- Joined
- Mar 11, 2013
- Messages
- 13,152
- Points
- 113
“One of Noor’s video blogs featured the apparent vandalism of a Buddhist statue under construction in a Buddhist monastery in Rangunia. Noor claimed that the attackers were supported by forest officials and the local MP of the AL party because they wanted to evict the monks from the area. After Noor published his videos, local Islamist groups protested against the blogger and accused him of damaging religious harmony between Muslims and Buddhists.”
Note that the local “Islamist” groups didn’t have any problem with the vandalism of the Buddhist statue. Only Noor was “damaging religious harmony between Muslims and Buddhists” by defending the Buddhists.
This is a universally recurring phenomenon. Counterjihadists in the U.S. are terrible people for pointing out the violent actions of Islamic jihadis and incendiary statements of some Muslim clerics; the same people who charge those counterjihadists with “Islamophobia,” however, never have a word to say about those jihadis and clerics. The fault lies not with them for calling for and engaging in warfare against unbelievers; it lies with us for pointing out that they’re doing it.
“Bangladeshi blogger faces death threats for criticizing Islamic fundamentalism,” by Arafatul Islam, DW, August 24, 2020 (thanks to The Religion of Peace):
Rights groups are urging Bangladeshi authorities to withdraw all charges against blogger Asad Noor, restore his passport and end harassment of his family members. Noor fled to India after multiple threats to his life.
Asad Noor, an outspoken Bangladeshi blogger, has been facing threats and intimidation from both state and non-state actors for supporting minorities and criticizing Islamic fundamentalism.
The atheist blogger crossed the Bangladesh-India border illegally on February 14, 2019, with the help of an agent after intelligence officers confiscated his passport. He has been living in India ever since.
“In my YouTube and Facebook videos, I have been criticizing Islam and Prophet Mohammad, referencing the Quran and the Hadith. At the same time, I am critical about political Islam. That’s why Islamists are angry with me,” Noor told DW.
“Local police frequently search our house (in Bangladesh) to try and arrest me … my family has been paying the price for my activism,” he added.
Alleged attack on monastery
In July, Noor published several video blogs protesting the persecution of Bangladesh’s minority Buddhist community in Rangunia, a town in the southeastern part of the country.
A local leader of the country’s ruling party Awami League (AL) sued the blogger in July 2020 under the Digital Security Act, accusing him of “hurting religious sentiments” and “running propaganda against the spirit of the liberation war.”
One of Noor’s video blogs featured the apparent vandalism of a Buddhist statue under construction in a Buddhist monastery in Rangunia. Noor claimed that the attackers were supported by forest officials and the local MP of the AL party because they wanted to evict the monks from the area.
After Noor published his videos, local Islamist groups protested against the blogger and accused him of damaging religious harmony between Muslims and Buddhists.
Police raided Noor’s family house in Rangunia and allegedly harassed his family members while he was in India. “On the early morning of July 18, police forcefully picked up my parents as well as four other family members, and kept them in illegal detention for nearly 48 hours,” Noor said.
The Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) was formed in 2004 to battle growing Islamism in Bangladesh. It initially managed to arrest or kill some top terrorists. But it did not take long for RAB’s good reputation to be tarnished as it slowly became a symbol of fear. It’s now seen as an all-powerful “death squad” unit that acts on the fringes of the law and imposes its own brand of justice….
Note that the local “Islamist” groups didn’t have any problem with the vandalism of the Buddhist statue. Only Noor was “damaging religious harmony between Muslims and Buddhists” by defending the Buddhists.
This is a universally recurring phenomenon. Counterjihadists in the U.S. are terrible people for pointing out the violent actions of Islamic jihadis and incendiary statements of some Muslim clerics; the same people who charge those counterjihadists with “Islamophobia,” however, never have a word to say about those jihadis and clerics. The fault lies not with them for calling for and engaging in warfare against unbelievers; it lies with us for pointing out that they’re doing it.
“Bangladeshi blogger faces death threats for criticizing Islamic fundamentalism,” by Arafatul Islam, DW, August 24, 2020 (thanks to The Religion of Peace):
Rights groups are urging Bangladeshi authorities to withdraw all charges against blogger Asad Noor, restore his passport and end harassment of his family members. Noor fled to India after multiple threats to his life.
Asad Noor, an outspoken Bangladeshi blogger, has been facing threats and intimidation from both state and non-state actors for supporting minorities and criticizing Islamic fundamentalism.
The atheist blogger crossed the Bangladesh-India border illegally on February 14, 2019, with the help of an agent after intelligence officers confiscated his passport. He has been living in India ever since.
“In my YouTube and Facebook videos, I have been criticizing Islam and Prophet Mohammad, referencing the Quran and the Hadith. At the same time, I am critical about political Islam. That’s why Islamists are angry with me,” Noor told DW.
“Local police frequently search our house (in Bangladesh) to try and arrest me … my family has been paying the price for my activism,” he added.
Alleged attack on monastery
In July, Noor published several video blogs protesting the persecution of Bangladesh’s minority Buddhist community in Rangunia, a town in the southeastern part of the country.
A local leader of the country’s ruling party Awami League (AL) sued the blogger in July 2020 under the Digital Security Act, accusing him of “hurting religious sentiments” and “running propaganda against the spirit of the liberation war.”
One of Noor’s video blogs featured the apparent vandalism of a Buddhist statue under construction in a Buddhist monastery in Rangunia. Noor claimed that the attackers were supported by forest officials and the local MP of the AL party because they wanted to evict the monks from the area.
After Noor published his videos, local Islamist groups protested against the blogger and accused him of damaging religious harmony between Muslims and Buddhists.
Police raided Noor’s family house in Rangunia and allegedly harassed his family members while he was in India. “On the early morning of July 18, police forcefully picked up my parents as well as four other family members, and kept them in illegal detention for nearly 48 hours,” Noor said.
The Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) was formed in 2004 to battle growing Islamism in Bangladesh. It initially managed to arrest or kill some top terrorists. But it did not take long for RAB’s good reputation to be tarnished as it slowly became a symbol of fear. It’s now seen as an all-powerful “death squad” unit that acts on the fringes of the law and imposes its own brand of justice….