1023
Published on August 2, 2025One year of the Yunus government has unfolded as a barbaric chapter of minority persecution in Bangladesh. Is Bangladesh still an independent nation? Or has it turned into a Taliban-style horror state—where being a minority means facing death, rape, or forced exile?
From August 2024 to August 2025, what has occurred in Bangladesh surpasses even the atrocities committed by Pakistani forces during 1971. Under the direct patronage and protection of the Yunus regime, a coordinated campaign of religious cleansing, ethnic persecution, and planned genocide of minority communities has taken place across the country.
What has Bangladesh gained during this time? It has suffered the venom of tyrannical rule, the spread of religious extremism, the rise of fundamentalist frenzy, blueprints for minority annihilation—and state silence in the face of it all.
The Yunus government’s rule has marked the rise of a cruel, communal state—where being a minority is a crime, and religious identity itself evokes terror. Over this past year, minorities have been subjected to planned and continuous terror: fanatics have attacked temples, raped women, abducted girls, burned homes—all while the state remained monstrously silent.
Statistics speak for themselves: One year soaked in the blood of minorities under Yunus
2,442 incidents of persecution (Aug 2024 – Jun 2025):
→ Rape, murder, arson, temple vandalism, land grabs—all carried out under the silent protection of the state.
1,452 attacks on a single day—August 5 alone!
→ Such barbarism in a day shows this regime is orchestrating a religious purge.
2,010 attacks in just 16 days:
→ 69 temples targeted, 157 Hindu families and businesses destroyed.
First six months of 2025:
→ 27 minorities killed, 20 cases of rape or sexual violence, and 59 attacks on religious institutions.
So now, is being a minority synonymous with terror?
From Barishal to Thakurgaon, from Khilkhet to Cumilla—minority homes are burning, and faith is being reduced to ashes!
In Bisharkandi, Barishal, terrorists threatened a Hindu family with murder and carried out a violent assault.
In Habiganj, brilliant college student Monpriya Sarkar was abducted and made to disappear.
In Cumilla, a Hindu woman was stripped and gang-raped inside her home—while the state remained silent.
In Khilkhet, the government forces demolished a Durga temple.
In Thakurgaon’s Mansa temple, idols were smashed, the site set ablaze, and threats of exile issued.
Behind these atrocities lies the Yunus administration, driven by fundamentalist ideology and a communal state agenda.
State-sponsored extremism and impunity: Hindus, Buddhists, Christians—none are safe!
Despite proclaiming secularism, the Yunus regime has opened the gates for radical Islamist forces. Hate speech and incitement now echo in Qawmi madrasas, Friday sermons, and even within the military.
Army personnel mock the “Hare Krishna” mantra, disrespecting temples and sacred beliefs. The Officer-in-Charge in Lalmonirhat openly threatens minorities with execution—is this what rule of law looks like?
This is a blueprint for ethnic cleansing.
The Yunus government has revived the horrors of 1971’s Hindu genocide. Today, it’s not just about political opposition—religious identity alone invites murder and rape.
This regime has proven beyond doubt:
Bangladesh today is a safe haven for religious extremists, and a deadly graveyard for its minorities. Yunus’s rule is nothing but the rise of a new invader—masked in fundamentalism.