DHAKA: Thousands protested against police across Bangladesh on Monday, a day after at least four people died when officers fired on a crowd in one of the country’s deadliest religious riots to date.
Protest Against Police
Some 20,000 Muslims called for the execution of a young Hindu man on Bhola island Sunday for writing Facebook messages that allegedly defamed the Prophet Mohammed PBUH), with police saying they opened fire after rocks were thrown at officers.
Four people died and nearly 50 were injured after police fire at them, with at least seven in a critical condition in hospital.
Mob attacks over online posts perceived to be blasphemous have emerged as a major headache for security forces in Bangladesh, where Muslims make up some 90 percent of the country’s 168 million people.
Deadliest Religious Riots
The deaths sparked a new round of protests late Sunday and on Monday as thousands of Muslims across several cities shouted slogans and called for the officers involved to be put on trial.
“This is not acceptable. Police have illegally and unconstitutionally opened fire on the protesters,” 22-year-old madrasa student Mahmudul Hasan told AFP at a rally in the capital Dhaka.
“It is an extrajudicial killing. We seek justice.”
Hindu Man Incite Religious Tension
The Hindu man whose Facebook account hosted the original messages and is from Bhola, was charged with inciting religious tension.
But Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina called for calm Sunday and said the man’s Facebook account was hacked by a Muslim person and used to “spread lies”.
Protest Against Blasphemous Post
Thousands of protesters who took part in the Bhola protest were being investigated, local police chief Enamul Haque told AFP, adding a police officer was also “fighting for his life” after he was shot by demonstrators.
No arrests have yet been made, he added.
This is not the first time alleged Facebook posts have sparked large-scale religious violence in the impoverished South Asian country.
In 2016, angry Muslims attacked Hindu temples in an eastern town over a Facebook post that allegedly mocked one of Islam’s holiest sites.
And in 2012, Muslim mobs torched Buddhist monasteries, houses and shops in the coastal Cox’s Bazar district after a photo of the koran that was considered defamatory was put online by a young Buddhist.