Four people were killed after police opened fire on villagers at a protest against two China-backed power plants turned violent in southeastern Bangladesh yesterday.
Around 500 villagers had gathered in Gandamara, a remote coastal town, to protest against the construction of two coal-fired power plants that they say will evict thousands from the area.
Local authorities had banned the demonstration from taking place and the police said they opened fire on the crowd when the protesters attacked them.
Four people died, including a pair of brothers, district police chief Hafiz Akter said.
Dozens were injured, including 11 policemen, he added. One officer was shot in the head, he said.
Witnesses said at least five people were shot dead and more than 100 were injured by police. They also estimated the crowd at around 15,000
protesters.
“The clashes erupted when police came under attack by local villagers protesting against the move to install the power plant by S Alam group with finance from China,” government administrator of Chittagong district M
Mesbahuddin said.
“At one stage police opened fire to disperse the agitators and to bring the situation under control,” he said.
Doctor Saiful Islam, of Chittagong Medical College Hospital, said seven people, including four who were shot by live rounds, were brought to his clinic.
“Police opened fire as we brought out a procession against the power plants. They even chased the villagers to their homes,” Abu Ahmed, a member of the village committee that staged the protest said.
Ahmed said he was shot in the leg.
He said the villagers had been holding peaceful protests for days after S Alam, the local conglomerate behind the project, started purchasing land for the plants in the village, which lies on the edge of the Bay of Bengal.
Chittagong-based S Alam Group plans to build two coal-fired power plants at the area, which will have the capacity to produce 1,224 megawatts of electricity, the local Daily Star reported.
Two Chinese firms — SEPCOIII Electric Power and HTG — are financing $1.75bn of the plants’ estimated $2.4bn cost, the newspaper said.
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