An official said police fired rifles after hundreds of protesters from the country's largest Islamic party, a key ally of the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), attacked them on Kutubdia island in the Bay of Bengal with rocks and sticks.
"Two protesters have died in the firing," district administrator Ruhul Amin told AFP, adding about a dozen policemen were injured in the clashes.
Another two people were killed in an earlier series of clashes between the opposition and ruling party supporters today.
The four fatalities brought to 20 the death toll since Friday, when the opposition began a push to force Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to quit.
After a series of mass rallies at the weekend, the BNP and its Islamist allies launched a three-day general strike, which ended today.
BNP leader Khaleda Zia, who has twice served as premier, has branded the current government "illegal" and says that a neutral caretaker government must be set up three months before national elections, due in January.
Hasina has scrapped the caretaker system and instead proposed an all-party interim government led by herself to oversee the polls.
On Saturday, Hasina invited Zia to hold talks and urged her to postpone the strike, during a 40-minute phone conversation believed to be the first time the "battling begums" have spoken in at least a decade.
"Begum" is an honorific for a Muslim woman of rank.
Zia spurned the request, but said she was ready for talks after Tuesday.
Leaked audiotape of the conversation has since showed the two leaders spent most of the conversation quarrelling over their past records.
"You killed people by carrying out the August 21 grenade attack," Hasina said during the call, referring to blasts at her rally in 2004 which killed at least 20 people and injured Hasina, then the opposition leader.
"We did not do the killing. The longer you live is better for us. The more indecent language you use, the better for us," said Zia.
Hasina also accused Zia of celebrating a fake birthday on August 15 -- which is also the anniversary of the assassination of Hasina's father, who was the country's founding leader, along with almost her entire family.
Zia shouted back: "Can't anybody be born on that day?"
Bangladesh has been ruled alternately by Hasina and Zia since 1991, apart from when a military-backed government ran the country between 2007 and 2008.
On Tuesday, scores of people were injured as the opposition staged demonstrations in almost every city and town across the country on the third day of the strike.
Police officials told AFP a protester was hacked to death by ruling party activists in western Magura town, and another drowned at a coastal town in Chittagong as he tried to escape clashes between rival supporters. Read Original Post
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