Bangladesh |
Former Bangladesh Ruling Party Official to Be Hanged for War Crimes |
2014-11-25 |
[AnNahar] Bangladesh's war crimes court Monday sentenced a former ruling party official to hang for mass murder, the 14th person convicted of atrocities during the 1971 independence struggle against Pakistain, a prosecutor said. Mobarak Hossain, who was expelled from the Awami League after he was charged with war crimes in 2012, was found guilty of heading a militia that rounded up and killed scores during the nine-month conflict. "He was sentenced to death for the murder of 33 people and given (a) life term for the abduction and murder of another person," prosecutor Shahidur Rahman told Agence La Belle France Presse. The 64-year-old Hossain is the first person connected with the ruling party to be given the death penalty by the controversial tribunal, which has mostly focused on trials of officials of the country's largest Islamist party, Jamaat-e-Islami ... The Islamic Society, founded in 1941 in Lahore by Maulana Sayyid Abul Ala Maududi, aka The Great Apostosizer. The Jamaat opposed the independence of Bangladesh but has operated an independentbranch there since 1975. It maintains close ties with international Mohammedan groups such as the Moslem Brotherhood. the Taliban, and al-Qaeda. The Jamaat's objectives are the establishment of a pure Islamic state, governed by Sharia law. It is distinguished by its xenophobia, and its opposition to Westernization, capitalism, socialism, secularism, and liberalist social mores... Hossain, who was in court to hear the verdict, had previously been an official of Jamaat-e-Islami which opposed independence from Pakistain. During the war he was a local commander of a notorious pro-Pak militia in the eastern border town of Akhaura which carried out murders, abductions and torture, Rahman said. In one of the worst episodes of the war, "Hossain and his associates kidnapped 132 people and then murdered 33 of them on the bank of a pond", he said. After Bangladesh gained independence, Jamaat was banned for some years. Hossain eventually switched to the Awami League, serving as a low-level official for 16 years until he was charged. Jamaat's leader and its top lieutenants were sentenced to death last year for their roles in the war, triggering the country's deadliest political violence. Thousands of Islamist activists clashed with police in various protests that left some 500 people dead. An ex-minister of the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) has also been sentenced to hang. The BNP and Jamaat have called the court's trials politically motivated and aimed at eliminating opposition leaders rather than rendering justice. Rights groups have said the trials fall short of international standards and lack any foreign oversight. The government of Prime Minister ![]() the Battling Begums.. maintains the hearings 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. |
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Bangladesh |
Prosecution seeks capital punishment for Mobarak |
2014-05-20 |
[Dhaka Tribune] The prosecution of the trial of alleged razakar commander Mobarak Hossain alias Mobarak Ali ended their part of the closing arguments yesterday, seeking death for the accused for the crimes against humanity he committed in Brahmanbaria during the 1971 Liberation War. At the end of argument session, prosecutor Md Shahidur Rahman said: "We think we have been able to prove all the five charges brought against the accused beyond reasonable doubt and we are pleading for maximum punishment for him." He made arguments for documentary evidence and for legal arguments. The International Crimes Tribunal 1 appreciated the way he placed the new charge of genocide for the first time against Mobarak. He said charges number two and five might fulfil the gravity of genocide "if we can prove that the accused committed the crime against a particular group." The prosecution mentioned the group should be "pro-liberation." |
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Bangladesh |
2 Shibir men held in capital |
2013-04-23 |
[Bangla Daily Star] Law enforcers have juggedDrop the heater, Studs, or you're hist'try! two leaders of Islami Chhatra Shibir ... the student wing of the Jamaat-e-Islami Bangladesh... including its education secretary at Mohammadpur in the capital on Monday. The arrestees are: Mobarak Hossain, education secretary of Shibir, student wing of Jamaat-e-Islami ... The Islamic Society, founded in 1941 in Lahore by Maulana Sayyid Abul Ala Maududi, aka The Great Apostosizer. The Jamaat opposed the independence of Bangladesh but has operated an independentbranch there since 1975. It maintains close ties with international Mohammedan groups such as the Moslem Brotherhood. the Taliban, and al-Qaeda. The Jamaat's objectives are the establishment of a pure Islamic state, governed by Sharia law. It is distinguished by its xenophobia, and its opposition to Westernization, capitalism, socialism, secularism, and liberalist social mores... , and Russell Ahmed, a member of Shibir central committee. A team of Rapid Action Battalion ![]() The elite forces also seized some books on jihad from the possession of the Shibir leaders, the Rab official added. |
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Bangladesh | |
Cops arrest top suspect | |
2011-11-14 | |
[Bangla Daily Star] Detective police last night locked away Tippon Kazi, a listed criminal of Narsingdi, in connection with the Narsingdi municipality mayor Lokman Hossain murder case. Tippon, also a member of Narsingdi district Jubo League ... the youth wing of the Bangla Awami League... committee, a pro-Awami League youth body, is accused in 21 criminal cases including two murder cases, sources say.
a woman is only as old as she admits... Tippon was not accused in the Lokman murder case filed by Lokman's brother Kamruzzaman on November 3 with Narsingdi Model Police Station. Kamruzzaman accused 14 people in the case. Narsingdi police sources said a police team locked away Tippon at his hideout in Gopalnathpur village in Gopalganj around 7:00pm. They suspect that Tippon was involved in the Lokman liquidation on November 1. Narsingdi Superintendent of Police Khandker Mohid Uddin said Tippon of Satirpara of the town is a listed criminal of Narsingdi. Mohid earlier told newsmen that they are very close to identifying the people involved in the killing and hoped that the perpetrators will be locked away "very soon". Meanwhile, ...back at the fist fight, Jake ducked another roundhouse, then parried with his left, then with his right, finally with his chin... the Chief Judicial Magistrate's Court in Narsingdi yesterday sent Mohammad Selim on a four-day remand. Selim was jugged by police on November 8 at Tongi in connection with the Lokman murder case. Police had sought a seven-day remand for Selim. They said Selim provided "significant clues" to the liquidation during preliminary interrogation. Selim was shown locked away yesterday in the Lokman murder case and produced before the court. Police sources claimed that Selim is a relative of Mobarak Hossain Moba, a Jubo League leader of Narsingdi who is accused number three in the Lokman murder case. They say that Moba used Selim's ![]() Police sources said they suspect Moba took part in the planning of the hit and hiring of the goons. They think Moba left for Malaysia a fortnight before the murder to make his alibi. Lokman, twice best mayor award winner and general secretary of Narsingdi town unit of Awami League, was shot by masked gunnies inside the town Awami League office on November 1 when he was talking to his party men. He died in Dhaka Medical College Hospital three hours later. | |
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Bangladesh |
Rajshahi city Jamaat ameer remanded |
2010-02-13 |
[Bangla Daily Star] Rajshahi city Jamaat Ameer Ataur Rahman and 10 other Shibir men were taken on a five-day remand yesterday in connection with three cases filed for February 9 RU violence. The court of additional chief metropolitan magistrate granted the five-day remand while the police sought for 10 days. Ataur Rahman has been shown remanded in Faruk Hossain killing case. BCL activist and Rajshahi University student Faruk was hacked to death during the RU rampage. Police charged the Jamaat leader with ordering and provoking Shibir cadres to go berserk and perpetrate the murder. With the 11, the number of arrestees in Rajshahi following the RU incident has reached 46. Meanwhile, two injured BCL workers, Rahedul Islam Rahi and Ruhul Amin, earlier admitted to Rajshahi Medical College Hospital, lodged two more cases against some 90 Shibir leaders and activists with Motihar Police Station yesterday. Rahi accused 34 Shibir men, including RU Shibir president Shamsul Alam Golap and general secretary Mobarak Hossain, and 25 other unknown persons. Ruhul accused 31 Shibir men. The complainants said the accused persons had attacked them during the overnight clash between BCL and Shibir on RU campus. Including these two cases, a total of five cases have been filed against 700 persons for their alleged involvement in the RU violence. An unprecedented number of police and Rab members were deployed at different points of the city, especially the Shibir strongholds and mosques, to prevent Shibir from staging protest programmes. Shibir men have fled the city locking up their messes at Meherchandi, Budpara, Binodpur and several other places. Police raided some of the dens last night. |
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Bangladesh |
Mutiny charges against nine |
2009-11-25 |
[Bangla Daily Star] The much-talked-about trial of BDR mutiny began yesterday through pressing charges before the three-member court against nine soldiers of 12 Rifle Battalion of the Rangamati sector. This is the first time in the history of Bangladesh Rifles (BDR) that the border guards set up own courts to try soldiers on charges of mutiny on February 25-26. The three-member court headed by BDR Director General Maj Gen M Mainul Islam sat at 3:00pm at a makeshift courtroom at the Mechanical Transport Shed of the sector headquarters. During the fifty-minute proceedings, Deputy Assistant Director (DAD) of Rajanagar 12 Rifle Battalion Reaz Uddin Ahmed read allegations before the court against the nine alleged mutineers. Of them, five are now in Rangamati jail and the rest are in Unit Quarter Guard, the BDR chief Maj Gen Mainul told journalists after adjourning the proceedings. DAD Reaz in his submission told the court the nine mutineers supported the incidents at Pilkhana Headquarters and were ready to revolt. They also misbehaved with the officers and their families, cut telephone wire and kept arms and ammunition in open without permission, he added. The prosecutors in the court said they have adequate evidence and documents against the nine accused. They added after nine months of investigation they have identified the nine as guilty with the help of the enquiry teams. None of the accused was however produced before the court yesterday. The court heard and accepted statements of the prosecutors and ordered to produce the accused before it today when the court sits again at 9:30am. At first members of the special court-4 -- Maj Gen Mainul, Lt Col Abdur Rouf and Maj Mostafa Al Mamun -- took oaths one by one by themselves and began the proceedings. The trial is being conducted under the Bangladesh Rifles Order, 1972. The BDR has set up six such special courts to try the alleged mutineers in Dhaka and elsewhere under the BDR law. During the bloody incidents in Pilkhana, mutiny also spread in some other battalions and garrisons including in a few battalions under the Rangamati sector. The mutineers outside Dhaka, if found guilty, will get a seven-year jail term in maximum punishment, the DG said. However, another trial will be held under the civil law (Penal Code) for the grievous offences committed by the soldiers in Pilkhana including murder, loot and arson. Investigations into these offences are still on by the Criminal Investigation Department (CID). During the Pilkhana carnage, 74 people were killed including 57 army officers. Among the dead were the then BDR DG Maj Gen Shakil Ahmed and his wife. During yesterday's trial, Deputy Attorney General Shoharawardi was present as the government law officer to advise or suggest the court. Besides, Mosharraf Hossain Kazal and Monzurul Alam Monzu were present as the senior public prosecutors on behalf of the state. Three separate cases were filed accusing 39 BDR soldiers who allegedly revolted during the mutiny in Rangamati. The cases were filed with three police stations in Barkal, Baghaichhari and Longudu upazilas. The mutiny in Rangamati took place at three of the sector's five battalions. The three battalions are 12 Rifle Battalion in Rajanagar in Longudu, 9 Rifle Battalion in Marishya in Baghaichhari and 18 Rifle Battalion in Chhotohorina in Barkal. Around 39 alleged mutineers from the three battalions are now in Rangamati jail. Of them, nine from the 12 Rifle Battalion will face today's trial. The nine mutineers are havilders Sabbir Ahmed, Md Shamsul Haque and Sohrab Hossain, signalman Abdur Rahman, sepoys Md Abul Kalam Azad, Md Sakhawat Hossain, Md Rasel Kabir, Md Zahir Uddin and Md Sarwar Kamal. Eighteen alleged mutineers are from 9 Rifle Battalion of Baghaichhari. Of them, 16 names have been confirmed so far. They are Sohrawardi, Humayun Kabir, Delwar Hossain, Abdul Mannan, Shafiqul Islam, Kartik Chandra, Amir Hossain, Abul Kashem Sikder, Sohrab Hossain, Mofiz Rahman, Abdul Motaleb, Abul Fazal, Abdul Mukit, Abdul Latif, Abdul Hannan and Enamul Haque. Eleven allegedly revolted from 18 Rifle Battalion. They are Kamruzzaman, Shahin Ahmed, Abdul Haque, Solaiman Ahmed, Mobarak Hossain, Ramjan Ali, Kazi Enamul Karim, Rafiqul Islam, Kamal Hossain Khandaker, Salimur Rahman and Mizanur Rahman Mizan. All of the alleged mutineers are now behind bars. BDR MEMBERS WANT TO RETRACT CONFESSION In Dhaka, 19 BDR members yesterday appealed to a Dhaka court to let them retract their confessional statements in the BDR mutiny case. Metropolitan Magistrate Mohammad Sahadat Hossain kept the petitions in the carnage case file after holding hearing on the appeals. The petitioners divulged their confessional statements before different courts on different dates. In the petitions, BDR members said they earlier were taken on remand and were tortured to give confessional statements. Earlier, 58 other BDR jawans submitted same appeals to different Dhaka courts. |
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Bangladesh | |
Yet another BDR man pegs out | |
2009-03-23 | |
![]() With his death, the number of border troops who have died since March 9 stands at four. Of them, three died at Pilkhana and one in Joypurhat. Besides, BDR central mosque's pesh imam (someone who leads prayers), who reportedly witnessed the start of the bloodbath, died during the same period. In all cases, the authorities concerned have cited heart attack or suicide as causes of death.
Before coming to Dhaka on February 18 to join the BDR week, he was stationed at Rifle Security Unit in 29 Battalion of Chittagong. He held ID No.48235. Requesting anonymity, his cousin yesterday afternoon told reporters, "My brother died an agonising death after torture." Earlier, sources at Dhaka Medical College (DMC) morgue said the lance nayek's wrists, arms, knees and shoulders were swollen and badly bruised. Two police constables rushed him to DMC Hospital at around 10:40am. Doctors on duty there announced he had already died. Mahbub, one of the constables, said they don't know anything. All they did was shift him from the Pilkhana hospital. Contacted, BDR Director General (DG) Brig Gen Md Mainul Islam said, "Perhaps, he [Mobarak] died of a heart attack. I'm not sure though about the cause of his death. That will be known after post-mortem." Asked about the injury marks, he said, "You know how soldiers suffered injuries while fleeing the headquarters. The marks on his body might have resulted from those wounds." The deaths at regular intervals bring into question the soundness of the measures taken to protect suspected mutineers, most of who are considered vital witnesses to the vicious killings of 74 people including 55 army officers. | |
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Bangladesh |
Criminal killed in 'shootout' with Rab |
2006-10-06 |
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