Photo: Daily Messenger
Drama is nothing new for BNP and its character is crystal clear to the people of Bangladesh. The citizens of Bangladesh know very well that BNP’s main aim is to seize power by any means and that’s why its leaders have staged drama, resorted to falsehood, taken the path of unethical politics and terrorist tactics.
The party has been staging drama again and again since its formation. With these false dramas, the party has given people fodder for laughter. Even the grassroots leaders of the party had faced embarrassing situations on several occasions for the false dramas staged by its senior leaders.
In its latest drama, BNP on Thursday broke open its central office in Dhaka’s Nayapaltan and entered it for the first time in 74 days since it was locked it resorted to violence on the streets on October 28.
Party insiders said the party leaders staged the drama to get sympathy from its foreign masters as they locked the central office on October 28 in the presence of reporters and general people.
They went into hiding after being widely criticised for the kind of attacks and heinous acts of police lynching and burning of railways after October 28.
They never tried to enter their party office for the last 57 days, fearing assault from party activists and supporters.
But on Thursday they claimed that police locked the gate, and when they asked for the key to open it, they did not give the key.
Dhaka Metropolitan Police (DMP) several times said that the police did not seal the BNP office in Naya Paltan, rather it was the work of the party.
“They locked it [BNP office] and didn’t go there. We have no objection if they open their offices … We never had any,” Dhaka Metropolitan Police (DMP) Commissioner Habibur Rahman said on November 14.
Political analysts said that with this unethical practice of staging false drama, the BNP proved that it is doing politics of falsehood. It casted a negative effect on the grassroots leaders and activists of the BNP. They opined that the movement of BNP has fallen into the ditch as they are doing politics at the advice of foreign masters.
Messenger/Alamin