Bangladesh’s War Crimes Trials
By Rajeev Sharma
If the ongoing war crimes trials in
Bangladesh are carried out in an objective
and transparent manner, the new generation
of Bangladeshis will be made aware of the
extreme brutalities and distress inflicted
on their forefathers by the occupying
Pakistani forces and their local
collaborators and the heavy cost paid by
them during the Liberation war in 1971. The
new generation will also then come to know
of the gruesome consequences of the abuse of
religion to justify heinous crimes. Success
in holding trial of war crimes and crimes
against humanity will be achieved when
exploitation of religion in the country’s
power-play is brought to an end, an idea
that appears almost Utopian in the present
political scenario of the country.
For probing war crimes and crimes against
humanity committed forty years ago by the
occupation forces of Pakistan and their
local collaborators comprising mostly
Jamaat-e-Islami (JEI) leaders and Muslim
Leaguers, the investigators will have to
rely mainly on news reports, statements of
the accused published in the newspapers of
the time, official records and books written
by eminent personalities during the period.
Citing from the submissions of Nuremberg
Tribunal’s Chief Prosecutor Robert H
Jackson, Hannan Khan, one of the prosecutors
of the International Crimes Tribunal (ICT)
said ‘There is no count in the indictment
that cannot be proved by media reports,
books and records’.
The JEI mouthpiece ‘Dainik Sangram’ bears
ample testimony to the war crimes committed
by senior JEI leaders during the liberation
war in 1971. The provocative statements of
senior JEI leaders published in the
‘Sangram’ had instigated large scale
killings, arson, looting and rape in the
name of religion. In the so-called civilian
government formed by the Pak military junta
in East Pakistan in 1971 with Dr A.M. Malik
as the Governor, Abbas Ali Khan, former JEI
chief (now dead) and Maulana Abul Kalam
Mohammad Yusuf, the present JEI Naib-e-Amir
were made ministers. According to a report
carried in the daily ‘Sangram’ former JEI
Amir Golam Azam in his speech at a reception
in honour of the JEI ministers at Hotel
Empire in Dhaka said, ‘Pakistan is the house
of Islam for all Muslims of the world.
Therefore, JEI workers and sympathizers do
not find any justification for being alive
if Pakistan had to disintegrate’.
The present JEI chief Matiur Rahman Nizami,
who was the chief of Islami Chhatra Sangha,
student wing of JEI in 1971, wrote “Sacred
land Pakistan is the home of Allah for
establishing His rule” in an article
published in the ‘Sangram’. Nizami who
subsequently succeeded Golam Azam as JEI
chief, labeled the freedom fighters as
‘Khodadrohi’ (rebels against Allah). In the
article he also wrote ‘The cowards (freedom
fighters) who are against the almighty Allah
have attacked the holy land of Allah
(Pakistan)’. The daily ‘Sangram’ in its
issue of September 15, 1971 quoted Nizami as
saying: ‘Every true Muslim should assume the
role of dedicated soldier of Islam and kill
those who are hatching conspiracy against
Pakistan, as conspiracy against Pakistan is
conspiracy against Allah’.
Further, ‘Sangram’ archive reveals that
Razakar (the term has become synonymous with
brutalities and evokes panic in the mind of
people even now) was formed by former JEI
Secretary General Maulana Abul Kalam
Mohammad Yusuf. Al Badr, Al Shams and
Razakar which were formed to counter and
kill the freedom fighters comprised mostly
the JEI and its student organization Islami
Chhatra Sangha activists. When these pro-Pak
/ anti-liberation forces realized that their
defeat was imminent they picked up almost
all the leading intellectuals and
professionals of the erstwhile East Pakistan
on December 14, 1971, lined them up and
killed them in brush fire with the help of
occupying Pak forces. This day is the
blackest day in the history of the country
and observed as Martyred Intellectuals
Day.
Apart from the reports and articles
published in the JEI mouthpiece ‘Sangram’,
there are plenty of other documents that can
serve as evidence of involvement of senior
JEI leaders and other
anti-liberation/pro-Pak forces in war crimes
and crimes against humanity. Much vital
information about the role played by these
elements are available in ‘Secret
Fortnightly Intelligence Reports’ prepared
by Home Ministry of the erstwhile East
Pakistan Government for the central Martial
Law administration. These reports reveal
that Golam Azam had urged his followers to
crush the liberation war branding freedom
fighters as ‘rebels, secessionists and
enemies of Islam as well as Pakistan’. One
of these fortnightly reports, to be
specific, the report covering first half of
August, 1971, reveals that at a meeting
organized by JEI on August 4, 1971 in
Khulna, Golam Azam called upon the people to
‘crush and annihilate the rebels (freedom
fighters) in order to establish Islamic rule
on the basis of Quran and Sunnah’.
These fortnightly reports disclose that on
April 4, 1971, Golam Azam met Gen Tikka Khan
and assured him of his party’s full support
in protecting territorial integrity of
Pakistan at any cost and described the
liberation war as ‘naked Indian interference
and infiltration’. Azam promised all-out
help to the ‘patriotic armed forces’ of
Pakistan to foil India’s ‘mischievous
intentions’. During the nine month long
liberation war, the JEI played an active
role in organizing ‘Peace Committee’ for
rendering ‘assistance’ to the occupation
forces of Pakistan in resisting the
activities of the freedom fighters whom Azam
described as ‘miscreants’. The role of Peace
Committee and its wings – Al Badar, Razakar
and Al Shams – in perpetrating inhuman
torture and killing of freedom fighters,
innocent people and intellectuals in the
erstwhile East Pakistan has been
well-documented in various studies.
According to fortnightly reports of the East
Pakistan government, Azam was directly
involved in ordering the systematic
genocide. One such report covering the first
half of September 1971 mentioned that
addressing the workers at a party meeting in
Dhaka on September 3, 1971, Golam Azam said,
‘We need to restore normalcy in the country
by physically eliminating the rebels and
anti-social elements’ (freedom fighters).
All this is crucial evidence of war crimes
and crimes against humanity committed during
the liberation war of Bangladesh in 1971.