Several killed as Modi's Bangladesh visit sparks violent protests

At least four protesters are shot dead in Chittagong port city during clash between police and demonstrators protesting against Indian PM Narendra Modi's controversial visit to join celebrations of Bangladesh's Independence Day.

Activists clash with the police as they protest against the visit of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Dhaka on March 26, 2021.
AFP

Activists clash with the police as they protest against the visit of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Dhaka on March 26, 2021.

Four protesters have been shot dead in Bangladesh's Chittagong port city in violent demonstrations over Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's controversial tour to capital Dhaka.

Police said on Friday that four bodies of members of Hefazat-e-Islam, a religious group, were brought to Chittagong Medical College Hospital after violence erupted at Hathazari, a rural town where the group's main leaders are based.

"We got four bodies here. They are all hit with bullets. Three of them are madrasa students and another a tailor," Alauddin Talukder, a police inspector at the hospital, told AFP news agency.

He did not say who opened fire at the demonstrations.

Dozens of protesters were wounded in Chittagong port city while some 50 others were wounded in Dhaka, witnesses say. 

PM Modi is visiting Bangladesh to join celebrations marking 50 years of the country's independence.

READ MORE: Bangladesh police use force to break anti-Modi protests in Dhaka

Violent protests 

The right-wing Indian leader's visit sparked demonstrations at Dhaka's main mosque that were dispersed by police using bullets and tear gas, wounding scores of people, after clashes broke out between groups of demonstrators, officials and witnesses said on Friday. 

Critics accuse Modi’s Hindu-nationalist party of stoking religious polarisation in India and discriminating against minorities, particularly Muslims.

Modi's two-day visit, his first abroad since the coronavirus pandemic began last year, will include commemorating 100 years since the birth of Bangladeshi independence leader Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the father of current Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina.

Hasina, a key partner for India in maintaining regional stability, welcomed Modi at Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport in Dhaka on Friday morning.

By Friday afternoon, hundreds of protesters had gathered outside the Baitul Mokarram mosque. 

READ MORE: India's far-right links Covid-19 outbreak to a Muslim congregation

Rival protests

Witnesses said violent clashes broke out after one faction of protesters began waving their shoes as a sign of disrespect to Modi, and another group tried to stop them.

Local media said the protesters who tried to stop the shoe-waving are aligned with the ruling Awami League party. The party criticised the other protest faction for attempting to create chaos in the country during Modi’s visit.

Local TV showed protesters throwing stones at the police, who were heavily present on the streets near the mosque. Somoy TV reported that at least 40 people were injured, including journalists, and were taken to the Dhaka Medical College Hospital for treatment.

Abdul Mazid, a businessman who joined the prayer, told The Associated Press that he was trapped in the mosque after trying to flee when violence erupted during the prayer.

"I had a feeling that something was going to happen. I am still inside the mosque," he said by phone. "There is huge violence, I can see from here."

A police official said members of several Islamist groups had joined the protests, but it was not immediately clear which groups they were representing. The official spoke on condition of anonymity in line with regulations. He declined to give any figures for how many people were injured.

READ MORE: 73 years on, violence is reimagined in Modi's India

Modi's eye on Hindu support in key state

While Modi’s trip is mainly focused on Bangladesh's anniversary celebrations, the visit also has a political agenda at home, as voting begins on Saturday in several state-level elections, including West Bengal, which borders Bangladesh.

With an eye on galvanizing Hindu support in the key battleground state, Modi is set to visit a Hindu temple outside Dhaka that is sacred to the Matua community back in West Bengal. The Matua sect’s vote is expected to determine the winner of at least seven seats in a close race for control of the state assembly.

Modi, in a tweet late on Thursday ahead of his trip, said the two countries share a vital relationship.

"Our partnership with Bangladesh is an important pillar of our Neighborhood First policy, and we are committed to further deepen and diversify it. We will continue to support Bangladesh’s remarkable development journey, under Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s dynamic leadership," he said.

In recent weeks, demonstrators have urged the Indian leader not to come to Bangladesh and chanted anti-India and anti-Modi slogans. 

Student protesters called Modi "the butcher of Gujarat." Others carried signs reading "Go Back Modi, Go Back India," and "Go Back Killer Modi."

Modi was chief minister in the western state of Gujarat in 2002 when anti-Muslim riots left more than 1,000 people dead, mostly Muslims.

Allegations that authorities allowed and even encouraged the bloodshed have long followed Modi, who has repeatedly denied having any role. India's Supreme Court has said it found no evidence to prosecute him.

READ MORE: Modi's BJP moves to block Muslim refugees from getting Indian nationality

Hasina criticised 

The protesters also criticised Hasina for inviting Modi, saying the two countries have many unresolved disputes. 

The protesters accuse Modi and his Hindu-nationalist party of discriminating against Muslims, such as a controversial 2019 amendment to the citizenship law.

They’ve also criticised the killings of Bangladeshis by Indian border guards. India says such casualties happen when Bangladeshis are involved in cross-border smuggling and attempt to cross the border illegally.

READ MORE: Why India's Muslim truckers and aid workers fighting Covid-19 face attacks

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