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Friday, February 4, 2011

[ALOCHONA] Meeting Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina

Meeting Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina

By Abbas Faiz –" South Asia researcher for Amnesty International

It was a welcome opportunity to meet Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina
during her official visit to the UK. Three of us, Lord Eric Avebury of
the UK House of Lords, Brad Adams of Human Rights Watch and I met the
Prime Minister on 30 January at her hotel suite in London.Bangladesh
Foreign Minister, Dr Dipu Moni and the Bangladesh High Commissioner to
the UK, Dr Sayeedur Rahman Khan were also present at the meeting.

We began with a discussion on the war crimes trials, restrictions on
human rights groups visiting Chittagong Hill Tracts, and the continued
delay in implementing the Chittagong Hill Tracts Accord (CHT) that was
signed in 1997 during Sheikh Hasina’s previous tenure as Prime
Minister.

The Prime Minister said she was committed to implementing the CHT
Accord and had set up a committee to advise her on how to implement
it.

The Foreign Minister said the government was aware of the concerns the
International Bar Association had raised about the law under which war
crimes will be tried. She said the government had sought the opinion
of legal experts on those concerns and that the amended law
incorporates their advice. She said the process is to heal wounds, and
the government is looking at all issues in relation to the trials, and
the rule of law would be followed.

The law denies, among other things, the right to challenge the
jurisdiction of the Tribunal and the right to the possibility of bail
but it was not clear if the government would move to amend the law.

I told the Prime Minister that Amnesty International welcomes the
government's move to make the National Human Rights Commission
permanent and asked for her assurances that it would remain
independent and well resourced. Also, the government's move to try
Bangladesh Rifle mutineers in civilian courts, as against courts
martial, was welcome.

I expressed concern that the government's move to address some of the
human rights concerns appear to favour only members of her own party,
the Awami League. There is a long, unwelcome legacy in Bangladesh for
governments to go soft on the criminal activities of members of their
own party and harsh on the opposition. I asked why the only known
cases of the government pardoning death penalty convicts were 20
convicts, 19 of whom were members of the governing Awami League. I
also expressed concern about the activities of the Bangladesh Chattra
League (BCL), the student wing of the Awami League, and the serious
allegations of human rights abuses by this grouping, which have gone
unpunished.

The Foreign Minister said the deaths sentences had been politically
motivated and for that reason the prisoners have been pardoned. I was
dismayed as I had hoped to hear a commitment to pardoning more death
penalty convicts and the exercise of utmost impartiality in choosing
who to pardon.

The Prime Minister said she had taken action against the BCL members.
Some have been arrested for committing crimes and some have been
expelled from the Awami League.

I explained that torture continues to be widespread and asked the
Prime Minister if her government would consider implementing the 2003
Supreme Court ruling that provides guidelines for torture free
investigation of suspects. This question remained unanswered.

I referred to statements the Prime Minister had made before and after
the 2008 elections that extrajudicial executions would end. Yet, they
continue and nothing seems to be done to stop them.

The Prime Minister said extrajudicial executions have been happening
since 2004 and she has been very vocal on the issue from that time.
She said they could not stop overnight. She said all incidents are
investigated, and if any officer is found to have committed a crime
immediately we take action against it.

I agree that extrajudicial executions cannot stop overnight, but work
to stop them can begin straight away. While the Prime Minister's
comments generate the hope that the government might be prepared to
address the issue, the Home Minister's comments last week that
extrajudicial executions were not happening undermines that hope.
-----------------------------
Abbas Faiz –" South Asia researcher for Amnesty International
E Mail : afaiz@amnesty.org
http://newsfrombangladesh.net/view.php?hidRecord=347520


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