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Bangladesh Minorities Under Siege: Rights Groups Allege Systematic Campaign of Fear and Displacement

Gadyal Desk by Gadyal Desk
21/05/2026
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In the shadow of Bangladesh’s 2026 elections, violence against Hindus, Christians, Buddhists and indigenous communities escalated from episodic incidents into a structured campaign of fear, dispossession and flight. Rights groups and minority platforms documented more than 2,500 incidents since the August 2024 “Monsoon revolution”, even as Dhaka insisted that most cases were merely “political” or isolated crimes, not communal persecution. This widening gap between lived reality and official narrative is precisely where state complicity begins.

A Dispersed but Coherent Pattern

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Minority monitoring groups report more than 2,500 incidents of communal violence — including murders, rapes, arson and attacks on places of worship — since the fall of the Awami League government. Annual and periodic tallies by the Bangladesh Hindu Buddhist Christian Unity Council speak of hundreds of attacks in 2025 alone, with at least 61 to 66 killings and assaults affecting hundreds of families across several dozen districts. The geographic spread — from urban Dhaka to districts in Chattogram, Khulna, Rangpur, Comilla and Dinajpur — makes it difficult to sustain the fiction that these are random local quarrels rather than a countrywide climate of targeted intimidation.

Crucially, these incidents spiked around politically charged periods, particularly the run-up to the February 12, 2026 general elections, mirroring earlier patterns where minorities became victims of partisan contestation and street unrest. For communities that have long voted for secular parties, this translates into a brutal message: their safety is expendable.

Social Media, Blasphemy and Mob Mobilisation

Research on recent attacks shows a disturbingly consistent script: a rumour or social media post alleging blasphemy circulates, mosque loudspeakers and messaging apps amplify outrage, and mobs mobilise before facts are verified. Studies of incidents between 2011 and 2025 underline how fabricated or disputed Facebook posts and screenshots have been repeatedly used to incite assaults on Hindu homes, temples and businesses, often in localities where minorities are numerically and politically vulnerable.

The lynching of Hindu worker Dipu Chandra Das in Bhaluka, Mymensingh, on December 18, 2025 — beaten by a mob, then hanged from a tree while still alive, and set on fire following an accusation of insulting Islam that investigators later found to be unsupported by evidence — has become emblematic of this nexus of rumour, religious frenzy and impunity. Rights groups note that dozens of similar blasphemy-linked cases have produced not only arrests under cyber or security laws but also collective punishment through mob vandalism of entire Hindu neighbourhoods. When minority life, liberty and property can be revoked overnight by a viral allegation, the line between “law and order problem” and targeted persecution is effectively erased.

Police Inaction and Denial as Policy

Against this backdrop, the response of Bangladeshi law enforcement has been lethargic at best and obstructionist at worst. Multiple field-based reports describe police arriving after homes have burned, failing to disperse mobs, or registering only a handful of cases relative to hundreds of documented attacks. The Yunus government and police headquarters repeatedly characterised most incidents as “political in nature” with “no proof of communal violence”, and described many complaints by minority organisations as exaggerated.

Yet these official reassurances sit uneasily beside independent tallies that record more than 2,500 attacks and dozens of deaths, as well as testimonies that victims’ complaints are discouraged, downgraded or left to languish without effective investigation. When security forces stand down in the face of mobs, or focus on disputing the communal character of attacks rather than protecting threatened communities, neutrality is indistinguishable from enabling.

Jamaat’s Street Power and Celebratory Narratives

The 2026 elections saw Jamaat-e-Islami and allied hardline networks re-emerge as significant political actors, consolidating street presence after years of formal marginalisation. Reports from church, minority and human rights groups repeatedly highlighted the role of Islamist outfits — including Jamaat-linked cadres — in attacks on Hindus, Christians, Ahmadiyyas and dissidents in the post-Hasina period. Their ideological project openly questions secular constitutionalism and positions religious minorities as obstacles to an “Islamic” Bangladesh.

At the local level, this ideological framing translates into rallies, processions and sermons that celebrate vigilante action against alleged blasphemers and traitors, frequently branded as “Indian agents”, while casting those who flee as evidence of divine justice rather than state failure. Such normalisation of vigilante violence nurtures an environment where further attacks appear not as crimes but as community service, and where perpetrators expect — often correctly — that they will face no consequences.

Land Grabbing as a Demographic Weapon

Violence against minorities in Bangladesh has long been intertwined with disputes over land and property, and recent waves of attacks have sharpened this nexus. Minority forums and church sources document repeated cases where homes and farms are looted or occupied shortly after assaults, with local elites or politically connected figures moving in as displaced families flee.

In northern districts such as Dinajpur, indigenous Christians and Hindus have faced coordinated assaults explicitly aimed at seizing disputed plots, as well as church graveyards and temples.
Contemporary analyses speak of an “exodus” driven by property dispossession, with Hindu-owned assets transferred under duress and little prospect of restitution. When intimidation, blasphemy accusations and mob attacks are repeatedly followed by land occupation, the pattern resembles deliberate demographic engineering rather than incidental criminality.

Scholars of minority persecution in Bangladesh emphasise that the current phase marks a particularly dangerous convergence of state weakness, Islamist assertiveness and structural impunity. The density, geographic spread and repetition of attacks; the systematic use of blasphemy narratives; the celebration of vigilante “punishment” in Islamist discourse; and the documented link to land grabs together amount to more than sporadic communal disorder.

They indicate the early stages of a slow-moving process of ethnic cleansing — pushing non-Muslim and dissenting communities out of contested spaces, stripping them of property and bargaining power, and shrinking their footprint in public life.

Security analysts and Indian commentators have begun to describe this crisis as linked to a Pakistan-backed Jamaat project to reorder Bangladesh’s demography. Whether or not every incident is externally directed, what is visible is the posture of the Bangladeshi state: minimising communal intent, questioning victims’ data, under-policing minority localities, and allowing Islamist formations to normalise violence as moral policing. In such a configuration, the line between incapacity and complicity blurs — and for Bangladesh’s minorities, that distinction is fast becoming academic.

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