http://bdnews24.com/bangladesh/2013/08/12/appeal-to-ban-jamaat

Appeal to ban Jamaat

Suliman Niloy,  bdnews24.com

Published: 2013-08-12 17:25:13.0 BdST Updated: 2013-08-12 19:35:26.0 BdST
The state has sought the banning of the Jamaat-e-Islami for its role during
the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War, days after the High Court scrapped its
registration as a political party.

Additional Attorney General MK Rahman, leading the prosecution at the war
crimes tribunal, also appealed on Monday against the tribunal’s sentence
awarding a 90-year prison term to Jamaat’s former chief Ghulam Azam.

Rahman said he had sought death penalty for Azam for his involvement in
crimes against humanity during the 1971 war.

”Jamaat acted against Bangladesh’s war for freedom. This is a historical
truth. Those who were involved with the party cannot claim they supported
the Liberation War,” he told reporters after filing the government plea.

“We have moved court, seeking a ban on the party, as the tribunal described
it as a criminal organisation,” he added.


The Additional Attorney General said the Appellate Division had the power
to ensure ‘complete justice’ as per Article 104 of the Constitution.

The High Court had cancelled the party's registration with the Election
Commission on Aug 1.

Jamaat had openly opposed Bangladesh’s independence movement and supported
Pakistani military efforts to suppress it.

Its leaders and activists worked with auxiliary support forces functioning
as brutal vigilantes murdering, raping and looting innocents in a campaign
of terror and its brutality is unparalleled in recent history.

Many Jamaat leaders are now facing trials, while some have been convicted
already by the special war crimes tribunals.

On Jul 15, the first war crimes tribunal of Bangladesh found the
91-year-old Azam guilty of five types of crime – conspiracy, planning,
incitement, complicity (abetment) and murder.

However, the judges said they had spared him the death penalty, considering
his age and the state of his health.

The tribunal had observed in the verdict that the Jamaat had acted as a
‘criminal organisation’.

The previous verdicts by the war crimes tribunal had referred to Jamaat’s
anti-Bangladesh campaign in 1971 and its direct involvement with crimes
against humanity.

Shahbagh’s youth-led Ganajagaran Mancha has been demanding a ban on the
party.

After the High Court verdict, State Minister for Law Qamrul Islam said the
move would provide a ‘solid foundation to the legal process’ to ban the
party.

The former Jamaat chief Azam appealed against the prison sentence on Aug 5,
seeking to be let off unconditionally.

Meanwhile, the Supreme Court has rejected the plea to freeze the High
Court's verdict that declared as illegal and void Jamaat’s registration.


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