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Tuesday April 16, 2024

BD hangs JI leader for 1971 war massacre

DHAKA: The Bangladesh authorities on Saturday hanged a top Islamist leader for overseeing a massacre during the 1971 independence war, officials said.“Mohammad Kamaruzzaman has been executed at 10:30pm Bangladesh time,” Law and Justice Minister Anisul Huq said.Four especially trained convicts took him to a makeshift gallows set up near his

By our correspondents
April 12, 2015
DHAKA: The Bangladesh authorities on Saturday hanged a top Islamist leader for overseeing a massacre during the 1971 independence war, officials said.
“Mohammad Kamaruzzaman has been executed at 10:30pm Bangladesh time,” Law and Justice Minister Anisul Huq said.
Four especially trained convicts took him to a makeshift gallows set up near his prison cell and hanged him using a rope, in line with Bangladeshi jail procedure. He was declared dead by a magistrate and a government doctor.
Kamaruzzaman, the third most senior figure in the Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) party, was convicted of abduction, torture and mass murder as one of the JI leaders who killed thousands of people during 1971 war.
Hundreds of secular supporters burst into cheers and made victory signs as news of the hanging was announced at Shabagh square in central Dhaka where they gathered to celebrate the death of a man they called a “war butcher”.
Kamaruzzaman, 62, became the second Islamist to be hanged for atrocities during the 1971 war. Abdul Quader Molla, the fourth-highest ranked leader of the Jamaat-e-Islami party, was hanged in December 2013.
Police said security was tightened outside the capital’s main jail and across the country ahead of the hanging.
“We are alert to prevent any violence or subversive acts,” Dhaka police spokesman Jahangir Alam Sarker said.
Kamaruzzaman was originally expected to be hanged in the early hours of Saturday morning, but the execution was postponed at the last minute, with no official reason given.
Bangladesh went ahead with the execution despite last-minute pleas by the United Nations, the European Union and human rights organisations to halt the hanging. The UN said the trial did not meet “fair international” standards.
Just hours before the execution, members of Kamaruzzaman’s family visited him at the prison, surrounded by tight security. “We found him in good health and not worried about his fate at all,” his eldest son Hasan Iqbal said after seeing his father.
“In his last comments, he regretted that he did not see the victory of Islamic movement in Bangladesh. But he was confident that it would be victorious here one day,” he said. The family had dug a grave at his village in northern Sherpur district where he would be buried on Sunday, he added.
The country’s Supreme Court cleared the last hurdle for execution of Kamaruzzaman on Monday after rejecting his final appeal against the original death sentence handed down to him by a controversial war crime court in May 2013. He was given several days to seek clemency from the country’s President Abdul Hamid to avoid death. But his son said his father did not seek any mercy. “My father said only Allah can give or take life, not a president,” he said. Prosecutors said Kamaruzzaman presided over the massacre of at least 120 unarmed farmers who were lined up and gunned down in the remote northern village of Sohagpur during the 1971 war.
The remote northern hamlet has since become known as the “Village of Widows”. “All 32 widows who are still alive are happy that the notorious killer has been hanged. Finally we got justice,” said Mohammad Jalal Uddin, a Sohagpur farmer who lost seven members of his extended family in the killing.
Analysts said the execution could deepen the country’s political crisis after the main opposition leader, Khaleda Zia, launched a nationwide protest in January to try to topple Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s secular government. Jamaat, the nation’s largest Islamist party, is an ally of the Zia’s Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP).