Hindu community of Bangladesh: A century of upheaval & fear
June 4, 2026
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Hindu community of Bangladesh: A century of upheaval and a new wave of fear

With Hindus now less than 8 per cent of Bangladesh’s population, their vulnerability is acute. NGOs continue to document land grabs, temple vandalism and targeted attacks. Official narratives often downplay incidents as “non‑communal disputes", but community members describe a daily reality shaped by fear and uncertainty

Uma MRUma MR
Jan 18, 2026, 03:00 pm IST
in World, South Asia, Asia
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When 32‑year‑old factory worker Dipu Chandra Das stepped out of his home in Mymensingh on December 18, 2025, he had no reason to believe he would never return. Hours later, he was dead; lynched by a mob in an attack that stunned his community but surprised few who have watched Bangladesh’s political crisis deepen. Over the next 18 days, five more Hindu men across five districts were murdered in separate incidents, each killing adding to a growing sense of dread.

For Bangladesh’s Hindu minority, these deaths are not isolated crimes. They are the latest flashpoints in a long, painful history shaped by political turmoil, shifting alliances and the fragile promise of minority protection. Understanding the present crisis requires an examination of the historical trajectory of displacement, the geopolitical realignment currently underway and the lawful, non-violent pathways available to safeguard human rights ahead of the Bangladesh 2026 general elections.

A History written in partitions and promises

The roots of today’s crisis stretch back more than a century. The first partition of Bengal in 1905 split the region along communal lines, igniting protests and sharpening identities. Its reversal in 1911 did little to ease tensions. By 1947, Bengal was divided permanently: West Bengal joined India, while East Bengal became part of Pakistan.

For Hindus who stayed behind, the new borders brought uncertainty. Under Pakistani rule, discrimination hardened into violence. The 1971 genocide; documented in the U.S. “Blood Telegram”; saw Hindus disproportionately targeted. The demographic impact was stark: Hindus fell from 22 per cent of East Pakistan’s population in 1951 to 13.5 per cent by 1974.

1971: Liberation, sacrifice and unfinished work

The Bangladesh Liberation War reshaped South Asia. India’s intervention, triggered by Pakistan’s crackdown and a massive refugee influx, ended with the surrender of 93,000 Pakistani soldiers; the largest since World War II. India paid heavily: thousands of soldiers killed or wounded and emergency taxes imposed to sustain the war effort. Bangladesh emerged with a secular constitution. But the promise of protection for minorities would prove fragile.

Decades of instability and a shrinking community

From 1971 to 2024, Bangladesh cycled through coups, political transitions and rising extremism. Attacks on Hindu homes, temples and businesses became a recurring feature of the country’s political landscape. By the 2022 census, Hindus made up just 7.95 per cent of the population; another demographic warning sign.

2024: Hasina’s fall and the violent unraveling

The resignation of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina on August 5, 2024, amid student protests and allegations of repression, created a political vacuum. Muhammad Yunus stepped in as head of an interim government, promising reforms and elections. Instead, violence surged.

Human‑rights groups documented thousands of attacks on Hindu, Buddhist, Christian, Ahmadiyya and other indigenous communities. The six recent Hindu killings; from Mymensingh to Narsingdi; reflect a broader collapse of law and order. Analysts point to political retribution, land disputes and emboldened extremist groups.

2026 Elections: A nation on edge

Bangladesh heads to the polls on February 12, 2026, in what may be its most consequential election in decades. With the Awami League sidelined, the BNP and radical groups have gained ground. Hindus; long perceived as Awami League supporters; have become strategic targets.

The December 2025 assassination of candidate Sharif Osman Hadi triggered retaliatory mob violence, including the lynching of Dipu Chandra Das. Subsequent killings of businessmen Khokon Chandra Das and Rana Pratap underscore the growing insecurity.

Also Read: Pakistan seals Afghan border, India opens billion-rupee pharma pathway to Kabul as regional trade map shifts

Geopolitics complicate an already volatile landscape

Yunus’s controversial remarks in China suggesting Bangladesh controls India’s access to the ocean sparked outrage in India. Dhaka’s dismissal of minority‑attack reports as “fake news” further strained relations. Indian parliamentary reports documented 23 Hindu deaths and 152 temple attacks since the 2024 transition.

Meanwhile, Pakistan has moved quickly to rebuild influence in Dhaka. Trade ties have expanded, visas eased and defense discussions initiated. Reports of an ISI “Dhaka Cell” and potential JF‑17 fighter‑jet sales have raised alarms in New Delhi.

Analysts note that Pakistan and China see Jamaat‑e‑Islami, not BNP, as their preferred partner; though BNP itself has avoided taking a clear stance on Pakistan’s growing role, focusing instead on the 2026 elections.

A community living with fear

With Hindus now less than 8 per cent of Bangladesh’s population, their vulnerability is acute. NGOs continue to document land grabs, temple vandalism and targeted attacks. Official narratives often downplay incidents as “non‑communal disputes,” but community members describe a daily reality shaped by fear and uncertainty.

Two nations, Two opinions

In Bangladesh, public opinion is sharply divided. Government‑aligned voices dismiss reports of persecution; secular activists and minority groups insist the threat is real and growing. Views on Pakistan’s influence are similarly polarized.

In India, the reaction has been intense. The killings have sparked anger and anxiety, especially in states with cultural ties to Bangladesh. Many Indians see the violence as both a humanitarian crisis and a strategic challenge to the India’s security in the region.

What India can do; Without escalation

Former Indian diplomats stress that military intervention is not an option. India’s tools are diplomatic and humanitarian:

  • High‑level engagement with Dhaka
  • Raising the issue in UN and regional forums
  • Supporting civil‑society groups and documentation efforts
  • Strengthening intelligence cooperation
  • Public messaging that signals seriousness without destabilizing the region

These measures aim to protect vulnerable communities while respecting Bangladesh’s sovereignty.

Proposals gain attention, but remain unrealistic

Bangladesh’s interim leader Muhammad Yunus sparked controversy during a visit to China when he suggested that India’s Northeast is “landlocked” and reliant on transit routes through Bangladesh. His comments were widely interpreted as a strategic threat, hinting that Dhaka could theoretically pressure or even restrict India’s access to the Siliguri Corridor. The implication that Bangladesh could influence or disrupt this critical lifeline prompted a swift reaction from New Delhi. India imposed targeted export restrictions on Bangladesh, issued formal diplomatic warnings and accelerated efforts to revive several World War II–era airstrips in the Northeast to enhance rapid military mobility and reduce dependence on the vulnerable corridor.

Assam CM Himanta Biswa Sarma responded to Bangladesh’s threat with a firm, retaliatory warning, reminding Dhaka of its own vulnerabilities and urging India to strengthen alternative connectivity routes. Some nationalist voices in India have floated extreme ideas: creating buffer zones inside Bangladesh, territorial expansion or military intervention. These scenarios are exceedingly unlikely, yet if India were to pursue them, Bangladesh’s territorial borders would be permanently and profoundly reshaped.

A region at crossroads

From Bengal’s early partitions to the present political upheaval, one truth has endured: in moments of crisis, Bangladesh’s Hindu minority becomes the first indicator of how deep the instability runs. The violence that has escalated since 2024 is not just another chapter in domestic unrest; it is a signal to the entire region. Safeguarding Hindu communities has become a measure of Bangladesh’s democratic resolve, India’s strategic steadiness and South Asia’s commitment to pluralism. If this moment is mishandled, the fallout could reverberate across borders and even alter them.

Topics: BangladeshattackMinority CommunitygeopoliticsPakistanHindus
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