Members of Islami Andolan Bangladesh, a radical Islamic group, vandalise a car as they barricade a highway during a daylong strike in Kachpur near Dhaka July 10, 2011. Twelve mostly Islamic political parties have called a 30-hour countrywide general strike from July 10 to protest the 15th constitution amendment bill which was passed into law. The bill scrapped the caretaker government system but retained Islam as state religion, alongside some other basic changes, police said. - Reuters Photo

DHAKA: Riot police in Bangladesh fired tear gas shells Sunday to disperse thousands of activists trying to enforce an anti-government general strike, leaving at least 50 people injured, news reports said.

The violence erupted at two places outside capital Dhaka after police tried to stop the protesters from blocking roads and smashing vehicles that defied the shutdown, private television stations ATN News and Boishakhi TV reported.

Footage showed protesters, many of them wearing Islamic prayer caps, throwing stones at police. Police responded with batons and tear gas.

The 30-hour nationwide strike has been called by a coalition of 12 Islamic parties to protest removal of a clause from the country’s constitution that expressed “absolute faith and trust in Allah.” The main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party backed the protest.

The amendment also restored secularism as a state principle of Muslim-majority Bangladesh.

In a recent constitutional amendment, Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s coalition government tried to appease both the Islamists and the liberals.

It has retained Islam as the state religion, but included secularism to replace the phrase “absolute faith and trust in Allah.”

The Islamic parties want the government to reinstate the phrase in the charter’s preamble.

The Islamic parties have no representatives in the Bangladesh’s 345-member Parliament, but they draw support from the country’s hundreds of Islamic schools.

During Sunday’s strike several thousand protesters, many of them armed with sticks and stones, tried to block a road outside Dhaka, TV footage showed. The footage showed police using batons and stones to break up the protesters at Kanchpur, 10 miles southeast of the capital city.

Similar clashes also occurred in Keraniganj, another small town on southern outskirts of the capital city.

At least 50 people were injured in the violence, the reports said.

Police officials were not immediately available for comments.

A general strike is a common opposition tactic to embarrass the government in Bangladesh. Such strikes usually turn violent in the South Asian nation, a parliamentary democracy, that has a history of two successful and 19 failed military coups since 1971, when the country won independence from Pakistan.

Opinion

Merging for what?

Merging for what?

The concern is that if the government is thinking of cutting costs through the merger, we might even lose the functionality levels we currently have.

Editorial

Dubai properties
Updated 16 May, 2024

Dubai properties

It is hoped that any investigation that is conducted will be fair and that no wrongdoing will be excused.
In good faith
16 May, 2024

In good faith

THE ‘P’ in PTI might as well stand for perplexing. After a constant yo-yoing around holding talks, the PTI has...
CTDs’ shortcomings
16 May, 2024

CTDs’ shortcomings

WHILE threats from terrorist groups need to be countered on the battlefield through military means, long-term ...
Reserved seats
Updated 15 May, 2024

Reserved seats

The ECP's decisions and actions clearly need to be reviewed in light of the country’s laws.
Secretive state
15 May, 2024

Secretive state

THERE is a fresh push by the state to stamp out all criticism by using the alibi of protecting national interests....
Plague of rape
15 May, 2024

Plague of rape

FLAWED narratives about women — from being weak and vulnerable to provocative and culpable — have led to...