The new story and proposal came to light after the leaders of the anti-discrimination student movement met the interim government’s chief advisor Muhammad Yunus. The meeting took place hours after Islamists issued threats in Chattogram, resulting in no lawyers coming forward to represent Hindu monk and minority rights advocate Chinmoy Krishna Das, who has been jailed on sedition charges. Had gone.
Amidst the news of atrocities on minorities in Bangladesh and the arrest of three Hindu monks, student leaders now included in the government have doubled their anti-India stance. Naheed Islam, information advisor to the caretaker government, has called for two-India and accused the ruling elite in India of practicing divisive politics. After a meeting with chief advisor Muhammad Yunus, student leaders announced plans to set up a media cell to counter the growing image of Islamic fundamentalism in Bangladesh following the fall of the Sheikh Hasina government on 5 August.
The new story and proposal came to light after the leaders of the anti-discrimination student movement met the interim government’s chief advisor Muhammad Yunus. The meeting took place hours after Islamists issued threats in Chattogram, resulting in no lawyers coming forward to represent Hindu monk and minority rights advocate Chinmoy Krishna Das, who has been jailed on sedition charges. Had gone.
After the meeting, student leaders also said they demanded disclosure of all agreements made with India by the Awami League government, Dhaka-based newspaper Prothom Alo reported. Along with the meeting with Muhammad Yunus, Bangladesh’s information and broadcasting advisor Naheed Islam told X that the Indian ruling elite and Hindutva forces were engaging in divisive politics and anti-Bangladesh rhetoric.