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International News : Voices are being raised in America against the attacks on Hindus in Bangladesh. A large number of people demonstrated outside the White House in Washington DC against the atrocities on Hindus in Bangladesh. At the same time, two prominent US lawmakers of Indian origin have demanded direct US intervention to stop the attacks on minority Hindus in Bangladesh. They have also mentioned that instability in that region "motivated by religious intolerance and violence" is not in the interest of America or its allies.

According to two Hindu organisations - Bangladesh Hindu Buddhist Christian Unity Council and Bangladesh Puja Udyapan Parishad - members of minority communities in Bangladesh have faced at least 205 incidents of attacks in 52 districts since the Sheikh Hasina-led government resigned and left the country on 5 August. Thousands of Bangladeshi Hindus are trying to flee to neighbouring India to escape the violence. 

MP Shri Thanedar wrote a letter to Antony Blinken.

In a letter to Secretary of State Antony Blinken, US Congressman Mr Thanedar said that his stand against the ongoing atrocities against Hindus in Bangladesh is not his alone. He noted that many people in the international community have condemned the continuing violence against minority groups in Bangladesh, including some people from his own district. Mr. Thanedar, a Michigan MP, wrote to Blinken, "With Muhammad Yunus taking over as the interim Prime Minister of Bangladesh, the US must assist this new government in ending violence and unrest. He said, "I urge the Biden administration to grant temporary protected status as refugees to persecuted Bangladeshi Hindus and other religious minorities." 

Nobel laureate Yunus (84) was sworn in as the head of an interim government in Bangladesh on Thursday. According to Hindu community leaders based in Dhaka, several Hindu temples, homes and businesses were vandalised, women were attacked, and at least two Hindu leaders belonging to Hasina's Awami League party were killed in the violence that rocked Bangladesh after Sheikh Hasina resigned as prime minister and fled the country. 

MP Raja Krishnamurthy also sought intervention.

At the same time, Indian-origin MP Raja Krishnamurthy said that credible eyewitness reports of anti-Hindu attacks in various media reports demonstrate the scale of the attacks. Krishnamurthy wrote in his letter, "I am writing this letter to you regarding the unstable situation in Bangladesh and the increase in anti-Hindu coordinated violence after the resignation of former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina. Now that Mohammad Yunus has taken oath as the chief advisor of the interim government, the US must work closely with his government to end the violence and bring the perpetrators to justice."

He said, "Sadly, this is not the first time that anti-government protests in Bangladesh have taken the form of anti-Hindu violence. In October 2021, nine people were killed amid the destruction of hundreds of homes, businesses and temples in anti-Hindu riots. In 2017, more than 107 Hindus were killed and 37 'disappeared'. Krishnamurthy said that "instability driven by religious intolerance and violence in the region is clearly not in the interest of the US or our allies.''

 


 

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