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Advocate Rana Dasgupta, general secretary of the Hindu-Buddhist-Christian Unity Council of Bangladesh, thanked Hefazat-e-Islam Bangladesh for protesting the attack on the minority community in Bangladesh capitalizing on the French incident.
He made the remarks while addressing a mass rally organized by Hindu-Buddhist-Christian Unity Parishad at the Newmarket corner of Chittagong city on Saturday (November 8) at 12 noon.
Advocate Rana Dasgupta said: “Friends, political parties have not been able to make any statement to date (attack on minority community). I am grateful to Amir Nur Hossain Qasemi, the central Naib of Hefazat-e-Islam. He is the general secretary of Jamiat Ulama Islam. “The government must take a firm stand against human rights abuses,” he said in a statement. We have noticed that the Imani movement for the protection of the dignity of the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) is conspiring to create so much communal unrest by diverting him. “
Rana Dasgupta said: “We said these words at a press conference on the 2nd.”
Addressing the Minister of the Interior, he said: “Honorable Minister of the Interior, I speak at your home at least five or six times a year about the interests of the minority community in this country. Today when you go to the BBC and say, “What Ranababu said has been exaggerated.” I mean, what did Mr. Kasemi exaggerate?
“We want a thorough trial of everything we have said, we want a thorough investigation, we want an immediate end to communal attacks. And we want to identify those who are doing this and release those who have been hanged through Facebook.”
Earlier, Oikya Parishad leaders and activists began gathering at Chittagong’s New Market corner after 9 a.m. The mass sit-down program began before the scheduled time. At one point, advocate Rana Dasgupta, the council’s general secretary, sat in the street with leaders and activists. At that time, they chanted slogans such as ‘Religion belongs to everyone, the state belongs to everyone’, ‘Give back the constitution of ’72’, ‘Break the black hand of communal power’.
As the day progressed, the sit-in program took the form of a large public gathering. Law enforcement initially tried to control the situation, but at one point it did not work.
Traffic was stopped on the city’s main highway due to the sit-in program of thousands of people. Thousands of cars were stuck on the road. The inhabitants of the city suffer during the trips.
Later, around 12 noon, a protest procession went through different streets of the city and ended at the Chittagong Press Club.
Abu Azad / BA / JIM
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