Op-Ed / Asia 20 June 2016 1 minute A Rule of Law Meltdown Is Behind the Murder of Bloggers in Bangladesh Share Facebook Twitter Email Linkedin Whatsapp Save Print A series of gruesome attacks on bloggers in Bangladesh has shocked the country and the world. But they are only one element in a years-long cycle of mounting violence. Large-scale political repression has created a climate of injustice that extremist groups have easily exploited in their war against secularists and liberal thinkers. Unfortunately, political violence is nothing new in Bangladesh. Much of it is the result of the unrelenting, intense rivalry between the country’s two major parties, the governing Awami League of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and the opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) of former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia and its Islamist ally Jamaat-e-Islami. But the violence has worsened as repression peaks. The government, in its attempt to silence political dissent, has politicized and dangerously overstretched the country’s law enforcement institutions. Bangladesh’s prisons are overflowing with political opponents and activists, while extremists, thriving in an atmosphere of impunity, intimidate ordinary citizens. ... [continue reading] A full version of this article first appeared in World Politics Review. Related Tags More for you Op-Ed / Asia After Hasina, Bangladesh needs a foreign policy reset Originally published in Nikkei Asia Statement / Asia Bangladesh: The Long Road Ahead Also available in Also available in Bengali