radical Islamist cleric – Reporters Nepal https://nepalireporter.com Impart Educate Propel Sun, 03 Mar 2013 14:14:44 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.6 https://nepalireporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/cropped-RN_Logo-32x32.png radical Islamist cleric – Reporters Nepal https://nepalireporter.com 32 32 Bangladesh deploys troops as 16 killed in fresh protests https://nepalireporter.com/2013/03/8569 https://nepalireporter.com/2013/03/8569#respond Sun, 03 Mar 2013 14:14:44 +0000 http://nepalireporter.com/?p=8569 DHAKA: Bangladesh deployed troops in the north of the country Sunday after 16 more people were killed in a fresh wave of violence over the conviction of Islamist leaders for war crimes in the Muslim-majority nation.

Thirteen were shot dead in the north and northeast and one policeman was killed in clashes with protesters in the western district of Jhenidah, police officials told AFP, adding two people were killed late Saturday.

In the northern district of Bogra at least 10,000 protesters armed with sticks, home-made bombs and other weapons attacked five police stations, forcing police to open fire on them, police Inspector Shamsul Haq said.

“They came from the villages in several groups and attacked our stations in the dawn. Seven people were killed in Bogra district including three who were killed in the worst-affected Shahjahanpur (town),” he told AFP.

Troops have been deployed in Shahjahanpur to strengthen security, he said.

Four people were shot dead in the northwestern town of Godagari after police and border guards opened fire on thousands of protesters from the Jamaat-e-Islami party after they attacked police with sticks and stones, the area police chief said.

The death toll in the clashes over the war crimes verdicts has risen to 72 since the first was announced on January 21, police said, including 56 killed in the four days since Jamaat´s vice president was sentenced to death.

Delwar Hossain Sayedee was Thursday found guilty of murder, religious persecution and rape during the 1971 independence war against Pakistan. The sentence triggered violent clashes across the country between rampaging Jamaat supporters and police.

The 73-year-old firebrand preacher was the third person to be convicted by the war crimes tribunal. The verdicts have sparked outrage among Islamists.

Jamaat, the nation´s largest Islamic party, says the process is more about settling scores than delivering justice.

The party has called a nationwide strike for Sunday to protest at the verdicts and the killing of its activists by police.

Security was tight in the capital Dhaka with around 10,000 policemen on patrol and shops and schools were closed. Inter-city motorways and roads in the capital Dhaka and the port city of Chittagong were empty.

The United States and United Nations have appealed for calm while global rights group Human Rights Watch has asked the government and Jamaat to act urgently to stem further acts of violence.

On Saturday minority groups appealed to the government for increased security after a series of attacks on Hindu temples and houses by Jamaat supporters, in which one Hindu man was killed. Jamaat denied they were behind the attacks.

An inter-city train was torched, allegedly by protesters, late Saturday.

The war crimes trials of a dozen leaders from Jamaat and the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party have opened old wounds and divided the nation, with the opposition accusing the government of staging a witch-hunt.

The government, which says the war claimed three million lives, rejects the claims and accuses Jamaat leaders of being part of pro-Pakistani militias blamed for much of the carnage during the war.

Independent estimates put the death toll from the war in which Bangladesh won independence from Pakistan at 300,000-500,000.

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34 killed in Bangladesh after court orders Islamist leader hanged https://nepalireporter.com/2013/03/8488 https://nepalireporter.com/2013/03/8488#respond Fri, 01 Mar 2013 09:10:47 +0000 http://nepalireporter.com/?p=8488 DHAKA: At least 34 people were killed in Bangladesh in a wave of violence on Thursday as Islamists reacted furiously to a ruling that one of their leaders must hang for war crimes during the 1971 independence conflict.

At least 23 of them were shot in clashes between police and protesters that erupted after Delwar Hossain Sayedee, the Jamaat-e-Islami party´s vice president, was found guilty of war crimes, including murder, arson and rape.

Sayedee is the third person to be convicted by the controversial domestic tribunal whose previous verdicts have also been met with outrage from Islamists who say the process is more about score settling than delivering justice.

Thursday´s death toll was compiled by AFP after talking to police in the 15 districts where protests turned deadly. They were the most violent political clashes in more than two decades in the impoverished country´s history.

The latest unrest brought the overall death toll to 50 since the first verdict was delivered on January 21.

Among Thursday´s dead were four policemen, two of whom were beaten to death after protesters hurled small homemade bombs at a police station in Gaibandha in Bangladesh´s north and attacked it with sticks, local police chief Monjur Rahman said.

“At least 10,000 Jamaat supporters attacked us. We were forced to open fire,” Rahman told AFP.

About 300 people, including scores of policemen, were also injured, doctors, police and local media said.

Police also reported attacks on several Hindu homes and temples by Islamists in the southern Noakhali and Chittagong districts. One old Hindu man was killed in the attack in Chittagong, district police chief Hafiz Akter told AFP.

Security forces had been braced for trouble ahead of the verdict against Sayedee, who reacted to the judgment by saying it had been influenced by “atheists” and pro-government protesters who have been demanding his execution.

Sayedee, now best known in Bangladesh as a firebrand preacher, was convicted for setting ablaze 25 houses in a Hindu village and abetting the murders of two people including a Hindu man, according to a copy of the verdict.

He led a pro-Pakistani militia who abducted three Hindu sisters and raped them for three days at a Pakistani camp, said the verdict. He also forced at least 100 Hindus to convert to Islam and made them say Islamic prayers, it added.

His lawyer Tajul Islam described the verdict as “a gross miscarriage of justice”, adding that Sayedee did not live in the town at the time when the alleged crimes took place.

“It´s a case of mistaken identity. We´re stunned. We´re going to appeal the verdict,” he told AFP.

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