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      Home Writer's Column

      Gruesome lynching of Dipu Chandra Das: A disturbing signal for Bangladesh’s Hindus and religious minorities

      HP News Service by HP News Service
      December 31, 2025
      in Writer's Column
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      By Salah Uddin Shoaib Choudhury

      Bangladesh was founded on linguistic nationalism, cultural pluralism, and resistance to religious absolutism. Yet in recent days, that founding promise has been violently betrayed. The brutal lynching and burning alive of a young Hindu garment worker, Dipu Chandra Das, has sent shockwaves across the country and beyond, raising urgent questions about minority safety, mob radicalization, and the state’s diminishing authority in the face of Islamist extremism.

      On the night of December 18, along the Dhaka–Mymensingh highway in Bhaluka, Mymensingh, Dipu Chandra Das, 27, was dragged out of police custody by an Islamist mob, beaten to death, tied to a tree, and set on fire. Video footage of the incident – now viral – shows extremists chanting jihadist slogans such as “Naraye Takbir, Allahu Akbar” as they carried out the killing. Even more disturbing is the visible role of law enforcement, who handed Dipu over to the mob instead of protecting him.

      The killers justified their actions by accusing Dipu of “blasphemy” – a charge that has become a lethal weapon across South Asia. However, subsequent investigations by Bangladeshi authorities completely dismantled this claim. Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) officials, local police, and senior administrators all confirmed that there was no evidence Dipu had insulted Islam or made any religiously offensive remarks.

      Mymensingh Additional Superintendent of Police Abdullah Al Mamun stated unequivocally that the blasphemy allegations were “totally false”. Bhaluka Model Police Station Officer-in-Charge Mohammad Jahidul Islam also confirmed the absence of any proof. RAB Company Commander Md Shamsuzzaman noted that if Dipu had posted anything offensive online, it would have been traceable – nothing was found.

      The reality, according to investigators, is far more mundane and tragic: Dipu was targeted following a dispute with fellow workers at the garment factory where he was employed. What should have remained a workplace conflict was rapidly transformed into a deadly religious accusation, weaponized to incite mob violence.

      Dipu’s murder did not end with his death. After lynching him, the mob publicly displayed his burned body – hanging it from a tree so others could witness the brutality. His father, Rabilal Das, later recounted learning about his son’s fate through Facebook rumors before relatives confirmed the horror.

       “After beating him to death, they tied his body to a tree and set it on fire”, Rabilal Das said in a media interview. “Then they left the burned body outside for everyone to see. The sight was horrific”.

      Even more alarming is what followed – or rather, what did not. According to Dipu’s family, no government authority reached out to offer condolences, assurances of security, or support. This silence has only deepened fear among Bangladesh’s Hindu community, which already lives under constant anxiety.

      Eyewitnesses and factory workers remain too frightened to speak.

      Bangladesh’s leading daily Prothom Alo reported that none of the workers it approached near the factory were willing to talk, with some stating they had been instructed by factory authorities not to discuss the incident. CCTV footage revealed that outsiders gathered at the factory gate before forcibly breaking in and abducting Dipu – raising serious questions about prior coordination.

      This lynching did not occur in isolation. It coincided with a broader surge in Islamist aggression across Bangladesh. In recent weeks, extremist mobs attacked newspaper offices in Dhaka, threatened journalists, attempted to storm the Indian High Commission and its consulates, and even intruded into the National Parliament complex – an act unthinkable in a functioning democracy.

      Islamist groups have openly waved Islamic State (ISIS) flags and chanted jihadist slogans, signaling a level of confidence that suggests diminishing fear of state consequences. As a result of escalating security concerns, the Indian High Commission was forced to suspend visa services indefinitely.

      Within 48 hours of Dipu’s killing, another disturbing incident unfolded in Jhenaidah district. A Hindu rickshaw-puller, Gopal Biswas (also known as Govinda Biswas), was falsely accused of being an Indian spy simply for wearing a spiritual wristband and chanting “Jai Ma Durga”. His “crime” was his visible Hindu identity – an indication that religious expression itself is now being criminalized.

      International reactions have been limited but telling. US Congressman Andy Ogles publicly condemned Dipu’s lynching and urged authorities in Bangladesh and India to take notice. Yet much of the global media response has been evasive. While outlets like The New York Times reported on the killing, critics argue that such coverage diluted the crime by framing it as part of a generalized pattern of “religious intolerance” across South Asia, rather than naming Islamist extremism as the driving ideology.

      This reluctance to identify ideological motivation is not journalistic neutrality – it is moral evasion. By refusing to confront the role of political Islam in such violence, international media risk normalizing it. Dipu Chandra Das was not killed by abstract “societal tensions”. He was murdered by extremists empowered by fear, impunity, and ideological absolutism.

      What is unfolding in Bangladesh bears unsettling resemblance to trajectories seen in Pakistan and Afghanistan, where false blasphemy accusations have long been used to terrorize minorities and silence dissent. Once such violence is tolerated, it expands – devouring journalists, artists, reformist Muslims, and eventually the state itself.

      This assault on minorities is inseparable from an assault on Bengali culture. Islamist groups reject music, poetry, women’s public participation, and linguistic nationalism – the very pillars upon which Bangladesh was built. Organizations like Hizb-ut-Tahrir openly advocate dismantling nation-states in favor of a transnational Caliphate.

      The interim administration under Muhammad Yunus now faces a defining test. International reputation cannot substitute for domestic responsibility. A state that cannot protect its minorities cannot claim moral or democratic legitimacy. Silence, indecision, or appeasement will only embolden extremists further.

      The lynching of Dipu Chandra Das must therefore be remembered as more than a singular atrocity. It is a warning. Bangladesh stands at a crossroads: reaffirm the rule of law, confront Islamist mob violence, and protect all citizens equally – or slide toward a future where fear replaces citizenship and mobs replace justice.

      Remembering Dipu’s name is not enough. Justice requires confronting the ideology that enabled his murder and ensuring that Bangladesh does not follow the tragic path already taken by others. The choice, for now, still remains.

      (The writer is an award-winning journalist, writer, and Editor of the newspaper Blitz. His views are of his own)

      HP News Service

      HP News Service

      An English daily newspaper from Shillong published by Readington Marwein, proprietor of Mawphor Khasi Daily Newspaper, who established the first Khasi daily in 1989.

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      You’re visiting the official website of Highland Post, a leading and most circulated English daily of Meghalaya published by the Mawphor Group. Stay updated with our e-edition for latest updates from Meghalaya, North Eastern India and World as a whole.

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