GHHRC Leads Protest March Against Global Atrocities on Hindus, Demands Justice for Victims Like Dipu Chandra Das
The Global Hindu Human Rights Collective (GHHRC), along with several Hindu organizations, successfully organized a protest march condemning the continuing atrocities faced by Hindus in Bangladesh and across the world. The march was not merely symbolic. It was a collective outcry against a growing pattern of violence, discrimination, and religious targeting that Hindu communities continue to endure with alarming regularity.
At the center of the protest was a solemn tribute to Dipu Chandra Das, a young Hindu garment worker from Bangladesh whose brutal lynching has become a chilling symbol of this ongoing human rights crisis.
The Brutal Killing of Dipu Chandra Das
On the night of 18 December 2025, Dipu Chandra Das was attacked by a large mob in Bhaluka Upazila, Mymensingh district, Bangladesh, following unverified allegations of blasphemy. What followed was an act of barbarity that shocked consciences across borders. Dipu was beaten mercilessly, tied to a tree, and set on fire by the mob. His charred remains were later recovered and sent for autopsy.
Reports indicate that the allegations against him were never substantiated. Yet, in an environment where mob justice routinely replaces due process, especially when the accused belongs to a religious minority, Dipu was denied even the most basic protection of law. Disturbingly, local accountability mechanisms failed, and as of now, justice remains elusive.
Dipu’s murder was not an isolated eruption of violence. It unfolded against the backdrop of wider political instability and communal tension in Bangladesh, where Hindu minorities have repeatedly found themselves vulnerable to targeted attacks, often triggered by rumours, religious accusations, or orchestrated mob mobilisation.
A Pattern, Not an Exception
The GHHRC-led march emphasized a critical truth: Dipu Chandra Das is not an exception, he is one among many.
In recent months alone, Bangladesh has witnessed multiple incidents of mob violence, arson, and lynching involving Hindu victims. Homes of Hindu families have been set ablaze, temples vandalized, and individuals assaulted or killed under the pretext of blasphemy or communal provocation. In several cases, perpetrators have acted with near impunity, reinforcing a climate of fear and silence among minority communities.
Beyond Bangladesh, similar patterns emerge across regions where Hindus face religious persecution through targeted killings, forced displacement, social boycotts, and systemic discrimination. These incidents rarely receive sustained international attention, and when they do, they are often dismissed as “isolated” or “localised” disturbances rather than recognized as symptoms of a broader human rights failure.
The Protest March: Tribute, Solidarity, and Demand for Action
The protest march organized by GHHRC paid tribute to Dipu Chandra Das and stood in solidarity with countless Hindu victims whose suffering remains unacknowledged. Participants carried placards, raised slogans for justice, and demanded accountability, not only from perpetrators, but from systems that repeatedly fail to protect vulnerable minorities.

The demonstration made it clear that silence and selective outrage cannot be allowed to normalize such violence. The continued targeting of Hindus, whether through lynch mobs or systemic neglect, constitutes a serious human rights concern that demands urgent global response.
GHHRC’s Call to Governments and the International Community
Through this peaceful yet resolute demonstration, GHHRC called upon State governments, the Government of India, Hon’ble Prime Minister Narendra Modi, world leaders, international human rights organizations, and the global community to act decisively.
The demands are clear:
- Justice and swift legal action in cases like the lynching of Dipu Chandra Das
- International monitoring and documentation of anti-Hindu violence
- Consistent application of human rights standards, without religious or political bias
- Concrete safeguards to ensure the safety, dignity, and freedom of Hindu minorities across borders
GHHRC stressed that human rights cannot be conditional, selective, or politically convenient. Every life lost to mob violence is an indictment of global inaction.
Reaffirming Commitment
The march reaffirmed GHHRC’s unwavering commitment to standing with Hindus everywhere, amplifying their voices, documenting their suffering, and pressing relentlessly for meaningful action. It was not merely a protest, but a declaration that the global Hindu community will no longer remain silent in the face of repeated injustice.
Justice for Dipu Chandra Das is not just about one life, it is about confronting a system that allows such brutality to recur. Until accountability is ensured and protection becomes reality, GHHRC remains resolute in its mission to defend the safety, dignity, and fundamental human rights of Hindus worldwide.