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Sunday, July 6, 2008

[mukto-mona] WHEN 'SAM BAHADUR' CONFRONTED INDIRA GANDHI/Dr Hasan receives death threat

Dear Friends,
While going thru a write up above, Dr Hasan is in receipt of death threat.
INTERSTING correspondence between SAM and Indira Gandhi (WHEN SAM CONFRONTED GANDHI)
WOW !! If SAM was not there, Bangladesh was unable to secure independence
within 9 months with more intellectuals cud have been killed, the way it WAS between two days within 14th
Dec to 16th dec, '71 as recently revealed by prominent columnist Samad Azad
who has been
exiled to Delhi for last six yrs.
SAM cud have been a very unique eye-witnees for International Criminal
court.
It appears, Bangladesh present Govt is recognising India's role in 1971 war
in more positive way since 1975 and it's a good sign on promoting INDO-BD
relation, though it is quite late.
Tks to CTG/Army chief and campaign on War criminal to ICC is to be continued
and not landed up on softened manner, the unfortunate error in our political
eras.


KRGDS
RCH


BANGLADESH SALUTES GEN MANEKSHAW: Bangladesh yesterday mourned the death of
Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw, recalling his "signal contribution" to the 1971
war that created the nation. "The people and the Government of Bangladesh
will always recall with warm gratitude his signal contribution to our war of
liberation and his association with a glorious epoch in the history of
Bangladesh's evolution," the foreign affairs adviser to the interim cabinet,
Iftekhar Ahmed Chowdhury, said in a letter to Indian foreign minister Pranab
Mukherjee.
Army chief general Moeen U. Ahmed in a statement mourned the death of the
celebrated soldier, saying the "Bangladesh army recalls his contribution
with gratitude and pays rich tribute to the departed soul". "The successful
leadership of Field Marshal Manekshaw as the chief of Bangladesh-India
allied forces helped Bangladesh achieve the quick victory during the war of
liberation in 1971," Ahmed said.


WHEN 'SAM BAHADUR' CONFRONTED INDIRA GANDHI: There are legends galore about
India's best known soldier. One such incident is about how as the Army Chief
in 1971, General Sam Manekshaw confronted the then Prime Minister Indira
Gandhi on the Bangladesh issue.
The Field Marshal narrated this incident at the inaugural Field Marshal KM
Cariappa Memorial Lecture in October 1995 at Delhi.
"There is a very thin line between being dismissed and becoming a Field
Marshal. In 1971, when Pakistan cracked down in East Pakistan, hundreds and
thousands of refugees started pouring into India, into West Bengal, Assam
and Tripura. The PM held a Cabinet meeting in her office. I was then
summoned. A very angry, grim-faced Prime Minister read out telegrams from
the Chief Ministers of West Bengal, Assam and Tripura.
She then turned around to me and said, 'What are you doing about it?' And I
said, 'Nothing, it's got nothing to do with me. You didn't consult me when
you allowed the BSF, the CRP and RAW to encourage the Pakistanis to revolt.
Now that you are in trouble, you come to me. I have a long nose. I know
what's happening.'
She said, 'I want you to enter Pakistan. And I responded, That means war!'
She said, 'I do not mind if it is war.'
I said 'Are you prepared? I am certainly not. This is the end of April. The
Himalayan passes are opening and there can be an attack from China.' I
turned around to the Prime Minister and said that the rains were about to
start in East Pakistan and when it rains there, it pours and the whole
countryside is flooded. The snows are melting, the rivers would become like
oceans. All my movement would be confined to roads."
Manekshaw told Gandhi that the Air Force would not be able to provide
support because of climatic conditions. "Now Prime Minister, give me your
orders. The grim Prime Minister with her teeth clenched said, 'The Cabinet
will meet again at four o'clock.'
The Cabinet members started walking out. I being the junior most was the
last to go and as I was leaving, she said, 'Chief, will you stay back?'
I turned around and said, 'Prime Minister, before you open your mouth, may I
send you my resignation on grounds of health, mental or physical?'
She said, 'Everything you told me is true.' 'Yes! It is my job to tell you
the truth,' I responded. 'And it is my job to fight, it is my job to fight
to win and I have to tell you the truth.' She smiled at me and said, 'All
right Sam, you know what I want?' I said, 'Yes, I know what you want!'"
Manekshaw apparently had his way as the Bangladesh war took place seven
months later, giving the armed forces ample time for preparations.

--- On Tue, 7/1/08, Jamal Hasan <poplu@hotmail.com> wrote:
From: Jamal Hasan>
Subject: Bangladesh war crimes stir tension [BBC News]
To:
Received: Tuesday, July 1, 2008, 1:02 PM
 
Languages
30 June 2008 10:36 UK

Bangladesh war crimes stir tension

By Mark Dummett
BBC News, Dhaka

Pulitzer Prize winning picture of unrest in Dhaka in 1971
Guerrillas attack Pakistani militiamen in newly-independent Bangladesh

As Bangladesh's bloody war of independence from Pakistan came to its end, Dr MA Hassan went in search of his brother.

He was afraid that Selim, who like him was an officer in the pro-liberation forces, had been killed in one of the last battles of the conflict, and he wanted to recover his corpse.

He didn't find it, but as he stumbled through a marsh at the northern edge of Dhaka, he came across a horrific scene.

"That day, 31 January 1972, I saw a few hundred bodies, mutilated dead bodies, littered all around that place," he recalled. "There were marks of torture on every body; nails turned out, eyes gouged out, hearts taken out."

He added: "Some were female, their breasts were amputated, private parts mutilated. I had to push the bodies one by one to make my way. Mostly they were the innocent public."

We did not take part in any of the crimes that has been alleged against us
Abdur Razzak, Jamaat-e-Islami lawyer

At that time, hundreds of other mass graves were also being discovered across the newly independent country. This followed a nine-month war when the Pakistani army tried to bludgeon the citizens of its eastern province into renouncing their dreams of self-rule.

The crisis was precipitated when East Pakistanis (who later became Bangladeshis) voted overwhelmingly in favour of autonomy and West Pakistan responded by sending in its army.

Hundreds of thousands of people were killed, including Hindus, political activists, intellectuals and students. The Pakistani army carried out "collective punishment" where they suspected villagers of helping the freedom fighters.

Thousands of women were raped, millions fled into India. Bangladeshis say the killings amounted to a genocide and that three million people died.

'Notorious'

Thirty-six years later, Dr Hassan took me back to the place where he had come across the corpses, an area called "Black Water". It is one of the wet wastelands that ring the Bangladeshi capital and life there is now perfectly normal, if bleak. When we visited, men were smashing bricks into chips to help build a new road, and women and children were washing in a pond.

Dr M.A. Hassan revisits the scene of bloody horror
Dr Hassan revisits the scene of the killings

There is no memorial to the hundreds of people killed there and none of the killers has ever been brought to justice. But what he witnessed has inspired Dr Hassan to do something about that.

He is a leading member of the War Crimes Fact Finding Committee which is dedicated to investigating the massacres and putting pressure on the government to hold war crime trials.

Although most killings were carried out by the Pakistan army, many locals helped them.

These collaborators became members of so-called peace committees, or armed militia of razakars (volunteers).

In one of the most notorious incidents of the war, more than 150 academics and journalists (including BBC reporter Nizamuddin Ahmed) were rounded up in Dhaka on the eve of Pakistan's defeat and killed by members of a group call Al-Badr, which was allegedly made up of members of the religious party Jamaat-e-Islami.

At the end of the war hundreds of alleged collaborators were arrested, and many were executed by pro-liberation forces.

But Bangladesh's leader, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, then granted a general amnesty and subsequent governments shied away from confronting such a controversial issue.

The War Crimes Fact Finding Committee is now at the forefront of a campaign for justice, which has gathered momentum in Bangladesh since a military-backed interim government took over in January 2007. The campaigners have been encouraged by the government's promise of political reforms.

Accused

That is because this is now a deeply political issue. Many of the people accused of committing war crimes have gone on to become influential public figures. Jamaat-e-Islami has gone from being a fringe party in 1971, to a junior coalition partner in the last elected government.

The campaigners are demanding that the authorities block Jamaat from standing in the next elections to be held in December.

Matiur Rahman Nizami, leader of Jamaat-e-Islami
Matiur Rahman Nizami, leader of Jamaat-e-Islami

None of the accusations against them are new. Reporters covering the war for newspapers such as The Times of London, and the New York Times, wrote at that time that Al-Badr comprised Jamaat members.

The War Crimes Fact Finding Committee has spent the last 19 years gathering reams of documents and eyewitness accounts to back up their claims, and has handed them over to the government, along with the names of 1,150 alleged war criminals.

But Jamaat-e-Islami, which describes itself as a "moderate Islamic political party that believes in democracy and human rights" says it is the victim of a political vendetta. None of its leaders has ever been prosecuted for their alleged activities during the war and its lawyer Abdur Razzak says the accusations are baseless.

"In this country the law of defamation has become totally ineffective," he said. "If I say you are a war criminal there is nothing you can do about it. This is being used against Jamaat-e-Islami for a political purpose.

"We did not take part in any of the crimes that has been alleged against us.

"Had there been any specific allegations, there would have been prosecutions in the last 36 years."

But Dr Hassan, who has received death threats since publishing the list of alleged war criminals, denies he has a political agenda. He says he doesn't want to "take revenge, but to break the silence of impunity".

Some of the campaigners worry that that silence will never be broken, and that unless war crime trials establish the truth soon, then there is a danger that the history of Bangladesh's cruel birth will be rewritten.

In response, a group of bloggers has now started posting archives on the web so that anyone with an internet connection can discover for themselves what happened.



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