Plight of Hindus in Bangladesh after coup

Sadly it's because of Modis failed foreign policy in Bangladesh that Bangladeshi Hindus are being treated in this way. They are wrongly seen as Modis men and foreign agents rather than Bangladeshi citizens.

He can't clean up the mess he himself has created.

Best way to clean this up is for Modi to publicly apologize, fess up to his failed foreign policy, and maybe wash the feet of some Bangladeshis as atonement.

But he won't do that because he doesn't care about Hindus he just says things for power.

Hindus in BD are being killed because they are not Muslims.

And Muslims here are making fun of it.

That's the true face.
 
Not entirely true.
It all started with the hatred of India among Bangladeshis and that happened much before Modi came on the scene.

India may have liberated Bangladesh in 1971, but did nothing to nurture and build relations with the new country. Bangladesh has been asking India to demarcate the borders and finalise water sharing, among other things. But the f*tards in Delhi have been ignoring them.

Meanwhile, the Jamaat-e-Islami, in cahoots with Pakistan's ISI, has been actively spreading anti-India sentiment in Bangladesh since 1971, while Delhi was napping away. The foundations were laid right then. Now all that has come home to roost.

No point in blaming Modi. He has been trying to clean up the garbage he inherited from his predecessors since he came to power. If Modi's foreign policy was to blame, India wouldn't have such excellent relations with other muslim countries.
Will start with your last line first. For all of his faults I don't think Modi is stupid enough to have foreign policy dictated by any religious bias. He tries to do what is best for India first. The issue with Bangladesh is regional not religious from the Indian perspective.

Since 71 Bangladesh has mainly had governments propped up by India. Bangladeshis feel India has propped up Hasina in 2014, 2018 and most recently.

Modi made several blunders recently. First by backing Hasina all the way even though it was clear she was a lame duck. Now by holding onto her for so long they are further increasing anti India sentiment. The whole strategy has flopped and the last few months have been an own goal especially being lumbered with Hasina with no plan to move her on somewhere and wipe their hands from the situation.
 
Hindus in BD are being killed because they are not Muslims.

And Muslims here are making fun of it.

That's the true face.
You have wiped your hands from your brothers.

Rather than even mention anything to try and alleviate the suffering caused by your country to your co-coreligionists you have resorted to your usual Muslim bashing.
 
You have wiped your hands from your brothers.

Rather than even mention anything to try and alleviate the suffering caused by your country to your co-coreligionists you have resorted to your usual Muslim bashing.
Yeah how dare you muslim bash @cricketjoshila don't you know it's the Hindus that are killing each other in Bangladesh...
 
Modi made several blunders recently. First by backing Hasina all the way even though it was clear she was a lame duck. Now by holding onto her for so long they are further increasing anti India sentiment. The whole strategy has flopped and the last few months have been an own goal especially being lumbered with Hasina with no plan to move her on somewhere and wipe their hands from the situation.

It is unlikely that anyone will accept her now, it seems she may have become a permanent resident of India.
 
It is unlikely that anyone will accept her now, it seems she may have become a permanent resident of India.
A major miscalculation. They should have thought of a way of moving her on before taking her in.
 
It is the Congress and their worthless governments before 2014 that are largely responsible for the anti-India sentiment in Bangladesh. If the Indian governments had played the cards properly after 1971, we wouldn't have had this problem today.

It is up to the BJP and Modi to clean up the mess now. But the anti-India sentiment won't go away so easily. So we are going to have to deal with it. The hindus in BD are going to be the worst affected.

By playing cards carefully you mean Congress should have befriended Islamists in Bangladesh and allowed for Hindus to be butchered on the streets like they are being subject to today?

If anything Congress delayed the inevitable.
 
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By playing cards carefully you mean Congress should have befriended Islamists in Bangladesh and allowed for Hindus to be butchered on the streets like they are being subject to today?

If anything Congress delayed the inevitable. This was always going to happen because guess what ? An uneducated and poor Muslim
Majority country
Not befriended Islamists. If India had kept its eye on Bangladesh since 1971 and nurtured relations with them, it could have had more power and could have done much more to save the hindus from any Islamists there. It could have also prevented the Pak supported anti-India sentiment from spreading far and wide. Because of what India did instead, it has no friends or any leverage in BD today, and no power to save the hindus. So the BD Hindus have been left alone to deal with the Islamists.
 
In Islam the only second grade human being is the one who puts race above his deen. So that would apply to Pakistanis, Indians and Bangladeshis alike depending on if the cap fits.
 
Sadly it's because of Modis failed foreign policy in Bangladesh that Bangladeshi Hindus are being treated in this way. They are wrongly seen as Modis men and foreign agents rather than Bangladeshi citizens.

He can't clean up the mess he himself has created.

Best way to clean this up is for Modi to publicly apologize, fess up to his failed foreign policy, and maybe wash the feet of some Bangladeshis as atonement.

But he won't do that because he doesn't care about Hindus he just says things for power.

Modi already said in twitter to protect hindus in Bangladesh while wishing the new PM.

What else you expected him to do? Open the damn so that Bangladesh gets flooded?

:rabada2
 
In Islam the only second grade human being is the one who puts race above his deen. So that would apply to Pakistanis, Indians and Bangladeshis alike depending on if the cap fits.

Pakistan is not an Islamic nation.
It’s a barely a nation.
 
Agreed in principle, in reality it is surprisingly functional though despite the lack of sincere leadership for decades.

It’s just qudrat ka karishma.
Otherwise there’s no logic behind Pakistan function in 2024. Bitter but true.
 
Modi is PM of India not outsiders. Wonder why pakistanis feel a need to talk about him.
If you find yourself immediately upset by any criticism of Modi, consider taking a step back. Isolating yourself from differing opinions or perspectives by avoiding news or online forums may seem like an option, but it’s crucial to remember that , criticism of political leaders, be it Modi or any other politician, is both natural and necessary. It's important to respect the right of individuals, from any part of the world, to express their viewpoints.
 

Bangladesh ethnic violence: Buddhist monks, Chakma students take out protest rallies in Agartala to restore peace in CHT​


Days after violence broke out in parts of Chittagong Hill Tracts (CHT) of neighbouring Bangladesh, a series of protests rocked Agartala on Saturday against purported violence on Hindus, Buddhists and other indigenous communities there, especially arson and violence in areas such as Rangamati, Khagrachari, Dighinala areas.

Buddhist monks, holding placards and banners condemning the alleged attacks on Buddhists shrines, walked through all major streets of the city demanding a peaceful life for Buddhists and all other minorities in Bangladesh. They also protested against the attacks by “foreign settlers” and the “army”, alongwith alleged looting and vandalism of Buddha statue at Banrupa Maitri Vihar there.

According to Bangladesh news reports, at least seven people were killed and several others injured in the ethnic clash that broke out between indigenous Chakma and Bengali residents in CHT, bordering India and Myanmar. Hundreds of houses have also been burnt in the violence, the reports said. However, the protesters claim there have been 67 casualties so far.


short article insertA Buddhist monk from the Tripura Rajya of Raimavalley Bhikkhu Sangha who joined the protest in front of Venuban Bihar Buddhabandir at Agartala, told reporters that Buddhists who are minority in Bangladesh are facing extensive torture. “Buddhist temples are destroyed there. We want justice. So, we have gathered together to register our call for peace and justice and are holding a peace march here,” he said.

Source: Indian Express
 
In a major blow to Bangladesh, PM Modi refused to meet their leader in USA for everything the Hindus went through in Bangladesh recently at the hands of the Islamist mob.
I was under impression that all indian neighbours are trying to isolate india as per pp. Pak is requesting us for ct and bng a meeting. Strange
 
Confidential nature hence cannot be shared in public.
You are a brother so I will be respectful but the stronger is interpretation of these events based on limited data available is Modi chickened out of the meeting and run away from NY instead of looking eye to eye with Younus bhai
 
You are a brother so I will be respectful but the stronger is interpretation of these events based on limited data available is Modi chickened out of the meeting and run away from NY instead of looking eye to eye with Younus bhai


I think Modi believes in the media a bit too much. He thought this BDeshi is it to kill me, and refused to meet him.

By the way, I have not looked at the news coming from BD too closely lately. Any further reports of the purported Hindu genocide going on there? Is it still ongoing or are they taking a break from it?
 
I think Modi believes in the media a bit too much. He thought this BDeshi is it to kill me, and refused to meet him.

By the way, I have not looked at the news coming from BD too closely lately. Any further reports of the purported Hindu genocide going on there? Is it still ongoing or are they taking a break from it?
There was some news that they found an Indian citizen who was breaking the statues in the Hindu temples. Seems like he was a RAW operative but there is some locals involved in desecration of religious buildings too.

However, unlike @uppercut I don't believe that there is such a thing as being provoked into rioting so we shouldn't give the Bangladeshi rioters any cover. Even one attack on a religious building is one too many and we should remember what the Quran tells us that Allah told the Bani Israel - That is why We ordained for the Children of Israel that whoever takes a life—unless as a punishment for murder or mischief in the land—it will be as if they killed all of humanity; and whoever saves a life, it will be as if they saved all of humanity

Even the death of 1 of our innocent Hindu brothers we should consider it and condemn it as they killed all of humanity.
 
In a major blow to Bangladesh, PM Modi refused to meet their leader in USA for everything the Hindus went through in Bangladesh recently at the hands of the Islamist mob.

Well done PM Modi ji. The nation firmly stands behind you.


Dr. Yunus shouldn't attempt to meet with chaiwala Modi. There are far more important leaders who he can meet.

Modi can play Carrom with Hasina.
 
There was some news that they found an Indian citizen who was breaking the statues in the Hindu temples. Seems like he was a RAW operative but there is some locals involved in desecration of religious buildings too.

However, unlike @uppercut I don't believe that there is such a thing as being provoked into rioting so we shouldn't give the Bangladeshi rioters any cover. Even one attack on a religious building is one too many and we should remember what the Quran tells us that Allah told the Bani Israel - That is why We ordained for the Children of Israel that whoever takes a life—unless as a punishment for murder or mischief in the land—it will be as if they killed all of humanity; and whoever saves a life, it will be as if they saved all of humanity

Even the death of 1 of our innocent Hindu brothers we should consider it and condemn it as they killed all of humanity.

There is no Hindu genocide in Bangladesh. Isolated cases are not the norms.

These incidents happen throughout the subcontinent. It happens in India; it happens in Sri Lanka; it happens in Nepal; it happens in Pakistan; it also sometimes happens in Bangladesh. There are idiots in every country.

Only BJP lunatics call it a Hindu genocide because they have an agenda.
 
There is no Hindu genocide in Bangladesh. Isolated cases are not the norms.

These incidents happen throughout the subcontinent. It happens in India; it happens in Sri Lanka; it happens in Nepal; it happens in Pakistan; it also sometimes happens in Bangladesh. There are idiots in every country.

Only BJP lunatics call it a Hindu genocide because they have an agenda.
We can throw the opinion of BJP lunatics in the bin. They are crazy zealots who want to normalise killing of Muslims.

I am speaking as a Muslim that when when even 1 Hindu minority dies in Bangladesh it should make us sad and we should condemn it and ensure it never becomes normal.

Otherwise we will become like the BJP lunatics who cheer for the murder of others.
 
We can throw the opinion of BJP lunatics in the bin. They are crazy zealots who want to normalise killing of Muslims.

I am speaking as a Muslim that when when even 1 Hindu minority dies in Bangladesh it should make us sad and we should condemn it and ensure it never becomes normal.

Otherwise we will become like the BJP lunatics who cheer for the murder of others.

Any attack on an innocent person (doesn't matter what religion the person follows) should be condemned. I agree.

Vast majority of Bangladeshi Muslims condemn it and do not do these things.
 
Dr. Yunus shouldn't attempt to meet with chaiwala Modi. There are far more important leaders who he can meet.

Modi can play Carrom with Hasina.

Well , she’s being taken full care of because nobody fulfils dosti quite like a Bharatiya



IMG_6147.jpeg
 
While Bangladeshis are desperately lining up to get Indian visas, People are making big talk.
 
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991 Durga puja mandaps to be built in Khulna this year

A total of 991 Durga puja mandaps will be built across Khulna district this year.
The decision was made during a meeting at the office of the Khulna Deputy Commissioner Mohammed Saiful Islam yesterday.
Of the total mandaps, 101 will be built in the city, 113 in Batiaghata, 214 in Dumuria, 107 in Terokhada, 155 in Paikgacha, 84 in Dakop, 63 in Digholia, 34 in Phultala, 74 in Rupsa, and 46 in Koyra upazilas.

The Puja Udjapan Parishad leaders have been requested to increase patrolling in remote areas before the celebrations commence, reports our local correspondent.

According to DC Saiful, home and religious affairs ministries have promised to enhance security during the yearly festival -- the biggest religious occasion celebrated by the Bangalee Hindu community.

Ansar members will be deployed at all places of worship, while joint forces, including the army, navy, coast guard, and police, will patrol the area throughout the duration of the festival.

Closed-circuit cameras will be installed at mandaps to bolster security, and measures will be taken to address the spread of rumours on social media.

"The immersion ceremony is expected to be completed by 7:00pm. Music at puja mandaps will be paused during azan and namaz hours. Meanwhile, special surveillance teams have been formed, which will remain active 24/7 at the DC, UNO, and police super's offices," added the DC.
 
Sorry, just saw this. The girl is saying that the teacher said us you show your bodies, that's why boys get attracted. That's why Hindu girls are having trouble getting married now a days. Then the teacher ordered them to come wearing hijab from the next day. Then the teacher asked about whether they have read Gita or not. He said that Muslims read Quran but hindus don't read Gita. Then he asked them why do they worship idols. Another girl who is probably married said that the teacher had problems with her wearing sankha-sindoor.
 
Heres a good article by Bloomberg on the reaity on the ground now .
Not sure what Sweep_Shot has to say about this .


By Kai Schultz

September 27, 2024 at 4:00 AM UTC

Soon after student protesters dramatically took down Bangladesh’s government last month, a group of boys broke into the home of Tureen Afroz, the former chief prosecutor of a tribunal for war crimes committed during the nation’s independence movement in the early 1970s.They burst into her bedroom, interrogated her about why she wasn’t wearing a hijab — a head covering worn by some Muslim women — and then proceeded to shave her head. For days, the youths kept her hostage, stabbing her with pencils and lecturing her about Islam. Afroz worried that they’d rape her young daughter. “I thought they’d kill me,” she said, recalling the incident from her house in Dhaka, the capital. “We were terrified.” Bangladesh, home to the world’s fourth-largest Muslim population, is now at a critical turning point. Western and Indian officials fear Islamist extremists are on the verge of gaining a foothold in a volatile part of the world where terrorist networks like the Islamic State have made advances in recent years. Higher tensions in the Middle East, with Israel fighting Hamas and threatening a ground invasion of Lebanon, provide a ripe environment for recruitment.

The ouster of former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina after 15 years of increasingly authoritarian rule initially spurred hopes that the nation would embrace a new era of democracy and clean government. The army reinforced that optimism by tapping Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus, a friend of Hillary Clinton who pioneered microcredit to the poor, to lead an interim government.Protesters waving Bangladesh's flag stormed Sheikh Hasina's palace in August.Yet Hasina’s downfall also reopened old wounds stemming from a genocide half a century ago that has fueled extremism and shaped Bangladesh’s politics ever since. Despite her flaws, Hasina was praised by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in particular for keeping Islamists at bay and providing a moderate foil to Pakistan, where terrorist groups have found safe haven for decades. Muhammad Yunus, the head of Bangladesh’s interim government, at an oath-taking ceremony. As many as 3 million Bengalis were killed in the 1971 struggle to break free from Pakistan, while another 10 million people — mostly in the Hindu minority — fled to neighboring India. Hasina, whose father served as Bangladesh’s first president before his assassination, sought to prosecute those responsible for acts of genocide after she took power in 2009, including figures associated with her Islamist political rivals such as Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami.

In recent weeks, revenge-style attacks against Hasina’s supporters and religious minorities have proliferated. Lawlessness rules Dhaka, where embassies are running with reduced staff, teenagers have helped direct traffic and police stations are burned-out shells. Thousands of Hindus have already tried to flee into a sensitive sliver of India that borders Tibet and Myanmar — and has a long association with armed rebel groups.“These kind of post-revolutionary environments are incredibly contingent,” said Paul Staniland, a professor at the University of Chicago who studies international security. “There’s a risk that a meaningful opening will persist for Islamist groups to operate within a deeply uncertain political environment.”What happens next is unclear. The army, which forced Hasina out after refusing her orders to shoot at protesters, has said it wants democratic elections within a year and a half, though that timeline isn’t definite. Bangladesh’s once-promising economy, built on the world’s second-largest garments industry, needs at least $3 billion of emergency aid from the International Monetary Fund — and could soon become a bailout candidate.

Months of curfews and deadly street protests have disrupted operations for fast-fashion brands like Zara, Gap and H&M. Exporters expect as much as a 20% decline in sales this year and some labels are already planning to produce elsewhere next season. And the threat of sectarian violence is growing. About a decade ago, extremists affiliated with Islamist groups began hunting down secular bloggers in Bangladesh with machetes. In 2016, several militants — most with cosmopolitan backgrounds — opened fire on Holey Artisan Bakery, an upscale restaurant in Dhaka, picking out non-Muslims and killing more than a dozen foreigners. Hasina responded with force, banning Jamaat-e-Islami — a fundamentalist Islamic group — and sentencing the ringleader of the blogger murders to death.

After Hasina fled to India on Aug. 5, masked men set Hindu temples ablaze and decapitated statues depicting secular icons like the poet Rabindranath Tagore. A letter circulated at the University of Dhaka instructing female professors to wear “traditional clothing.” The ban on Jamaat-e-Islami — which has previously allied with the Awami League’s bigger political rival, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party — was lifted. And a memorial for the police officers who died defending Holey Artisan Bakery was recently smashed and replaced with a poster for a fundamentalist group.Statues depicting secular icons were vandalized at the University of Dhaka.With the backing of Bangladesh’s military, students who led the movement to topple Hasina recruited Yunus to clean up the mess. For years, Hasina publicly castigated the economist, accusing him of “sucking blood” from the poor through his microcredit programs. Under Hasina, Yunus faced life imprisonment for money laundering and graft, charges that were dropped soon after the change in leadership.
Yunus, who declined an interview, has condemned the blood-letting and expressed confidence that he can restore order “within a short period of time.” But he has little formal experience navigating the life-or-death politics of Bangladesh, which has seen more than two dozen military coups since its founding. His advisers, a handpicked team of 19, are largely academics, activists and students — far removed from the biography of figures like Hasina, who has survived multiple assassination attempts. “Yunus doesn’t seem to have much control, much actual power,” said Sajeeb Wazed, Hasina’s son. Since the fall of the government, he said, Islamists and related groups have piggy-backed off the protest movement to capture power in institutions.

In Dhaka, a sprawling city dominated by murals about the revolution, it’s hard to know who’s in charge. Though technically in Hasina’s seat, Yunus has spent much of his time holed up in a fortified guest house typically used by visiting heads of state, where he’s living and working because the official residence for prime ministers was ransacked. Separated from family and colleagues, Yunus is trailed by military personnel everywhere he goes, including up the spiral staircase to his bedroom.

People close to Yunus say he accepted the chief adviser position because he felt he had no choice. By the time students approached him about the job, several hundred protesters had already died in skirmishes with the police and army. The volume of demands foisted on Yunus so quickly has exasperated the economist, who uses the phrase “expectations management” to describe his approach to the role.Patience is a hard sell in Bangladesh these days. Hasina’s political rivals are eager to hold a national vote as soon as possible. Student leaders aren’t so keen. They want Yunus and his team to reform the Election Commission — and ensure a free and fair process — before Bangladeshis head to the polls. How long the impasse will last is anyone’s guess. Yunus has resisted casting himself in the role of mediator. His advisers say they’d likely need at least a year to enact substantive change. High on their list are addressing slowing growth and the dearth of quality jobs, the genesis of many of the initial protests.

Hasina was widely credited with lifting millions out of poverty through building out a $47 billion garment exports industry. But her administration likely overstated the strength of Bangladesh’s economy, releasing inaccurate data on exports, inflation and gross domestic product, according to Debapriya Bhattacharya, an economist preparing a white paper for Yunus analyzing these anomalies. In an interview, Bhattacharya said Hasina sold out the government to corporate interests, pointing to Bangladesh’s tax-to-GDP ratio of around 8%, less than half that of neighboring India and one of the lowest in the world. This month, the country increased a key policy rate by half a percentage point to fight decade-high inflation. Bangladesh’s central bank said it’ll need more than $5 billion of emergency aid beyond $4.7 billion it already secured from the IMF last year. “They gave money to their cronies,” Bhattacharya said of Hasina’s administration. “Oligarchs sustained this regime, but at one point in time the government lost its autonomy.” For Hasina’s supporters, the vigilantism of the past few weeks is evidence that the prime minister’s tough approach to governance was necessary. Politics is personal in Bangladesh. In the 1970s, while Hasina was abroad, most of her family was murdered in a military coup. She’s long suspected the involvement of the BNP and the husband of her fiercest rival, former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia, who has denied involvement.

In recent days, dozens of Awami League leaders — along with business tycoons and journalists who were considered their allies — have been charged with crimes, including genocide. A former Supreme Court justice, and sharp-tongued critic of the protest movement, was beaten by a mob while trying to cross into India on foot. Hasina’s ministers have been mostly driven underground, popping their heads up to question why a student movement built on respect for human rights is now ignoring theirs.
For weeks, Hasina has kept a low profile around Delhi, where she’s believed to be under the watch of the Indian government, a close ally. In a statement, she called for an investigation into “acts of sabotage, arson and violence” and vindication for those who’d “fallen victim to terrorist aggression.” Innocent people are caught in the crossfire. From a bare apartment on the outskirts of Dhaka, Aysha Begum recounted the day her husband, Faruk Molla, was murdered. Last month, a mob burst into their home and identified themselves as members of the BNP, Aysha said. They stabbed her in the head, lunged at her husband with axes and argued about whether to kill their seven-year-old son.
Faruk Molla’s wife displays his picture. Though Faruk wasn’t intimately affiliated with the Awami League, his brother was. After five hours, the mob left and burned down the house. Aysha fled to a sister’s apartment in Dhaka, where family members tense up every time the doorbell rings. “All I want from this government is justice for my husband’s murder,” said Aysha, 40, wiping tears with a red shawl. “Nothing else.” Retribution is on everybody’s mind — and it’s hard to see the cycle of violence ending anytime soon.
Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir, a senior BNP leader, denied the party’s role in the attacks, adding that officials in Hasina’s government and media outlets in India had exaggerated reports of reprisal killings and the targeting of minority Hindus, who’re often Awami League supporters. “There is no problem,” he said.

Instead, Islam highlighted Hasina’s own blotted record. Under the former prime minister, Bangladesh’s intelligence wing ran a secret prison called the “house of mirrors.” Detainees say they were kept in dark, windowless cells, sometimes for years, where they were interrogated about their criticism of Hasina. Rizwana Hasan, one of Yunus’s advisers, said the new government wants to “prove ourselves different” than Hasina’s and has already started investigating human rights abuses against minorities and others.
Hasan, a prominent environmental activist, said perhaps the only way forward is to create an entirely new political establishment freed from the rot of a state that abused its power to “harass, kill, oppress, suppress.” Years ago, Hasan’s husband was abducted under Hasina’s watch. Long after his release, he still sleeps with a light on.
“What Hasina has done is something we can’t forgive,” she said. “People are now asking for a corruption-free Bangladesh. Their demands, however long the list is, have to be met.”

On the other side is Afroz, the former war crimes prosecutor, who had her head shaved last month by Islamists because they perceived her to be a supporter of the ousted prime minister. She’s worried about the new regime and likened the current period to the fight for independence from Pakistan in the 1970s. If the extremists get their way, she said, they’ll change the country’s flag, national anthem and identity. “I don’t know what’s going to happen to Bangladesh,” Afroz said. “But I pray we’ll fight until the last drop of our blood.”
 
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On the Palestinian thread - Indians cheering for Palestinian civilians to be killed, 100,000 and its still not enough

The contrast with this thread is noticeable
 
On the Palestinian thread - Indians cheering for Palestinian civilians to be killed, 100,000 and its still not enough

The contrast with this thread is noticeable

No wonder why you guys are not being taken seriously globally.

Comparing street riots to a war
 
More power to you my Sanatani brothers in Bangladesh. We have not forgotten you and you remain in our thoughts and prayers. Help reaches those who are brave. Fight on these Islamists


What a sight! @CricketCartoons
Contrast this to the indian bengalis who are still in amnesia despite facing two bloody partitions. At least the Bangladeshi hindus have been awakened. But typical of hindus, they awake when it is very late. Till then they sleep in secular amnesia.
 
Alarming situation right now. The government of Bharat can not stay quiet when our brothers and sisters are getting bullied, murdered in Bangladesh.


Will be interested to know if he has ever posted anything similar on Hindudva Terorrists when they attack mosques on a regular basis in India (have seen numerous videos in past couple of years), attack Christians, bulldoze Muslim homes, and innocent Indian minority get butchered for selling or eating beef on a usual basis and many other events of religious extremist Hindudva troubling the minority?
 
No wonder why you guys are not being taken seriously globally.

Comparing street riots to a war

Indians take "us" seriously that's why they run to many Muslim countries to find work and bread, don't think anyone from Muslim countries even go to India :)
 
Indians take "us" seriously that's why they run to many Muslim countries to find work and bread, don't think anyone from Muslim countries even go to India :)

Saudis, Emiratis are nothing like your typical backward Muslim countries.

They’re respectful of all people and are very sensible.

In fact they have completely distanced themselves from this Hezbolllah, Hamas nonsense. Raising Palestinian slogans is actually banned in Saudi.
 
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Indians take "us" seriously that's why they run to many Muslim countries to find work and bread, don't think anyone from Muslim countries even go to India :)
Your ummah doesnt care about Palestine or any other cause. I doubt Indians are moving to Palestine to find work and bread rather they move to affluent middle east nations who doesnt even care about the ongoing conflict and are progressive.
 
Indians take "us" seriously that's why they run to many Muslim countries to find work and bread, don't think anyone from Muslim countries even go to India :)

Pakistanis again trying to climb on the shoulders of Saudis and Emiratis. India has extremely good relationship with them.

They don't get involved in the Palestine war anymore.

Talk about Pakistanis. What have you guys done for Palestine except lip service?
 
I want to thank Jinnah.

Jinnah knew the only way to save the entire sub continent from being a catastrophic failure was to keep as many muslim converts away from rest of the Bharat population.

Had the partition not happened, Bharat's population today, most likely may have been 55-45 with Hindus being a slight majority with Bharat facing a disasterous situation due to the higher convert population.

Jinnah led partition proved that muslims in majority in the sub continent are a utter failure, corrupt, non tolerant and will be a failure till the end of time.

Thank you again for the creation of Pakistan and Bangladesh...
 

As sweepy said,this is definitely one off as there is only one crown
 
While Trump definitely is better for Hindus compared to Kamala but that’s like choosing between A shark or an aligator for Hindus.

Maybe Indian Hindus like him better.
 
Whatever is happening in Bangladesh is setting precedent for Bharat to do the same.

You cannot have a situation where hindus are being persecuted everywhere in the world while in their homeland they have to deal with minorities with two hands tied up in the name of secularism.

I’m short, Bharat does not have to bear the weight of secularism and be a flag bearer of it for the rest of the world.

Every major nation was built on the name of one major religion.
 
Also, Bharat must prepare to attack some of its neighbours with poor track record of dealing with Hindus and reclaim a good portion of their lands in the name of Sanatan.

Once again, Bharat does not have to abide by any U.N. laws while every major country out there has taken more land in their prime in the name of their dominant religion.
 


Communal tensions are escalating in Bangladesh as the Chittagong-based Islamist outfit Hefazat-e-Islam called for a ban on the International Society for Krishna Consciousness or ISKCON. According to author Taslima Nasreen's social media post on Friday, the group was heard chanting violent slogans, such as “Catch one ISKCON, then slaughter,” during a recent rally in Chattogram.

 
India scored a real own goal here.

Now even the Bangladeshi Hindus have given up on India and instead are pleading directly with Tulsi and Trump knowing that after causing this mess Modi has raised his arms in defeat.
 
This is so sick.am not sure how the country can be so idiotic and bigot .All they want is religion expansion and let people die.

This seems to have changed over the period of the last decade or so. Prior to the last election many Indian posters were using BD's economic success as a form of Pakistan bashing. But from what I heard the partnership was mostly one sided with India striking deals with BD which heavily favoured them ahead of Bangladesh interests.
 
This seems to have changed over the period of the last decade or so. Prior to the last election many Indian posters were using BD's economic success as a form of Pakistan bashing. But from what I heard the partnership was mostly one sided with India striking deals with BD which heavily favoured them ahead of Bangladesh interests.

I honestly don't know why Indians are so concerned who is in power in BD. This is for Bangladeshi people to decide.

Hasina was only good for India and not for BD.

The so-called economic growth was a bit of a mirage. Hasina and her party have looted Billions of Dollars.
 
This seems to have changed over the period of the last decade or so. Prior to the last election many Indian posters were using BD's economic success as a form of Pakistan bashing. But from what I heard the partnership was mostly one sided with India striking deals with BD which heavily favoured them ahead of Bangladesh interests.
As usual nice tactics to deflect. those guys are sick and their mentality is beyond pathetic .
 
As usual nice tactics to deflect. those guys are sick and their mentality is beyond pathetic .


I enjoyed the slapping Modi rhythmically on his cheeks with shoes part tbh.

But I agree the demolition of the Mandir part isnt right.

Anyway do you think India meddling with Bangladesh was also sick, or are you just annoyed that now they want to meddle in return?
 
I enjoyed the slapping Modi rhythmically on his cheeks with shoes part tbh.

But I agree the demolition of the Mandir part isnt right.

Anyway do you think India meddling with Bangladesh was also sick, or are you just annoyed that now they want to meddle in return?
Am annoyed at the part of conversion bro .it's not good to live a life dedicated for conversion of other religion or killing others.they should bother about their family ,kids and family economic /educational progress. It's not about religion. It's not a good cause to die or kill.they are behaving like fanatics and borderline terrorism. Sadly this is almost 2025 and still harping on demolition of a religion saddens me
 
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