attacks on hindus – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Tue, 10 Dec 2024 06:18:11 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png attacks on hindus – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Attacks on Hindus in Bangladesh: Protest march held from White House to U.S. Capitol https://artifex.news/article68968025-ece/ Tue, 10 Dec 2024 06:18:11 +0000 https://artifex.news/article68968025-ece/ Read More “Attacks on Hindus in Bangladesh: Protest march held from White House to U.S. Capitol” »

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Representational image only. File

A large number of Indian Americans held a march from the White House to the U.S. Capitol over attacks on Hindus in Bangladesh.

Raising slogans such as “We want Justice” and “Protect Hindus” the peaceful demonstrators urged the Joe Biden administration and the incoming Donald Trump administration to ask the new government in Bangladesh to take steps to protect Hindus but also take action against those responsible for this.

Bangladesh crisis: 10 temples attacked, Hindu musician Rahul Ananda’s house torched

The march was held on Monday (December 9, 2024) over attacks on Hindus in Bangladesh. Organisers of the event — StopHinduGenocide.org, Bangladeshi Diaspora organisations and HinduACTion — demanded that the companies in the U.S. stop buying garments from Bangladesh, which is heavily dependent on its exports to the U.S.

“This march is not just a cry for justice; it is a demand for accountability. Today, the Bangladeshi Hindu community and the larger Hindu diaspora from the Indian subcontinent has come in support of the Bangladesh Hindu community because there is continuing violence going on in Bangladesh, specifically in Chittagong and Rangpur area, as well as in some other parts of the country,” said Utsav Chakrabarti, from HinduACTion.

“Hindus are being targeted, their temples are being burnt down and destroyed. Their houses are being looted. Chinmoy Das, who is one of the Hindu leaders in the Chittagong area, has been incarcerated and is facing torture. The community around the world is extremely worried about it. So, people are trying to make sure that the White House and people in America are aware of what’s going on in Bangladesh,” Mr. Chakrabarti said.

“We have gathered here in front of the White House to ask for justice for Bangladeshi Hindus…,” Narasimha Koppula from Virginia said. Srikanth Akunuri from HinduAction said unspeakable tragedies are happening for the Bangladeshi Hindus. “We also demand that ISKCON leader Chinmoy Das be released,” he said.

Prasenjit Dutta, head of a Bangladeshi community organisation from Atlantic City demanded the release of ISKCON leader Chinmoy Das.

“I don’t know why the Biden administration is not doing anything. We are asking the White House to act,” he said. Mohinder Gulati, president of Global Hindu Temple Network, said the atrocities against Hindus in Bangladesh are an attack against this minority community.

“Bangladesh should be debarred from sending peacekeeping forces to other countries. We have also written to the United Nations Human Rights Organisation, UN Women, and UNICEF that all the international obligations that Bangladesh has, that they should be held accountable for those obligations,” he said.

“World Bank, Asian Development Bank, IMF, they are lending to Bangladesh. They have their own policies. These organisations have their gender justice policies and social justice policies. They should ask Bangladesh to comply with the policies of the lending organisations before they can lend,” he said.



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Two Indian-American lawmakers seek U.S. intervention to stop ‘coordinated’ anti-Hindu attacks in Bangladesh https://artifex.news/article68509841-ece/ Sat, 10 Aug 2024 17:31:42 +0000 https://artifex.news/article68509841-ece/ Read More “Two Indian-American lawmakers seek U.S. intervention to stop ‘coordinated’ anti-Hindu attacks in Bangladesh” »

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Two prominent Indian-American lawmakers have sought the U.S.’s direct intervention to stop the “coordinated attacks” against minority Hindus in Bangladesh, underlining that instability in the region, “fuelled by religious intolerance and violence”, is not in the interest of America or its allies.

Members of minority communities in Bangladesh faced at least 205 incidents of attacks in 52 districts since the fall of the Sheikh Hasina-led government on August 5, according to two Hindu organisations — Bangladesh Hindu Buddhist Christian Unity Council and the Bangladesh Puja Udjapan Parishad — in the violence-hit nation.

Thousands of Bangladeshi Hindus have been trying to flee to India to escape the violence.

In a letter dated August 9 to Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Congressman Shri Thanedar said he is not alone in his stance against the atrocities being committed against Hindus in Bangladesh. Many in the international community, including some from his own district, have condemned the violent actions being committed against minority groups in Bangladesh.

“With Muhammad Yunus stepping up as the interim Prime Minister for Bangladesh, the United States has an obligation to assist this new government, to ensure that violence and civil unrest come to an end. I urge the Biden administration to grant persecuted Bangladesh Hindus and other religious minorities temporary protected status as refugees,” the Congressman from Michigan wrote to Mr. Blinken.

Mr. Yunus, the 84-year-old Nobel laureate, was sworn in on Thursday as the head of an interim government in Bangladesh.

A number of Hindu temples, households and businesses were vandalised, women assaulted and at least two Hindu leaders affiliated with the Awami League party headed by Hasina were killed in the violence in Bangladesh after she fled the country, according to community leaders in Dhaka.

Mr. Thanedar urged Blinken to work closely with Yunus and his government to bring “an end to the coordinated attacks against the Bangladesh Hindus”.

He underlined that Mr. Yunus has called for an end to the violence and welcomed his willingness to rebuild the country.

“This is a critical time for Bangladesh, and we must do everything we can to support them in their efforts to bring an end to the violent actions and rhetoric being targeted towards Hindus in the country,” the Indian-American lawmaker said.

In a letter dated August 8 to Mr. Blinken, a copy of which was released to the press on Friday, Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi said credible eyewitness reports of the anti-Hindu attacks in various media reports demonstrate the scale of the attacks.

“I am writing to you regarding the fluid situation in Bangladesh and the rise of coordinated anti-Hindu violence in the wake of former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s resignation. Now that Muhammad Yunus has been sworn in as Chief Adviser for the interim government, it is of utmost urgency that the United States engage with his government for both bringing the violence to an end and the perpetrators to justice,” Mr. Krishnamoorthi wrote.

“Sadly, this is not the first time that anti-government protests in Bangladesh have metastasised into anti-Hindu violence. The anti-Hindu riots in October 2021 left nine people dead amidst the destruction of hundreds of homes, businesses and temples…In 2017, more than 107 Hindus were killed and 37 ‘disappeared’…following the International Crimes Tribunal conviction of Jamaat-e-Islami leader Delwar Sayeedi for war crimes,” he said.

Krishnamoorthi underlined that instability in the region, “fuelled by religious intolerance and violence, is clearly not in the interest of the United States or our allies”.

He urged Blinken to engage “directly” with the interim government and exert US influence to help his administration end the violence and “bring those responsible to justice”.

Mr. Thanedar in his letter noted that political violence in Bangladesh is not a new phenomenon and that the country has experienced many coups and leadership changes since its inception in 1971.

“Targeting of its Hindu population is also not new. Hindus only make up eight per cent of Bangladesh’s population, exposing this minority to risk of discrimination and violence,” the Congressman said.



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