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The photos, verified to be authentic photos taken after government action at Shapla Chattar last night, shows the demise of the chances of a peaceful and democratic transition of power in Bangladesh. You will see most of the dead were simply hiding or running away and shot while trying to run. These photos herald the end of a democratic era of non-bloody power transfer that started with the election of 1991. After doing these, no one in sane mind will leave power willingly.

http://alalodulal.org/2013/05/06/end-of-an-era/
 
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@CaPtAiN_pLaNeT

I am not sure if you saw my reply to your earlier post as both got deleted. So just wanted you to know that I posted that video without watching it till the end, now I have replaced it.
 
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@CaPtAiN_pLaNeT

I am not sure if you saw my reply to your earlier post as both got deleted. So just wanted you to know that I posted that video without watching it till the end, now I have replaced it.

dekh ke post kiya ker jaani . BTW i liked it but only last 1 minute was radiclus .
 
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dekh ke post kiya ker jaani . BTW i liked it but only last 1 minute was radiclus .

Yes I should have watched it fully before posting. I didn't watch it because I had already seen it on the BBC website before.
 
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At least 36 people were killed and 60 injured as police fought running battles with thousands of Islamic fundamentalists in the Bangladesh capital of Dhaka today.

dhaka-fire_2555174c.jpg


The protestors are calling for the death penalty for blasphemy, and for a number of “atheist bloggers” - who published posts demanding tougher action against war criminals - to be hung.
Four bloggers have been arrested for offending “religious sentiments”. Sheikh Hasina’s Awami League government has rejected demands for tougher blasphemy sentences, however, and banned protests in Dhaka until midnight tonight. The leader of the Hefazat-e Islami group behind the protests, which accounts for just two per cent of the country’s schools, was today ordered to leave the capital as police tried to contain the violence.
The clashes are the latest to grip the Bangladeshi capital in recent months as political tensions have intensified in the run-up to next January’s elections, and amid strong Islamic opposition to the government’s inquiry into war crimes committed during the 1971 liberation war when the country broke away from Pakistan.

A number of opposition groups have called general strikes to demand a caretaker government to oversee the general election campaign later this year, while others launched a series of demonstrations at Shahbagh, Dhaka, in February to call for convicted war criminals to face the death penalty.
The latest demonstrations mark the opening of a third front in the Awami League government’s troubles. Police chiefs and officials moved quickly to try to end the protests and suppress sympathetic media coverage. A pro-Islamic television station, Diganta, was shut down after it broadcast footage of running battles between police and demonstrators, with the government accusing the station of inciting religious tension in the country. The station is owned by an Islamic party leader accused of war crimes.
Imtiaz Ahmed, Professor of International Relations at Dhaka University said Hefazet e Islami could become a significant group if the two main polical parties, the Awami League and the Bangladesh National Party, fail to resolve their differences over the appointment of a caretaker government for the duration of the election campaign later this year.
“Much of what happens, I think, depends on how quickly the two major parties can settle their election differences in particular the process of holding next elections. If there is delay, the space will be there this kind of violence or something similiar and Hefazet will probably try to exploit the situation,” he said.

36 killed in Dhaka as Islamic militants clash with police - Telegraph

Islam and violence go hand in hand??
 
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Sadek Hossain Khoka claimed the death toll of last night operation in dark was 2500. If it's exaggeration being an opposition leader and we cut 2000, still it's unbelievable. I think they should've been armed with guns to confront genocidal police/RAB/BGB. Definitely, there happened something unimaginable.
 
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Its up to the muslims of Bangladesh t defend the country from the haram-ee class

Bangladesh was going fine, decent development, nation was secure and suddenly all this Shabagh nonsense started a firestorm and now look

If the secular liberal slime hadnt pushed their luck none of this would have happened
 
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Sadek Hossain Khoka claimed the death toll of last night operation in dark was 2500. If it's exaggeration being an opposition leader and we cut 2000, still it's unbelievable. I think they should've been armed with guns to confront genocidal police/RAB/BGB. Definitely, there happened something unimaginable.

Over 2,000 in one night? What the heck were they using? Heavy machine guns? Tanks? Aircraft?

Reports state that an army man was killed:
Army man among 6 killed in Hathazari | The Daily Star

What the heck are army personnel doing there? Do they understand that army's involvement in such activities can have grave consequences for the nation?
 
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Over 2,000 in one night? What the heck were they using? Heavy machine guns? Tanks? Aircraft?

Reports state that an army man was killed:
Army man among 6 killed in Hathazari | The Daily Star

What the heck are army personnel doing there? Do they understand that army's involvement in such activities can have grave consequences for the nation?


2000 people in one night? Isn't it stretching the imagination bit too far?
 
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Was the army personnel a supporter of hefazat or police or caught in between?
 
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