http://zeenews.india.com/news/south-asia/another-jamaat-leader-in-bangladesh-charged-with-1971-war-crimes_863057.html

Another Jamaat leader in Bangladesh charged with 1971 war crimes
Last Updated: Thursday, July 18, 2013, 17:47
Dhaka: Bangladeshi prosecutors on Thursday slapped six war crime charges,
including genocide, against a senior leader of fundamentalist
Jamaat-e-Islami, a day after the party's second-highest ranked official was
sentenced to death for atrocities during the country's 1971 war of
independence.
"We have brought six charges against Jamaat-e-Islami's (detained) assistant
secretary general ATM Azharul Islam... the court (International Crimes
Tribunal or ICT) has fixed July 24 to issue orders on the indictment of the
accused," prosecutor A K M Saiful Islam told a press briefing.

He said the prosecution sought to try him on specific charges like murders,
genocide, abduction, persecution and rape, siding with the Pakistani troops
during the 1971 liberation war.

Islam was arrested in August last year to face justice for war crimes along
with nearly a dozen other top Jamaat leaders and its then student wing
Islamic Chhatra Sangha leaders who were opposed to Bangladesh's
independence from Pakistan.

In a related development, the ICT today issued an arrest warrant against an
incumbent but fugitive mayor of a town in western Faridpur to face justice
for war crimes charges.

Prosecution lawyers said Mayor of Nagarkanda Zahid Hossain Khokan, also a
local leader of main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party was a
self-declared collaborator of the Pakistani troops as he used to say "I was
a Razakar (collaborator), still am, and want to die as a Razakar."

Khokon, who previously was a Jamaat activist, however, went into hiding
since investigations were launched to unearth his 1971 role.

The development came as Jamaat enforced a nationwide general strike
protesting the death sentence handed out to its secretary general Ali Ahsan
Mohammad Mojaheed, who led the infamous Al Badr force.

Al-Badr is particularly castigated for carrying out a systematic cleansing
campaign against the Bengali intelligentsia during the Liberation War.

Today is the fourth consecutive day of shutdown enforced by Jamaat to
protest the war crimes trial. The reports, however, said the strike drew
little response in the capital as it failed to keep most transport out of
the road.

But parts of the country and the outskirts of the capital where Jamaat is
believed to have their stronghold, however, witnessed isolated violence
leaving nine people dead in the past one week as the fundamentalist party
preferred violent protests to reject the trial.

The verdict against Mojaheed was the second judgement in a week that came
two days after the ICT-1 handed down 90 years of imprisonment to
90-year-old Jamaat supremo Ghulam Azam saying his role in 1971 deserved
death penalty but his old age and ailments prompted it to deliver the long
imprisonment.

Since the constitution of the first war crimes tribunal three years ago, 12
people were indicted so far nine of them being Jamaat leaders, two of main
opposition and Jamaat's crucial ally BNP and one being a junior leader of
ruling Awami League.

Mojaheed was the fifth accused and the fifth Jamaat leader convicted by the
two special tribunals set up in 2010 in line with ruling Awami League's
election pledges.

Four of the convicts were handed down death penalty and two others long
term or life imprisonments with five of them being Jamaat stalwarts and one
being an expelled Jamaat leader.

PTI

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Peace Is Doable

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