KOLKATA: India has arrested nearly a dozen Bangladeshis attempting to cross the border to escape violence and political tumult following deadly protests that led to the ouster of prime minister Sheikh Hasina, border officials said Monday.
Hundreds more are waiting along the frontier pleading for permission to cross, India’s Border Security Force (BSF) said.
Hindus are the largest minority faith in mostly Muslim Bangladesh, and are considered a steadfast support base for Hasina’s party, the Awami League.
After Hasina’s abrupt resignation and escape to India ended her 15 years of autocratic rule on August 5, there were numerous reports of attacks against Hindu households, temples and businesses.
India’s BSF said 11 Bangladesh nationals had been arrested since Sunday trying to “sneak” across the frontier into West Bengal state.
“Several hundred Bangladeshi nationals are still waiting in no-man’s land to cross over the border,” BSF deputy inspector general Amit Kumar Tyagi told AFP.
Bangladesh is almost entirely encircled by India, with the border stretching for more than 4,000 kilometers (2,485 miles), large parts of which are unfenced.
Four Bangladeshis were also “repelled” from India’s Assam state, chief minister Himanta Biswa Sarma said on social media platform X.
New Delhi has kept a wary eye on the fall of Hasina, who pursued a delicate balancing act of enjoying support from India while maintaining strong relations with China.
Hindus account for around 8 percent of Bangladesh’s 170 million people.
Over the past week, religious rights groups said they documented more than 200 incidents of attacks on minority communities in Bangladesh, a figure that also includes Christians and Buddhists.
The security situation has since dramatically improved, and on Monday Bangladeshi police resumed patrols of the capital Dhaka, ending a strike that left a law and order vacuum.
India’s home minister Amit Shah said Friday a committee had been created to monitor the situation “to ensure the safety and security of Indian nationals, Hindus, and other minority communities living there.”
Interim government leader Muhammad Yunus’s “council of advisers,” the de facto cabinet now administering the country, said it had noted with “grave concern” some attacks on Hindus and other minorities.
In its first official statement on Sunday night, the cabinet said it would work to “find ways to resolve such heinous attacks.”
India blocks Bangladeshis fleeing chaotic regime change
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India blocks Bangladeshis fleeing chaotic regime change
- After Hasina’s abrupt resignation and escape to India, there are numerous reports of attacks on Hindu households, temples and businesses
- Indian border authorities say 11 Bangladesh nationals have been arrested since Sunday trying to ‘sneak’ across the border into West Bengal
China to scrap tariffs for most of Africa from May: Xi
BEIJING: Beijing’s scrapping of tariffs for all but one African country will start May 1, Chinese President Xi Jinping said Saturday, according to state media.
China already has a zero-tariff policy for imports from 33 African countries, but Beijing said last year it would extend the policy to all 53 of its diplomatic partners on the continent.
China is Africa’s largest trading partner and a key backer of major infrastructure projects in the region through its vast “Belt and Road” initiative.
From May 1, zero levies will apply to all African countries except Eswatini, which maintains diplomatic relations with Taiwan.
China claims the democratic island as its own and does not rule out using force to take it.
Many African countries are increasingly looking to China and other trading partners since US President Donald Trump imposed steep tariffs worldwide last year.
Xi said the zero-tariff deal “will undoubtedly provide new opportunities for African development,” announcing the date as leaders across the continent gathered in Ethiopia for the annual African Union summit.
China already has a zero-tariff policy for imports from 33 African countries, but Beijing said last year it would extend the policy to all 53 of its diplomatic partners on the continent.
China is Africa’s largest trading partner and a key backer of major infrastructure projects in the region through its vast “Belt and Road” initiative.
From May 1, zero levies will apply to all African countries except Eswatini, which maintains diplomatic relations with Taiwan.
China claims the democratic island as its own and does not rule out using force to take it.
Many African countries are increasingly looking to China and other trading partners since US President Donald Trump imposed steep tariffs worldwide last year.
Xi said the zero-tariff deal “will undoubtedly provide new opportunities for African development,” announcing the date as leaders across the continent gathered in Ethiopia for the annual African Union summit.
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