http://news.kuwaittimes.net/2013/02/28/30-dead-over-death-sentence-bangladesh-islamists-death-sentence-sparks-deadly-riots/


30 dead over death sentence – Bangladesh Islamist’s death sentence sparks 
deadly riots 
DHAKA: At least 30 people were killed in Bangladesh in a wave of violence 
yesterday as Islamists reacted furiously to a ruling that one of their leaders 
must hang for war crimes during the 1971 independence conflict. At least 22 of 
them were shot in clashes between police and protesters that erupted after 
Delwar Hossain Sayedee, the Jamaat-e- Islami party’s vice president, was found 
guilty of war crimes, including murder, arson and rape.

Sayedee is the third person to be convicted by the controversial domestic 
tribunal whose previous verdicts have also been met with outrage from Islamists 
who say the process is more about score settling than delivering justice. 
Thursday’s death toll was compiled by AFP after talking to police in the 13 
districts where protests turned deadly. The latest clashes brought the overall 
death toll to 46 since the first verdict was delivered on January 21. Among 
yesterday’s dead were four policemen, two of whom were beaten to death after 
thousands of protestors hurled small homemade bombs at a police station in 
Gaibandha in Bangladesh’s north and attacked it with sticks, local police chief 
Monjur Rahman told AFP. “At least 10,000 Jamaat supporters attacked us. We were 
forced to open fire,” Rahman said.

About 300 people, including scores of policemen, were also injured, doctors, 
police and local media said. Police also reported attacks on several Hindu 
homes and temples by Islamists in the southern Noakhali district. Security 
forces had been braced for trouble ahead of the verdict against Sayedee, who 
reacted to the judgment by saying it had been influenced by “atheists” and 
pro-government protesters who have been demanding his execution. Sayedee, now 
best known in Bangladesh as a firebrand preacher, was convicted for setting 
ablaze 25 houses in a Hindu village and abetting the murders of two people 
including a Hindu man, according to a copy of the verdict. He led a 
pro-Pakistani militia who abducted three Hindu sisters and raped them for three 
days at a Pakistani camp. He also forced at least 100 Hindus to convert to 
Islam and made them say Islamic prayers. His lawyer Tajul Islam described the 
verdict as “a gross miscarriage of justice”, adding that Sayedee did not live 
in the town at the time when the alleged crimes took place. “It’s a case of 
mistaken identity. We’re stunned. We’re going to appeal the verdict,” he told 
AFP.

Under a newly amended war crimes law, the appeal process must be completed 
within 90 days, meaning Sayedee would be hanged later this year if the 
country’s highest court upholds the verdict. Protesters at a central Dhaka 
intersection erupted in jubilation as news of Sayedee’s sentence filtered 
through. “We’ve been waiting for this day for the last four decades,” a 
protester told Somoy TV.

There was no immediate reaction from Jamaat to the verdict, but the party has 
enforced a nationwide strike demanding a halt to the trials. The cases against 
eight more Jamaat leaders are still being heard. Earlier this month, the 
tribunal-a local court with no international oversight-sentenced Jamaat’s 
assistant secretary general Abdul Quader Molla to life imprisonment.

While angering Jamaat supporters, that verdict also enraged secular protesters, 
tens of thousands of whom have since poured onto the Shahbag intersection in 
central Dhaka to demand the execution of Jamaat leaders. In January the 
tribunal handed down its first verdict when it sentenced fugitive Muslim TV 
preacher Maolana Abul Kalam Azad to death. The tribunal has been tainted by 
controversies and allegations that it is targeting only the opposition with 
trumped-up charges. Rights groups say its legal procedures fall short of 
international standards. The government rejects the accusations, saying the 
trials are needed to heal the wounds of the war that it says killed three 
million people. — AF


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