A Sinister Blueprint
The government is now plotting to train young men and women in the use of firearms, with a singular, treacherous goal: to orchestrate a civil war and sabotage the upcoming election.
In a brazen social media post, Asif Mahmud Sajeeb Bhuiyan, an advisor to the Ministry of Youth and Sports, declared that 8,850 individuals will initially be trained at seven centers across the country. These recruits are to be schooled in Karate, Judo, Taekwondo, and crucially, in the handling of firearms.
This is the orchestration of chaos. The NCP is essentially Professor Yunus’s private militia—the very instrument he used to seize power illegally through violent movements. Now, Yunus’s government is setting the trap once more, aiming to ignite a civil war and derail the election. His ambition is clear: to cancel the polls and cling to power, while paying off his dues to America.
Meanwhile, a calculated campaign is underway to render the NCP—a party born from the coordinators of the July movement—politically irrelevant. They were conspicuously excluded from the so-called July Assembly, and chaos has been deliberately sown around their election symbol. In this manufactured uncertainty, they too are expressing deep apprehension about the election proceeding. Analysts assert that Yunus himself is engineering their irrelevance to ensure the election’s collapse.
Recall the warning: during his tenure as Information Advisor, Mohammad Nahid Islam revealed last year that Sheikh Hasina’s government had pre-recorded a video message threatening an armed struggle if they did not achieve victory by August 5, a day they alleged would see a genocide.
This was followed by the chilling discovery of AK-47 ammunition in Asif’s luggage at the airport. Analysts warn these are not isolated incidents, but ominous signs pointing to a volatile struggle for state power, political movements, and the potential resurgence of reactive forces.
Adding fuel to the fire, the NCP is now locked in a conflict with the Election Commission over its symbol. Defiantly disregarding all rules, they demand the “Shapla” (Water Lily) symbol and nothing else. On the final day for symbol selection, NCP leaders stormed the Election Commission, vowing not to accept any symbol “forced” upon them.
Their chief coordinator, Nasiruddin Patwari, provocatively questioned, “How can a fair election be held in February when the country is burning—when even airports are set ablaze and people feel unsafe?”
The NCP’s stance is a threat: no Shapla, no registration. The party is openly pushing for a state of anarchy.
Analysts conclude that the government intends to use the NCP, just as it did with the July movement, to unleash violence before the election. This is the true purpose behind the firearms training for a select group of youth—a sinister strategy to orchestrate chaos and ensure the election is destroyed.



