Did Supporters of BNP Attack Awami League's Student Leader's Family?

Synopsis
Key Takeaways
- Increasing violence against political activists poses serious concerns.
- BNP is accused of orchestrating political attacks.
- Awami League claims to seek justice for the victims.
- Political tensions are escalating in Bangladesh.
- Reports indicate a troubling trend of violence associated with political affiliations.
Dhaka, Aug 12 (NationPress) The Bangladesh Awami League reported on Tuesday that supporters of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) executed a violent attack on the family of a prominent leader from its student organization, Chhatra League.
The incident took place at the residence of Faimin Sardar, the General Secretary of the Upazila Chhatra League, located in the Khulna district.
The attackers targeted Faimin Sardar's father, Bir Muktijoddha (freedom fighter) Ruhul Amin Sardar, along with the women and children present in the household.
"They vandalized and looted the home -- a horrifying echo of the atrocities committed by the Pakistani occupation forces, executed today by the BNP, a so-called political party masquerading as a terrorist entity," the Awami League stated.
The party criticized the BNP, asserting that assaulting a freedom fighter's family for their connection to the Chhatra League demonstrates that the BNP now embodies the "monstrous" and "anti-Liberation War mentality."
"Justice for this barbarity will be delivered on the soil of Bengal -- and the punishment will be so severe that these despicable descendants of Razakars will never again dare to show their faces," the party added.
Earlier on Saturday, the Awami League highlighted another act of violence, pointing to the attempted murder of Atik Hasan, the President of Ward 8 Jubo League, the party's youth wing in Monpura, Bhola district.
The Awami League asserted that this attack was also orchestrated by the BNP.
On the morning of August 3, armed BNP supporters executed a violent assault, leaving Atik severely injured and drenched in blood. The party claimed the aim was to silence an Awami League organizer and instill fear in the local community.
They raised concerns about whether being a member of the Awami League has now become a death sentence in Bangladesh.
"BNP has fully adopted the politics of murder, mirroring the tactics of the defeated forces of 1971. Their objective is clear -- to eliminate Awami League leaders and activists," the party remarked.
Last week, a report by Transparency International Bangladesh revealed that the BNP was involved in 92% of the violence, while the radical Islamist party Jamaat-e-Islami participated in 5%, and the National Citizen Party (NCP) accounted for 1% of violent incidents in the nation.
Bangladesh has been plagued by numerous unwarranted and violent assaults against journalists, police officers, minorities, and individuals linked with the Awami League following the rise of the Muhammad Yunus-led interim government last year.