Jumbangla Desk: Information and Broadcasting Advisor Nahid Islam said, "I also had the experience of staying for 24 hours where people were disappeared." I stayed in that room and saw the writing on the wall of those who had been imprisoned there for a long time.
He said these things in Muzaffar Ahmed Chowdhury Auditorium of Faculty of Social Sciences of Dhaka University on Thursday (November 28). This discussion was organized on the initiative of the Department of Sociology, University of Dhaka, Politics of Mockery and Mockery: Cartoons and Graffiti during the July Uprising.
Adviser Nahid said the stories of abuse, including the horrific experience of the mirror, are so horrific that victims still don't want to tell them. Where they are repeatedly requested by the government to tell, but still they don't want to tell, their experiences were so horrible.
He said that about 1600 have applied to the Missing Commission and the number may increase to 5000. It means that five thousand people have experienced disappearance in the last 15-16 years. These are their experiences, which were completely avoided by our state. We could not say these words to anyone.
He also said that our movement actually progressed through graffiti and artwork. We are now thinking of saving them. We will find there elements of what people really meant and what people really wanted to say.