The Hindu reports on anger at the inaction of the Bangladesh government over this string of public murders.
The hacking of another blogger-activist to death in Bangladesh has set off a storm of criticism against Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, with noted author Taslima Nasreen saying people had “given up any expectation” that she would act against the killers.
…
In an exclusive interview to The Hindu, Ms. Nasreen said the “killings prove that the Hasina government isn’t taking action against the groups that are targeting them because of votes. The government thinks if it arrests them they will be considered anti-Islam.”
While much of Mr. Das’ work was on scientific theories of evolution, he had also written a poem eulogising Ms. Nasreen recently, in which he had praised her for “not compromising on feminist principles” despite death threats issued against her over two decades.
Protesting the murder, activists of Shahbagh Gonojagoron Mancha, the group Mr. Das headed, took out a procession and held a rally at Dhaka’s Shahbagh. They also condemned the repeated killings of the bloggers and free thinkers and blamed the murder on the government’s failure to arrest attackers and hold trials.
And the government looked fixedly in another direction.
Marcus Ranum says
Yeah, so much for the “provide for the common good” aspect of government.
left0ver1under says
As I said elsewhere, they don’t like the victims, so they give consent with their silence.
Danny Butts says
How can a government, supported by the religious establishment and voted in by religious people to govern a country created to be Islamic, possibly be described as “anti Islam”?
There’s a half formed quote rattling around my head, something about “in a theocracy, the violent fundamentalist is king”.