Dhaka: Another Hindu temple was vandalised in Bangladesh as troops were deployed in
force to protect the minority community during its holiest festival that began on
October 11, officials said.
An idol set up inside a temple for the 'Durga puja' festival was destroyed in the
Western district of Pabna, officials said.
Senior government leaders rushed to the spot to assure the Hindu community, which
decided to give up their celebrations.
"Everything is peaceful here now", police officer Matiur Rahman told on telephone.
He said a case was filed but there were no immediate suspects.
In another incident, leaflets in the name of an Islamist outfit were distributed in
the Southern district of Pirojpur urging Hindus to destroy the idols or see them
destroyed by the militants.
But the incident could have a political dimension. It took place in a constituency
held by the fundamentalist Jammat-e-Islami, a controversial member of Prime Minister
Khaleda Zia's coalition government, and 'The Daily Star' newspaper said two suspects
arrested for distributing the leaflets were from the main Opposition Awami League.
Zia's government has declared a "state of alert" during the five-day festival,
hoping to avoid accusations of discrimination against the Hindu community, which
forms 12 per cent of Bangladesh's mostly Muslim 130 million people.
Bangladesh's Opposition and Hindu groups have alleged persecution against the
minority community after the coalition swept to power a year ago.
The government has denied any campaign against Hindus. Zia and other leaders met the
members of the minority community as the festival got underway.
In the capital Dhaka, thousands of Hindus crowded temples in the old city on October
11, celebrating the festival with drums, cymbals and conch shells.
Troops were deployed across the city's 300 places of worship. Ahead of the
celebrations, police detained more than 1,400 people "to ensure a trouble-free
festival".
Over the weekend, a temple was torched and idols destroyed in three attacks around
Bangladesh.
Amnesty International said in a December report that Hindus and other religious
minorities had been attacked after the general election won by Zia's Islamist allied
coalition.
But a US state department's 2002 international religious freedom report said many
reports of atrocities have not been independently verified and that
Bangladeshis "generally are free to practice the religion of their choice".
It said there was a rise in crime after Zia's election that "increased public
perceptions of the vulnerability of religious minorities".
AFP