Human Rights Violation
In 2024–2025, Bangladesh experienced a surge of concern from Hindu, Buddhist, and Christian minority organisations over attacks, discrimination, and land-grabbing incidents reportedly targeting their communities.
These concerns have been widely documented by rights groups like Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch (HRW), and the Bangladesh Hindu Buddhist Christian Unity Council (BHBCUC).
When Muhammad Yunus - a Nobel Peace Prize laureate and one of Bangladesh’s most respected figures - gave interviews downplaying or denying that such anti-minority violence existed, the backlash was strong.
In an interview with Zeteo in September 2024, Yunus stated:
He framed reported incidents as neighbourly disputes between Hindus and Muslims, rather than targeted attacks.
These concerns have been widely documented by rights groups like Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch (HRW), and the Bangladesh Hindu Buddhist Christian Unity Council (BHBCUC).
When Muhammad Yunus - a Nobel Peace Prize laureate and one of Bangladesh’s most respected figures - gave interviews downplaying or denying that such anti-minority violence existed, the backlash was strong.
What Yunus said (in brief)
In an interview with Zeteo in September 2024, Yunus stated:
There is no anti-Hindu violence in Bangladesh. These are fake news stories... one of India’s specialities is fake news.
He framed reported incidents as neighbourly disputes between Hindus and Muslims, rather than targeted attacks.
Why rights groups criticised him
- Denial of minority persecution
- Rights reports have detailed attacks on temples, homes, and businesses owned by Hindus and Buddhists, especially around elections.
- The BHBCUC stated that his remarks "distort reality and embolden perpetrators of violence."
- Denying the lived experience of victims, they said, silences vulnerable groups and erodes trust in justice systems.
- Undermining advocacy for protection
- When a prominent global figure like Yunus calls such violence "fake news," it risks delegitimising local activists who document abuses.
- Rights groups warned that this kind of rhetoric can make it harder for victims to be believed or protected.
- Political undertone
- Some interpreted his remarks as politically convenient for the government or groups wishing to present Bangladesh as free of sectarian conflict.
- Critics argued that this was a form of image management at the expense of truth and minority safety.
- Failure to uphold moral leadership
- Yunus is celebrated globally for peacebuilding and social justice (via microcredit and Grameen Bank).
- Activists felt that minimising discrimination contradicted the humanistic values he’s known for.
- As one op-ed put it:
When the voice that once uplifted the poor now dismisses the persecuted, it betrays the same principles it once defended.
- Impact on social harmony
- Bangladesh’s minorities often depend on moral and political support from civil society.
- Critics feared Yunus’ words could embolden perpetrators or discourage victims from reporting abuse.
Sources
AP News
Bangladesh minority rights group accuses interim government of failing to protect minorities
Hindustan Times
'India's specialty': Bangladesh's Yunus has a ‘fake news’ denial on anti-Hindu violence | Watch
Indian Express
'Don’t call yourself a Hindu, call yourself a citizen': Bangladesh chief adviser Muhammad Yunus’s advice to minorities
TBS News
There's no anti-Hindu violence in Bangladesh: Yunus tells Mehdi Hasan in Zeteo interview