The 1/11 Chronicle — Part 4 (FINALE): The Volcano Erupts — The Day Bangladesh Went on the Operating Table (2006-2007)

October 28 2006 Logi-Boitha violence Dhaka

Read Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3

Six years of festering rot. Minority persecution, state-sponsored extremism, grenade attacks, arms trafficking, a world record in corruption, bombs in 63 districts — Bangladesh was a ticking time bomb.

In October 2006, it finally exploded.

🔴 Election Commission Hijacked & the K.M. Hasan Controversy

After BNP’s term ended, a caretaker government was supposed to take over to conduct fair elections. Under the constitution, the last retired Chief Justice would lead it.

But BNP had rigged the game in advance — they extended the Chief Justice’s retirement age specifically so Justice K.M. Hasan would get the role. The opposition said: this man is not neutral, this election will not be fair.

🔴 October 28, 2006 — The Logi-Boitha Massacre

Paltan Moar. The heart of Dhaka.

Political workers faced off with bamboo poles and oars. People beaten to death in broad daylight. Blood-soaked streets. Men dying on live television — and no one could stop it.

Then came the prolonged shutdowns and deadlock. October 28, 2006 to January 9, 2007 — two and a half months of the country burning. Dozens killed. Thousands injured. The economy paralyzed. Ordinary people held hostage.

🔴 The President Becomes Caretaker Chief — The Ultimate Farce

When K.M. Hasan refused the role under political pressure, President Iajuddin Ahmed seized the position of Chief Advisor himself.

The President — appointed during BNP’s tenure — would now oversee the election? It was a slap in the face of democracy.

🔴 The United Nations’ Final Warning

The situation had deteriorated so badly that the UN sent a message: if they supported such a questionable election, Bangladeshi peacekeepers could be removed from international missions.

UN peacekeeping isn’t just a point of pride for the Bangladesh Army — it’s a massive economic and diplomatic pillar. This threat was the final straw.

🔴 January 11, 2007 — That Historic Night

Oath taking ceremony road to 1/11 Bangladesh
The oath ceremony that marked the beginning of the caretaker government — the road to January 11, 2007

9 PM. A state of emergency declared nationwide.

Iajuddin Ahmed resigned. A neutral caretaker government was formed — Dr. Fakhruddin Ahmed became Chief Advisor.

And then began the work that no one had done for six years:

  • 12.1 million fake voters removed — photo voter ID rolls created for the first time
  • 160 politicians, bureaucrats & businessmen charged with corruption — including Tarique Rahman
  • Political extortion and thuggery shut down
  • Ordinary people could finally sleep without fear

🔴 Was 1/11 Perfect?

No. No military intervention ever is. There were human rights violation allegations during the emergency too.

But the question is — did 1/11 come from nowhere?

Absolutely not.

  • 18,000+ minority women raped
  • 24 killed in a grenade attack on a political rally
  • International arms trafficking through state channels
  • World’s most corrupt country 5 years running
  • Simultaneous bombings in 63 districts
  • 600+ extrajudicial killings
  • Systematic efforts to destroy democracy

These aren’t opinions. These are facts documented by Human Rights Watch, BBC, Amnesty International, International Crisis Group, Transparency International, and Bangladesh’s own courts.


They call 1/11 a crime today.

But was 2001 to 2006 not a crime?

Now you have both sides. The decision is yours.


📎 Sources: Human Rights Watch, BBC News, Amnesty International, International Crisis Group, Transparency International, Minority Rights Group, Bangladesh court rulings & judicial commission reports

Comments

2 responses to “The 1/11 Chronicle — Part 4 (FINALE): The Volcano Erupts — The Day Bangladesh Went on the Operating Table (2006-2007)”

  1. […] changed after January 11, 2007, when the military-backed caretaker government took power and launched genuine investigations into […]

  2. […] Military officers who played roles in political transitions — particularly 1/11 […]

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