Indian spies have sounded the alarm: Bangladesh’s minorities face an unrelenting barrage of attacks as elections approach, marking a chilling evolution in the nation’s dark history of communal strife. Officials call it ‘extraordinary and alarming,’ with violence no longer episodic but a persistent siege.
HRCBM documentation logs 116 murders of minorities from June 2025 to January 2026, infiltrating all eight divisions and dozens of districts—a pattern screaming coordination. ‘Stop only when the job is done,’ seems to be the chilling directive, per intel assessments.
Unlike earlier waves quelled by state action, this campaign thrives amid political flux. After Sheikh Hasina’s ouster, Yunus’s regime has failed to rein in ISI-Jamaat forces, allowing them to accelerate what sources deem a genocidal push.
The agenda? Not just purging minorities but provoking India, leveraging fear to bolster radical vote banks ahead of polls. Bangladesh’s minority share has nosedived dramatically over decades, from 30% in 1946 to 9% now, testament to systemic bias.
Authorities dismiss patterns as coincidental squabbles, but probes confirm targeted executions. With elections on the horizon, Indian agencies brace for worse, calling for global pressure to safeguard vulnerable populations and preserve regional stability.