Bangladesh says will not ban ousted PM’s party

Bangladesh says will not ban ousted PM’s party

Last month, a UN rights company fact-finding vision claimed that her government was to blame for the government’s repeated attacks and murders of demonstrators in an attempt to hold onto power last year.

It identified “reasonable basis for the belief that the crimes against humanity of murder, torture, prison, and the punishment of various inhuman deeds have taken position.”

Students have constantly pressed for the party to be outlawed ahead of elections for a new government, which are scheduled for June second year, since she was toppled.

The interim state did not declare the Awami League’s student wing’s death while blaming its role in violent attacks on protests last year.

Hasnat Abdullah, a prominent member of a new student-backed political party, criticized the administration’s decision.

He wrote on Instagram,” The Awami League has to be banned.”

According to local magazine Prothom Alo, other student leader Nasir Uddin Patwary warned last month that if the party is not banned, Bangladesh will start to become a” legal war.”

On Friday, Shafiqul Rahman, the president of Bangladesh’s most important Islamist party, wrote on social media that people would reject its “rehabilitation.”