New Straits Times

20 SENT TO GALLOWS OVER STUDENT KILLING

21-year-old was brutally beaten for six hours by members of student political group

- DHAKA

BANGLADESH sentenced 20 university students to death yesterday for the 2019 murder of a young man who criticised the government on social media.

The battered body of Abrar Fahad, 21, was found in his dormitory hours after he wrote a Facebook post slamming Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina for signing a water-sharing deal with India.

He was beaten with a cricket bat and other blunt objects for six hours by 25 fellow students who were members of the ruling Awami League’s student wing, the Bangladesh Chhatra

League (BCL).

“I am happy with the verdict,” Fahad’s father, Barkat Ullah, told reporters outside court after the sentencing.

“I hope the punishment­s will be served soon.”

The remaining five perpetrato­rs were handed life imprisonme­nt.

Chief prosecutor Mohammad Abu Abdullah Bhuiyuan said the murder was premeditat­ed.

All those given death sentences were between 20 and 22 years old at the time of the murder and attended the elite Bangladesh University of Engineerin­g and Technology alongside Fahad.

Three of the defendants are still at large while the rest were in the courtroom.

Faruque Ahmed, a lawyer for the defendants, said the sentence would be appealed.

“I am very disappoint­ed at the verdict. It is not fair,” he said.

“They are young men and some of the best students of the country. They were sentenced to death despite no proper evidence against some of them.”

Fahad had put up a post on Facebook that went viral hours before his death.

In it, he criticised the government for signing an accord that allowed India to take water from a river that lies on the boundary the two countries share.

Fahad had been seen, in leaked CCTV footage that went viral on social media, walking into a dormitory with some BCL activists.

About six hours later, his body was carried out by the students and laid on the ground.

Protests in the days after Fahad’s murder called for the attackers to be harshly punished and for the BCL to be banned.

Hasina vowed soon afterwards that the killers would get the “highest punishment”.

The BCL has earned notoriety in recent years after some of its members were accused of killing, violence and extortion.

Death sentences are common in Bangladesh with hundreds of people on death row. All executions are by hanging, a legacy of the British colonial era.

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