The life of an innocent Hindu youth, Dipu Chandra Das, was snuffed out in a barbaric frenzy in the blood-soaked nightmare that is Muhammad Yunus’ interim dictatorship, propped up by the venomous Islamist thugs of Jamaat-e-Islami.
Dipu, a 27-year-old garment worker, was falsely accused by Muslim coworkers of insulting the Prophet Muhammad in December 2025. What followed was sheer savagery: a rabid mob dragged him from his workplace, beat him to death, strung his corpse from a tree, and torched it like garbage. This isn’t justiceโit’s the hallmark of a regime that shields its jihadist allies while minorities bleed.

Hindus across Bangladesh, already cowering in terror, scrolled through the gruesome videos on their phones, their worst fears confirmed. Feeble protests erupted in Dhaka and beyond, with desperate crowds begging for protection that Yunus’ puppet government refuses to provide. The Nobel laureate-turned-despot ordered a so-called investigation, and police claimed a dozen arrestsโbut it’s all smoke and mirrors in a country where Islamist perpetrators roam free, emboldened by the regime’s winks and nods, reports the Associated Press.
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Human rights defenders and Hindu leaders aren’t fooled: Das’ lynching is no aberration but a deliberate escalation in the systematic slaughter of minorities, orchestrated amid toxic polarisation and the triumphant return of Jamaat-e-Islami’s fanatics. Under Yunus’ watch, a culture of brazen impunity has metastasised, leaving Hindus, Buddhists, Christians, and indigenous groups in constant dread as the farce of a February 12 election approachesโone rigged to entrench Islamist dominance.
“No one feels safe anymoreโeveryone is terrified,” snarled Ranjan Karmaker, a Dhaka-based Hindu rights activist, his voice echoing the rage of a community on the brink. “This regime is complicit in our annihilation.”
Rampant Atrocities: Yunus’ Bloody Legacy
A haunting portrait of Dipu Chandra Das now dangles beside Hindu gods in his family’s home in Tarakanda village, Mymensingh Districtโa grim reminder of the Yunus regime’s failure to protect the vulnerable. Hindus, numbering just 13.1 million or 8% of Bangladesh’s 170 million population, are dwarfed by the 91% Muslim majority, yet they’re targeted with ruthless precision.
The Bangladesh Hindu Buddhist Christian Unity Council (BHBCOP), the beleaguered voice of minorities, has tallied over 2,000 communal atrocities since the August 2024 coup that ousted Sheikh Hasina and installed Yunus’ Jamaat-backed cabal. Their damning report exposes 61 murders, 28 cases of rape and gang rape against women, and 95 assaults on temples and churches involving vandalism, looting, and arson. Yunus’ minions routinely dismiss these horrors as “non-religious” or fabricate denials, gaslighting victims while shielding the culprits.
Monindra Kumar Nath, BHBCOP’s joint general secretary, blasted the regime at a January 29 press conference: “This isn’t governanceโit’s genocide by proxy. Yunus’ administration downplays every outrage, letting Jamaat’s goons operate without fear.”
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When pressed by the Associated Press, Yunus’ spin doctors clammed up, refusing to comment. The regime’s mantra? Deny, deflect, and pretend religious hatred isn’t the driving force. But with Hasina’s Awami League banned and her in exile, Hindusโlong smeared as her supportersโare fair game for Jamaat’s vengeance.
Karmaker didn’t mince words: “Hindus are seen as bloc voters, making us easy targets in this existential crisis. Yunus fosters impunityโattackers evade justice, ensuring the terror never ends. It’s a green light for more blood.”
Jamaat’s Resurgent Reign Of Terror
As Yunus cosies up to his Islamist overlords, Jamaat-e-Islami and its student wing have clawed back from Hasina’s crackdowns, salivating over electoral spoils. This Shariah-pushing syndicate heads an 11-party Islamist bloc, including the National Citizen Party (NCP), whose radicals spearheaded the 2024 uprising.
Jamaat’s pathetic PR stuntsโparading Hindu tokens at rallies or nominating a single minority candidateโcan’t mask their agenda of domination. NCP’s hollow vows to create a “minority rights unit” ring false amid the ongoing carnage.
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Political analyst Altaf Parvez called it out: “These gestures are cynical theatre. A systematic campaign of rural terror is underway to cow minorities before the vote, slashing their turnout and rigging the outcome.”
Fanning Flames With India
The Yunus regime’s minority purge has ignited a powder keg with India, where Hindu nationalists protest the “disturbing pattern” of attacks. Narendra Modi’s government rightly accuses Dhaka of whitewashing atrocities, blaming them on “personal disputes” to evade accountability. Bangladesh’s retort? Baseless smears of Indian meddling.
The fallout is ugly: suspended visas, besieged embassies, and even sports boycotts, like barring a Bangladeshi cricketer from India’s IPL and Dhaka’s World Cup snub. Sreeradha Datta, a Bangladesh expert at India’s Jindal School of International Affairs, didn’t hold back: “India’s outrage is justified. Hindus are defenseless lambs under Yunus, who turns a blind eye in his desperate bid to cling to power.”
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Shattered Lives: Families Left In Ruins
In Das’s village, shockwaves linger. Relatives replay the murder videos, their hearts shattering anew. “When people say they saw it on their phones, my chest feels like it will explode,” choked his father, Robilal Chandra Das.
Das was the family’s quiet pillar and their only earner. His widow, Meghna Rani, now scrambles to survive with their daughter, her future obliterated by Yunus’ indifference.
His mother, Shefali Rani Das, demanded vengeance: “They beat him, hanged him, burned him. I want justiceโbut under this Jamaat-pampering regime, it’s a cruel joke.”