“No anarchy will be tolerated,” spokesperson Syed Ashraful Islam
warned at a press briefing amid Hifazat’s rally in the Motijheel
business district.
The ruling party’s spokesperson told the
Chittagong-based Islamic radicals to not mistake the government’s
magnanimity for weakness.
“This time we allowed you to come to Dhaka, next time you will not be able to come (Dhaka) or even come out of your homes.”
Supporters
of the organisation started gathering thronging the Motijheel after
blocking the accesses to the capital to press for their 13-point charter
of demands.
A group of Hifazat supporters locked horns with the
law keepers at Gulistan at around noon and the violence spilled to
nearby Paltan, Bijoynagar, Kakrail, and Naya Paltan. Hifazat activists
went berserk vandalising and torching hundreds of shops and damaging
vehicles.
Clashes were going on during Ashraf’s media briefing. He also hinted at going hardline if there were ‘any chaos’.
He said the government would do ‘everything necessary’ to maintain law and order and safety of the people and their property.
Ashraf asked the Hifazat activists to wrap up their rally by evening and leave Dhaka and threatened actions if they did not.
Minutes after the leader’s statement, a Hifazat leader countered, saying they would make the Awami League leave the capital.
At
the briefing, Ashraf advised the radical group against considering the
ruling party ‘weak’. “The Awami League alone is enough to teach you a
lesson,” he said.
The little-known group came to the limelight
after it announced to oppose a programme of the Ganajagaran Mancha in
Chittagong in March. It has termed the organisers of the Mancha
‘atheists’ and demanded punishment.
The Ganajagaran Mancha has
been demonstrating since Feb 5 demanding maximum penalty for convicted
war criminals and a ban of the Jamaat-e-Islami as a political party. The
ruling party alleges the Hifazat is backed by the Jamaat and the BNP.
In
April, the radical group had rallied in the capital and put forth a
controversial 13-point charter of demands including scrapping the
women’s policy and banning the public mixing of sexes.
Ashraf
termed the Hifazat the successor of infamous ‘al-Badr’ and ‘Razakars’,
the forces that had sided with the akistani troops and actively opposed
the nation’s struggle for freedom.
He said the people of
Bangladesh will not tolerate mayhem in the name of religion and
reiterated the government was ready to take any measures necessary.
Asked
if there were any relations between the BNP’s 48-hour ultimatum to
concede its demand of a non-party polls-time government and the
Hifazat’s rally, Ashraf said the programmes had been fixed after
discussion.
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