News Flash
DHAKA, Sept 9, 2025 (BSS) - The government today published a comparative crime picture based on data from 2020 to August 2025, stating that murder rates in the last 13 months appeared to be high as at least 1,130 murders committed during Hasina's 16-year rule were only filed after July Uprising.
"The murder rates during the last 13 months of the Interim Government appeared to be high. This is partly due to the fact that at least 1,130 murders committed during Hasina's 16-year rule were only filed after the revolution (after August 6, 2024 to August this year)," said a statement issued by the Chief Adviser's Press Wing.
It said many murder cases were suppressed previously by ruling party thugs - and discouraged by police - and only surfaced and recorded after regime change.
Many categories of crime also appear elevated in 2025 compared to earlier years, the statement said, adding, "However, this is less about new waves of violence and more about delayed justice: Citizens are no longer blocked from filing cases against politically protected offenders".
It said ruling party men previously prevented victims from opening cases especially when the perpetrators were activists from their party, skewing the data downward during Hasina's period. Police were also reluctant to take cases against ruling party men, the statement added.
According to the crime data, it said, robbery fell from 1,405 (2024) to 1,314 (2025), but still high compared to pre-2023 levels.
This is because all robbery cases are now being recorded at police stations without interference from influential individuals, the statement said, adding, furthermore, a supportive environment has been established within the police stations, encouraging citizens to report offences without fear or hesitation.
It said offences under The Law and Order Disruption (Speedy Trial) Act decreased sharply from 1,226 (2024) to 651 (2025) and rioting also decreased from 125 (2024)to 59 (2025) while theft cases dropped significantly from 8,652 (2024) to 6,354 (2025).
"This suggests that while reported violent crimes (like murder) appear to rise, common crimes are trending downward, pointing to both better law enforcement and more accurate case registration," the statement said.
The increase in murders and certain crimes since August 2024 is not purely a surge in violence - it reflects long-suppressed cases finally being filed, it said, adding, some of the murder cases recorded during the last 13 months even date back to 2009-2013.
Noting that criminal accountability has improved, the statement said victims can now report without fear of political thuggery. Police officers no longer discourage or prevent people from filing criminal cases, it added.
"Some categories, particularly theft, are actually decreasing under the new conditions, which may indicate improved law and order alongside freer reporting," the statement said.