Home Neighbours Bangladesh Bangladesh: Protestors Storm, Burn Mujibur Rehman’s Home In Dhaka

Bangladesh: Protestors Storm, Burn Mujibur Rehman’s Home In Dhaka

Several thousand protesters gathered around the historic house and independence monument, while others brought a crane and excavator to demolish the building.
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Thousands of protesters torched and vandalised the house of Bangladesh’s founding leader Sheikh Mujibur Rahman as his daughter, ousted Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, urged her supporters in a fiery social media speech to resist the interim government.

Witnesses said several thousand protesters, some armed with sticks, hammers, and other tools, gathered around the historic house of Sheikh Hasina’s father, which is also a monument of Bangladesh independence, while others brought a crane and excavator to demolish the building.

Bulldozer March

The rally was organised alongside a broader call, dubbed “Bulldozer Procession”, to disrupt Hasina’s scheduled 9 p.m. online address on Wednesday.

Protesters, many aligned with the “Students Against Discrimination” group, had expressed their fury over Hasina’s speech, which they viewed as a challenge to the newly formed interim government.

Tensions have been escalating in Bangladesh since August 2024, when mass protests forced Hasina to flee to neighbouring India.

Interim Government Struggles

The interim government, led by Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus, has struggled to maintain control as protests and unrest have continued. Demonstrators have attacked symbols of Hasina’s government, including the house of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, which was first set ablaze in August.


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A symbol of the country’s establishment, the house is where Bangabandhu (friend of Bengal), as he is popularly known, declared Bangladesh’s independence from Pakistan in 1971.

A few years later it became the site of a national tragedy. Mujibur Rahman and most of his family were assassinated at the house in 1975. Hasina, who survived the attack, later transformed the building into a museum dedicated to her father’s legacy.

‘History Takes Its Revenge’

“They can demolish a building, but not the history. History takes its revenge,” Hasina said in her speech on Wednesday.

She urged the people of Bangladesh to stand against the interim government, accusing them of seizing power in an unconstitutional manner.

The student-led movement behind the protests has voiced plans to dismantle the country’s 1972 Constitution, which they argue embodies the legacy of her father’s rule.

(With inputs from Reuters)