Bangladesh Sentences Opposition Leader to Death
A special war crimes tribunal in Bangladesh ruled Tuesday that a senior
member of the main opposition party should be put to death for his
involvement in the killing of hundreds of people during the county's
independence fight against Pakistan in 1971.
The verdict against Salauddin Quader Chowdhury came in a packed
courtroom as he stood in the dock amid tight security in the nation's
capital, Dhaka. Fearing a backlash from Bangladesh Nationalist Party
supporters, authorities deployed paramilitary forces in southeastern
Chittagong district, where Chowdhury was elected to Parliament six
times.
Attorney General Mahbubey Alam said the tribunal convicted Chowdhury on
nine of 23 charges, including four counts of genocide. Chowdhury was
found guilty of aiding and ordering the killing of at least 200 people,
mostly minority Hindus, during the war in Chittagong.
During the war, Cowdhury's father was an influential politician of the
Muslim League party, which worked to prevent Bangladesh from breaking
away from Pakistan.
"I think this is a fair trial," Alam said. "We are happy."
Chowdhury's wife, Farhat Quader Chowdhury, told reporters immediately after the verdict that her husband would appeal.
"We will do whatever we need to do to show the world that this is a farce," she said.
Bangladesh says Pakistani soldiers, aided by local collaborators, killed
3 million people and raped 200,000 women during the nine month war that
ended in December 1971. Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina set up the
tribunal in 2010 to punish the alleged collaborators.
The opposition, led by former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia, has criticized
the trials as an attempt to weaken the Bangladesh Nationalist Party and
its allies.
Six people have already been convicted of war crimes by the tribunal.
Four of them are currently top officials of the country's main Islamic
party, Jamaat-e-Islami, while one is a former party chief and another is
an expelled member of the party. Those verdicts led to widespread
violence.
Jamaat-e-islami is the main political ally of Zia's party and is seeking
to contest in next general elections under a Zia-led alliance.
Jamaat-e-Islami shared two posts in the Cabinet during Zia's latest
premiership in 2001-2006.
New York-based Human Rights Watch criticized the conduct of the tribunals, saying they are not up to international standards.
Hasina's government denies that the tribunal is biased. It points out
that it pledged before the 2008 elections to prosecute those responsible
for war crimes and that its 14-party political alliance won that
election with a two-thirds majority.
No comments:
Post a Comment