Dear members,

 

Assalamu Alaikum. An English daily has published the following account
in the first page on 26th March..The Prime Minister as called for
national unity of all political forces.This paper is raising divisive
issues again.May be they have raised same issues hundred times or more
before.This continuous propaganda is not without a purpose, we can
surmise who benefits from Bangladesh dis-unity.

 

The reality of situation  in 1971  and in/ after 1972 is not same. The
historical reality has changed altogether .As far as I have read history
Bangladesh  Jamaate Islami started functioning around 1977 and all its
leaders have become loyal citizens of Bangladesh and their service for
nation is probably more than others .There is no case against them
anywhere.

Jamaat Islami is a committed Islamic party now and before, there is no
question abuse of Islam  by them.Only they abuse religion for their
interest who talk of Islam, Quran and Sunnah only at the time of
election.

 

The war crime trial now against the wishes of the founder of Bangladesh
is a sinister game, further under a law of 1973 (which does not fulfill
the standards of a fair law ) is more unfair.

 

Shah Abdul Hannan

 

 

 

 

 

 


Abuse of religion: old tricks at play


 


This picture published in the daily Sangram in 1971 shows members of the
fourth Razakar Force taking oath over the holy Quran after completing
training under Rajshahi Peace Committee in 1971.Julfikar Ali Manik

Religion was the major weapon of the anti-liberation elements including
Jamaat-e-Islami in their attempts to foil the birth of Bangladesh and in
helping the Pakistani invaders, who launched genocide triggering the
nation's armed struggle for independence on March 26, 1971.

"Jamaat-e-Islami cherishes Pakistan and Islam as an inseparable entity,"
commented former Jamaat ameer Golam Azam in 1971. He was also the chief
of the East Pakistan unit of Jamaat during the Liberation War.

Jamaat's mouthpiece the daily Sangram covered a speech by Golam Azam in
1971. "Pakistan is the house of Islam for the world Muslims. Therefore,
Jamaat activists don't justify being alive had Pakistan disintegrated,"
Golam Azam was quoted by Sangram as addressing a reception of Jamaat
ministers at defunct Hotel Empire in Dhaka.

Jamaat incumbent Ameer Motiur Rahman Nizami, who was the chief of Islami
Chaatra Sangha, student wing of Jamaat in 1971, said in an article,
"Sacred land Pakistan is the home of Allah for establishing His rules."

Nizami, who has succeeded Golam Azam, had also labelled the freedom
fighters as "khodadrohi" [rebels against Allah].

He said in that article, "The cowards [freedom fighters] who are against
Allah have attacked this holy land [Pakistan]."

"Will the holy occasion of Shab-e-Qadr be able to evoke our courage to
establish true peace and welfare through resisting all the attacks
launched against Pakistan and Islam?" he asked.

Historical documents and news reports published during and after the
Liberation War show that Nizami was the commander-in-chief of Al-Badr.

The Sangram quoted him on September 15, 1971 as saying: "Everyone of us
should assume the role of a Muslim soldier of an Islamic state and
through cooperation to the oppressed and by winning their confidence we
must kill those; who are hatching conspiracy against Pakistan and
Islam."

These are the few examples of the anti-liberation political elements,
which stood against independence of Bangladesh with the Pakistani
occupation forces when the freedom fighters were sacrificing their lives
to liberate motherland.

Several political elements of Bangladesh had not only campaigned against
liberation but also actively helped Pakistani forces commit genocide.
Although some of these elements gradually disappeared from the political
scene, some others like Jamaat became more and more powerful. 

Jamaat leaders had also formed some paramilitary wings like Razakar and
Al-Badr during the Liberation War. These wings worked as the auxiliary
forces of the Pakistani military and also killed many pro-liberation
people across the country.

Records show that Jamaat formed Razakar and Al-Badr to counter the
freedom fighters. Razakar force was established by former Jamaat
secretary general Moulana Abul Kalam Mohammad Yousuf, while Al-Badr
comprised the Islami Chhatra Sangha activists.

During the nine-month bloody Liberation War, Pakistani forces and their
Bangladeshi collaborators committed genocide and war crimes that left
three million people killed and around quarter million women violated
besides the planned elimination of the best Bangali brains on December
14, 1971.

Anticipating sure defeat, the Pakistani forces and their collaborators
-- Razakar, Al-Badr and Al-Shams [mostly leaders of Jamaat and its
student front] -- picked up leading Bangali intellectuals and
professionals on December 14 and killed them en masse in an attempt to
intellectually cripple the nation.

Demand for the trial of war criminals is one of the oldest issues of the
country linked to the birth of Bangladesh.

Despite their defeat on December 16, 1971 with the Pakistani army,
remnants of the collaborators have apparently never left their fight in
the last 38 years. Even the nation witnessed it in the same manner in
the national elections in December last year.

While the victorious Awami League had campaigned for secular Bangladesh,
their main political rivals campaigned with the slogan "save Islam"
through ballots.

Establishing Bangladesh as a secular state was one of the major essence
of the liberation struggle and to liberate the country from the Islamic
republic of Pakistan.

This historical split has not ended even after 38 years of independence
as the political elements against liberation have not been tried for
their war crimes.

The trial of war criminals is still a big challenge for the newly
elected AL government, which led the War of Independence, even after
having huge mandate for its major electoral pledges including trying the
war criminals.

The demand for trial of war criminals has always been ignored due to
several reasons including pressures from home and abroad to save the
killers.

When the nation became hopeful about fulfilment of that demand, it has
apparently been sidelined following the carnage at Pilkhana BDR
headquarters in the name of a mutiny on February 25-26 that left 74
people including 57 army officers killed.

The brutality of the killings has again reminded the nation of many
atrocities by the Pakistani occupation forces in 1971.

The investigators of the carnage suspect the aim of such a heinous act
was, among others, to foil the government's firm move to try the war
criminals.


-- Edited by Al Mamun Russell


 

Reply via email to