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The house No. 32 in Bangladesh Dhanmondi is the residence of Bangladesh’s founding father, Sheikh Mujibur Rehman.
The interim government of Bangladesh blamed Sheikh Hasina, the prime minister in the exile of the nation, for vandalism and the cause that took place in his father’s house in Dhanmondi of Dhaka.
Dhanmondi’s house No. 32 is a national monument of Dhaka, since it is the residence of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the founding father of Bangladesh.
The museum and the former home of the late father of Hasina and also the first president Sheikh Mujibur Rahman of Bangladesh, caught fire last year during the revolution led by students who finished his 15 years of government.
A report from the news agency AFP He said that government -owned construction vehicles were used to create ravages in other cities of Bangladesh, where the symbols associated with Hasina and his father were attacked.
The report also said that in some cases the security forces maintained and observed and the protesters took control.
However, the revolution was kidnapped by Islamists and rivals of the Awami League of Sheikh Hasina’s party and the interim government has not stopped violence against Awami supporters and religious minority communities and tribal people.
Late in Wednesday, six months until the day from Hasina fled by Helicopter to Old Ally India on August 5, the crowds that transported hammers and metal bars began to beat along the walls of the building in the capital of Dhaka.
According to witnesses, at least two people, accused of being members of the Awami League, were defeated by the crowd.
The protests were activated in response to the reports that Hasina, 77, who has challenged an arrest warrant to face the trial in Dhaka for massacres, would appear in a Facebook transmission from exile.
“The recurrence of such incidents can only be avoided if Sheikh Hasina, against whom the Government has issued arrest orders and is accused of crimes against humanity, refrains from pronouncing speeches,” reads a statement of the government.
“Hasina … insulted people who sacrificed their lives by making irrelevant, absurd and hateful comments.”
Dhaka’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said he wrote to New Delhi demanding that Hasina be forbidden to make “false, manufactured and incendiary statements” while she is her guest.
On Thursday morning, excavators were being used to tear down the remaining walls of black fire.
The protesters also destroyed and burned other houses throughout the country linked to Hasina, including a fire attack against the late husband of the Dhaka de Hasina house.
Prothom Alo, the largest Bengali newspaper, reported that the crowds used excavators owned by the government to crush a building owned by the Hasina family in the city of Khulna.
In the western city of Kushtia, protesters destroyed the house of a leader of the Hasina Awami League party, Mahbubul Alam Hanif.
In Chittang, the protesters carried out a torch procession and broke a mural of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman.
The security forces remained allowing protesters to assault the buildings.
AIN or Salish Kendra (ASK), a leading human rights organization of Bangladesh, condemned violence.
- Location :
Dhaka, Bangladesh