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[🇧🇩] Sheikh Hasina gave direct order to kill student protesters
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July-August uprising

Sheikh Hasina ordered use of lethal weapons: Prosecution


As of now, 23 cases have been lodged at the International Crimes Tribunal on charges of crimes against humanity. Sheikh Hasina has been accused in three of the cases.

Pradip Sarkar
Dhaka
Updated: 20 Mar 2025, 19: 42

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Former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina ordered the use of lethal weapons on students and the people during the July uprising. The Office of the Chief Prosecutor of the International Crimes Tribunal (ICT) has found documentary evidence of her order.

Based on this evidence, the chief prosecutor’s office wants to submit an investigation report against Sheikh Hasina to the tribunal by next April.

Speaking about this, the tribunal’s prosecutor Gazi Monowar Hossain told Prothom Alo, “We have found her (Sheikh Hasina) direct involvement. We have found direct documentary evidence of her orders and instructions. We have also found documentary evidence of the order to use lethal weapons.”

Prosecutor Gazi Monowar Hossain further said it would be possible to submit charge sheets of four cases to the tribunal by April.

The case filed against Sheikh Hasina on charges of committing crimes against humanity during the mass uprising is also included among the four, he added.

The Awami League government was toppled on 5 August last year by the student-people uprising. Later, the International Crimes Tribunal was reconstituted on 14 October that year.

So far, the tribunal has filed 23 cases on charges of crimes against humanity. Sheikh Hasina has been accused in three of them. in one of these three cases, Sheikh Hasina has been accused of committing crimes against humanity, including genocide and torture, committed during the mass uprising.

She has been accused of enforced disappearances and killings during the 15-and-a-half-year rule of the previous Awami League government in another case.

And in the third case, charges have been brought against her of killing and torturing the leaders and activists of Hefazat-e-Islam Bangladesh at Shapla Chattar in the capital’s Motijheel area on 5 and 6 May 2013.

Sheikh Hasina fled to India in the face of the student-people movement on 5 August last year. Arrest warrants have been issued against her in all three cases filed against her at the ICT. Bangladesh has already sent a diplomatic note to India requesting her extradition. The government has also sent a request to the Interpol to issue an arrest warrant against Sheikh Hasina.

‘Superior responsibility’

The tribunal is giving importance to killings took place during the mass uprising, enforced disappearances and killings during the 15-and-a-half year tenure of the previous Awami League government, and crimes against humanity like the torture and killings at Shapla Chattar in the capital’s Motijheel area in 2013.

Sheikh Hasina is accused in all three types of crimes.

Speaking to Prothom Alo, several officials of the tribunal’s investigation agency said while conducting investigations, they considered whether the crimes committed were crimes against humanity or not.

According to them any crime has to be committed at a larger scale and systematically to be categorised as crimes against humanity. There remains a “superior responsibility”, at whose order the crimes are committed at a larger scale and systematically. Or someone who either allowed, or did not try to stop, the crimes being committed at a larger scale and systematically.

Ousted prime minister Sheikh Hasina is accused of “superior responsibility” in this case, the officials added.

The investigation agency officials also said the crimes started through the attacks of Bangladesh Chhatra League men on Dhaka University campus on 15 July. On 16 July, Begum Rokeya University student Abu Sayeed and another one in Chattogram were killed. Then the movement started across the country and crimes committed all over the country.

At one stage, the crimes became crimes against humanity. Accusations of “superior responsibility” have been brought against Sheikh Hasina in all the cases that are being filed on charges of crimes against humanity.

A crime cannot be categorised as crimes against humanity unless there is “superior responsibility”.

Progress made in cases

No investigation report has been submitted at the ICT in any case although seven months have gone by after the mass uprising. The responsibility of submitting investigation reports lies with the tribunal prosecution and the investigation agency.

The investigation agency will first submit the report to the office of the chief prosecutor, which will verify the report and submit those before the tribunal. Only then the formal trial begins.

Several sources from the prosecution said they want to submit four investigation reports, including one in the case against Sheikh Hasina on charges of crimes against humanity, to the tribunal by next April.

Former Inspector General of Police (IGP) Abdullah Al-Mamun is also an accused in the case. Sheikh Hasina was the sole accused in the case when it was filed in October last year.

The prosecution sources said the three other cases are Abu Sayeed murder case, killing of seven in the capital’s Chankharpool area and the incident of burning bodies in Ashulia, Dhaka.

The sources also said the tribunal so far issued arrest warrants against 142 people in 23 cases. Of them, 50 have been arrested.

Families of July uprising martyrs expressed their grievances and disappointments as several influential ministers, who are accused in the cases filed at the tribunal, of the ousted government fled the country.

Rabiul Awal is the general secretary of July 24 Martyred Family Society, a platform of the martyred family members, and brother of martyred Imam Hasan Taim.

He told Prothom Alo sufficient steps are not being seen to conduct the trial. If one accused is arrested for each killing, then the number of arrested should have been 2,000. How many people have been arrested so far? Who will be brought to book if the accused are not arrested?

* This report appeared in the print and online edition of Prothom Alo and has been rewritten for the English edition by Shameem Reza​
 
The types of weapons carried in helicopters during the July uprising. Rab denies firing lethal shots from SMGs, but some deaths on rooftops and balconies of high-rise buildings indicate otherwise.


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Sheikh Hasina ordered firing on protesters in 2024, Al Jazeera investigation reveals

BSS Dhaka
Published: 25 Jul 2025, 21: 45

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Ousted Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina. Photo from Al Jazeera's Documentary

The evidences obtained by Al Jazeera have revealed that ousted prime minister Sheikh Hasina ordered police to use ‘lethal weapons’ against protesters during the July mass uprising last year.

Sheikh Hasina, “issued an open order” to “use lethal weapons” on students protesting against her government’s policies last year and shoot “wherever they find them”, her secret phone call recordings, accessed by Al Jazeera, have revealed.

Hasina, who ruled Bangladesh for 15 years, fled to India on 5 August in 2024 after weeks of bloody protests and brutal action by government forces killed nearly 1,400 people and wounded more than 20,000, according to the Bangladesh’s International Criminal Tribunal (ICT).

The Al Jazeera Investigative Unit (I-Unit) had the recordings analysed by audio forensic experts to check for AI manipulation, and the callers were identified by voice matching.

In one call, recorded on 18 July by the National Telecommunications Monitoring Centre (NTMC), Hasina told an ally that she had ordered her security forces to use lethal force, Qatar-based outlet Al Jazeera reports.

“My instructions have already been given. I’ve issued an open order completely. Now they will use lethal weapons, shoot wherever they find them,” Hasina said. “That has been instructed. I have stopped them so far … I was thinking about the students’ safety.”

Later in the call with Sheikh Fazle Noor Taposh, the mayor of Dhaka South City Corporation and a relative of Hasina, the ousted premier talked about using helicopters to control demonstrations.

“Wherever they notice any gathering, it’s from above – now it’s being done from above – it has already started in several places. It has begun. Some [protesters] have moved.”

At the time, Bangladeshi security forces had denied firing on protesters from the air, but Shabir Sharif, an accident and emergency doctor at the Popular Medical College Hospital in Dhaka, told the I-Unit that shots were fired from a helicopter “targeting our hospital entrance”.

He added that doctors attended to student protesters with unusual bullet wounds.

“The bullets entered either the shoulder or the chest, and they all remained inside the body. We were receiving more of these types of patients at that time,” he said.

“When we looked at the X-rays, we were surprised because there were huge bullets.” Al Jazeera has not been able to verify what types of bullets were used.

The calls may be presented by prosecutors as evidence before the ICT, which has charged Hasina, her ministers and security officials with crimes against humanity. Hasina and two other officials were indicted on July 10, and the trial is scheduled to begin in August.

Hasina’s surveillance network, the NTMC, recorded these conversations. The NTMC has previously been accused of spying on not just opposition figures but even Hasina’s political allies.

Tajul Islam, chief prosecutor for the ICT, said the former prime minister knew she was being recorded.

“In some cases, the other side [would say we] … ‘should not discuss this over telephone’. And the reply was from the prime minister, ‘Yes, I know, I know, I know, I know, it is being recorded, no problem.’”

“She has dug a very deep ditch for others. Now she’s in the ditch,” Islam said.

Student protests started peacefully in June 2024 after the high court reintroduced an unpopular quota system that reserved state jobs for the families of veterans who fought in Bangladesh’s war of independence in 1971. Many students felt the system favoured supporters of the ruling Awami League party, which had led the freedom movement, and that many jobs in the civil service were not awarded on merit.

On 16 July, student protester Abu Sayed was shot dead by police in the northern city of Rangpur. His death was a turning point in the July uprising, leading to a national outcry and intensifying the protests.

In one secret phone recording of Hasina’s ally and economics adviser Salman F Rahman, he is heard trying to get hold of Sayed’s postmortem report. During the call, Rahman quizzes inspector general of police, Chowdhury Abdullah Al-Mamun, wanting to know what had happened to the report.

“Why is it taking so long to get the post-mortem report? Who’s playing hide and seek? Rangpur Medical?” he asked, referring to Rangpur Medical College and Hospital, which was carrying out the autopsy on Sayed.

Rangpur Medical College Hospital’s physician Rajibul Islam told Al Jazeera that police forced him to change Sayed’s postmortem report five times to remove any reference to multiple bullet wounds.

“They wanted to write a report stating that Abu Sayed Bhai died due to injuries from stone-throwing … [whereas] he died from police bullets,” he said.

Twelve days after Sayed’s death, his family were flown to Dhaka for a televised event with the prime minister. In all, about 40 families were gathered – all of them had relatives killed in the protests.

“Hasina forced us to come to Ganabhaban,” said Sayed’s father, Maqbul Hossain, referring to the PM’s residence. “They forced us to come; otherwise, they might have tortured us in another way.”

As the cameras recorded the event, Hasina handed out money to each family. She told Sayed’s sister, Sumi Khatun: “We will deliver justice to your family.”

Khatun replied to Hasina: “It was shown in the video that the police shot him. What is there to investigate here? Coming here was a mistake.”

In a statement to Al Jazeera, an Awami League spokesperson said Hasina had never used the phrase “lethal weapons”, and did not specifically authorise the security forces to use lethal weapons.

“This [Hasina’s phone] recording is either cherry-picked, doctored or both.”

The statement added that government efforts to investigate Abu Sayed’s death were “genuine”.
 

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