Marathon in the Cemetery in Paris, the destruction of Nandan in Dhaka!

  • Dr. Mahfuz Parvez, Associate Editor, Barta24.com
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photo: Barta24

photo: Barta24

Tokyo Olympics were held in 2021 instead of 2020. In that year, the pandemic covid spread across the world. This time, the Olympic competition 2024 (July 26-August 11) or the 33rd Olympics has started in the host country Paris. After the start of the Olympics in Athens in 1896, the magnificent city of Paris became the destination for the second Olympics in 1900. With this, Paris has hosted the Olympics for the third time.

"Paris is a running festival," said Ernest Hemingway. All over the city are world-famous buildings, artifacts, literary treasures and rich museums. Lavas rot avenues and squares in a tangle of global memories and emotions. History is frozen in Paris in walls, in monuments. Romance is all around the city. Paris is the most romantic city in the world. Best tourist destination. It is said, one country for the rest, two countries for the wanderlust. One is his own, the other is France.

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This is the first time that the Olympics in Paris have started under the open sky and not in a stadium. Next was the flowing river Seine. The river is so interesting and historical that people from all over the world flock to see it. Bathing in this river has been forbidden for a hundred years. The ashes of Joan of Arc are scattered in this river. Joan of Arc was burned at the stake for dressing as a boy despite being a girl. The jury found no further charges against the teenager who surprised the army by leading the army despite having no lessons in warfare. Joan of Arc in Paris marks the first time in Olympic history that gender parity has been established with equal numbers of male and female competitors.

Olympic events are spread across the historic sites of Paris. Beach volleyball is played next to the 330-meter-tall minaret built by Gustavo Eiffel. The touch of the Eiffel Tower does not end there. The medals that the contestants receive contain a metal piece of the Eiffel Tower.

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Champ de Mars will be judo, wrestling. The Grand Palace, whose 'glass roof' attracts tourists from all over the world, will sit and gaze mesmerized at the ceiling as well as watch fencing events. Men's and Women's Road Cycling Races at Trocadero.

The main event of the race will be the marathon, which will finish near the cemetery of Napoleon Bonaparte. The name of the place is Place de la Concorde where the guillotine used to be. Louis XVI and Queen Antoinette, who could not bear the heat of the French Revolution, said "They can't have bread, they can eat cake". Both were guillotined here post-French Revolution.

International Olympic Committee President Thomas Buck said in his opening speech, "The Paris Games come at a time when the world is torn by a thousand conflicts and divisions, and people everywhere are tired of hatred, war and aggression." France itself is in a state of political upheaval. There is a coalition of pairs instead of a single majority government. However, entrepreneurs are not deterred. Desperate Paris is also active in matching the game with tradition. The Olympic Committee said, "If their country is involved in a conflict, even war, they can compete under the same rules." All will live peacefully together under one roof at the Olympic Village.'

This time only 206 IOC members are represented in the peace agreement which is traditionally called 'Olympic Truce'. Russia and Afghanistan are exceptions - participants from the first country are stipulated that they cannot support the war in Ukraine, and athletes from the second country are exiled from the country. The incentives for world peace in the pretense of playing in Paris are clear.

Peace is very much needed in this tense situation of fear and conflict. Paris is in post-election turmoil. France does not have a permanent government during the Olympics. Protests continue over Russia's attack on Ukraine. The impact of the war on Gaza is a storm of condemnation everywhere. Global conflicts and wars continue. Death and destruction run parallel. France's train service was damaged by the attack just hours before the opening of the Paris Olympics. In the darkness of the night, the train was set on fire at several places. But Paris did not stop. The Paris of Equality-Friendship-Liberty has spread the fragrance of peace in the French fragrance all over the world.

At the same time, the situation in Dhaka was indescribable. Post-modern Dhaka's iconic Metrorail is in ruins. Railway system affected. Government offices and city buildings were destroyed. The fire of protest spread in different parts of Bangladesh. Both sides clashed from time to time. The most tragic and irreparable loss is the death of countless people. Officially, it is close to one and a half hundred and according to the private sector, it is more than two hundred. Several thousand were injured. Almost all were burned, not shot or hit in the head. Many have lost their eyes. Many are missing. The death of over two hundred protestors, pedestrians, Chhatra League and police in one week and the total devastation in human and material loss knows no bounds.

The combined appearance of so much death, so much blood, so much destruction and so much violence was terrible, horrible and pitiful. Bangladesh was burnt and bloody due to the unexpected events of mid-July 2024. Panic, fear and anxiety were fresh in the memory of the countrymen, which, though gradually relieved, turned into a nightmare.

The late journalist Nirmal Sen wrote in 1973, '...I don't want to be beaten to death. I don't want my relatives to cry seeing my deformed body. Let the flood of tears fall in the eyes of my people. I don't want an assassin's bullet to pierce me in an unguarded moment. I don't want my well-wishers to become police officers one dayfor me I don't want to get crowded on the random list.' He wanted a guarantee of a 'natural' death.

When Paris calls for world peace by organizing marathons in Napoleon's cemetery and Olympic events in all the sights of the city, what message does Dhaka send by destroying the beauty of the city and bursting with blood and death?

Prothom Alo reported in a report (July 29) that many students and working people died in the quota reform movement and subsequent protests and clashes. 75 percent of those killed were children, teenagers and young adults. According to the sources of hospitals, relatives and people bringing dead bodies, 210 people have died in the clashes so far. Among them, detailed information on age, occupation and type of injury and in which area they were injured or killed was found for 150 people. Among them, 113 are children, teenagers and young people.

Analysis showed that most of the victims had fatal bullet wounds. Pellet or pellet, rubber bullet wounds and other injuries are less common. An autopsy is needed to confirm the cause of death and the type of gunshot wound. Autopsies have been conducted in many cases, but no reports have been prepared. In many cases, the bodies were taken away by the relatives without post-mortem.

Clashes started in various districts of the country including Dhaka on July 15. No death was reported that day. Deaths occurred on 16, 18, 19, 20 and 21 July (no deaths were reported on 17 July). After that, many died while undergoing treatment in the hospital.

Writer and researcher Mohiuddin Ahmad believes that students and youth have participated more in mass movements in Bangladesh before and after independence and this time too. He told Prothom Alo, when the quota reform movement went outside the University campus, the accumulated anger of the people was seen. People from all walks of life came down. There might have been some looters in there, there always are. He said that the government is talking about terrorism. Why people are angry is not analyzed.

[Dr. Mahfuz Parvez: Associate Editor, Barta24.com; Professor, Department of Political Science, Chittagong University and Executive Director, Chittagong Center for Regional Studies, Bangladesh (CCRSBD).