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[🇧🇩] BDR Mutiny---An Irreparable Damage to Bangladesh's First Line of Defense

[🇧🇩] BDR Mutiny---An Irreparable Damage to Bangladesh's First Line of Defense
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15 YEARS OF BDR MUTINY​

No end to wait for justice​

Judge shortage holds back hearing of appeals against conviction, 283 in jail after acquittal of murder charges​

Muktadir Rashid and M Moneruzzaman | Published: 00:34, Feb 25,2024


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Families of the victims as well as the accused soldiers still cry for justice as appeals against convictions in the murder case for the February 25–26, 2009 mutiny in the border force are still pending with the Appellate Division, while a case under the explosives act is pending with the trial court.

Justice into the killings of 75 people, mostly army officers deputed in the erstwhile Bangladesh Rifles, has not been delivered even after 15 years of the mutiny in the border force, while many former soldiers and civilians have been languishing in jail for years and dozens have died pending trials.

Those who were acquitted by a trial court in November 2013 of the murder charge have been in jail as another case related to explosive substances is still pending with the trial court.

The families of the accused and convicts said at least 48 people have died in jail custody since the trial started, while the plot and plotters are yet to be identified.
‘Many questions about the incident are yet to be answered,’ said retired Lieutenant Colonel Mustafizur Rahman, who investigated the incident during his posting in army intelligence and later left the job and the country.

He said that their investigation could not identify many perpetrators.

Family members of the accused and convicts said that they were devastated by the event and its aftermath, and they wanted immediate disposal of the trials pending both in the Supreme Court and trial court.

The shortage of Appellate Division judges caused the delay in holding hearings on 71 appeals filed by the government and the convicts, according to attorney general AM Amin Uddin.

‘A special bench with at least four judges will be needed to hear and dispose of the large volume of appeals,’ Amin told reporters at his office on Thursday.

On February 25, 2009, several hundred BDR soldiers took arms against their officers deputed from the army at Durbar Hall during their annual gathering at the paramilitary headquarters in Dhaka, leaving 75 people—57 army officers, two wives of army officers, nine BDR soldiers, five civilians, an army soldier, and a police constable—killed.
Border guard special courts sentenced 5,926 soldiers to varying terms on mutiny charges in 57 cases, including 11 in Dhaka, while two criminal cases—one filed for the murders and the other filed under the Explosive Substances Act—are still pending with the court.

A case filed under the Explosive Substances Act against 833 BDR personnel and a civilian is pending with the Dhaka Metropolitan Sessions Judge Court, and 273 of the 1,344 prosecution witnesses have so far been examined, said deputy chief prosecutor Sheikh Baharul Islam.

Only 18 prosecution witnesses were examined between February 2023 and February 2024, according to a court document.

The appeals filed by death-row convicts against their sentences and another by the government against the acquittal of some soldiers by the High Court in the murder case await an Appellate Division hearing.

Attorney general Amin said that the special bench required for the pending hearings could not be constituted unless new judges were appointed to the Appellate Division.
Two major cases were investigated jointly by the Criminal Investigation Department, and the trial started in 2011 against 850 riflemen and civilians.

Amid the simultaneous trial, the trial court continued the trial of the case filed for murder and other offences, slowing down proceedings in the explosives case.

On November 5, 2013, additional sessions judge Akhtaruzzaman, who was later elevated to the High Court as judge, pronounced the verdict in the murder case, sentencing 151 soldiers and civilian Zakir Hossain to death.

The court also jailed 160 soldiers, including late Bangladesh Nationalist Party leader Nasiruddin Pintu, local Awami League leader and retired BDR subedar Md Torab Ali, for life terms, and 256 others for varying terms.

It acquitted 278 people. Four others died before the verdict.

In November 2017, the special High Court bench of Justice Md Shawkat Hossain, Justice Md Abu Zafor Siddique, and Justice Md Nazrul Islam Talukder upheld the death sentences of 139 soldiers. It commuted the death sentences of seven soldiers and Md Zakir Hossain, then a local Awami League leader, to life in jail.

The court acquitted four soldiers of the charges, and BDR deputy assistant director Habibur Rahman died in jail custody in February 2014 while his appeal against the death sentence was pending with the High Court.

The High Court upheld the life terms of 146 BDR personnel and acquitted 12 others of their life terms. Two others died during the pendency of their appeals.

Defence lawyers and family members said that a total of 283 acquitted people and 190 others, who completed their short jail terms in other cases, were still languishing in jail due to the delayed trial of the explosives case.

‘My brother sepoy Darul Islam was in Peelkhana during the mutiny. He was arrested later. He was jailed for seven years on the charge of murder but acquitted of the charges of murder, arson, and other heinous crimes. It’s been 10 years, he was not released,’ Sabuj Miah told New Age over phone.

He said that they had been trying to draw the attention of the government and judiciary to how the former troopers were facing injustice.

The attorney general said that the government filed 20 appeals in December 2020.

Death-row convicts filed 35 appeals in January and February 2021 against their sentences, a court official said. The attorney general said all appeals would be heard together.

Both the government inquiry committee, headed by former secretary Anis-uz-Zaman Khan, and an investigation conducted by the army failed to identify the plot and the plotters.

The report by Anis-uz-Zaman recommended an investigation into the failure to gather intelligence about the planned mutiny. The army did not make the results of its investigation public.

New York-based rights group Human Rights Watch said that it had obtained the report and stated that the report faulted the government for not having taken a stronger line against BDR before the rebellion.

The successive Awami League government has so far initiated no further investigation recommended by the two probe bodies, while the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party has been saying that they will identify the perpetrators if voted to power.

HRW also urged the government to establish an independent investigative and prosecutorial task force with sufficient expertise, authority, and resources to rigorously investigate and, where appropriate, prosecute all allegations of unlawful deaths, torture, and mistreatment of suspects in the BDR mutiny, regardless of the perpetrator’s rank or institutional affiliation.

Families of slain officers and convicted soldiers said that the nation should know the reason for the rebellion, as well as the plot and plotters because neither an investigation nor a trial revealed them.

Slain Colonel Quadrat Elahi Rahman Shafique’s son, Saquib Rahman, repeatedly said that the pawns were tried but the plotters were not identified.

As of February 24, a total of 761 BDR jawans have been detained in Dhaka Central Jail, Kashimpur High Central Jail-1, Kashimpur Central Jail-2, and Kashimpur High Security Central Jail, according to the directorate of the prisons.

Senior military and civilian officials will pay tribute to the graves of killed soldiers at their military graveyard in the capital’s Banani today.​
 
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BDR families reunite after 16 years
M Moneruzzaman 23 January, 2025, 15:21

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Family members embrace a former member of Bangladesh Rifles, renamed as Border Guard Bangladesh, after garlanding him with flowers after his release on bail from the Dhaka Central Jail in Keraniganj after 16 years on Thursday. | New Age photo

178 ex-BDR soldiers released on bail

A total of 178 former members of the then Bangladesh Rifles were released from different jails on Thursday, four days after they were granted bail in an explosive case linked to the 2009 BDR mutiny.

The jail authorities freed the BDR members in the case in the morning as their release orders reached the Dhaka Central Jail and three jails in Kashimpur.

As the released former members of BDR came out of the jails, emotional scenes occurred at the jail gates as they embraced their family members waiting there with flowers and garlands to welcome them and reunite after 16 years.

Tears of joy, heartfelt embraces, and a flood of memories marked the end of an agonizing chapter for them, who were finally able to hold their fathers, husbands, and brothers.

Of the released ones, 43 were freed from Dhaka Central Jail in Keraniganj, 27 from Kashimpur Central Jail-1, 95 from Kashimpur Central Jail-2, and 13 from Kashimpur High-Security Central Jail, said Jahangir Kabir, deputy inspector general of prisons for Dhaka division.

Currently, 579 former BDR soldiers remain in four jails in connection with the cases related to the mutiny, he said.

Despite being acquitted by both the trial court and the High Court in a murder case related to the mutiny, many of these soldiers had remained in custody in a separate mutiny-related explosive case.

The mutiny in February 25–26, 2009, lasted 30 hours and resulted in the deaths of 74 people, including 57 army officers posted to the then Bangladesh Rifles.

On January 19, Dhaka Metropolitan Special Tribunal judge Md Ibrahim Mia granted bail to 178 ex-BDR soldiers out of 426 who sought bail in the explosive case.

The bail orders were issued on the day amid protests from the families of the detained soldiers in Dhaka and elsewhere in the country, demanding their release.

The trial had been stalled for 12 years and resumed recently, with retired Major Syed Md Yusuf testifying as a prosecution witness.

The next hearing in the explosive case is scheduled for February 10. The murder case remains pending before the Appellate Division.

The court has so far recorded testimonies of 284 out of 1,264 witnesses under the Explosive Substances Act.

The trial was stalled since the disposal of the murder case in 2013.

Chief public prosecutor Borhan Uddin told New Age that the trial court, for granting bail, gave priority to those soldiers who got acquittal in the murder case but were detained in the explosive case.

Maliha, a young woman from Thakurgaon, had been waiting anxiously with a bouquet of roses at the gate of the Dhaka Central Jail in Keraniganj Thursday morning. As soon as her father walked past the jail gate, she broke into tears, ran to his father, and clutched him.

For Maliha, this was the first time she could hug her father.

Born just three months before the 2009 BDR mutiny, Maliha had never experienced her father’s affection. ‘I’ve waited my whole life for this moment,’ she said in an emotion-choked voice.

Mostafizur Rahman, one of the released soldiers who talked to reporters outside the Dhaka Central Jail gate, said ‘We were detained for political reasons, despite being innocent.’

His voice carried a mix of relief and bitterness.

‘We always believed that our freedom would come with a change in government. Today, we are free as the Awami League regime was ousted on August 5, 2024, amid the student-led mass uprising. We are grateful to all those who stood by us.’

For Rehena Begum, the day was a day of long-awaited reunion. Standing with her children near the jail gate since morning, she could hardly contain her joy. ‘For 16 years, we lived with the pain of separation. My husband was imprisoned unfairly. Finally, he is coming back to us,’ said Rehena.

Her children, who clung to her, were eagerly waiting to see their father for the first time in years.

Sirajul Islam, who traveled from Gaibandha, was there to welcome his brother.

His face reflected both happiness and a lingering sadness. ‘The years my brother lost can never be returned,’ he said.

‘He was detained unfairly. He is a victim of the Awami League’s repression against BDR soldiers. But, today, we are celebrating his freedom,’ Sirajul said.

The release of the former BDR members happened five and a half months after the fall of the Awami League regime on August 5, 2024.

The families of the former DBR members believe that this political shift was pivotal in ending years of suffering for their loved ones.

On November 5, 2013, the trial court sentenced 568 soldiers in the murder case. Of them, 152 were awarded death penalty, 162 were handed life imprisonment, and 256 were sentenced to varying jail terms. Of the total 850 accused in the case, 278, mostly former BDR personnel, were acquitted.

In a two-day judgment delivered in November 26–27, 2017, the High Court upheld the death sentences of 139 soldiers and handed life imprisonment to 185 others.

Additionally, it upheld varying jail terms for 200 convicts, while acquitting 45 accused of all charges.

Defence lawyer Aminul Islam told New Age that the trial court had initially acquitted 277 soldiers. But after the then Awami League government appealed against the acquittal of 69 individuals, the High Court handed life imprisonment to 20 of them.

In December 2020, the then Awami League government filed 20 appeals with the Appellate Division, challenging the High Court verdict. One of the appeals challenged the High Court’s acquittal of 16 soldiers.

The lower court sentenced 12 of the 16 soldiers to life imprisonment and handed death penalty to the rest four.

The appeals now remain pending in the Appellate Division.

Aminul Islam noted that the recent 426 bail applications included soldiers who had completed serving the sentences handed down by the High Court, but remained in custody in the explosive case.​
 
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BDR massacre: Chief of inquiry commission to get status of SC judge

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The chief of the National Independent Commission of Inquiry tasked with reinvestigating the 2009 BDR massacre will be granted the status of an Appellate Division judge of the Supreme Court.

The commission's members will be entitled to the status of High Court Division judges, and enjoy similar salary and benefits.

The government issued an official gazette notification on January 26 in this regard, signed by Cabinet Secretary Sheikh Abdur Rashid, following directives from the president.

This notification is effective immediately.

Earlier, on December 24, 2024, the government in a gazette notification established the seven-member commission to reinvestigate the BDR massacre and examine the crimes committed before, during, and after the tragic incidents of February 25 and 26, 2009.

The commission will also seek to identify the individuals and entities, both domestic and international, implicated in the incident.

Former BGB director general Maj Gen (retd) ALM Fazlur Rahman will lead the commission, with retired Maj Gen Jahangir Kabir Talukder and retired Brig Gen Md Saidur Rahman serving as members.

Other members include former joint secretary Munshi Alauddin Al Azad, former DIG M Akbar Ali, Associate Professor of Dhaka University Shariful Islam, and Assistant Professor of Jagannath University Shahnawaz Khan Chandan.​
 
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Sacked BDR members suspend protests
Staff Correspondent 13 February, 2025, 00:14

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Police put barricades on the road to halt a march of sacked Bangladesh Rifles members towards secretariat, demanding their reinstatement, near Shikkha Bhaban in Dhaka on Wednesday. | Md Saurav

The members of erstwhile Bangladesh Rifles, who were dismissed and imprisoned after the 2009 BDR massacre, and their families on Wednesday suspended their protests demanding reinstatement of their jobs and the release of the detained BDR members.

They suspended their protests Wednesday evening as they were assured that a meeting between the home adviser and a team of their representatives would be held on February 17.

Before the suspension, several hundred BDR members and their families from different areas across the country kept the Abdul Goni Road in front of Khadya Bhaban near the Secretariat blocked from 1:00pm to 6:00pm to press home their eight-point demand that also includes compensation for all the ‘victim BDR members’.

Police used water cannons to disperse the crowd but they broke through the barricade at the Shikkha Bhaban and took position there halting vehicular movement on the road.

Student Against Discrimination executive committee member Md Mahin Sarkar and the representatives of the protesters held a meeting with home ministry officials in the afternoon.

Mahin later told the protesters that the ministry was positive regarding the demands and a meeting would be arranged with the home adviser on February 17.

Moniruzzaman, one of the representatives of the protesters, told New Age that they decided to withdraw all the protest programmes, including the sit-in at the Central Shaheed Minar till February 17 meeting.

The protesters had been continuing a sit-in at the Central Shaheed Minar in Dhaka since Tuesday to press home their demands.​
 
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BDR CARNAGE: Commission records statements of 37 people in 41 working days
Staff Correspondent 20 February, 2025, 15:23

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The National Independent Investigation Commission for investigating into 2009 BDR carnage hold a press conference in Dhaka on Thursday. | New Age photo.

The National Independent Investigation Commission formed to investigate the 2009 BDR carnage said on Thursday that the commission had taken statements of 37 people in its 41 working days.

The commission was formed on December 24, 2024 and it was asked to complete the investigation by 90 working days.

The witnesses are mostly former army officers, including three lieutenant generals, two major generals, five brigadier generals, four colonels, four lieutenant colonels, seven majors and two captains, seven erstwhile Bangladesh Rifles members and three members from slain officers’ families, said the commission’s president retired Major General ALM Fazlur Rahman at a press conference in the capital Dhaka.

‘Of the army officers, some are serving and most of the others are former officers,’ said the commission president.

Fazlur said that they were prioritising survivors, armed forces command, Rapid Action Battalion and police officials concerned, members of the Directorate General of Forces Intelligence and National Security Intelligence, persons who were entrusted with command responsibility, persons who created obstacle to military operation, ministries concerned, political and foreign involvement and the violation of the Army Act.

‘Many witnesses and those who were involved in the incident are either dead, or fugitive or staying in foreign countries. It will cause a delay in collecting such witnesses’ statements,’ said Fazlur, adding that many witnesses could not be able to recall time, date and many issues of the incident.

He said that the commission had requested the authorities concerned to ban several people from travelling abroad.

Fazlur also said that the commission decided to contact with some foreign embassies and had already sent a letter to the foreign ministry in this connection.

He said that the commission had opened a web site, bdr-commission.org, and anyone could give information through the web site.

‘I think that we would need more time as we will not be able to complete our task by the stipulated time,’ he said while responding to a reporter’s question.

At least 74 people, including 57 army officers, were killed in the BDR carnage that took place in February 25-26, 2009.

On January 23, a total of 178 former members of the then BDR were released from different jails on bail in an explosive case linked to the 2009 BDR mutiny amid protest by the victim families and students.

On January 29, survivors and families of the victims of the BDR carnage at a press conference in Dhaka said that it would be unjust if all imprisoned and death row convicts were released on a wholesale basis, as they thought that all BDR soldiers were not innocent.​
 
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বিডিআর বিদ্রোহ: শেখ হাসিনা ও মঈন ইউকে জিজ্ঞাসাবাদ করবে তদন্ত কমিশন

 
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