The Prague Post - Bangladesh Islamist chief backs crimes against humanity trial for ex-PM

EUR -
AED 4.299618
AFN 80.772999
ALL 98.102368
AMD 448.468011
ANG 2.09515
AOA 1073.456153
ARS 1518.918349
AUD 1.799594
AWG 2.107988
AZN 1.994696
BAM 1.958505
BBD 2.362764
BDT 142.176383
BGN 1.95664
BHD 0.441076
BIF 3465.026106
BMD 1.170617
BND 1.500372
BOB 8.086065
BRL 6.32239
BSD 1.170216
BTN 102.343363
BWP 15.660631
BYN 3.903892
BYR 22944.091786
BZD 2.350517
CAD 1.617735
CDF 3388.93643
CHF 0.944212
CLF 0.028741
CLP 1127.50357
CNY 8.407493
CNH 8.415453
COP 4701.197582
CRC 591.316763
CUC 1.170617
CUP 31.021349
CVE 111.096105
CZK 24.471049
DJF 208.042501
DKK 7.464732
DOP 72.256377
DZD 151.673585
EGP 56.499883
ERN 17.559254
ETB 165.233038
FJD 2.6408
FKP 0.863659
GBP 0.863319
GEL 3.149417
GGP 0.863659
GHS 12.467527
GIP 0.863659
GMD 84.874235
GNF 10158.032896
GTQ 8.975397
GYD 244.724893
HKD 9.159434
HNL 30.90878
HRK 7.535308
HTG 153.121501
HUF 395.438883
IDR 18967.506082
ILS 3.956077
IMP 0.863659
INR 102.445195
IQD 1533.508175
IRR 49297.609841
ISK 143.260551
JEP 0.863659
JMD 187.248639
JOD 0.830014
JPY 172.227062
KES 151.599342
KGS 102.287107
KHR 4688.321206
KMF 492.248859
KPW 1053.555237
KRW 1625.952243
KWD 0.357565
KYD 0.975147
KZT 633.885562
LAK 25288.256608
LBP 104414.323965
LKR 352.226517
LRD 235.883727
LSL 20.591598
LTL 3.456528
LVL 0.708095
LYD 6.338936
MAD 10.546678
MDL 19.512952
MGA 5197.539565
MKD 61.615107
MMK 2457.754565
MNT 4210.466208
MOP 9.430426
MRU 46.76659
MUR 53.357163
MVR 18.03965
MWK 2031.020774
MXN 21.941463
MYR 4.931855
MZN 74.806787
NAD 20.591593
NGN 1794.228419
NIO 43.032319
NOK 11.935166
NPR 163.74918
NZD 1.975725
OMR 0.449849
PAB 1.170201
PEN 4.167835
PGK 4.846793
PHP 66.201944
PKR 330.172943
PLN 4.259967
PYG 8569.837184
QAR 4.261753
RON 5.063859
RSD 117.322785
RUB 93.766881
RWF 1691.541461
SAR 4.392451
SBD 9.626888
SCR 16.558907
SDG 702.959768
SEK 11.189698
SGD 1.499214
SHP 0.919921
SLE 27.279667
SLL 24547.249292
SOS 669.011861
SRD 43.968805
STD 24229.40694
STN 24.934141
SVC 10.239143
SYP 15220.15252
SZL 20.591584
THB 37.975245
TJS 10.912033
TMT 4.108865
TND 3.376352
TOP 2.741706
TRY 47.765426
TTD 7.939865
TWD 35.156557
TZS 3058.240971
UAH 48.298012
UGX 4165.753995
USD 1.170617
UYU 46.814663
UZS 14691.242835
VES 158.583885
VND 30752.106694
VUV 139.471344
WST 3.238249
XAF 656.855873
XAG 0.030814
XAU 0.000351
XCD 3.163651
XCG 2.109013
XDR 0.822168
XOF 656.716485
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.270026
ZAR 20.597292
ZMK 10536.961287
ZMW 27.119111
ZWL 376.938173
  • RBGPF

    2.8400

    75.92

    +3.74%

  • BCC

    -0.6300

    85.99

    -0.73%

  • AZN

    0.7000

    79.17

    +0.88%

  • NGG

    -0.1300

    71.43

    -0.18%

  • GSK

    0.5581

    39.36

    +1.42%

  • BCE

    0.2400

    25.61

    +0.94%

  • RIO

    0.2000

    61.24

    +0.33%

  • SCS

    -0.0500

    16.15

    -0.31%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    23.12

    +0.13%

  • RELX

    0.2700

    47.96

    +0.56%

  • BTI

    -0.2700

    57.15

    -0.47%

  • JRI

    0.0835

    13.36

    +0.62%

  • CMSD

    0.0505

    23.34

    +0.22%

  • VOD

    0.0300

    11.67

    +0.26%

  • BP

    0.1892

    34.33

    +0.55%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2100

    14.71

    -1.43%

Bangladesh Islamist chief backs crimes against humanity trial for ex-PM
Bangladesh Islamist chief backs crimes against humanity trial for ex-PM / Photo: Munir Uz Zaman - AFP

Bangladesh Islamist chief backs crimes against humanity trial for ex-PM

Bangladesh's top Islamist politician says he supports the extradition of ousted premier Sheikh Hasina to face trial for crimes against humanity in the same tribunal that convicted his colleagues.

Text size:

Shafiqur Rahman is the leader of Jamaat-e-Islami, whose members were hounded, driven underground and sentenced to death during Hasina's autocratic 15-year rule.

Her government justified the crackdown on the nation's largest Islamist party by accusing it of sponsoring extremist attacks -- charges Rahman denies.

After Hasina's toppling and exile in neighbouring India following a student-led revolution in August, the ban on Jamaat's activities was lifted.

Rahman is leading its public revival.

Now back in the political mainstream, he says Hasina must be extradited to face trial with her allies for abuses committed during her tenure.

"We don't believe in the theory that just because we faced injustice, someone else should also face injustice," the 65-year-old told AFP at his party office in the capital Dhaka.

"But people want them to be tried. If they don't face trial, these criminals will commit more crimes."

Dozens of Hasina's allies were taken into custody after her regime collapsed, accused of culpability in a police crackdown that killed more than 700 people during the unrest that deposed her.

Several cases accusing Hasina of orchestrating the "mass murder" of protesters are being probed in a deeply contentious war crimes court her government set up.

The International Crimes Tribunal was ostensibly created to try Bangladeshis accused of committing crimes against humanity during the country's devastating 1971 independence war against Pakistan.

The United Nations and rights groups criticised its procedural shortcomings, and it became widely seen as a means for Hasina to eliminate political opponents.

The tribunal hanged five of Jamaat's top leaders, sparking protests that led to the deaths of around 500 people.

Rahman said it was important Hasina and her loyalists faced a fair trial, the kind denied to his executed comrades.

He said he was confident that the tribunal, if reformed, could meet the task.

"Whenever there is any crime against humanity in this country, then there is no problem with it being explored in the tribunal," he said.

"If there is any disparity of law, if there is any contradiction with the constitution or human rights, that can be amended."

At the same time, Rahman said Jamaat would challenge the tribunal's former wrongdoings by posthumously appealing the death penalty verdicts handed to his former colleagues.

"We will prove that we faced injustices in the court which hanged our leaders," he said.

- No election without reforms -

Jamaat's headquarters was shuttered for more than a decade but reopened days after Hasina's downfall. It is now swarming with party activists.

The party will contest the next national elections, expected sometime in the next two years -- but Rahman says they are in no rush.

Instead he wants the caretaker government, led by Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus, to first fulfil its pledge of a democratic overhaul.

"The election would not be meaningful without reforms," Rahman said.

So far there had been no alliance struck with its previous coalition partner, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), he said.

But Rahman did support the return of exiled BNP leader Tarique Rahman, convicted of graft charges during Hasina's government, and who has lived in London since 2008.

"We have many false cases against us, so we believe he also has many false cases against him," Rahman said.

- Minority attacks -

Hasina accused Jamaat of supporting extremism and undermining the country's secular constitution.

The impetus for her crackdown on the party was bolstered by several Islamist attacks during her time in office that killed bloggers accused of blasphemy and Westerners living in Dhaka.

Rahman emphatically denied the party's association with any extremist group, saying Jamaat had long committed to the democratic process.

He cited Jamaat's condemnation of a spate of attacks after Hasina's toppling on Bangladesh's minority Hindus, motivated by the community's perceived support of her government.

And he pointed to the party's efforts to guard Hindu temples and Sufi Muslim shrines after they were attacked since August.

"We are loud and clear," he said. "We don't have any ambiguity here. We don't support any of this."

Z.Pavlik--TPP