Arab News

Bangladesh court upholds top Islamist’s death sentence

-

DHAKA: Violence broke out in Bangladesh on Monday after the country’s highest court upheld the death sentence of an Islamist party leader convicted of committing war crimes, including mass murder, during the 1971 independen­ce conflict.

The Supreme Court’s rejection of Mohammad Kamaruzzam­an’s appeal means that he will now be hanged within months, unless the case is reviewed again or he is granted clemency by the country’s president.

The 62-year-old assistant secretary general of the Jamaat-eIslami will be the second senior Islamist to hang for crimes committed during the war, which saw the former East Pakistan secede from Islamabad.

The decision triggered sporadic violence across Bangladesh.

Islamist protesters set off more than a dozen crude improvised bombs, torched and damaged cars and pelted police with rocks, who responded by firing rubber bullets and tear gas.

Jamaat called a nationwide 48-hour strike from Wednesday morning to protest against the court’s decision.

The ruling came after another senior Jamaat official, Abdul Quader Molla, was executed in December after being convicted on similar charges.

In the last week, Bangladesh’s Internatio­nal Crimes Tribunal — a domestic court — has sentenced Jamaat’s supreme leader Motiur Rahman Nizami and key financier Mir Quasem Ali to death.

The conviction­s of some of Nizami’s top lieutenant­s last year triggered the country’s deadliest political violence since independen­ce. Tens of thousands of Jaamat activists clashed with police in protests that left some 500 people dead.

Critics say the latest flurry of judgments are designed to intimidate the opposition, which has been stepping up protests against Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s government.

In recent weeks Jamaat and the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalis­t Party have held a series of giant rallies to demand fresh polls after Hasina was controvers­ially re-elected in January in a contest boycotted by the opposition.

Rights groups have said the tri- als have fallen short of internatio­nal standards and lack any foreign oversight.

Hasina’s government maintains the trials are needed to heal the wounds of the conflict, which it says left three million people dead.

Independen­t researcher­s estimate that between 300,000 and 500,000 people died in the 1971 war.

Kamaruzzam­an was found guilty in May 2013 of mass murder, torture and abductions.

The prosecutio­n was centered around a mass killing at the border town of Sohagpur, which has become known as the “Village of Widows,” after at least 120 unarmed farmers were lined up and slaughtere­d in paddy fields.

Three of the widows testified against him during his trial.

 ??  ?? DESTINY: Bangladesh­i Jamaat-e-Islami party leader Motiur Rahman Nizami sits inside a van as he is taken to a prison at the Internatio­nal Crimes Tribunal court in Dhaka in this Oct. 29, file photo. (AFP)
DESTINY: Bangladesh­i Jamaat-e-Islami party leader Motiur Rahman Nizami sits inside a van as he is taken to a prison at the Internatio­nal Crimes Tribunal court in Dhaka in this Oct. 29, file photo. (AFP)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia