21 More Killed as Violence Continues in Bangladesh
Bangladesh today deployed army in its north as a fresh wave of violence claimed 21 lives, taking the death toll to about 80, in clashes that have rocked the nation since the conviction of Islamist leaders for 1971 war crimes.

Violence in the country escalated on Thursday when a death sentence was handed down to 73-year-old Delwar Hossain Sayedee, vice-president of the Jamaat-e-Islami (JI), by International Crimes Tribunal.

A two-day strike called by Jamaat starting today coincided with President Pranab Mukherjee's maiden visit to the country.

Another shutdown has been called by the fundamentalist outfit's alliance partner and main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party led by Khaleda Zia on the last day of the visit by Mukherjee on March 5.

Authorities called army troops in north-western Bogra as JI activists attacked a police station with homemade bombs and guns at the cantonment area.

"Two platoon troops were deployed on request from the local administration as the violence erupted at the cantonment area," an army spokesman told PTI.

The death toll in the clashes over the war crimes verdicts has risen to about 80 since the first conviction was made on January 21.

Twenty one people, including a police constable, were killed today and about 50 others were injured in the violence that rocked the first day of the strike called by Jamaat.

Activists of Jamaat-e-Islami and Islami Chhatra Shibir clashed with the police in the districts of Bogra, Joypurhat, Jhenaidah and Rajshahi districts throughout the day.

Of those killed, nine died in early morning clash in three upazilas of Bogra while six in two upazilas of Joypurhat during Jamaat-called 48-hour shutdown, the Daily Star reported.

Two, including a young boy, were killed in a gunfight between Jamaat-Shibir men and police in Godagari upazila of Rajshahi while a police constable was killed in clash with Jamaat-Shibir in Jhenidah.

A Jamaat man died when Border Guard Bangladesh personnel opened fire on marauding Jamaat-Shibir activists after being attacked in Satkhira.

Two more people were killed in clashes between police and Jamaat members in other parts of the country, media reports said.

Jamaat activists overnight torched a train and attacked several police installations in northwestern Bangladesh as they enforced a nationwide 48-hour stoppage to halt ongoing trial of their leaders.

Most of the violence victims were JI activists.

Sayedee was the third JI politician to be convicted by the International Crimes Tribunal since the trial of war crimes suspects, mostly belonging to the Islamist group, began three years ago.

In the first verdict of the tribunal on January 21, former Jamaat leader Abul Kalam Azad was sentenced to death on similar charges.

Another Jamaat leader Abdul Quader Mollah was sentenced to life in February for atrocities during the war.

Main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) has extended its support to its crucial extreme right-wing ally, which was opposed to the countries 1971 independence siding with the then Pakistani junta, questioning the "neutrality" of the war crimes trial.

BNP, however, did not extend its moral support for the 48-hour JI shutdown unlike previous such occasions.

BNP chief and ex-premier Khaleda Zia has called the violence a "genocide" carried out by law enforcement agencies.

However, Information minister Hassanul Haque Inu told reporters here, "Police did never attack any unarmed person. In every incident Jamaat hoodlums were the attackers. They launched attacks on police . . . Torched mosques, houses of the Hindu community and their temples."

Reports said suspected extreme right-wing activists also set ablaze a Hindu temple and attacked two local leaders of ruling Awami League who were followers of Hindu faith at southwestern Bagerhat and ransacked another temple at suburban Gazipur district yesterday.

Meanwhile, thousands of "non-partisan" youths continued to stage demonstrations in the capital and several other major cities demanding ban on JI and capital punishment of their top leaders for 1971 crimes siding with Pakistani troops.

Jamaat-e-Islami, the largest Islamic party in Muslim-majority Bangladesh, was opposed to Bangladesh's 1971 Liberation War when officially 3 million people were killed.
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Digression

9/D-60
Mar 05, 2013
08:51 AM

 Bangladesh got independence from Islamofascist hell hole called PAKISTAN in 1941..

But 42 years latter, its people are still fighting on what they want to be..

Whether they want to be Secular Bangadesh or the Islamofascist Talibani East pakistan..

I am afraid that except for a strong , urbanized educated elite, the majority still sympathise with latter..

The incompetent, secular india was silent when Pakistan liquidated its religious minorities..

The Incompetent secular india was dumb and deaf when Buddhist Fascist sinhalese rulers destroyed the Eelam tamil (hindus and christians)..

The Incompetent, blind India will remain so as the 9% non islamic minorities of Bangladesh get rids of its hindu (and some christian, buddhist) minorities in next few  decades..

By 2040 or so, Bangladesh will demographically be no different from Sindh (in Pakistan)..

Of course the civil war will continue since the real fight btw the Secular elite and the islamofascist talibanis of Bangladesh is not so much about the place of religious minorities but more about how much of the piece of cake they want for each...

That is sad tale. islamic nations have been and can be secular and tolerant - like turkey and indonesia in rest of world; but in the Indian subcontinent, no secular islamic nation can exist. This is the sadder tale.

And the saddest tale is that we refuse to understand this truth and refuse to do anything to the religious minorities living right within the state of Kashmir in Secular India...

Ramki, Delhi
8/D-108
Mar 04, 2013
11:50 AM

 As a friend and a well wisher, India can observe with sympathy. It is for Bangladesh to choose one of two very different visions for its future.

ashok lal, mumbai
7/D-106
Mar 04, 2013
11:41 AM

 Pinaki Ray,

Thanks for your post about Indira Gandhi's move to send Indian Army to Bangladesh in 1975. Was completely unaware of that. I have always been puzzled about why the war criminals trial did not take place in after 1971 war. May be the course of Pakistan would have changed for better in that case. Or may be not..

R. Saroja
Bombay, India
6/D-102
Mar 04, 2013
11:27 AM

Madame Saroja,

To my understanding the power base of BNP is Jamaat. Hence, if Jamaat becomes dysfunctional, BNP will be finished politically. My "optimism" extends only as far as the point that Jamaat will be finished in the very long run. But what the political climate will be next nobody knows although it is unlikely to go backwards in history.

Remember one thing that Bangladesh has stubbornly refused to declare herself as an "Islamic" Republic despite having a vast majority of Muslims in its population and is the only nation state in the world which has signed a non-expiring (or permanent) "friendship treaty" with India. Behind the scene, Indira Gandhi did a great job for the Indian nation in this political context.

As disclosed recently by their PM Hasina, there was a move by the traitors in BD, after the coup in 1975 organised by the Muslim countries of the Middle East with tacit support of Pak-China-US axis in that era, to declare Bangladesh as another Islamic republic. At that point, Indira Gandhi was well prepared to send the Indian army there for the second time. And that threat perception from India reversed the political course for Bangladesh.

And this time, if it comes to that Jammat turns the table on others, India will intervene again invisibly in some form or other to thwart their move. Most probably Pranab will extract a right of passage for India through Bangladesh to the eastern states of Nagaland, Manipur etc.  Pranab's in-laws live in a village of Bangladesh and he should have a personal stake there. 

If the identity and cohesiveness of Bangladesh is defined by the Bengali language, it is hard to imagine how they could align with real Islam in the long run since Bengali is written in a variation of the Devnagiri script. And the language itself derives from Sanskrit.

Pinaki S Ray, Adelaide
5/D-80
Mar 04, 2013
10:42 AM

Sub Continental news these days mainly  are Shia's Mosque bombed yesterday in Pakistan by Jihadies.45 Muslim Shias killed .Total in two months 500 plus.

Bangla Desh Islamist Jehadies are burning ,looting their own Sonar Bangla and torching every thing .In couple of days 100 plus innocents killed by Islamists .

In India Hyderabad Indian Mujhadins  Terror Arm of ISI-LeT blasted bombs , killed a Dozen plus and many injured .Three out of the killed were Muslims .

Then there are Arab African Lands .

Time and again my Muslim brothers say other Races misrepresent ,twist the facts out of contacts and manufactured incidents .

a k ghai
mumbai, India
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