'জয় বাংলা।
মহান জাতি, মহান নেতা
শেখ মুজিব, শেখ মুজিব।
তোমার নেতা আমার নেতা
শেখ মুজিব শেখ মুজিব।
সংগ্রাম, সংগ্রাম
চলছে চলছে,
চলব চলবে।
জয় বাংলা।।
জয় বাংলা।।
জয় বাংলা '
https://t.co/UwBcncT7gZ
Homecoming is always challenging when occupied forces are in power. Sheikh Hasina did exactly the same thing in 2007 and 1981 despite facing death threats and external pressure.She has overcome similar challenges so many times. This time she will do it again.
Joy Bangla
For decades, Prof. Dr. Muhammad Yunus had established his image worldwide as a friend of the poor, an advocate of women's empowerment, and a campaigner for microcredit. Through paid campaigns and by the blessings of his Western masters, he won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006 for “alleviation of poverty”, even though there are no success stories of microcredit in Bangladesh or elsewhere, millions were trapped in long-term debts. His “social business” model is applicable only in philanthropic schemes, while the “Three Zero” formula is another farce. He became vocal during various political movements and election-centric stalemates since the ’90s, but he never ran for direct office because of his work toward depoliticization. Despite being a campaigner for Bangladesh’s independence, he never paid tribute to the heroic freedom fighters of the 1971 Liberation War until becoming the Chief Adviser in 2024 as a puppet of the Western powers. His 559-day misrule as the head of the interim government helped people see his real face. Many have understood how he had long been playing tricks from behind a mask to gain power and sell off the country's sovereignty while trampling the spirit of the Liberation War, defaming the martyrs and the heroic freedom fighters.
🔊From the preface of the book, The Yunus Files: Unmasking a Fake Saint
Now available at stores in Bangladesh 👇
Order online:
-Neon Books: https://t.co/CTPAD3nLGE
-Nalonda: https://t.co/rSmEJcKFll
American citizen Khalilur Rahman has become President of the United Nations. I think most people are unaware of his dark history.
During the 2001 caretaker government period, allegations surrounding Khalilur Rahman's extramarital relationship were linked to a tragic incident in which the Chief Adviser's protocol officer was shot by her husband, who later committed suicide. After that, Khalilur left Bangladesh and remained abroad for years.
Suddenly, after Yunus came to power, he returned as the interim government's security adviser and also became Tarique Rahman's Foreign minister. What a life he has had. A man who, according to his critics, should have faced criminal conviction and spent years in prison has now become President of the United Nations. What an irony.
Isn't this a case of moral bankruptcy by the @UN ?
@ZulkarnainSaer exposed Khalil a long time ago, and now he has become UN President. Why are you silent? You should speak out.
Bloody Ukhiya: The Death of a Mother, or the Blunt Reflection of an Unjust State?
——
Ukhiya in Cox’s Bazar - once known for tourism, border politics, and the Rohingya crisis - is once again making headlines over allegations of horrific political violence.
On Saturday night, May 16, 2026, around 9:30 PM, an incident unfolded in the Thaingkhali-Thaipalong area of Ukhiya that has shaken not just one family, but the entire community. According to reports published in various media outlets, leaders and activists of the #BNP were accused of abducting Chhatra League activist Abdur Rahman over the slogan “Joy Bangla.” When his mother, Chhaiyada Khatun (50), attempted to rescue him, she reportedly came under attack. She later died from her severe injuries.
A political slogan — “Joy Bangla.”
A phrase deeply tied to Bangladesh’s Liberation War history. If those words can now become a threat to someone’s life, then this is no isolated incident; rather, it symbolizes a terrifying collapse of political tolerance within the state.
From a legal and political perspective, the incident raises allegations of several serious crimes:
- First, intimidation and persecution based on political identity or ideology.
- Second, abduction.
- Third, a coordinated assault on a woman and a mother.
- Fourth, death resulting from that assault.
In other words, this single event appears to contain a complete blueprint of violence.
Perhaps the cruelest aspect is that at the center of this tragedy was a mother.
She was not a frontline political activist, nor a leader of rallies or demonstrations. She was simply a mother trying to save her child - and she lost her life doing so. Such a scene is shameful for any civilized society.
The cries of Abdur Rahman’s sister after losing her mother have already spread across social media. The atmosphere of grief, fear, and anger now surrounding Ukhiya reflects not just the tragedy of one family, but the growing insecurity felt by ordinary citizens.
Ukhiya has long struggled with instability. For years, various reports have raised allegations involving weapons, drugs, extortion, and violence surrounding the Rohingya camps.
Political rivalry in the region has also frequently turned violent. As a result, ordinary people are increasingly asking: is the state truly capable of maintaining law and order?
The government’s responsibility is not merely to issue statements. It must ensure impartial investigations, bring perpetrators to justice regardless of political affiliation, and take a visible stand against political violence. Otherwise, every new death will become just another statistic.
This incident in Ukhiya once again forces the nation to confront an old and painful question:
Is Bangladesh becoming a state where a person’s political identity determines whether they are safe?
The answer to that question - written in the blood of a mother - now remains a debt owed to the entire nation.
#Bangladesh #BangladeshCrisis
“Karina Died due to Hospital Negligence”💥
-Alleges Kaisar Hamid after India-hating influencer Karina died in Chennai.
Despite years of Anti-#India, Anti-#Hindu propaganda,her death during Treatment in India is now Fueling another Narrative by her Father.
@ajaykraina@avarakai
US firms already dominate Bangladesh’s Gas & LNG sector. Now,a May 14 US-Bangladesh MoU signed in #Washington is Raising Fears of deeper strategic control,not just over Energy,But also Bangladesh’s Maritime Boundaries in the #BayofBengal.
@narendramodi@ajaykraina@avarakai
Custodial deaths of political prisoners continue unabated in #Bangladesh, raising serious concerns about human rights protection and treatment of political detainees under the #BNP Govt led by PM #TariqueRahman.
The most recent case is that of 67-year-old Sultan Mia, former councillor of Ward No. 8 of Dhaka South City Corporation (DSCC) and president of the ward unit of the Awami League. He died of cardiac arrest on 4 May 2026 while undergoing treatment at the National Institute of Cardiovascular Diseases (NICVD), after falling ill at Dhaka Central Jail in Keraniganj on 24 April.
In the last two and a half months alone, four detainees affiliated with the #AwamiLeaguehave died in prison custody. Over the past 21 months, the total number of reported custodial deaths of political detainees has reached at least 46. See:
https://t.co/kOTfQyWEzE
However, the most disturbing aspect of Sultan Mia’s case is how and why he remained detained.
He was arrested from his Gopibagh residence on 18 Oct 2024 in a case filed with Paltan Police Station as an “unnamed accused”, meaning he was not originally named in the case at all. He was subsequently “shown arrested” in nine additional cases.
Sultan eventually secured bail in all nine cases before Eid-Ul- Fitr, and his family expected his release. Yet law enforcement authorities then showed him arrested in yet another case filed with Rampura Police Station, ensuring the continuation of his detention. News:
https://t.co/oBmNtXoJMa
This custodial death can therefore be directly attributed to two abusive practices being systematically used against political prisoners associated with the Awami League under both the Interim and BNP governments.
First, the use of the “unnamed accused” loophole, a widespread phenomenon in criminal cases linked to the violent 2024 protests, enables authorities to arrest individuals who were not initially identified in complaints or FIRs. This has been abused on an industrial scale since Aug 2024.
Second, the practice of “showing arrested” individuals in new cases immediately after they secure bail in existing ones, allowing authorities to prolong arbitrary detention indefinitely, effectively nullifying judicial relief.
This is not the first time political detainees have paid the ultimate price as a result of such abusive practices.
The devastating human impact of the “shown arrested” mechanism was illustrated in the tragic case of former #ChhatraLeague leader Shafiqul Islam, who died after being subjected to this malpractice for eight and a half months. His prolonged incarceration, sustained through repeated “shown arrested” applications, demonstrated the human cost of a system in which legal safeguards are routinely disregarded. See:
https://t.co/fhCra3LYF0
Similarly, the deadly consequences of denying bail on political considerations alone were demonstrated in the case of Jubo League leader AK Azad, who was released from prison two weeks after suffering a severe brain stroke, an ordeal that ultimately led to his death. See:
https://t.co/vWzxhQx6Sr
In the majority of these 46 prison-custody death cases, family members have alleged torture, custodial harassment, medical negligence, or the failure of authorities to provide timely and adequate healthcare.
By failing to conduct transparent, credible, and independent investigations into the growing number of custodial deaths, the Yunus-led Interim Govt violated #Bangladesh’s obligations under international law.
The BNP Govt now appears to be continuing in the same direction of abuse, neglect, and impunity under the leadership of Tarique Rahman.
…
#BangladeshCrisis @amnestysasia@StateDRL@hrw@IBAHRI@EURightsAgency@UNHumanRights@omctorg@Ginitastar@PearsonElaine@TheDavidBergman@StateDRL@UN_HRC@SRjudgeslawyers@ESandersFCDO@volker_turk@meeganguly@AgnesCallamard@justiceinfonet@MujMash@HannahEP@CordeliaSkyNews@UN_SPExperts@job71org
Arrested at the Jail Gate: Yet another repressive tool being used to facilitate the indefinite detention of political activists in #Bangladesh.
Kazi Sonia Sultana, the Organising Secretary of the #AwamiLeague’s #Magura district unit and a former elected Vice-Chairman of the Magura Sadar Upazila Council, was arrested and detained in a case filed under the Anti-Terrorism Act by a local #BNP leader.
As has increasingly become the norm in “new” Bangladesh, she was denied bail by the lower courts. In the current political climate, few judges or magistrates appear willing to grant bail to individuals affiliated with political parties perceived to be rivals of the ruling establishment.
However, on 7 May 2026, Sonia Sultana was finally granted bail by the High Court. On the morning of 8 May 2026, as she was being released from Magura District Jail, she was re-arrested by police directly at the jail gate.
According to the Officer-in-Charge of Magura Sadar Police Station, she was taken into custody again due to a specific “allegation” against her in a separate #vandalism case.
News:
https://t.co/2cYPHl6NbM
This reflects yet another abusive tactic being employed by law enforcement agencies in Bangladesh at the behest of the #BNP Govt to prolong the detention of #AwamiLeague-affiliated political detainees indefinitely.
The playbook has become increasingly familiar:
If there is sufficient time between a court granting bail and the detainee’s scheduled release, police seek to have the person “shown arrested” in a new case. Where the interval between bail and release is short, police instead rearrest the detainee immediately in connection with another cognisable offence and then initiate fresh legal proceedings afterward.
The objective appears straightforward: once detained, ensure there is no meaningful possibility of release.
Such practices strike at the heart of due process, the presumption of innocence, and the rule of law. The repeated use of “shown-arrested” and “re-arrests” to circumvent bail orders undermines public confidence in both the #justice system and constitutional protections.
If Bangladesh is to genuinely chart a democratic future for itself, then respect for the universality of human rights and the independence of the legal process must be upheld consistently, regardless of political affiliation.
…
#BangladeshCrisis @meeganguly@PearsonElaine@job71org@ESandersFCDO@AgnesCallamard@amnestysasia@hrw@BonaveroIHR@IBAHRI@FortifyRights@forum_asia@HRF@volker_turk@UNHumanRights@SRjudgeslawyers@fidh_en@StateDRL@UN_HRC@justiceinfonet@Kennedy_HRC@CIVICUSalliance@EURightsAgency@fidh_en@humanrights
Five people, including the wife and child of an expatriate, were found brutally murdered with their throats slit in Kapasia, Gazipur.
#BangladeshCrisis
প্রায় ১৩ হাজার পাউন্ড তথা ২২ লাখ টাকা মূ���্যের ঘড়ি পরে সংসদে বসে নাকি পপুলিস্ট কথা বলা উচিৎ না, আসলেই কি বলা উচিৎ? ওবায়দুল কাদের মতো কেউ গিফট দিয়েছে এই যুক্তি কি দেবেন মিস্টার টেন পার্সেন্ট?
আওয়ামী লীগের কেউ কোন দামি কিছু পরিধান করলেই আমাদের দেশের রাজাকার এবং তাদের বংশধরদের ��ান্নাকাটি শুরু হয়ে যেত।
#Remember 21 Jul2025💥,the Milestone School F-7 BGI Jet Crash❓
Evidence now points to a Militant outfit like TTP.
From day 1 we warned of a Terror link behind the Deaths of countless Children.
Did #Yunus suppress the Truth?
@PMOIndia@ajaykraina@avarakai@ShefVaidya@AadiAchint