Bangladesh: Muslim Leader Rapes Hindu Woman
In yet another horrific case of targeting religious minorities by Muslims and violating their women, a 21-year-old Hindu woman was brutally raped by an influential Muslim leader in Bangladesh. This incident took place when the woman was visiting her paternal home in Ramchandrapur Panchkitta village under Muradnagar Upazila of Comilla district on the night of June 26, and has sparked outrage across Bangladesh, leading to mass protests and demands for justice from human rights organizations and the public.
According to police and local sources, the accused, Fazor Ali, forcibly entered the victim’s home around 10 p.m. and raped her at knifepoint. The survivor, a young mother of two, had come to stay with her parents for a couple of weeks. Her husband lives and works in Dubai. She alleges that Ali had been stalking and harassing her since the time she came to visit her parents. On Thursday night, when her family members had gone to visit a local fair, the accused, who is closely connected with the Bangladesh Nationalist Party, broke into the house and violently attacked her. He also filmed the gory act, and the footage was later circulated on social media, triggering widespread condemnation.
Following the massive outrage, five individuals were arrested in connection with this case. The victim also filed a complaint with the Muradnagar police on Friday, June 27. Fazor Ali was detained during a raid in Dhaka’s Sayedabad area for assaulting the woman, while the other four were arrested for recording and distributing the video of the assault. However, reports suggest that the police took action only after the video went viral and resulted in a massive backlash.
The case has been filed under the Women and Children Repression Prevention Act. Authorities have transferred the survivor to the One-Stop Crisis Centre at Cumilla Medical College Hospital for medical and psychological treatment.
The High Court of Bangladesh has taken suo motu cognizance of the matter, directing law enforcement agencies to remove all content related to the assault from social media and news portals. The police are also collaborating with cybercrime units to remove the viral footage from online platforms.
The two-judge bench has directed the authorities concerned to ensure the security of the rape survivor and provide her with necessary treatment. Remand hearings for the accused were scheduled on July 3, as the prosecution seeks further interrogation of the suspects.
What’s both shocking and deeply disturbing is the response from certain Muslims, who used social media to spread appalling and hateful views about the incident. Some Muslims openly justified the violence, claiming that since Bangladesh is a Muslim-majority country, it’s “natural” for Hindu women to endure such atrocities from time to time.
Under the leadership of Mohammad Yunus, Bangladesh is increasingly being seen as the rape capital of South Asia, with authorities appearing indifferent to the rising lawlessness. Alarmingly, the country’s police and military forces are acting like Muslim militias rather than guardians of law and order. Reports have emerged of these forces bulldozing sacred Hindu sites, including the Sri Sri Durga temple, destroying idols, vandalizing property, and looting valuables belonging to Hindu religious institutions.
And this happened between June 20 and June 29, 2025, when at least 24 rape cases involving women and children were reported nationwide. The scale and frequency of these assaults triggered widespread public outrage, forcing the government to take notice. Senior government adviser Sharmeen S. Murshid, a long-time advocate against gender-based violence, described the situation as a “pandemic-level crisis,” pointing to a broader breakdown in social and moral structures.
In response, the Ministry of Women and Children Affairs has launched Quick Response Teams (QRTs) in every sub-district (upazila). These teams are tasked with responding to cases within 24 hours and ensuring victims receive medical, legal, and psychological support. The move follows over 280,000 complaints received on the government’s hotline over the past year, which have overwhelmed existing systems.
Murshid also highlighted the growing influence of unrestricted mobile access, online pornography, and rampant drug abuse as contributing factors. An alarming case involved a 10-year-old raping a toddler, underscoring the urgent need for reform and awareness.
The adviser called for greater accountability in madrasas, warning that some function with little oversight and may be sites of abuse. She pledged direct government monitoring of such institutions. While Bangladesh’s laws, including Section 14 of the Women and Children Repression Prevention Act, provide for severe punishment, enforcement remains inconsistent. Murshid advocated for public exposure of perpetrators to act as a deterrent.
It’s increasingly evident that under the Yunus government, Bangladesh’s youth are drifting toward a fanatical adherence to Islam, and the country is grappling with a growing crisis of sexual violence. While the government’s swift deployment of Quick Response Teams (QRTs) may appear to be a proactive measure, without sustained cultural, legal, and institutional reforms, the problem is not only likely to persist; it would escalate rapidly.
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