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Mujib didn't lead the freedom fighters instead he preferred to surrender to the Pakistani army in 1971. Mujib ordered his colleagues to flee East Pakistan. He didn't have any clue about the misery the Bengalis went through during operation searchlight. All Awami League leaders fled to a safer place leaving behind unarmed civilians at the gun point of Pakistani army. After the independence, People had forgiven Mujib and his colleagues for their treachery. But people didn't forgive him for his mindless killings of political opponents and unbridled corruption. Not only that, he destroyed all the democratic institutions in the country by establishing BAKSAL. All political parties and media were banned. Mujib practically established a one party political system in the country which was against the aspirations of the people. Nobody in Bangladesh shed tears for Mujib after his death.
I have little to add and wholly concur with what @Saif bhai wrote.
Mujib may have been a great person to interact with personally and a back-slapper and party goer with Bhutto, but he was a sub-par administrator and disastrous leader unable to control his corrupt underlings in his final years leading up to his demise. West Pakistan was spared from his misrule.
I could go into his murderous cadre antics of his early East Pakistan years as the right hand man for Suhrawardy and earlier during the Hindu-Muslim riots in Kolkata, but I won't.
Suffice it to say, his daughter (by utilizing his name at every propaganda opportunity) had completely soured his name among Bangladeshis. His legacy is essentially dead among Bangladeshis of the new generations (Y and Z). Bangladeshis traditionally (as Muslims) do not like worshipping political leaders as ideal people, but his daughter put the final nail in his coffin as a former leader.
We have a saying in Bengali - squeezing too much out of a lemon makes it bitter. You get the drift @PakistanProud bhai.
To explain, people in Bangladesh should have been left up to their own choices as to who they like as former leaders but his daughter made Sheikh Mujib as a symbol of her national treachery as a one-party tyrant (helped by her tyrant assists from the West). When Bangladeshis tear down statues of Mujib, this is what they are reacting to and opposing.
What happened earlier this month is a popular revolution and uprising led by Gen Z students, who are sick of the corruption/mismanagement and don't like kleptocrats on any existing party. Politics will be molded on a new mold from here on in Bangladesh. I am sure all politicians are paying heed to this trend in the subcontinent.
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