Violent protests have broken out in Bangladesh following the death of a youth leader, as mobs set fire to newspaper offices and left journalists trapped inside the burning buildings.
Two major newspaper offices, Britain’s Daily Star and the Bengali-language Prothom Alo, were set on fire late on Thursday night by the rioters.
Critics accuse the publications of favouring neighbouring India, where Bangladesh’s ousted prime minister Sheikh Hasina has taken refuge since fleeing Dhaka in the wake of the 2024 uprising.
Staff stuck inside the blazing offices were rescued by firefighters, who brought the blaze under control early on Friday.
Staff trapped inside the Daily Star newsroom said the building quickly filled with smoke.
‘I can’t breathe anymore… You are killing me,’ reporter Zyma Islam wrote on Facebook, before firefighters managed to bring the blaze under control and rescue the employees.
Sajjad Sharif, executive editor at Prothom Alo, called it ‘an attack on freedom of the press, expression, dissent and diversity of opinion’.
It is the second straight day of protestors rallying in Bangladesh calling for the arrest of the gunmen who shot and killed a key figure in last year’s pro-democracy uprising.
The Prothom Alo newspaper office in Karwan Bazar was ablaze after protestors set it on fire on Friday
The protests followed the death of youth leader Sharif Osman Hadi, 32 (pictured inset), who was a key figure in last year’s pro-democracy uprising
Protestors held posters of Hadi, who was shot by a gunman and died in a Singapore hospital days later from his injuries
When news spread that 32-year-old student leader Sharif Osman Hadi died in hospital in Singapore on Thursday, crowds took to the streets in an outpouring of mourning and anger.
Several buildings were vandalised, including the offices of media outlets deemed to favour India – an old ally of Bangladesh’s ousted leadership.
Hadi, a staunch critic of India, was shot by masked gunmen while leaving a mosque in the capital Dhaka last week. He was initially wounded and flown to Singapore for treatment, but eventually succumbed to his wounds.
UN rights chief Volker Turk called on Friday for a ‘prompt, impartial, thorough and transparent’ investigation.
In Dhaka, protester Sajid Al Adeeb told the AFP that ‘people have gathered here demanding the swift arrest of those who killed Hadi.’
The 20-year-old student said the killers were ‘currently in India’ – a claim which New Delhi has not commented on.
‘I urge the government to take immediate and appropriate steps to arrest those responsible,’ he added.
‘Above all, I want Hadi’s ideals to live on.’
Military personnel stood guard in Dhaka amid the violent protests, which saw several buildings in the capital set on fire, according to authorities
People seen at the entrance of the Daily Star building as it burned on Friday. Critics accused the Daily Star and Protham Alo of favouring India, where Bangladesh’s ousted prime minister has taken refuge since fleeing Dhaka after the 2024 uprising
The aftermath of the blaze at the Prothom Alo newspaper
Burnt Daily Star newspapers made up the rubble the morning after the riots. Staff stuck inside the blazing offices were rescued by firefighters
Protests were also held in the cities of Gazipur, Sylhet and Chattogram on Friday.
Hadi’s remains were brought to Dhaka on Friday evening ahead of a funeral planned for the following day.
The customary funeral prayer will be performed on Saturday in front of the parliament building, the government said.
Hadi’s body will then be placed at the central mosque of Dhaka University to allow people to pay their last respects before his burial there.
Amir Hossain, Hadi’s brother-in-law, told AFP that the family wanted justice.
‘We don’t need anything except justice. The perpetrators must be punished,’ Hossain said.
The UN’s Turk said in a statement that ‘he was deeply troubled’ by Hadi’s killing.
‘Retaliation and revenge will only deepen divisions and undermine the rights of all,’ he said.
Protestors shouted slogans during the protests, which are in their second day following the death of prominent activist Hadi
Supporters blocked the Shahbagh Square, Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh, a major intersection and cultural hub
‘I urge the authorities to conduct a prompt, impartial, thorough and transparent investigation into the attack that led to Hadi’s death, and to ensure due process and accountability for those responsible.’
Ahead of the funeral, security has been beefed up in the capital with strict restriction on flying drones around the parliament building.
The US embassy in Dhaka urged its citizens to remain vigilant and ‘remember that gatherings intended to be peaceful can turn confrontational and escalate into violence’.
The interim government, led by the 85-year-old Nobel Peace Prize laureate Muhammad Yunus, spoke to the editors of the two newspapers that were set ablaze on Friday and condemned the vandalism.
The government also urged citizens to resist all forms of mob violence which it said was committed by a few ‘fringe elements’.
‘This is a critical moment in our nation’s history when we are making a historic democratic transition,’ a government statement said.
‘We cannot and must not allow it to be derailed by those few who thrive on chaos and reject peace.’
On Wednesday, before Hadi’s death, protesters demanding Hasina be returned to Bangladesh marched toward the Indian High Commission in Dhaka, in the latest sign of strained ties between the neighbours since the fall of her autocratic government.
Hadi, a leader of the student protest group Inqilab Mancha, was running for a parliament seat in the February 2026 national election.
Bangladeshi police said they had launched a manhunt for his killers.
