Friday 17 April 2009

DID BANGABANDHU ACTUALLY PARDON ALL WAR CRIMINALS?

Contrary to the misconception that all the war criminals have been pardoned

If a society that allows the war criminals to roam around free for so many years, it is not at all surprising that such a society will become a breeding ground for criminals. The trial of those who actively opposed Bangladesh's liberation by taking up arms to fight for the occupying Pakistani army has been one of the unfinished legacies of our history.

The process of trial of the war criminals was originally began in 1972 and stopped abruptly after the assignation of the country’s founding president Sheikh Mujibur Rahman in August 1975.

A total of 37,000 war criminals were arrested between 1972 and 1975.

Twenty-six thousands (26,000) of the detainees with records of minor offence, were pardoned under a general amnesty announced by Mujib government, in which the accused against whom there was no clear evidence of killing, rape, arson and looting were given clemency. There was this clause that even those who were pardoned if new allegations of killing, rape, arson and looting turned up against them they could be tried.

But the trial process of 11,000 others, against whom there was clear evidence of killing, rape, arson and looting was on. Among them 752 were handed down with sentences after the trial under the Collaborators Act 1972. By December 31, the trials of these 752 war criminals were finished, even death penalties were handed down, and one war criminal walked the gallows.

Notably, the first death penalty executed in the history of Bangladesh was in fact that of a war criminal.

But, unfortunately, after the assassination of Bangabandhu (Sheikh Mujibur Rahman) the ruling general Ziaur Rahman halted the process of trial of the war criminals by scrapping the Collaborators Act, resulting in rehabilitation of the hated criminals in the society.

Around 11,000 were behind bars when the government of Justice Sayem and General Zia repealed the Collaborators’ Act on December 31, 1975. They in fact stopped the trial and investigation process. Even those who had been punished were then freed.
sources: online

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