Bangladeshi women rally against gender-based violence

By AFP
May 17, 2025
Garment workers come out of a factory during lunch hours at the Ashulia area, outskirts of Dhaka, Bangladesh, November 8, 2023. — Reuters
Garment workers come out of a factory during lunch hours at the Ashulia area, outskirts of Dhaka, Bangladesh, November 8, 2023. — Reuters

DHAKA: Around 3,000 women rallied on Friday in Bangladesh for the country´s interim government to openly support a commission tasked with addressing gender-based violence.

The Women´s Affairs Reform Commission was set up by the caretaker government of Nobel Peace prize winner Muhammad Yunus in November as part of its efforts to reform systems established during the iron-fisted rule of former Prime Minister Shiekh Hasina.

Bangladesh´s influential coalition of hardline Islamist parties has called for the commission to be abolished, saying the reforms it suggested were against Islamist ideology.

Jannatul Ferdous, a 40-year-old labourer, who took part in the rally, told AFP violence against women had been increasing. “The situation is worse than it was 16 years ago. The (Islamist) hardliners have gained too much strength,” she said.

The commission has recommended a uniform family code instead of Muslim family law, which governs inheritance, marriage, divorce, and other issues. The protest was organised in the capital Dhaka by ´Narir Daake Moitree Jatra´, a women´s movement pressing for equal rights.

“The interim government must fulfil its constitutional role and take action against the reactionary group that is spreading propaganda and misinformation against the reform commission,” the women´s platform said in a statement.