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[🇧🇩] The International Crimes Tribunal-1----Charging Hasina and her accomplices
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FIRST ICT CASE OVER JULY UPRISING
Hasina, Asaduzzaman, Mamun charged
Ex-IGP pleads guilty, turns state’s evidence


M Moneruzzaman 10 July, 2025, 14:59

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Sheikh Hasina, Asaduzzaman Khan and Abdullah Al Mamun

The International Crimes Tribunal-1 on Thursday charged deposed prime minister Sheikh Hasina, her home minister Asaduzzaman Khan, and former inspector general of police Chowdhury Abdullah Al Mamun with crimes against humanity during the 2024 July uprising.

Mamun, however, turned state evidence after pleading guilty to the five counts of charges while the tribunal scheduled the formal commencement of the trial with the prosecution’s opening statement for August 3, to be followed by the beginning of the examination of witnesses on August 4.

The tribunal of Justice Md Golam Mortuza Mozumder, judge Md Shofiul Alam Mahmood, and Justice Mohammad Mohitul Hoque Anam Chawdhury framed the first charges in the case over atrocities, committed during the uprising, filed after Hasina fled to India amid the mass uprising on August 5, 2024.

Former IGP Mamun pleaded guilty in the tribunal and offered to testify as an approver against Hasina and Asaduzzaman.

He admitted to his involvement in the atrocities, expressing that he was willing to make a full and truthful disclosure of the events.

From the dock, Mamun read out a written statement: ‘I plead guilty. I am willing to voluntarily make a full and truthful disclosure of all circumstances within my knowledge relating to this case.’

His statement came after the tribunal read out five charges against him. When asked whether he pleaded guilty or not, Mamun confirmed his admission without hesitation.

The tribunal also allowed a prayer from Mamun’s lawyer Jayed Bin Amjad to accommodate him in a separate cell inside the jail for the sake of his security.

Section 15 of the International Crimes (Tribunals) Act allows the tribunal to pardon someone accused of serious crimes -- such as genocide, war crimes, or crimes against humanity -- listed under Section 3 of the law.

This pardon is, however, not unconditional. The person concerned must agree to give a full and honest account of the crime and names of others involved.

If the pardon is granted, the person becomes a witness for the prosecution. They are questioned during the trial and usually remain in custody until the trial ends.

The tribunal noted that the remaining two accused — Sheikh Hasina and Asaduzzaman Khan Kamal — remained absconding. As a result, the charges could not be formally read out or explained to them.

Earlier, on July 7, Mamun’s lawyer informed the tribunal that his client had instructed him not to file any discharge petition at this stage.

The same day, the tribunal concluded the charge hearing from the state-appointed defence for Hasina and Asaduzzaman.

The three accused have been formally indicted under Sections 3(2)(a), (g), and (h), read with Sections 4(1), (2), and (3) of the International Crimes (Tribunals) Act, 1973.

They face charges of abetment, conspiracy, incitement, complicity, and failure to prevent crimes such as murder, attempted murder, torture, and other inhuman acts committed during the uprising in Bangladesh.

The tribunal is authorised to impose the death penalty or other punishments, depending on the severity of the crimes defined in Section 3(a) of the International Crimes (Tribunals) Act, 1973.

On July 2, the same tribunal sentenced Hasina to six months in jail for contempt of court over a leaked phone call, made while in India, in which she allegedly said, ‘I have had 227 cases filed against me, so I have a licence to kill 227 people.’

State-appointed defence counsel Amir Hossain, representing both Hasina and Asaduzzaman, argued for their discharge in the uprising case, calling the charges ‘politically motivated and out of the tribunal’s jurisdiction’.

He mentioned that the incidents in question did not meet the legal threshold for crimes against humanity under the International Crimes (Tribunals) Act, 1973 as they stemmed from ‘political conflict’ rather than war.

He said that the two tribunals were formed in 2009 by the Awami League regime to try 1971 war crimes suspects. After the August 5, 2024 fall of the Awami League regime, the interim government reconstituted the two tribunals and amended the ICT Act 1973 on November 24, 2024 mainly to prosecute those responsible for the July–August 2024 atrocities.

The first charge states that Sheikh Hasina, then prime minister and head of the ruling Awami League and the 14-party alliance, between July 1 and August 5, 2024 — specifically on July 14 around 5:00-6:00pm — made inflammatory remarks at a press conference.

She reportedly referred to the student protesters involved in the Anti-Discrimination Student Movement as ‘sons and grandchildren of razakars’ (1971 wartime collaborators), while they were peacefully demanding reforms to the public sector recruitment system.

Following her remarks, activists from the ruling party’s student wing, Bangladesh Chhatra League, allegedly launched violent attacks on student protesters at Dhaka University and across the country.

Ministers, MPs, and political leaders from the Awami League and its allies are also accused of acting on her incitement to suppress the protest movement.

The second charge against Sheikh Hasina alleges that on July 14, 2024, around 11:00pm, she held a phone conversation with professor ASM Maksud Kamal, then vice-chancellor of Dhaka University.

During the phone call, Hasina reportedly referred to the peaceful protesters as ‘razakars’, saying that they ‘should be hanged or killed.’

She stated that she had already instructed law enforcing agencies — including the police, Rapid Action Battalion, and Border Guard Bangladesh — to act accordingly.

The charge further states that Hasina on July 18, 2024 spoke on phone with her cousin Sheikh Fazle Noor Taposh, then mayor of the Dhaka South City Corporation.

In that conversation, she allegedly ordered the use of lethal force — including live ammunition, drones, and helicopters — against the unarmed protesters.

She also directed security agencies to carry out widespread arrests, detentions, and acts of torture across the country.

Following her orders, security forces are accused of opening fire on protesters, using helicopters to shoot from above, and causing mass casualties.

The crackdown allegedly killed over 1,500 people and seriously injured more than 25,000, leaving many of them blind or permanently disabled. The victims included women and children.

The charge also states that Hasina ordered her party’s armed supporters to set fire to key national infrastructure — including the Jatiya Sangsad Bhaban (parliament), Bangladesh Television headquarters, and several metro rail stations — to falsely blame the protest movement and justify further violence.

According to the charge, Asaduzzaman and Chowdhury Abdullah Al Mamun directly executed Hasina’s orders. Both men allegedly supervised and coordinated operations using lethal weapons, drones, and helicopters to target demonstrators.

On July 27, 2024, Asaduzzaman and Mamun jointly authorized another round of coordinated attacks, says the charge.

Law enforcing agencies, under their command, reportedly launched widespread assaults involving live fire, abduction, unlawful confinement, and torture —constituting crimes against humanity.

The third charge alleges that police, ruling Awami League activists, and Begum Rokeya University, Rangpur officials on July 16, 2024, around 2:00pm, confronted unarmed student protesters at the university.

As students began demonstrating peacefully in front of the university gate, police, and Awami League activists reportedly opened fire on them without warning.

The protest quickly dispersed due to widespread injuries, but student leader Abu Sayeed remained standing, arms raised in defiance.

Acting on direct instructions from the three accused, Hasina, Asaduzzaman, and Mamun, police, including Rangpur Metropolitan Police officers, university vice-chancellor Md Hasibur Rashid, and local Awami League leaders, allegedly oversaw the operation.

ASI Md Amir Hossain and constable Sujan Chandra Roy have been accused of shooting Abu Sayeed multiple times in the chest at a close range, killing him on the spot.

Sayeed’s body was taken to Rangpur Medical College Hospital. Authorities allegedly attempted to conceal the true cause of death by filing a false first information report. Forensic experts were reportedly pressured to alter the autopsy report four times.

In a further attempt to deflect blame, a criminal case was allegedly filed against Sayeed’s fellow activists based on fabricated information.

These acts, the charge states, constitute inhuman crimes under international law and fall within the category of crimes against humanity.

The fourth charge has accused Hasina, Asaduzzaman, and Mamun of abetting shooting and killing six unarmed protesters at Chankharpool during the March to Dhaka on August 5, 2024.

The deceased were identified as Shahriar Khan Anas, Sheikh Mahadi Hasan Junaid alias Mostakin, Md Yakub, Md Rakib Howlader, Mohammad Imamul Haque, Manik Mia, also known as Shahrik.

The charge frames these killings as part of a broader, systematic attack on civilians and alleges that they amounted to crimes against humanity.

The fifth charge alleges that on August 5, 2024, around 4:00pm, a deadly attack on peaceful protesters occurred near the Ashulia police station under the direct supervision of local lawmaker Mohammad Saiful Islam and on the orders of deputy inspector general of police Syed Nurul Islam. Five protesters were shot, burned alive in Ashulia during the attack.

The victims were identified as Sazzad Hossain Sajal, As-Sabur, Tanzil Mahmud Sujoy, Bayezid Bostami and Abul Hossain. Another person was severely injured but remains unidentified.

After the shootings, police reportedly collected all six bodies — including the injured individual showing signs of life — and loaded them onto a pedal van, later transferring them onto a police pickup.

According to the charge, police then poured petrol on the bodies and set them on fire. The injured protester, still alive at the time, was given no medical assistance. Instead, officers allegedly added more fuel and wood to the fire, ensuring that all six were burned beyond recognition.

The ICT Investigation Agency’s member Alomgir Mia submitted its report against Hasina, Asaduzzaman, and Mamun to the chief prosecutor’s office on May 12 and chief prosecutor Mohammad Tajul Islam on June 1 placed the formal charges to the tribunal which later took the charges into cognisance.

According to the charge sheet, a total of 3,05,311 rounds of bullets were used across the country, including 95,313 rounds in the capital alone.

Investigators further said that the Chief Prosecutor’s Office received at least 350 complaints over crimes against humanity during the July–August 2024 uprising.

A total of 41 cases were shortlisted for investigation while formal charges were filed in four cases —indictment in one case against Hasina, Asaduzzaman, and Mamun were ordered on Thursday, and another case over Chankharpool awaits indictment order by the ICT-1 on July 14 while two separate cases, one linked to the murders of Abu Sayeed, and the other related to the six killings in Ashulia remains pending for indictment by ICT-2.​
 
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ICT begins trial of Hasina, Kamal, 11 army officers
M Moneruzzaman 22 January, 2026, 00:27

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Sheikh Hasina.

The International Crimes Tribunal-1 on Wednesday began the trial over enforced disappearances against deposed prime minister Sheikh Hasina, former home minister Asaduzzaman Khan Kamal, former defence adviser retired major general Tarique Ahmed Siddique, three former directors general of the Rapid Action Battalion, and 11 RAB directors deputed from the army.

The three-member tribunal, headed by Justice Md Golam Mortuza Mozumder, opened the trial by recording the testimony of Supreme Court lawyer and enforced disappearance victim Mir Ahmad Bin Quasem Arman.

The trial of the 17 accused in this enforced disappearance case began two days after the same tribunal on Monday opened the trial of another enforced disappearance case against 13 people, including Hasina, Tarique, and 11 other serving and retired army officials deputed to the Directorate General of Forces Intelligence.

Arman, who testified as the first prosecution witness in the case on Wednesday, is the son of executed war crimes convict Mir Quasem Ali and is one of the 11 victims who returned from a secret detention centre run by RAB-1 Taskforce cell at its headquarters in Dhaka after their enforced disappearance.

Arman told the tribunal that he was confined for eight years at a secret detention centre run by RAB-1’s Taskforce cell during the ousted Awami League regime.

His testimony began after chief prosecutor Muhammad Tajul Islam had placed his opening statement before the tribunal.

Tajul said that enforced disappearances of political dissenters were used as a tool by the Awami League to remain in power for long.

The tribunal set January 26 to complete Arman’s testimony and cross-examination.

The same date was also fixed for hearing review petitions filed by detained army officers challenging the tribunal’s December 23 order that rejected their discharge petitions.

The 10 accused army officers, who were then deputed in the RAB-1, are now detained and were present in the dock.

Seven other accused, including Hasina, Asaduzzaman, Tarique, a retired army officer and three former senior police officers, are still in hiding and facing the trial in absentia.

The detained army officers are Colonel KM Azad, Colonel Abdullah Al Momen, Brigadier General Md Mahbub Alam, Lieutenant Colonel Anwar Latif Khan, Brigadier General Md Jahangir Alam, Lieutenant Colonel Sarwar Bin Kashem, Lieutenant Colonel Saiful Islam Suman, Brigadier General Tofayel Mostafa Sarwar, Brigadier General Kamrul Hassan and Lieutenant Colonel Moshiur Rahman Jewel.

Besides Hasina, Kamal and Tarique, the other absconding accused are retired lieutenant colonel Muhammad Khairul Islam, a former RAB intelligence chief now believed to be living in the United Kingdom, and three former police officers - Benazir Ahmed, a former inspector general of police, Khurshid Hossain and barrister Harun-or-Rashid, all former RAB director generals during the Awami League regime.

Arman, in his testimony, said that he was picked up from his rented home in the capital’s DOHS area on the night of August 9, 2016, by seven or eight armed men who identified themselves as members of RAB-1.

He said that the men were wearing bulletproof vests marked ‘RAB-1’.

At the time, the Appellate Division was hearing his father’s review petition against the death sentence for war crimes.

Arman testified that when senior officials visited him, he was handcuffed behind his back and made to stand facing a wall so that he could not recognise the officers.

He said that he heard some visitors speaking in Hindi and talking on mobile phones, and noticed the smell of perfume.

He said he spent eight Ramadans during his confinement for eight years. He added that he wanted a copy of the Quran but was denied.

According to him, a guard once said that they could not provide it because a foreign intelligence officer of RAW had been staying there.

Arman testified that he was taken to a secret detention centre after his abduction and kept in a small cell on the first floor for 16 days while blindfolded and handcuffed. Later, he was shifted to another cell.

He said that only one of his hands was free for eating and using the toilet.

He said that he later identified the building after visiting the site with the chief adviser, members of the enforced disappearance commission, the ICT chief prosecutor, and investigators following the change of government on August 5, 2024.

Arman told the tribunal that he fell sick several times and underwent surgery for thigh swelling inside the detention facility.

He said he saw a wooden box marked ‘TFI’ and was once given an ointment tube labelled ‘Property of RAB HQ’.

During winter, he said that he was given a blanket marked ‘RAB’ or ‘INT’. From his cell, he said, he could hear aircraft landing, training activities, and the movement of vehicles.

Arman said that he was always blindfolded with military-style fabric. One night, the blindfold was changed to a gamcha, and his hands were tied with cloth.

He said that he was later put into a microbus, forced to lie on the floor, and someone sat on his body during the drive. After about 30 minutes, he was released.

Arman said that he walked after being dropped off, heard the call to prayer, offered prayers, and then realised that he was in the Diabari area of Uttara.

On Monday, the same tribunal started enforced disappearance trial of Hasina, Tarique Ahmed Siddique, and 11 other serving and retired army officials, who were deputed in the Directorate General of Forces Intelligence during the Awami League regime, for their alleged involvement in committing crimes against humanity, including abduction, detention and torture of 26 people with dissenting views against the Awami League at the DGFI’s secret detention Cells.​
 
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ICT-1 orders start of trial against Sajeeb Wazed Joy, Junaid Ahmed Palak
Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha . Dhaka 21 January, 2026, 16:47

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Zunaid Ahmed Palak and Sajeeb Wazed Joy. | UNB file photo

International Crimes Tribunal-1 on Wednesday framed charges against Sajeeb Wazed Joy, son of ousted prime minister Sheikh Hasina and former ICT affairs adviser, and former state minister for the ICT division Zunaid Ahmed Palak for allegedly facilitating crimes against humanity by imposing a nationwide internet shutdown.

The three-member tribunal, headed by Justice Golam Mortuza Mozumder, framed three charges of crimes against humanity against the duo and fixed February 18 for submission of the prosecution’s opening statement and commencement of witness depositions.

On January 15, the tribunal had set on Wednesday for passing its order after both the prosecution and defence concluded their hearings.

Chief prosecutor Muhammad Tajul Islam appeared for the prosecution, while Litonne Ahmed represented accused Zunaid Ahmed Palak and Manjur Alam defended fugitive accused Sajeeb Wazed Joy.

On December 4, the tribunal issued an arrest warrant against Joy after taking cognisance of the formal charges brought against him and Palak.

According to the formal charge, the accused are alleged to have shut down internet services across the country during the July uprising, thereby facilitating the commission of crimes against humanity.

The prosecution said Palak, while serving as state minister for the ICT division, posted a status on his verified Facebook account after receiving approval from Joy, which allegedly instigated widespread attacks on agitating students and the public by police and Chhatra League cadres.

Tajul Islam told the tribunal that, following Joy’s instructions, Palak first reduced mobile internet speed and later imposed a complete shutdown to create an environment conducive to the detention, torture and killing of protesters.

He further said Palak provided misleading statements regarding the internet disruption and later blocked social media platforms including WhatsApp, Facebook and TikTok to prevent information about the alleged atrocities from reaching the outside world.

‘The conspiracy to block the internet originated from Sajeeb Wazed Joy. He made the decision after consulting his mother, Sheikh Hasina, and Palak implemented it,’ the prosecution added.

The tribunal’s investigation agency submitted its probe report against the accused on December 3, 2025.​
 
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