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Cricket-mad Bangladesh erupts

Dhaka - Cricket-mad Bangladesh has erupted in joyous celebration on Monday after the national team dumped England out of the World Cup, with fans hailing the dramatic victory as the country's greatest sporting triumph.

Impromptu victory processions broke out across the country, with some of the loudest celebrations taking place at Dhaka University where around 5 000 people had been watching the match in Adelaide on a big screen.

The crowds, including hundreds of girls, started dancing and chanting "Bangladesh, Bangladesh" as Rubel Hossain clean-bowled last man James Anderson to guide the Tigers to a 15-run victory their first ever place in the quarter-finals.

The Tigers have been international cricket's whipping boys for much of the last two decades and few experts expected them to get out of a group that included joint hosts New Zealand and Australia, as well as Sri Lanka.

"I can't believe that we've pulled it off. We've finally shaken off the tag of minnows. Two more victories and we'll be in the final!" said Rashid Ahmed, a 22-year-old student.

Fellow student Tamir Islam, who is a keen cricketer, said: "I am sure no petrol bombs or molotov cocktails will go off today. We're united in cherishing the biggest triumph in our sports history."

Social media was flooded with people celebrating and photos of a Bengal tiger chasing James Bond starring Daniel Craig.

"There's screaming and whooping from every yellow hat on a construction site," Australian Sarah-Jane Saltmarsh, who lives in Dhaka, wrote on her Facebook page.

"Every rickshaw-wallah (cycle rickshaw drivers) is cheering, the guards outside my building almost hug me as I come in...Bangladesh is through to the World Cup Quarter Finals for the first time!" .

Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, a cricket buff herself, sent a message of congratulations to the team just moments after the victory in Australia while the sports minister announced bonuses for each player.

The country's opposition leader Khaleda Zia, who has been confined to her office in Dhaka for the last two months as part of a long-running chapter of political unrest, also congratulated the team.

Former national team captain Akram Khan, who skippered Bangladesh in the Tigers' first World Cup appearance in 1999, rated the victory over England as one of the team's finest moments.

"Let's be clear, we were stronger than England in every department. It's one of the most historic occasions in our cricket history," Khan, who led Bangladesh to a controversial win over Pakistan in 1999, told AFP.

Local television channels broadcast footage of young men honking the horns of their bikes and cars in Dhaka and the port city of Chittagong. Many boarded lorries and jammed the roads chanting slogans for the cricketers.

There were similar scenes in the cities of Khulna, Rajshahi, Barisal and Mymensingh, the hometown of man-of-the-match Mohammad Mahmudullah.

Female university students came out of their dormitories and sprinkled colours at each other well into the night.

"No one can stop the Tigers now. It'll be our World Cup," said a female fan, according to local Somoy television.

Some of the loudest cheers were reserved for Bangladesh bowling hero Rubel Hossain, who grabbed the last two wickets, but whose World Cup chances looked remote after he was accused of rape by a 19-year-old film actress.

Rubel was allowed to travel to Australia after a court granted him bail, while the actress reportedly said she would withdraw the case if the cricketer agreed to marry her.

"He is my hero no matter what!," said young banker Abdullah Al Maruf, as the crowd cheered "Rubel! Rubel!" in front of a big screen at the Teachers Student Center in Dhaka University.

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