Bangladesh

Husband Arrested After Fatal Rohingya Camp Assault

Khabor Wala Desk

Published: 20th June 2026, 11:24 PM

Husband Arrested After Fatal Rohingya Camp Assault

A case of domestic violence has resulted in the death of a Rohingya woman following a severe physical assault by her husband inside a refugee camp in Ukhiya, Cox’s Bazar. The fatal incident, which stemmed from a prolonged domestic dispute, involved the use of a heavy stone grinder as a weapon. Following the attack, law enforcement personnel from the Armed Police Battalion (APBN) intervened at the scene, successfully detaining the accused husband and taking him into official police custody.

Background of Domestic Conflict and the Fatal Assault

The fatal altercation transpired on Saturday afternoon, 20 June 2026, within the geographical confines of Block L-3 inside the Camp 18 Moynarghona Rohingya settlement, situated under the administrative jurisdiction of the Ukhiya upazila. The deceased victim has been formally identified as Minara Begum, aged 29, who was the wife of the designated assailant, identified as Mohammad Abu Taher.

According to verified accounts provided by local residents and community leaders within the camp, the married couple had been mired in severe domestic discord for an extended duration. The long-standing disputes, which involved a variety of unresolved familial matters, escalated significantly on Saturday afternoon. A heated verbal argument broke out between Mohammad Abu Taher and Minara Begum inside their residential shelter, rapidly deteriorating into an act of extreme physical violence.

During the height of the argument, Mohammad Abu Taher seized a heavy stone kitchen implement, commonly referred to as a shilpata (a traditional stone grinder used for crushing spices), located within the household. He proceeded to deliver multiple forceful blows to Minara Begum, targeting her head and various other vital parts of her body structure. Upon hearing the victim’s frantic cries for assistance, adjacent camp residents rushed to the shelter to intervene. Upon entering the premises, they discovered Minara Begum lying incapacitated on the floor of the shelter, covered in blood, while the husband was restrained by the gathering crowd.

Emergency Police Response and Seizure of Evidence

The 8th Armed Police Battalion (APBN), which holds security and law enforcement responsibilities over the specific camp sector, was immediately notified of the active domestic emergency. A rapid response deployment unit from the APBN rushed to the designated location in Block L-3 of Camp 18 to manage the volatile situation.

The Acting Commander of the 8th Armed Police Battalion, Superintendent of Police (SP) Mohammad Riaz Uddin Ahmed, formally validated the operational details of the police intervention. The Superintendent confirmed that the APBN officers located Minara Begum’s body inside the structure, though she had already succumbed to the extensive trauma before their arrival. The initial physical inspection conducted by the officers revealed clear and severe injury marks across her skull and various anatomical regions, corroborating the witness reports of a blunt-force assault.

Investigative RegistryCase Parameter DetailsInstitutional Responsibility
Victim IdentityMinara Begum, Aged 29Ukhiya Territorial Police
Accused PerpetratorMohammad Abu Taher (Husband)8th Armed Police Battalion (APBN)
Crime Scene LocationCamp 18 (Moynarghona), Block L-3Joint Camp Security Command
Weapon RecoveredTraditional Heavy Stone GrinderForensic Evidence Division
Current Legal StatusSuspect Detained; Inquest InitiatedCox’s Bazar District Judiciary

The APBN personnel officially seized the blood-stained stone grinder from the crime scene to serve as primary forensic evidence for the upcoming criminal prosecution. Concurrently, the police team took custody of the suspect, Mohammad Abu Taher, who had already been cornered and detained by the local camp residents immediately following the assault. He was transferred to a secure police facility for formal interrogation.

Post-Mortem Protocols and Legal Proceedings

The territorial civilian law enforcement apparatus has initiated standard statutory procedures to process the homicide case. The Officer-in-Charge (OC) of the Ukhiya Police Station, Mohammad Mujibur Rahman, released an official administrative update confirming that the body of the deceased Rohingya woman has been safely removed from the camp ecosystem.

The police administration transferred the remains of Minara Begum to the mortuary division of the Cox’s Bazar District Sadar Hospital to undergo a comprehensive post-mortem examination. The autopsy will legally document the exact medical cause of death, the trajectory of the blunt-force impacts, and the extent of the cranial trauma for the judicial record. Officer-in-Charge Mohammad Mujibur Rahman added that formal legal preparations are actively underway to file a regular murder case against the detained husband, and rigorous statutory investigations will continue to ensure judicial compliance.

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