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[๐Ÿ‡ง๐Ÿ‡ฉ] Chittagong Hill Tracts----A Victim of Indian Intervention

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[๐Ÿ‡ง๐Ÿ‡ฉ] Chittagong Hill Tracts----A Victim of Indian Intervention
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4 killed as armed groups clash in Khagrachari
Staff Correspondent 26 July, 2025, 16:29

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At least four people were reportedly killed in a gunfight between two armed groups at Jora Sindhu Karbaripara under Dighinala upazila of Khagrachari district on Friday night.

Confirming the gunfight, Dighinala police officer-in-charge Md Zakaria told New Age on Saturday afternoon that the gunfight took place between United Peopleโ€™s Democratic Front and Parbatya Chattagram Jana Samhati Samiti for hours since 8:00pm on Friday.

โ€˜From multiple people we have heard that four people were killed. The place is extremely remote and we cannot send forces to check due to highly remote areas,โ€™ the OC said.

The police officer said that they could not even confirm identities of the deceased as they were yet to receive bodies.

The UPDF, however, in a statement on Saturday said that the news of four UPDF memberss killed in gunfight between UPDF and JSS was โ€˜completely falseโ€™.

In the statement, UPDF spokesperson Ongyo Marma said that the party did not know about any gunfight incident, which was published in media.

โ€˜UPDF did not engage in war with anybody and no UPDF member was killed,โ€™ he said. PCJSS central member Dipayan Khisa said that he was unaware about such gunfight.

According to local people, at least six hours of gunfight took place starting from Friday night between the followers of UPDF led by Prasit Khisa and PCJSS led by Jyotirindra Bodhipriya Larma, widely known as Santu Larma, over establishing supremacy in the area, New Age correspondent in Khagrachari reported.

Witnesses said that panic sparked among the local people after explosion of grenades. They said that grenade explosion was rare in such clashes.​
 
I think we have to impose martial law in Chittagong Hill Tract to save it from disintegration. Strategically, Chittagong Hill Tract is the most important region for Bangladesh. And also we need to abrogate the so called peace treaty with Shanti Bahini to restore rule of Bengalis in Chittagong Hill Tract.


 

Army raids UPDF hideout in Rangamati; gunfire exchanged

Published :
Jul 29, 2025 10:48
Updated :
Jul 29, 2025 10:48

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Members of the Bangladesh Army have raided a hideout of the United Peopleโ€™s Democratic Front (UPDF) in a remote hilly area of Baghaichhari upazila in Rangamati.

The operation was carried out on Tuesday, according to a media release from the Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR), as per a UNB report.

During the operation, an exchange of gunfire occurred, later security forces recovered firearms, including an AK-47 rifle, ammunition and other military equipment from the hideout, reads it.

Further details of the incident, including possible casualties or arrests, will be shared later, the ISPR said.

Members of the Bangladesh Army have raided a hideout of the United Peopleโ€™s Democratic Front (UPDF) in a remote hilly area of Baghaichhari upazila in Rangamati.

The operation was carried out on Tuesday, according to a media release from the Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR), as per a UNB report.

During the operation, an exchange of gunfire occurred, later security forces recovered firearms, including an AK-47 rifle, ammunition and other military equipment from the hideout, reads it.

Further details of the incident, including possible casualties or arrests, will be shared later, the ISPR said.​
 
The Chittagong Hill Tract is getting restless once again. The video below contains many pictures of KNF and other terrorist outfits which prove that they are getting weapons and training from across the border. We can use TB-2 attack drones purchased from Turkey to neutralize the terrorist outfits sponsored by India.

 

CHT ACCORD: Implementation not possible without movement: discussion
Staff Correspondent 03 December, 2025, 00:40

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Politicians, rights activists and national minority leaders on Tuesday observed that without a strong movement full implementation of the Chittagong Hill Tracts Accord, signed about three decades ago, would not be possible.

Their remarks came at a discussion meeting held at the Womenโ€™s Voluntary Association auditorium in Dhaka city jointly organised by Parbatya Chattogram Ganosamhati Samiti and Bangladesh Adivasi Forum, marking 28 years of signing the agreement on December 2, 1997.

With Adivasi Forum leader Gagendra Nath Mahato in chair, the event was addressed by Communist Party of Bangladesh president Kazi Sazzad Zahir Chandan who said that the national minorities must continue their movement for the full implementation of the CHT accord.Dhaka city guide

The left and democratic political parties would continue supporting their movement, Sazzad Zahir said.

Rights activist Khushi Kabir, demanding the full implementation of the 1997 accord, said that it would be the best way to establish peace in the hills.

Adivasi Juba Forum vice-president Amar Shanti Chakma in his keynote paper said that addressing the issue of land ownership and empowerment of the regional and district councils would be the first step for resolving the ongoing crises in the CHT.

Association for Land Reforms and Development executive director Shamsul Huda alleged that the interim government did not give priority to establishing peace in the hills.

He also said that the interim government, after assuming power, had established several reform commissions on different issues, which they could have done for the trouble-ridden CHT region also, but they did not.

Leader of Parbatya Shanti Chukti Bastabayan Andolan Zakir Hossain, also chief executive of non-governmental organisation Nagorik Uddyog, mentioned that signing of the peace accord did not result in an end to the conflicts and confrontations as was expected. Assistant general secretary of Socialist Party of Bangladesh Razequzzaman Ratan said that the peace accord had failed to fulfil the aspirations of the national minority people.

He demanded an immediate end to the rampant grabbing of land of the national minority communities and full implementation of the CHT accord.

Bangladesh Jasod standing committee member Mushtuq Husein also demanded an immediate end to the violation of human rights of the national minority people of the hills.

Central leader of Parbatya Chattogram Ganasamhati Samiti KS Mong called on the government to resolve the problems of the CHT region, prioritising it as a national crisis.​
 

28 yrs of CHT Accord
CHT Peace Accord implementation faces fresh complications

Partha Shankar SahaDhaka
Published: 02 Dec 2025, 13: 00

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Chittagong Hill Tracts Prothom Alo

The Rangamati Hill District Council building remained under padlock for five days last month. Several Bengali organisations enforced the programme, demanding the cancellation of quotas for hill communities in public employment along with four other demands. Before that, the Councilโ€™s chairman, Kajal Talukder, was assaulted.

The Rangamati Hill District Council was formed in 1989. In the three decades since, no one has seen the Council, or any other hill district council, under lock and key.

The public humiliation of the Councilโ€™s chairman is also unprecedented in the region, says Gautam Dewan, the first elected chairman of the Rangamati Hill District Council.

Speaking to Prothom Alo, he said that obstructing teacher recruitment in this manner is, in effect, an attempt to undermine the Peace Accord. During the past 18 months of the interim government, there has been no genuine attempt to implement the Accord; rather, efforts are underway to effectively โ€œpadlockโ€ the Accord itself.

The Chittagong Hill Tracts (CHT) have even witnessed several โ€˜untowardโ€™ incidents over the past year and a half. These include the deaths of five people in law enforcement shootings, paralysis of district councils, the suspension of Land Commission meetings, and fresh armed clashes.

As a result, implementation of the Accord has become even more tangled. It is against this backdrop that the 28th anniversary of the CHT Peace Accord is being observed today, 2 December.

Councils run by appointed, not elected, members

After two decades of armed struggle, the Peace Accord was signed on 2 December 1997 between the government and the Parbatya Chattogram Jana Samhati Samiti (JSS), which had been agitating for autonomy. Following the Accord, the Regional Council and the district councils of Rangamati, Bandarban, and Khagrachhari were formed.

The 1989 law governing the district councils was amended accordingly. While several provisions have been implemented since, several central issues, such as resolving land disputes and holding elections to the district councils, remain unsettled.

After the 1997 Accord, violence in the hills decreased significantly. Although clashes between hill people and Bengalis did occur in the interim, gun violence and deaths had become rare. Under the interim government, however, old fears have resurfaced.
The JSS, the signatory to the Accord, has repeatedly accused successive governments, especially the most recent Awami League government, of obstructing implementation.

Of the Accordโ€™s 72 clauses, 35 are directly linked to the district councils. Experts therefore regard the Accord as a charter for local self-governance. Yet, elections to the three hill district councils have never been held. All the governments have run the councils through their nominees.

After assuming office, the interim government dissolved all three councils. Following about a month of leadership vacuum, the councils were reconstituted in November last year, again with government-nominated individuals.

โ€˜This wonโ€™t lead to anything goodโ€™

Bengali organisations raised objections to the Rangamati Hill District Councilโ€™s recruitment notice for assistant teachers in primary schools across 10 upazilas. They demanded the introduction of the national formula, 93 per cent merit-based, and 7 per cent quota, within the hills as well. As a result, examinations could not be held despite two dates being announced. Ultimately, the council building was padlocked.

Under the Peace Accord, priority in recruitment must be given to indigenous permanent residents of the hills. The District Council Act also vests the power of third and fourth-class recruitment in the council.

I received invitations for two meetings but both were cancelled. Under political governments, such problems did arise. But what is preventing this government from keeping these institutions, created under the Accord, functioning? The interim governmentโ€™s approach to the Accord has been purely ceremonial---Chakma Circle chief Raja Devasish Roy.

Jahangir Kamal, coordinator of the Parbatya Chattogram Samo-Odhikar Andolon, told Prothom Alo, โ€œThe most deprived community in the hills today is the Bengalis. Communities including the Khumi, Mro, and Rakhine are also lagging behind. We want recruitment purely on merit.โ€

When asked whether maintaining the national quota structure would push the numerically smaller indigenous peoples even further behind, he said, โ€œYes, that too can be discussed.โ€

Under the law and regulations of the three hill district councils, both indigenous and non-indigenous (Bengali) communities receive recruitment proportionate to the number of council members representing their groups. This system has been followed for decades.

Human rights activist Nirupa Dewan told Prothom Alo, โ€œBengalis have always been employed according to the law. No one questioned this before. Now fresh questions are being raised by those who do not believe in the spirit of the Accord or want it abolished.โ€

The structure of the hill district councils is significantly different from other district councils.

Local government expert Salauddin M Aminuzzaman believes the councils are a genuine model of local governance. The disputes surrounding the councils today, he says, undermine the spirit of local government.

According to him, in such a strategically vital region, disrupting local empowerment in this manner โ€œwill not lead to anything goodโ€.

2 โ€˜ominousโ€™ Septembers

Two bouts of deadly conflict in the hill districts over the past year resulted in eight deaths.

On 18 September last year, a Bengali youth, Md Mamun, was beaten to death in Khagrachhari Sadar over allegations of motorcycle theft. The next day in Dighinala, a man named Dhananjay Chakma was killed in mob violence.

Bengalis have always been employed according to the law. No one questioned this before. Now fresh questions are being raised by those who do not believe in the spirit of the Accord or want it abolished---Human rights activist Nirupa Dewan.

That night, gunfire erupted in the district town following the incident, killing two hill youths. This year, on 28 September, three hill youths were shot dead in Guimara, Khagrachhari.

After the 1997 Accord, violence in the hills decreased significantly. Although clashes between hill people and Bengalis did occur in the interim, gun violence and deaths had become rare. Under the interim government, however, old fears have resurfaced.

Speaking about this, security analyst Major (retd.) Emdadul Islam told Prothom Alo, โ€œTwo rounds of violence within a year are rare in the post-Accord period. The face-off between the security forces and local residents in Guimara is unprecedented. This is the result of the interim administrationโ€™s overall failure.โ€

Implementation reduced to mere formalities

Land disputes remain the most intractable issue in the CHT. Under the Accord, such disputes are to be resolved by the constitutionally mandated Land Dispute Resolution Commission. But its most recent meeting, scheduled for October, was not held due to obstruction by local Bengalis.

Similar disruptions occurred under the previous political government, yet the Commission managed to conduct several meetings nonetheless.

When the 12th meeting of the Task Force on the Rehabilitation of India-Returned Jumma Refugees and Internally Displaced Persons was called on 22 October, it too was cancelled following threats from local Bengalis.

As the Chakma Circle chief, Raja Devasish Roy is involved with both the Land Commission and the Task Force. He told Prothom Alo, โ€œI received invitations for two meetings but both were cancelled. Under political governments, such problems did arise. But what is preventing this government from keeping these institutions, created under the Accord, functioning? The interim governmentโ€™s approach to the Accord has been purely ceremonial.โ€

Foreign affairs adviser Md Touhid Hossain has been appointed convenor of the CHT Accord Implementation and Monitoring Committee, and Appellate Divisionโ€™s retired justice Muhammad Abdul Hafiz has been appointed chair of the Land Commission.

A meeting of the Implementation and Monitoring Committee has been held in Rangamati with the participation of the JSS. But the JSS said in a statement marking the Accordโ€™s anniversary that there has been โ€œno progressโ€ in implementing the decisions taken at that meeting five months ago.

Repeated attempts to reach CHT affairs adviser Supradip Chakma for the governmentโ€™s position on Accord implementation went unanswered.​
 

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