Bangabondhu,
Bangladesh and our independence have very closed relation. Bangabondhu Sheikh
Mujibur Rahman had one of the great nationalizes leader in the world.
Bangabondhu (http://www.humanrightstoday.info/?p=714) was the pioneer and
architect of independent Bangladesh and its sovereignty. His political
prudence, indomitable courage, eloquence and powerful leadership motivated the
countrymen to join in the war ofliberation.
Bangabondhu proclaimed independence on March 26 in
1971 and the people dived into nine months long bloody battle and achieved the
long desired sweetest freedom, He also gave restless effort to represent an
esteemed Bangalee nation on the world stage. His golden-etched name will remain
in the history of Bangalees and Bangladesh forever. But our nation has been
waiting from 34 years for justice his brutal murders.
August
15 in 1975 is a black-chapter in the history of Bangalee nation. Bangabondhu
and his family members were ruthlessly murdered by anti liberation force and
with the help of army member in this day. And the nation incurred an
irretrievable loss. The nation is deeply shocked and full with grief for this
shameful incident. Now, Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, the daughter of
Bangabondhu is the main target by killer's group especially Islamic militant
group.
The country today observes National Mourning Day
on the 34th death anniversary of Father of the Nation Bangabondhu, with a vow
to implement the longstanding High Court verdict in the case in connection with
his murder. The day is a public holiday. The government chalked out nationwide
programmes to observe the day at the state level. Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina
(she is a daughter of Bangabondhu), will visit her father's grave at Tungipara
under Gopalgonj district today. Along with ruling Awami League (AL), different
political parties, and student and socio-cultural organizations also planned
programmes to mourn the killings of Bangabondhu and most of his family members
on this day in 1975. Three separate attacks on this day 34 years ago left 24
people killed. Bangabandhu's two daughters -- Sheikh Hasina and Sheikh Rehana
-- could escape the bloodbath as they were abroad at the time. The victims also
including wife of Bangabondhu Begum Fazilatunnesa Mujib, sons Sheikh Kamal,
Sheikh Jamal and nine-year-old Sheikh Russell, daughters-in-law Sultana Kamal
and Parveen Jamal, brother Sheikh Naser, nephew Sheikh Fazlul Huq Moni and his
wife Begum Arju Moni, brother-in-law Abdur Rab Serniabat, 13-year-old Baby
Serniabat, Serniabat's son Arif and four-year-old grandson Babu, three guests,
Bangabondhu's four domestic helps, and his security chief Col Jamil Uddin
Ahmed.
Bangabondhu united the Bangalees to throw off the
shackles of Pakistani oppression and steered them towards independence. His
stirring speech on March 7, 1971, before a crowd of lakhs ready to stake
everything for freedom, left an indelible imprint on the nation's memory. For
21 long years, his killers had been immune from prosecution due to the
Indemnity Ordinance, which was finally repealed in 1996, paving the way for
trials of the killers. A murder case was filed on October 2, 1996. In November
1998, a trial court awarded death penalty to 15 former army officers for
killing Bangabondhu and his family members. The High Court (HC) upheld the
death sentences of 12. Five of the condemned -- dismissed army personnel Lt Col
Syed Farooq-ur Rahman, Lt Col Sultan Shahriar Rashid Khan, Lt Col Muhiuddin
Ahmed, Maj AKM Mahiuddin Ahmed, and Maj Bazlul Huda -- are behind bars while
six are hiding abroad. Another condemned Aziz Pasha died. The five condemned
convicts filed separate appeals with the Appellate Division of Supreme Court in
the last week of October 2007 against their death sentences pronounced by the
HC.Law Minister Shafique Ahmed recently told journalists that hearings of the
appeals will start soon as there is no shortage of judges in the Supreme Court
now. The condemned six still at large are Shariful Haque Dalim, AKM Mahiuddin,
Rashed Chowdhury, Nur Chowdhury, Abdul Mazed, and Moslemuddin.
In
the daily Star published a special report on 15 August of 1975. The report
says. Islamic radicalism, menacing the nation for years now, was something India
and the United States learnt to dread soon after the assassination of
Bangabondhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman. Documents lately declassified by the US
Office of the Historian show the apprehension had its roots in the perception
that Bangabondhu's killers--all military officers--were “pro-US, anti-Soviet
Union, Islamic, and less pro-Indian than the past leadership”.
The
August 15 bloodbath in 1975 left Mujib and most of his family butchered and his
party in total disarray. It led to the assumption that Pakistan would regain
its sway on the nation it sought to subdue only a few years back. In the
context of the cold war dynamics, India and the US were also concerned that
China, which recognized Bangladesh only after August 1975, might help radical
communist elements thrive in the delta sliding into militocracy. All these
worries were reflected in a conversation between the then US secretary of state
Henry Kissinger and Indian external minister YB Chavan.
The
US Office of the Historian, which is responsible for preparation and
publication of the official historical documentary record of American foreign
policy, has transcript of the conversation that took place at the US Department
of State on October 6, 1975. There, the discussion related to the developments
in Bangladesh goes like this:
After a while, Kissinger asked his Indian
counterpart, “What is the tendency of the [Bangladesh] military? Is it
anti-Indian?" Chavan replied, "Frankly, there is some anti-Indian
tendency, I am sorry to say." At this point, Kewal Singh, the then
secretary of Indian external affairs ministry, chipped in, "Some people
hostile to Mujib were brought back. We don't want to give the impression we are
concerned but pro-Islamic and pro-radical groups have some strength."
Chavan and Kissinger met the following day as well
and talked about Bangladesh. Almost immediately they got down to serious
talking about political ramifications of the August 15 coup d'état. Yet again,
the Indian minister said, "We are worried about Bangladesh. Radical
movements are already there. If Pakistan and China converse their efforts, this
could pose a problem. This would be a new factor in South Asia which needs
assessment." The secretary of state said, "Previously, the Chinese
were opposed to Bangladesh. They were not among Mujib's admirers." As he
asked if India had any advance indication of the coup, his opposite number
replied, "None."
Kissinger then observed, "People are always
complaining that we don't know about things in advance…They should realize that
any coup that succeeds must have fooled someone. Mujib just couldn't have
imagined that anyone would organize a coup against him. As I understand it,
your relations with Bangladesh are now good. What you are concerned about is a
future possibility.”
TN Kaul, the then Indian ambassador to the US,
added, "The danger is Pan Islamism." At one point, Kissinger said,
"The real worry would be if countries with resources like Saudi Arabia get
radical leaders. Then there would be trouble." Kaul said, "One reason
why we banned the Jamaat Islami and RSS is that these parties were getting
money from the outside." The Kissinger-Chavan meeting gives an impression
that none of the two countries had prior knowledge of the military takeover.
But the US state department's documents suggest
quite the contrary. They show that like India, the US had gathered that
something sinister was brewing, and it had even informed Bangabondhu about it.
Minutes of a staff meeting headed by Kissinger after August 15, show that the
US was well aware of the plot. There, Kissinger was heard enquiring Alfred
Atherton Jr., assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern and South Asian
affairs in 1974-1978, about the assassination. Atherton said the US had lots of
indications in March that some quarters were scheming to kill Mujib. Kissinger
asked, "Didn't we tell him [Mujib] about it?" The assistant secretary
of state said, "We told him at the time." As his boss pressed to know
if Bangabondhu was told who it was going to be, Atherton answered, "I will
have to check whether we gave him the names." At that point, Hyland of
Bureau of Intelligence and Research said, "We were a little imprecise on
that."
Referring
to the US alerting Bangabondhu to the danger of an attack on him, Atherton
said, "He [Mujib] brushed it off, scoffed at it, and said nobody would do
a thing like that to him." Kissinger remarked, "He was one of the
world's prize fools." Talking about the coup leaders, Atherton said,
"They are military officers, middle and senior officers, who are generally
considered less pro-Indian than the past leadership; pro-US, anti-Soviet."
The secretary of state responded, "Absolutely inevitable." And
Atherton went on, "Islamic. They have changed the name to the Islamic
Republic” Kissinger said, "That they would be pro-US was not inevitable.
In fact, I would have thought at some turn of the wheel they were going to
become pro-Chinese, and anti-Indian I firmly expected. I always knew India
would rue the day that they made Bangladesh independent. I predicted that since
'71."
Major
Dalim, one of the on-the-run convicted killers of Bangabondhu, in a radio
announcement soon after the killings declared the country would now be named
"Islamic Republic of Bangladesh". The declaration which eventually
did not materialise was a complete contrast to the secular ideals that stirred
Bangalees to fight for independence from "Islamic Republic of
Pakistan" in 1971.
Though
the republic's name was spared a change, its constitution soon lost secular
character. The original charter saw secularism dropped as one of its four
fundamental principles. It also had 'Bismillahir Rahmanir Rahim' in the
preamble.
Even
more alarming was the scrapping of the ban on religion-based political parties.
During the rule of Ziaur Rahman, five parties including Jamaat-e-Islami, which
collaborated with the Pakistani occupation forces and committed genocide and
numerous atrocities during the Liberation War, were allowed to be in politics
again. The government of independent Bangladesh in its first decision banned
these parties that always oppose the nation's independence and thrive on
communal disturbances. In the early 80s, the country's second military ruler HM
Ershad introduced Islam as state religion, dealing a death blow to secularism.
The rise of Islamist militancy, once a fear, is a
reality now, 34 years after the August 15 carnage. During the BNP-Jamaat-led
rule in 2001-2006, Islamist outfits spread tentacles across the country thanks
to patronage from some influential leaders of the ruling alliance. Though the
BNP government woke up to the dangers of militancy towards the end of its
tenure, it was too little too late. Now the task lies with Awami League-led
grand alliance that came to power on promises that include the one to root out
militancy. And at the centre stage in the combat against militancy is Prime
Minister Sheikh Hasina, who herself had been the target of several attacks.
Now the peoples of Bangladesh have don't want to
bother any late to execute the killers of Bangabondhu. In the same time we want
to see immediately the constitution of 1972 which was made after our
independence. We want to see to our loving country Bangladesh as an actual
democratic country, there will have rule of law, good governance, enough food
for our poor peoples, nutrition for all children's, there have no discrimination.
Source: the daily Star & BD
You
can agree or disagree with his political philosophy, but even his enemies have
no doubt about the patriotism of this man: Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the founding
father of Bangladesh. He spent most of his life fighting against the injustice
bestowed upon Bangalees, first by the British, and then by the Pakistani
Panjabi military/civil junta. After the mass uprising of 1969, he was given the
title "Bangabandhu", means "Friend of Bengal". He is largely
known as Bangabandhu among the millions of Bangalees.
History
of Bangladesh is largely interconnected with the life of Bangabandhu. He was a
young political activist during the British rule. He was active in every
political event of then East Bengal/East Pakistan: the Language Movement of
1952, Jukta Front election of 1954, Student Movement of 1962, 6-Point Demand of
1966, Mass Uprising of 1969, and finally Bangladesh Liberation War of 1971
against the Pakistanis. He was imprisoned more than a decade during the
24-years of Pakistani rule.
What
the Pakistanis could not do, some corrupt military officers were able to do so
in our own soil. They killed Bangabandhu along with most of his extended family
in August 15, 1975, just after 3 and 1/2 years of independence. Two of his daughters,
Shiekh Hasina and Sheikh Rehana, survived. In November 4, 1975, they killed 4
national leaders, cornerstone of our Liberation War: Syed Nazrul Islam, Taz
Uddin Ahmed, Captain Mansoor Ali, and Kamrujjaman.
Without a doubt, Bangabandhu is the greatest
Bangalee of our known history. He gave us a nation, a new country, a new
identity. Even today, he is more powerful as dead than anyone of us alive.
Credits:All of the pictures and information in
this book is contained in the book JATIR JANAK Father of the Nation, publised
by Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman Memorial Trust, Road
32, Dhanmondhi R/A, Dhaka-1209. This book was published in August 1, 1997 and
available in Muktizuddha Jadughar, Dhaka
The murderers of Bangabandhu should be bringing back.
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