STATEMENT BY INDIAN CITIZENS AGAINST BRUTAL STATE VIOLENCE AND IN SOLIDARITY WITH THE STRUGGLE IN BANGLADESH

[Even as the massive Long March in Dhaka’s Shahbagh is going on, reportedly with lakhs and lakhs of people demanding Sheikh Hasina’s resignation, rumours of her having already resigned are coming in. The statement is of course in support of Bangladesh’s struggle for democracy and against the brutal repression unleashed by her Awami League regime.]

We, the undersigned citizens of India, writers, artists, intellectuals and activists, express our deep concern over the recent developments in Bangladesh. As fellow South Asians, we share a common destiny and the destruction of democracy in any part of it is obviously a matter of concern for all of us. The current government that has unleashed massive violence on its own citizens has brazenly hijacked the elections three consecutive times in the last ten years.

The world has been watching in horror the violent crackdown on protesting students and youth in Bangladesh since mid-July. On 15th July, a peaceful protest by students of Dhaka University demanding reform in the quota system was violently attacked by a group of goons said to be from the student wing of the ruling party. The crackdown followed statements by the Awami League general secretary and an important minister that the Chhatra League would teach a lesson to the students, whom the prime minister, Sheikh Hasina had earlier labelled ‘razakars’ – a term used for the collaborators with the Pakistan army during the 1971 Liberation Struggle. Expectedly, the Bangladesh Police, rather than acting against the attackers, started a full-scale crackdown on protesters all across the country from the next day. On 16th July, the police killed Abu Saeed, a student of Begum Rokeya University, as he stood with open arms, without any weapon, in front of the approaching police forces who aimed their guns at the protesters. The murder of Abu Saeed, who posed no threat to the approaching police forces, manifests how the intention behind the crackdown on protesters was not to maintain law and order but to forcefully silence voices of dissent arising from all across Bangladesh.

Since then, what followed in Bangladesh will be documented in history as one of the worst state attacks on its citizens. As the police intensified their attack, the number of deaths continued to increase. While official reports as of 1 August had put the number of people killed at 209, reports by International Agencies suggest a figure of over 1000, with thousands more injured in a span of 10 days. Among the injured, in Dhaka alone, 500 are reported to have been wounded with pellets in their eyes. What has been most shocking is that shooting from helicopters and snipers from high-rise buildings have been reported, where children playing on the terrace or inside their homes were killed.
On 2 August, as the movement returned with even greater strength and people from all walks of life students joined in, firings and further killings have been reported from different parts of the country. The Internet was completely shut down for a week, cutting off news from Bangladesh to the rest of the world. However, this standard tactic of dictatorial regimes has not worked in containing the movement which is now demanding the resignation of the illegitimate government and fresh elections under the supervision of a caretaker government.

Along with a violent crackdown on protesters using lethal and non-lethal weapons that unfolded into one of the worst humanitarian tragedies, the Bangladesh government has also unleashed a reign of terror through arbitrary arrests and framing of cases against protesters. Media reports tell us more than 2,000 people have been arrested and more than 61,000 people have been named as accused in cases.
Bangladesh achieved its liberation in 1971 after millions sacrificed their lives for freedom of the country. We, as citizens of a neighbouring country, have been deeply sympathetic to Bangladesh’s liberation struggle. The citizens of a country that achieved its liberation through such massive sacrifices of lives, have not forgotten the spirit of that struggle. Today, the citizens of Bangladesh want to hold its government accountable for destroying the dream of the liberation struggle. The aspiration of a democratic government, free and fair election, freedom of speech and protest and a promise of a dignified future for the country’s youth is an aspiration for a modern democratic state.

We, members of civil society of India, extend our voice of support to that aspiration of the citizens of Bangladesh. In the interim, the citizens are demanding justice for the victims of the ‘July’ massacre (and later killings), action against responsible police officers, release of all protesters and quashing of criminal cases against protesters. We join our voices with the democratic forces in Bangladesh in demanding a restoration of democracy. We extend our support to their struggle for a fundamental change in the mode of governance in Bangladesh.

Aditya Nigam, Independent Academic

Tanika Sarkar, Historian

Atul Sood, Professor, JNU

Rohan D’Souza, Faculty, Kyoto University

Pamela Philipose, Journalist

Nivedita Menon, Professor, JNU

Bishnupriya Dutt, Professor, JNU

Nandini Sundar, Sociologist

Dhananjay, President, JNUSU

Naveen Gaur, Faculty, DU

Zoya Hasan, Former Professor, JNU

Sucheta De, CPIML

G Arunima, Faculty, JNU

Prof Surajit C Mukhopadhyay, Dean, Sister Nivedita University

Arundhati Ghosh, Independent Cultural Practitioner

Shuddhabrata Sengupta, Artist and Writer

Anuradha Chenoy, Former Professor, JNU

J Devika, Feminist Scholar

Ayesha Kidwai, Professor, JNU

Kuntal Ghosh, Associate Professor, ISI

Mary E John, Feminist Scholar

Navsharan SIngh, Activist

Suvankar Chakraborty, Senior Journalist

Anupam Roy, Artist

Laxmi Murthy, Journalist

Satakshi Nandy, Actor

Mohan Rao, Former Professor, JNU

Ravi Sundaram, CSDS, Delhi

Aamir Aziz, Poet

Kavita Srivastava, PUCL

Sandip K. Luis, Art Historian

Sanjeeb Mukherjee, Former Faculty, Calcutta University

Surojit Sen, Writer

Rupleena Bose, Writer

Bishwendu Nanda, Baniya Paramaribo Karu o Bastra Shilpa Sangha

Gaurab Chatterjee, Musician

P. Rohini Rajasekaran, Writer/Artist

Vasudha Thozhur, Artist

Chayanika Shah, Hasrat-e-Zindagi Mamuli, Mumbai

Pradip Datta, Retired Professor

Veda Thozhur Kolleri, Artist

Rupsha Guha, Artist

Suvonkar Banerjee, Senior Editor, DIsney+Hotstar

Anirban Ghoshal, Screen Writer/Film Maker

Sruthi Viswan, Artist

Debmalya Banerjee, Visual Artist

Debapriya Bhatta, Voxxy Media

Inder Salim, Artist

Shapath Das, Art House Film Foundation

Kirity Roy, Banglar Manabadhikar Suraksha Mancha

Satarupa Das, Director, Zindabad Studio

Monalisa Mukherji, Film Maker

Dr. Frazer Mascarenhas, Former Faculty, St. Xavier’s College

Raktim Ghosh, Adhikar Bangla

Shweta Bajaj, Journalist and Documentary Film Maker

Arindam, Arindam Nandy Production

Shal J, Artist

Chhatrapal Ninawe, CImagination

Sidharth Srinivasan, Independent Film Maker

Angana, Actor

Vidya Dinker, President/ INSAF

Nandini Bhattacharyya Panda, Indian Council of Historical Research

Barali, CPB

Nayanika Mookherjee, Durham University, UK

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Harsh AgarwalUncombed Buddha Films
Ashok SharmaRetired Civil Servant
Abhay MishrArtist
Anshuman DasEcobazaar/Organiser
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Chitra JoshiIndependent historian
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Subhamay GhoshalIndividual
Shivangi SinghStudent/Artist
Roopesh shajiFreelance Cinematographer
B AjaySelf
Sarthak BhatiaJNU
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ShirazPUCL
Rajshree ChandraDelhi University
Sourish GhoshResearcher
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Tathagata BiswasCitizen
Ammu AbrahamForum against oppression of women, PUCL Maharashtra
Anita DubeArtist
Ravi BallaCRPP
Nanjappan RadhakrishnanAdvocate
Indira RaniFreelance Development Consultant
Dipan MahapatraGraphic Designer
Fahd KabirFK studios
ArkaIndian citizen
Cynthia StephenIndependent journalist and policy researcher
S DattaTeacher
DipyamanRight to Food and Network, West Bengal
Atri BhattacherjeeStudent [Jadavpur university]
Avhijit SarkarActivist
Rupsha DasFreelance Artist
Dr. Arnab SahaProfessor, Writer.
Anushka Duttastudent
Pinak BanikArtist
Rumela DeyIndividual
Bonhihotri HazraAprachalito Magazine
Sourav RoyIndependent Scholar
Aurinjoy BiswasTEACHER
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Paromita DuttaUSAF
Mrinmoy DasHUMAN Network INDIA
Supriya BanerjeeEssayist, activist
Shiyas K.RAdvocate
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Prasanta BasakRight To Food work and campaign network
Anamika MondalStudent
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Somenath GuhaSaros
Pratyush ChatterjeeStudent
Nandita NarainAssociate Professor (Retd), St.Stephen’s College, Delhi University
Rajdeep MazumderHr
Souhardya PramanikStudent
Mahasweta SamajdarEditor of Magazines
Pratyay BanerjeePRASONGIK
Amit BhattacharyyaRetired Professor, Department of History, Jadavpur University, Kolkata
Sujato BhadraHuman Rights activist
Prajnaparamita Dutta RaychaudhuriManushir Boi Ghar, secretary
Souvik BoseStudent
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Mallar MoitraPashchimbanga Ganasanskriti Parishad
Avijit PalSelf
Sudipta Mullicksenior citizen of India
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Soumitra BoseCpiml liberstion
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One thought on “STATEMENT BY INDIAN CITIZENS AGAINST BRUTAL STATE VIOLENCE AND IN SOLIDARITY WITH THE STRUGGLE IN BANGLADESH”

  1. I fully endorse the statement.

    Sobhanlal Datta Gupta

    Former SN Banerjee Professor of Political Science

    University of Calcutta

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