________________________________
 
Battle over blasphemy deepens divisions in Bangladesh
By Shawn Ahmed on 07/05/2013 - 15:23

The charred remains of a bus damaged during Monday morning's clashes between 
security forces and Islamists in Dhaka. 
 
 
As the death toll rises to at least 38 after Sunday and Monday’s 
crackdown on Islamist protesters in Bangladesh, an Observer in the 
capital, who filmed the aftermath of these clashes, explains how divided the 
country has become.
 
Following a call by the hard-line Islamic group Hefajat-e-Islam, at least 
200,000 people took to the streets of Dhaka to try to pressure the government 
into adopting strict blasphemy laws, notably the death penalty for bloggers 
they accuse of insulting the Prophet Muhammad. The opposition Bangladesh 
Nationalist Party (BNP), the country’s main Islamic party, claims that 
hundreds of people were killed when the police broke up the protests. 
The police, meanwhile, have counted 38 dead so far, and said dozens more were 
being treated in local hospitals. They also announced the arrest 
of 194 Hefajat-e-Islam activists. 
 
The BNP and its Islamist allies have called for a two-day 
nationwide strike, starting on Wednesday, to protest what they call a 
“mass killing”.
 
Our Observer Shawn 
Ahmed filmed this short video report in central Dhaka on Monday 
afternoon, showing the aftrermath of the clashes. 
“Despite destruction all around us, the police told me nobody had been hurt, 
that there was nothing but light violence!”
Shawn Ahmed is a Canadian-Bangladeshi activist who lives in Dhaka. He runs this 
YouTube channel.
 
Monday afternoon, I went to Baitul Mukkaram mosque, near which 
there had been violent clashes. I saw a burnt-out bus, and concrete 
dividers smashed into little bits. The mall across the street was 
completely trashed, and a nearby marketplace was in smoulders. There was a 
horde of policemen there, so I asked some of them, were there injured 
protesters? Or injured police? They told me nobody had been hurt, that 
there was nothing but light violence! After much difficulty, and with 
the help of a policeman who apparently hadn’t been briefed about not 
talking to curious activists, I figured out which hospital injured 
protesters had been taken to. There, no medical personnel would talk to 
me, but I managed to speak to some men who had been shot – one in the 
eye, another in the hips. I also went to a morgue, where the police 
showed me four corpses they said were of protesters. I also saw police 
bringing in more corpses, but they claimed it was unrelated to the 
clashes.
 
Ahmed filmed this short video report at Dhaka University Hospital on Monday.
 
“Many people don’t want any documentation of events that could portray the 
Islamists as being in any way victims”
 
After putting photos and videos of all this online, anti-Islamist 
activists came at me with pitchforks, metaphorically speaking. Many 
people don’t want any documentation of events that could portray the 
Islamists as being in any way victims. It’s really disheartening to see 
how much both sides demonise each other. As a gay Muslim man, I’m 
obviously not a huge fan of the Islamists’ agenda; I don’t think 
“atheist bloggers” should be given the death penalty nor do I want 
sharia law. However, so-called “secular” activists are not exactly 
pacifists either – last February, they organised protests to call for the death 
penalty for a radical Islamic leader who had been given a life sentence for 
crimes perpetrated during the 
1971 war of independence. I heard many people in these protests chanting things 
like, “Light a fire, hang him!” Both sides are really good at 
incendiary rhetoric.
 
Bangladesh is a culturally diverse country – you can live a very 
modern, Western life in the city, and then go out to the villages and 
see families living a strict Muslim life, with no TV or radio, with kids 
studying in the madrassas. These cultural schisms are growing deeper 
and deeper, and I’m afraid that without a Desmond Tutu-type of leader 
that can embrace all sides, the situation will only get worse. I’m 
particularly worried about rumours that are currently circulating 
between Islamists via text messages and the radio, claiming that the 
police dumped 50,000 bodies in a river – whether it’s true or not, and 
it certainly seems unlikely, this could very well create a second wave 
of violence.
 
The relatives of this injured man told our Observer that he was shot in the leg 
during the protests. Photo by Shawn Ahmed.
________________________________
 
Source URL: 
http://observers.france24.com/content/20130507-blasphemy-law-clashes-sides-dhaka
Links:
[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hefajat-e-Islam_Bangladesh
[2] 
http://www.english.rfi.fr/asia-pacific/20130410-bloggers-are-under-pressure-bangladesh
[3] 
http://observers.france24.com/content/20130507-blasphemy-law-clashes-sides-dhaka
[4] http://observers.france24.com/content/video-damage
[5] http://observers.france24.com/content/video-hosptial
[6] http://observers.france24.com/content/injured
[7] http://observers.france24.com/profile/249948
[8] http://youtube.com/up
[9] 
http://observers.france24.com/content/20130227-violence-bangladesh-islamist-leader-quader-mollah-life-sentence


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