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Bangladesh
Tribunal hears first war crime petition today
2010-07-26
[Bangla Daily Star] Four months into formation of the International Crimes Tribunal, the special prosecution yesterday filed the first petition with the court seeking direction to show four top Jamaat-e-Islami leaders arrested or detained on charges of committing war crimes in 1971.

The four accused are Jamaat Ameer Motiur Rahman Nizami, Secretary General Ali Ahsan Muhammad Mojahid, Muhammad Kamaruzzaman and Abdul Quader Molla, both senior assistant secretaries general.

This is the first ever incident in the history of judiciary to seek direction to show any person arrested under the International Crimes Tribunal Act, 1973 as the incumbent government has taken initiatives to try war criminals under this law.

The three-member Tribunal headed by Justice Nizamul Huq yesterday accepted the petition and fixed 10:30am today for holding hearing on it. Justice ATM Fazle Kabir and Justice AKM Zaheer Ahmed are the other two judges of the tribunal.

The Tribunal for the first time would sit this morning in the open courtroom set up at the old High Court building. The courtroom was readied yesterday removing all the dumping materials and dirty stuffs.

The six-member prosecution team formed only to work in the Tribunal submitted the petition through its registrar at the court building.

After filing the petition, Chief Prosecutor Golam Arif Tipu briefed journalists saying, "We have submitted a petition against the four seeking necessary lawful steps from the Tribunal to keep them confined.

"We made the prayer so that they cannot escape or create obstruction in investigation and that the investigation agency can smoothly conduct probes into allegations against them of committing genocide, murder, rape, torture, loot, and arson during the Liberation War of 1971," he said.

He however rejected outright that the petition sought the Tribunal's direction to have the Jamaat leaders arrested or detained in any specific case, including one filed with Pallabi police.

"Our petition [against the four] has been filed on charges against them for committing offences under section 3 of the International Crimes Tribunal Act," Tipu said.

The investigation agency will probe offences mentioned in section 3 of the Act: crimes against humanity, crimes against peace, genocide, violation of any humanitarian rules during armed conflicts as laid down in the Geneva Convention of 1949, any other crimes under international laws, attempt, abetment or conspiracy to commit any such crimes and complicity in or failure to prevent commission of any such crime.

Hours after Tipu's briefing, Registrar of the Tribunal Md Shahinur Islam told newspersons the investigation agency formed under the International Crimes Tribunal Act started investigation based on a "Complaint Petition" of July 21 this year in which Nizami, Mojahid, Kamaruzzaman and Molla were made accused.

Sources say this "Complaint Petition" is the case of Pallabi police station which was transferred to the Tribunal on July 21.

On July 21, a Dhaka court sent this case to the Tribunal on charge of killing 345 people during the Liberation War.

On January 25, 2008, Mohammad Amir Hossain Mollah, a wounded freedom fighter and resident of Pallabi's Duaripara, filed this case with Pallabi police accusing Nizami, Mojahid, Kamaruzzaman, Quader and three other Jamaat men, and three non-Bangalees for the massacre of 345 people.

The registrar said the chief prosecutor mentioned in the petition that arrest or detention of the four accused is inevitable for fair and effective investigation into allegations brought in the case under the International Crimes Tribunal Act, 1973.

Prosecution sources say they would submit a petition to the tribunal soon for necessary order to show some other Jamaat leaders arrested or detained on the same charges.

RECORDS OF HISTORY
War records show Jamaat formed Razakar and Al-Badr forces to counter the freedom fighters in 1971. "Razakar" was established by former secretary general of Jamaat Moulana Abul Kalam Mohammad Yousuf, and "Badr Bahini" included the Islami Chhatra Sangha members.

Study of history also shows Matiur Rahman Nizami, incumbent Ameer of Jamaat, was the then president of Islami Chhatra Sangha.

He was quoted as saying on September 15, 1971 by Jamaat's mouthpiece the Daily Sangram: "Everyone of us should assume the role of a Muslim soldier of an Islamic state and through cooperation to the oppressed and by winning their confidence we must kill those who are hatching conspiracy against Pakistan and Islam."

Nizami's speech is evident in the September 8, 1971 issue of the Daily Sangram that carried a report headlined "Chhatra Shangha activists will protect every inch of Pakistan's land".

In 1971, Mojahid directed his party workers to build Al-Badr Bahini to resist freedom fighters, according to a "Fortnightly Secret Report on the Situation in East Pakistan". In line with an official procedure, the report had regularly been dispatched by the then East Pakistan home ministry to General Yahya Khan, the head of the government.

Many researches, academic studies, accounts of both victims and collaborators, and publications including newspapers revealed that Mojahid, who headed the Al-Badr team in Dhaka at the time, allegedly led those who had been involved in the killings of the intellectuals only two days before the victory of Bangladesh on December 16, 1971.

Muhammad Kamaruzzaman has a tainted past with Islami Chhatra Sangha and is blamed for his close links to the Al-Badr force.

"The Chhatra Sangha of Mymensingh district was converted into the Al-Badr force and provided with military training. The man responsible for organising the Chhatra Sangha into the Al-Badr was the then chief of the Mymensingh district Islami Chhatra Sangha, Kamaruzzaman," a book titled "Genocide '71" says.

In the early 1990s, a People's Inquiry Commission was formed to investigate the activities of war criminals and collaborators.

Abdul Quader Molla was known as a "butcher" to Bangladeshis in the Dhaka suburb of Mirpur in 1971, according to the report of the commission headed by the late poet Begum Sufia Kamal.
Posted by:Fred

#1  40 year delay? And I thought our red tape was bad.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2010-07-26 16:15  

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