Victim arrested as Yunus aide Ali Riaz rocked by rape-on-marriage-promise scandal

In a chilling display of power overriding justice, Atandra Ripa—the woman who accused Professor Ali Riaz, Special Assistant to Chief Adviser Muhammad Yunus, of rape under false promise of marriage and forced abortion—was arrested within days of releasing a tearful video testimony. The alleged rapist remains untouched.

Sources close to the case confirm that Dilruba Sharmin, a close associate of Professor Riaz, has privately admitted to escorting the victim to Gonoshasthya Hospital in Dhanmondi, where the abortion was allegedly carried out under duress and political threats.

Ripa’s video statement, now viral with millions of views, details how the relationship began in 2023 through Facebook and poetry discussions.

“He lied that he had a vasectomy, so protection was not needed. I trusted him,” she said, sobbing. When pregnancy was confirmed, Riaz allegedly vanished.

A poet, Ripa, says that she was later coerced into terminating the pregnancy with warnings that “Ali Riaz would be in danger” if she spoke out.

Instead of investigation, police pressure mounted. Ripa went into hiding wearing a burqa, posting desperate pleas: “They are threatening to disappear me.”

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Her worst fears materialised—she was arrested; Professor Riaz was not even questioned.

2018 #MeToo Allegation Resurfaces

This is not the first time Ali Riaz has faced such accusations.

In December 2018, Canada-based former Dhaka University student Samiha Tutli publicly accused Riaz of attempted sexual assault during a visit to Rajshahi. She described how the “distinguished professor” she admired as a poet turned predatory the moment they met in private. Tutli fled in terror.

Riaz denied ever knowing her or staying anywhere except a hotel, producing witnesses who backed his version. No investigation followed then either.

From Bedroom to Constitution: The Real Danger of Untouchable Power

Professor Ali Riaz is no ordinary academic. As Vice-Chairman of the National Consensus Commission and head of the Constitution Reform Commission, he wields unprecedented influence over Bangladesh’s political future. Critics—including senior journalists, freedom fighters, and major political parties—now openly brand him a “deep state agent” executing foreign-prescribed designs to:

– Rewrite the 1972 Constitution and dilute its secular foundation 

– Normalise anti-liberation forces and downplay the 1971 genocide in official narratives 

– Push the controversial July Charter while ignoring dissent from BNP, Jamaat, and others 

– Create deliberate divisions that threaten post-2024 national unity 

Senior journalist Masood Kamal warns: “Ali Riaz has messed up everything. His project is to impose a new constitution that sidelines the spirit of 1971. This man was never known as a constitutional expert—yet he controls our destiny.”

When the Rapist Allegedly Sits at the Heart of Power

Netizens are enraged, with one Facebook user saying: “First they silence victims with threats, then jail them, while the perpetrator drafts the nation’s future. This is the real face of the Yunus regime’s justice.”

As Bangladesh hurtles toward elections and constitutional upheaval, one question burns brighter than ever: If a woman can be jailed for accusing the second-most powerful man in the interim government of rape, what hope remains for the rule of law—or for the millions who believed August 2024 heralded a new era of accountability?

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