World Affairs

July Revolution's Top Leader Sharif Osman Bin Hadi Has Died

By: Belayet Hossen   December 23, 2025

Sharif Osman Bin Hadi, one of the leading heroes of the July Revolution 2024 in Bangladesh and spokesperson of Inqilab Monch, passed away today (December 18, 2025) at Singapore General Hospital while undergoing treatment.

Several days earlier, Osman Hadi was shot in Dhaka by criminals believed to be supporters of former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, who is currently exiled in India following a mass uprising against her regime last year. Soon after the attack, the perpetrators fled to India, evading police arrest.

This assassination was carried out with the direct cooperation and instigation of Sheikh Hasina and India's ruling party, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). Evidence includes audio clips and phone call records of Hasina to her followers, as well as reports aired by Indian news channels. From India, Sheikh Hasina has continued to incite terrorism in Bangladesh, urging her abandoned supporters to target youth leaders who played a key role in the revolution against her government.

Reports confirm that India is fully supporting Sheikh Hasina and her party, the Bangladesh Awami League (BAL). According to various newspapers and television channels, around thirty thousand of Hasina's top supporters, including cabinet members, fled to India and took shelter there. India opened its borders to them without visas or adherence to diplomatic norms with Bangladesh.

India's administration, led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, has continued to threaten Bangladeshi youth leaders who criticize its policies and support for Hasina's party. Yesterday, a former Indian army officer, Col. AJ, posted on X instructing Indian spies in Bangladesh to shoot one of the country's youth leaders, Hasnat Abdullah, in the shoulder. This was in retaliation for Abdullah's criticism of Modi's anti-Bangladesh stance and his support for the people of India's seven states, who have long struggled for independence from Indian occupation and colonization.

This incitement to violence by Col. AJ represents an escalation of hostilities against Bangladesh and a blatant disrespect for its sovereignty. India's behavior suggests it is attempting to take revenge on Pakistan through the people of Bangladesh, who refuse to submit to illegal occupation.

Since 1971, India has sought to control Bangladesh through puppet political parties such as the Awami League (BAL) and the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP). For the past 53 years, India has used these parties to serve its own interests and establish hegemony across the country.

Currently, the majority of Bangladeshis hold strong anti-India sentiments due to its aggression and criminal activities. India-backed governments have been accused of killing thousands of people-including scholars, politicians, intellectuals, army officers, students, and others-since 1971.

Following Sheikh Hasina's downfall, India has grown increasingly desperate due to her political failure and the resurgence of Muslim nationalist parties in Bangladesh. Despite this, India continues to interfere in Bangladeshi politics, attempting to secure victory for its puppet parties in the upcoming national election scheduled for February 2026.

However, given the prevailing sentiment among youth and the wider population, it is unlikely that India's ambitions will succeed. Instead, Bangladeshis are becoming more resolute and anti-India. Although India may attempt to assassinate top leaders, it will ultimately fail to regain control of the country-and may even lose its grip on the seven states bordering Bangladesh.

In conclusion, if India kills one Osman Hadi, thousands more will rise to stand against injustice and oppression, ensuring Bangladesh's victory over foreign interference, insha Allah.

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Author: Belayet Hossen   December 23, 2025
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