Bangladesh students protest against war crimes accused

Bangladesh students protest against war crimes accused
Updated on

Summary ‘Death to Killers’: Protesters demand death to leaders involved in war crimes.

 

DHAKA (AP) - Thousands of students rallied in Bangladesh s capital on Saturday demanding death to Islamic political party leaders who are on trial for alleged war crimes during the country s 1971 independence war.


Eight top leaders of Jamaat-e-Islami, the country s largest Islamic party, are being tried on charges of mass killings, rapes and arson allegedly committed during Bangladesh s nine-month war of separation from Pakistan.


Earlier this month, a tribunal convicted party leader Abdul Quader Mollah of mass killings during the war and sentenced him to life in prison, a sentence that many Bangladeshis considered lenient.


On Saturday, about 5,000 students shouted "Death to the killers" as they rallied in Dhaka.


The government says it will appeal Mollah s sentence before the Supreme Court this coming week, asking for the death penalty for the 65-year-old.


Saturday s protest came a day after activists from Jamaat and an alliance of 12 other Islamic parties clashed with police across the country, leaving four people dead and around 200 injured, including about a dozen journalists.


After Friday s violence, the Islamic party alliance called a nationwide general strike for Sunday, accusing the police of foiling their protests and alleging that the government is planning to ban religion-based political parties.


The government denies that religion-based parties will be banned.


The main opposition party, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party, led by former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia, said it would back Sunday s strike.


Sunday is a working day in Muslim-majority Bangladesh, where strikes are common opposition tactics to highlight demands.

 

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