Top opposition politician abducted in Bangladesh

Published February 25, 2015
DHAKA: Students take part in a demonstration during a nationwide strike and blockade called by the Bangladesh Nationalist Party-led alliance on Tuesday.—AFP
DHAKA: Students take part in a demonstration during a nationwide strike and blockade called by the Bangladesh Nationalist Party-led alliance on Tuesday.—AFP

DHAKA: A prominent Bangladesh opposition politician was abducted on Tuesday, allegedly by police, days after he appeared to say he was open to seeking military intervention to end the country’s deadly political crisis.

The family of Mahmudur Rahman Manna, 63, who has been trying to forge an alternative third political force in Bangladesh, said he was picked up by plain-clothed police officers from his niece’s home in the capital Dhaka.

“There were four to five men. They said they were from the DB (police detective branch). They asked him to go with them,” Manna’s niece Shahanama Sharmin said.

“They led him away on a micro-bus at around 3:30am,” she added.

The abduction is the latest twist in weeks-long turmoil led by the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) and its allies in efforts to topple Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and force fresh elections.

Confined by authorities to her office on Jan 3, BNP leader Khaleda Zia called on supporters to block roads, railways and waterways, sparking a wave of violence that has claimed more than 100 lives.

Over 10,000 opposition supporters and dozens of senior BNP officials have been arrested as part of a crackdown by Hasina to end the unrest.

Police denied they were behind the abduction of Manna, who has also been calling for talks between the government and the BNP to resolve the crisis.

“We don’t have any information regarding his detention or arrest. None of the branches of the Dhaka Metropolitan Police arrested or detained him,” police spokesman Monirul Islam said.

An audio recording of a phone conversation between Manna, an opposition official and an unknown third person was leaked to local media late on Sunday.

Manna can be heard telling the unidentified person that he was open to talks with generals in a bid to resolve the crisis gripping Bangladesh, a country with a history of military-backed coups.

Published in Dawn, February 25th, 2015

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