Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    News Analysis India
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • World
    • India
      • Chhattisgarh
      • Jharkhand
      • Madhya Pradesh
      • Bihar
    • Sports
    • Tech
    • Entertainment
    • Business
    • Health
    News Analysis India
    Home»World»Rising Attacks on Women and Hindus Threaten Bangladesh Elections
    World

    Rising Attacks on Women and Hindus Threaten Bangladesh Elections

    News Analysis IndiaBy News Analysis IndiaJanuary 17, 20262 Mins Read
    WhatsApp Facebook Twitter Copy Link Reddit Threads Email
    Rising Attacks on Women and Hindus Threaten Bangladesh Elections
    Share
    Copy Link WhatsApp Twitter Facebook Telegram Threads Email

    With general elections set for February 12, Bangladesh grapples with escalating violence against women and Hindu minorities, exposing cracks in the interim government’s stability under Muhammad Yunus. The surge underscores a failure to protect vulnerable groups as the country prepares for its first post-Hasina vote.

    Citing official police records, Human Rights Watch reports a marked increase in gender violence from early 2025 onward. Shubhajeet Saha of HRW attributes this to hardline religious factions opposing women’s empowerment initiatives. Their May backlash against government reforms triggered a wave of harassment—verbal, physical, and cyber—stifling female voices nationwide.

    This comes against a backdrop of minority persecution. A December mob killing of Dipuchandra Das over blasphemy claims exemplifies the dangers, with 51 documented Hindu-targeted incidents, 10 fatal. In Chittagong Hill Tracts, ethnic groups endure security force excesses even after the revolution.

    Despite trailblazing women leaders and active roles in 2024 protests, political parties shun female nominees. Thirty of 51 parties offer no women tickets; Jamaat-e-Islami’s 276 candidates are all male. Experts warn of record-low female participation, branding it a democratic setback.

    A Dhaka forum this week, attended by civil society heavyweights from Nari Uddug Kendra to Voice for Reform, slammed the Election Commission’s inclusive talk as empty. Activists reject quota seats, pushing for open competition to prove women’s mettle.

    The interim regime’s human rights record now hangs in the balance. As polls approach, addressing these assaults isn’t just a moral imperative—it’s key to restoring trust in Bangladesh’s fragile transition to democracy.

    Bangladesh Elections Gender violence Hindu attacks Human Rights Watch Jamaat-e-Islami Muhammad Yunus Religious minorities Women candidates
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram Email Copy Link Reddit WhatsApp Threads

    Related News

    Severe Flood Warnings Hit Romania with Arctic Blast

    World February 6, 2026

    Wang Yi’s Key Speech at China’s 2026 New Year Diplomacy Event

    World February 6, 2026

    China Launches World’s Largest 20MW Offshore Wind Power Giant

    World February 6, 2026

    Chinese Envoy: Military AI Governance Key to Global Shared Future

    World February 6, 2026

    PM Modi Malaysia Visit: Indian Community Preps Grand Welcome Events

    World February 6, 2026

    Pakistan Debt Crisis: 70.7% GDP Burden Breaches Legal Caps

    World February 6, 2026
    -Advertisement-
    News Analysis India
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • About
    • Contact
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
    © 2026 News Analysis India. All Rights Reserved

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.