Thousands of hardline Islamists protest controversial Bangladesh statue

Thousands of supporters of a hard-line Bangladeshi Islamist group staged protests calling for the removal or destruction of a controversial statue.
A Bangladeshi policeman fires tear gas shells to disperse protestors (Photo | PTI)
A Bangladeshi policeman fires tear gas shells to disperse protestors (Photo | PTI)

DHAKA: Thousands of supporters of a hard- line Bangladeshi Islamist group staged protests today calling for the removal or destruction of a controversial statue from the nation's highest court.

The statue of "lady justice" has ruffled feathers in the Muslim-majority nation, with hardliners demonstrating in recent weeks against what they say is a Greek god unbefitting Bangladesh.

Protesters want the statue of the blindfolded woman holding scales -- said to represent justice -- destroyed and replaced with a Koran, despite Bangladesh's secular constitution.

Supporters of Islami Andolan Bangladesh (IAB) gathered after Friday prayers outside the country's national mosque, Baitul Mukarram, in central Dhaka, chanting and wielding placards with slogans such as "Demolish the statue on the court premises".

"Nearly 10,000 protesters attended the rally. Security has been beefed up at the area," local police chief Rafiqul Islam told AFP. IAB spokesman Atiqur Rahman said they also wanted the removal of the country's chief justice because of his "procrastination" in removing the statue. "We want the statue of the Greek Goddess to be removed immediately," he told AFP.

Last week Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina told a meeting of top Islamic seminary teachers that she too disliked the statue, boosting the hardliners' stance. Secular rights groups accused her of "kowtowing" to the Islamists in preparation for an early general election.

Court officials have defended the statue as a symbol of justice. Conservative Bangladesh has experienced increasing tensions between hardliners and secularists in recent years, suffering a spate of killings of atheist bloggers, religious minorities and foreigners.

Related Stories

No stories found.

X
The New Indian Express
www.newindianexpress.com