New Delhi: The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has attacked the Muhammad Yunus-led Bangladesh interim government for its “inaction” after an attack on the ancestral home of Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore on 10 June. The BJP criticised Yunus Thursday for failing to save the UNESCO-protected Rabindra Kachharibari from a “pre-planned attack” by Islamists, with the incident turning into a diplomatic flashpoint.
At a press conference, BJP spokesperson Sambit Patra said, “The behaviour of the Bangladesh interim government of Muhammad Yunus is not appropriate. It has taken no action so far. It could not protect such a significant international monument. A deplorable message goes out to the world. The BJP condemns this behaviour.”
On Tuesday, a mob reportedly vandalised the house, now a museum, in Sirajganj, Bangladesh, and assaulted the museum director, only two days after an altercation between a visitor and the museum staff over parking fees escalated into a local protest. The mob targeted the heritage site, including an auditorium, following which the authorities formed a three-member committee to investigate the matter. The police have reportedly booked 50 persons so far.
Sambit Patra, however, said that the members of Jamaat-e-Islami and Hefazat-e-Islam were suspected to be behind the attack. Calling the incident an ideological attack on the ideology of Tagore, Patra said, “Gurudev Rabindranath Tagore was no ordinary figure. He was not just a literary icon; he was a multifaceted individual who made a significant contribution to the world. He was a man with a personality that went beyond borders.”
BJP leader and West Bengal Leader of Opposition Suvendu Adhikari, on the other hand, pointed fingers at Khaleda Zia’s Bangladesh Nationalist Party and Chhatra Shibir activists for the vandalism. “The sacred legacy of our most precious Kobiguru Rabindranath Thakur was desecrated in Sirajganj, Bangladesh, where a mob led by BNP and Chhatra Shibir activists vandalized the historic Rabindra Kachari Bari,” Adhikari wrote in an X post.
He also added political colour to his comments. Comparing the Mamata Banerjee-led government and the Yunus government and accusing both of giving space to radical forces, he warned, “This is a wake-up call for the Hindus of West Bengal. When extremist forces gain ground, they spare no one; not even a figure revered worldwide like Tagore.”
BJP IT cell head Amit Malviya wrote on X: “The mob raised hateful slogans against Tagore, shattered windows, and destroyed furniture—an open assault on Bengal’s cultural soul … Whether it is attacks on temples, disruption of Hindu livelihoods, or the suppression of age-old traditions—Bengal’s civilisational core is under siege. Culture, identity, and faith—all are being targeted.”
Pre-planned attack
“Today, the topic is Bangladesh. We are not intruding on the international domain. However, it is about Rabindranath Tagore, so the BJP takes it very seriously and sensitively. His ancestral house in Bangladesh was attacked and damaged,” Sambit Patra told the media, adding, “His Kachharibari, built by his grandfather, was attacked.”
Patra further alleged, “We are getting to know that the people of Jamaat-e-Islami and Hefazat-e-Islam carried out this attack. It is coming to light that this was a pre-planned attack. For five days, they planned the attack on the house of Rabindranath Tagore, who was the foundation and pillar of our civilisation and culture of Bengal, so that they could send a big message to the world.”
Since Yunus took the reins in Bangladesh after the fall of Awami League leader and ex-PM Sheikh Hasina, the New Delhi-Dhaka relations have deteriorated, with the former accusing Dhaka of failing to protect minorities or check anti-Hindu violence.
Moreover, India and the external affairs minister have condemned Yunus for calling Northeast India “landlocked” during his trip to China and did not take his meeting with the deputy speaker of Nepal in good faith.
“We are the only guardians of the ocean,” Yunus also said during his China visit in March this year while inviting Chinese investment to Bangladesh. He went further, suggesting that the geographical placement of China offered a “huge possibility”, claiming the region could become “an extension of the Chinese economy”. “From Bangladesh, you can go anywhere you want. The ocean is our backyard,” Yunus declared.
On Wednesday, Yunus also voiced his problem with India. He said Prime Minister Narendra Modi had brushed aside his request to prevent Sheikh Hasina from making political statements from Indian soil, where she had landed after waves of anti-quota protests drove her out of Bangladesh on 5 August 2024.
(Edited by Madhurita Goswami)
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