
June in Bangladesh was not just marked by horror—it was a glaring indictment of the Yunus regime’s utter failure to protect its people.
Rape & Sexual Violence This month alone saw:
• 63 rapes, including 17 gang rapes
• 7 survivors were women and girls with disabilities
• 19 children and 23 teenage girls were raped
• 39 cases of sexual harassment, 51 cases of physical abuse
These are not just numbers—they are shocking reminders that women in Bangladesh remain dangerously unprotected.
Mob Lynchings: Not Justice—Just Brutality
• 41 incidents of public lynching
• 10 killed, 47 severely injured
People were brutally attacked based on political identity, suspicion, or hearsay—executed without trial.
This isn’t justice—it’s mob rule thriving in the absence of law.
Unidentified Dead Bodies: Silent Killings Under State Watch
• 49 unidentified corpses recovered in June
• Found floating in water, dumped by highways, under bridges, or in fields
These nameless bodies are a chilling testament to a state that looks away as people vanish and die.
🗣️ Supreme Court lawyer Shahdeen Malik told Prothom Alo:
“The surge in mob violence is the direct result of state inaction and internal divisions.”
🛑 Yet the Chief Advisor, Home Minister, and Law Minister remain shockingly silent. Instead, a senior spokesperson for the government tried to whitewash the mobs as mere ‘pressure groups’.
➡️ This isn’t just negligence. This is complicity.
➡️ The state itself has become a shield for criminals.
We demand answers:
• Where is justice for rape survivors?
• Who is responsible for protecting citizens from lynch mobs?
• When will the bloodshed stop?
👉 Who is accountable for this brutal anarchy?
👉 How long will this culture of impunity last?
When the state fails to deliver justice, the voice of the people becomes the only weapon of resistance.