Daily Dispatch

Court upholds death sentences

-

BANGLADESH’S highest court yesterday upheld the death sentences of two opposition leaders convicted for atrocities during the 1971 independen­ce war against Pakistan, sparking fears of violence by their supporters.

The Supreme Court’s decision to dismiss the final appeals of Ali Ahsan Mohammad Mujahid and Salahuddin Quader Chowdhury clears the way for them to be hanged as early as next week if the president does not grant them clemency.

“The judgments fulfilled the desire of the whole nation. There is now no legal bar to execute them,” Attorney-General Mabubebey Alam said.

Mujahid, 67, is the second most senior member of Bangladesh’s largest Islamist party, Jamaat-e-Islami, and Chowdhury, 66, is a top aide to Khaleda Zia, leader of the main opposition party Bangladesh Nationalis­t Party (BNP).

They are among more than a dozen leaders of the opposition alliance who were convicted by a controvers­ial war crimes tribunal set up by the secular government in 2010.

The conviction­s triggered the country’s deadliest violence since independen­ce, with about 500 people killed, mainly in clashes between Jamaat activists and police.

There are fears the latest verdicts could spark fresh unrest in the Muslim-majority nation, which is reeling from a string of killings of secular bloggers as well as the murder of two foreigners in recent months.

Authoritie­s immediatel­y shut down Facebook and messaging and voicecall services Viber and WhatsApp in measures aimed at preventing Jamaat supporters mobilising to protest against the rulings. “We’ve ordered the shutdown after we’re instructed by the government,” Bangladesh Telecommun­ications Regulatory Commission Shahjahan Mahmud said

Jamaat-e-Islami called a nationwide strike to protest against the court ruling, declaring Mujahid’s original trial “farcical” and “aimed at eliminatin­g” the party’s leadership.

The ruling

came

as

unidentifi­ed

assailants shot and seriously wounded an Italian priest in the northern district of Dinajpur yesterday.

No one has yet claimed responsibi­lity, but it bore the hallmarks of previous attacks on foreigners that were claimed by the Islamic State (IS) group.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s government insists IS has no presence in Bangladesh. It blamed Zia’s BNP and its ally Jamaat for the attacks, which it says were part of a conspiracy to create chaos.

The tribunal found Mujahid guilty in 2013 of leading a notorious pro-Pakistan militia that killed secular intellectu­als including writers, journalist­s and professors during the final days of the war against Pakistan.

Dozens of these intellectu­als were abducted from their homes and murdered when it became clear that Islamabad was losing the war, in the most gruesome chapter of the conflict.

Their bodies were found blindfolde­d with their hands tied and dumped in a marsh on the outskirts of the capital.

“Mujahid ordered the killing of my father and other freedom fighters. I am happy that finally we’ve got justice,” Shawan Mahmud, daughter of top musician Altaf Mahmud said.

Chowdhury, a five-time former lawmaker and scion of a top political family, was found guilty of genocide, torture and rape.

Prosecutor­s had described him as a merciless killer who murdered more than 200 Hindus.

The tribunal has divided the country, with the opposition branding its trials a sham aimed at eliminatin­g their leaders rather than meting out justice.

Internatio­nal rights groups and legal experts have also criticised it, saying its procedures fall short of internatio­nal standards.

Hasina has rejected any criticism of the trials, saying they were needed to heal the wounds of the war.

Bangladesh says three million people died in the nine-month long war but independen­t estimates put the toll much lower. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa