In a chilling act of violence and religious intolerance, a mob stormed the shrine of Nurul Haque, widely known as Nural Pagla, in Rajbari, Bangladesh after the Juma prayers on Friday.
The attack escalated rapidly from protest to chaos, leaving one person dead, over 100 injured.
According to law enforcement sources, hundreds gathered under the banner of the “Tawhidi Janata” accusing Nurul Pagla’s burial site of grossly violating Islamic principles.
After the Juma prayers, the mob, armed with hammers and sticks, vandalised two police vehicles and the upazila nirbahi officer’s car before storming the shrine. They burned parts of the Darbar Sharif and brutally looted the premises.
The attackers overpowered police swiftly, forcing reinforcements from the army and Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) to be called in. Amid the chaos, they dug up Nurul Pagla’s body from the raised grave and carried it to Padma intersection on the Dhaka-Khulna highway, where they set it ablaze in public view.
Authorities are now pursuing legal action, filing charges against approximately 3,500 unidentified individuals for their involvement in this mayhem-among the largest single filings in recent memory.
The interim government swiftly condemned the attack, calling it “inhuman and despicable” and vowed to prosecute those responsible with full force of law.
Analysts warn that such acts of extremism and mob rule cannot be dismissed as local skirmishes-they reflect a mounting culture of religious vigilantism and erosion of rule-based governance.
This tragic event underscores a painful reality: the sanctity of religious spaces in Bangladesh is increasingly vulnerable in the absence of timely and effective safeguards, said Analysts.
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