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Rapid Action Battalion personnel keep watch outside the International Crimes Tribunal court during a nationwide strike in Dhaka on Tuesday. Photo: AFP

Riots erupt as Bangladeshi Islamist sentenced to life

Abdul Quader Molla, 64, assistant secretary general of the Jamaat-e-Islami party, was sentenced to life in prison by the controversial International Crimes Tribunal on Tuesday.

AFP

Riots broke out in several Bangladesh cities on Tuesday after a court sentenced a senior Islamist opposition official to life in prison for mass murder during the 1971 liberation war against Pakistan.

Abdul Quader Molla, 64, the fourth-highest leader of the Jamaat-e-Islami party, was the first politician to be found guilty by the International Crimes Tribunal, a much-criticised domestic court based in Dhaka.

Molla cried “Allahu Akbar!” (God is greater) and said the charges, which also include crimes against humanity, were false after presiding judge Obaidul Hassan delivered the verdict in a crowded and tightly guarded court.

He deserved the death sentence because of the gravity of the crimes. But the court gave him life imprisonment

“He deserved the death sentence because of the gravity of the crimes. But the court gave him life imprisonment,” said Attorney General Mahbubey Alam, adding Molla was found guilty of five out of six charges including mass murder.

The judgement sparked immediate protests by Jamaat, the country’s largest Islamic party which enforced a nationwide strike in anticipation of the conviction.

It warned it would resist “at any cost a government blueprint” to execute its leaders.

Police said they had clashed with protesters in the capital Dhaka and in several other cities across the country in the aftermath of the verdict.

In northwestern Rajshahi, police fired tear gas and rubber bullets at about 500 Jamaat supporters who hurled at least a dozen homemade firebombs.

The verdict is the second by the tribunal. On January 21 a top TV preacher who is also an ex-Jamaat official was sentenced to death in absentia for murder and genocide.

Activists and former freedom fighters who fought against Pakistan in the 1971 war demonstrate outside the International Crimes Tribunal court. Photo: AFP

Ten other opposition figures – including the entire leadership of Jamaat and two from the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) – stand accused of war crimes.

Both Jamaat and BNP have labelled the cases “show trials” aimed at barring the leaders from upcoming polls. International rights groups have questioned the proceedings.

Prosecutors said that during the war Molla was a senior figure in the then-student wing of Jamaat, while studying physics at Dhaka University, and was a member of a pro-Pakistan militia accused of killing hundreds of thousands of people.

“He directly participated in the killing of over 350 unarmed Bengali civilians including a poet and a top journalist,” prosecutor Mohammad Ali told reporters, adding he was known as “Butcher of Mirpur”, a Dhaka suburb.

Bangladesh Awami League activists march following the verdict at the International Crimes Tribunal court. Photo: AFP

“He killed my father and he got away. I am not happy,” said Khandoker Abul Ahsan, son of Khandoker Abu Taleb, a well-known journalist killed during the 1971 war.

Security was tight in the capital with more than 10,000 policemen on patrol. Schools were closed and many shops and businesses shuttered. Motorways linking Dhaka with other cities were largely empty.

A man helps extinguish a smouldering bus, allegedly set on fire by rioting Jamaat-e-Islami activists during a nationwide strike in Dhaka on Tuesday. Photo: AFP

Police said a young banker was burnt to death and four people injured on Monday night after a bus was torched by suspected Jamaat activists protesting the war crime trials.

“He was in the bus when it was set on fire,” deputy police commissioner Nisharul Arif told reporters, blaming members of Jamaat for the arson.

The tribunal, which has no international oversight, was created by the country’s secular government in 2010. It has been tainted by allegations it is politically motivated and targets only senior opposition officials.

The judge in Molla’s case refused a prosecution bid to try him for genocide.

Defence lawyers said Molla, Jamaat’s assistant secretary general, spent the entire time in the nine-month war in his village and alleged that the tribunal severely curtailed their ability to prove his innocence.

“We put forward the name of 965 defence witnesses. But the tribunal allowed only six,” said Shazzad Chowdhury, adding that they would appeal the verdict.

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