On 13th February, four separate incidents unfolded across four different districts of Bangladesh — each targeting vulnerable Hindu families and their property. Each incident has its own local context. But taken together, they paint a deeply disturbing picture of insecurity, impunity, and a growing climate of fear for minorities.
15 bighas of land belonging to Nikhil Chowdhury were forcibly occupied by local strongman named Shamim In Lakshmipur village of Sadullapur Upazila under Gaibandha District.
Local Hindu activist Bokul Barman has stated that armed men wielding sticks had stormed the premises looting valuable and setting fire to immovable properties. Videos show a Hindu family desperately trying to defend their land against these armed attackers.
The background appears to be a long-standing land dispute between the families but land disputes do not justify mob violence or arson.
Source : https://www.facebook.com/share/v/1abXSNgBN9/
A Hindu family was attacked by a mob of 25–30 men led by local B.N.P. affiliated strongmen Maksudul Rahman Dalim and Rafik Mallik in Baishari Union under Banaripara Police Station of Barishal District for refusing to pay their regular qouta of extortion money
While treating the injured family patriarch, the matriarch claims that the attackers had targeted them after falsely branding them as sympathizers of Jamaat-e-Islami Bangladesh.
Weaponizing religious labeling in a politically sensitive environment can isolate a family socially, justify aggression in the eyes of mobs and preempt sympathy.
Source : https://www.facebook.com/share/v/1899epEfNM/
Unknown miscreants had set fire to a Hindu family’s home in East Machimpur of Chandipur Union under Lakshmipur District.
The family matriarch recounts how their lives were saved “only by luck.” According to her, cloth soaked in flammable material was placed strategically before being ignited a method suggesting premeditation.
Arson is not a spontaneous act. It requires preparation, intent and carries the clear objective of terror.
When families sleep wondering whether flames will consume them by dawn, citizenship becomes fragile.

Sources :
https://www.facebook.com/share/r/1BqEZfVsKC/
https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1Egp5s8VeH/
So-called unknown miscreants had vandalised a Kali Pratima inside a village temple in Nathpara Hindu locality under Atwari Upazila of Panchagarh District.
Desecrating a deity is not random vandalism. It strikes at dignity, identity and community memory. It signals that even sacred spaces are not beyond violation.
Sources :
https://www.facebook.com/share/p/183y7FmBd3/
https://www.facebook.com/share/r/1BPNoLJb1o/


The issue is not communal sensationalism. The issue is rule of law.
If a land dispute exists — it must be resolved in court.
If extortion is alleged — it must be investigated.
If arson occurs — forensic and criminal accountability must follow.
If temples are vandalized — perpetrators must be identified swiftly.
Justice delayed, minimized or diluted does not merely fail victims. It signals permission.