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Bangladesh denies Islamist tycoon’s final death sentence appeal

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A November 2014 photo of Jamaat-e-Islami party leader, Mir Quasem Ali waving his hand as he enters a van at the International Crimes Tribunal court in Dhaka. Photo: AFP

A wealthy tycoon who was a chief financier for Bangladesh’s largest Islamist party could be executed in days after losing his final appeal on Tuesday against a death sentence from a controversial war crimes tribunal.

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The Supreme Court rejected Mir Quasem Ali’s last attempt to overturn the death sentence handed down two years ago by the domestic tribunal for murders committed during Bangladesh’s 1971 independence conflict.

“Now he has a chance to seek presidential clemency. Or else the verdict could be executed anytime whenever the state wants,” Attorney General Mahbubey Alam told reporters after the verdict was handed down.

Five opposition leaders including four leading Islamists have already been executed for war crimes since 2013. They were all hanged just days after their appeals were rejected by the Supreme Court.

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Their families said they had refused to seek a presidential pardon as they did not want to legitimise the whole trials process.

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