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Ayesha Begum, the widow of Akramul Haque, who according to police was killed in a shoot-out with authorities. Photo: AFP

Bangladesh defends drug war as chilling phone recordings fuel claims of cold-blooded killings

Widow says phone conversations she recorded with husband night he died contradict the official narrative – that he was armed and shot at police, who returned fire in self-defence

Bangladesh

Bangladesh says Akramul Haque was a meth kingpin who died after opening fire at police, one of 130 accused dealers killed in murky late-night shoot-outs in an increasingly bloody war on drugs.

But his wife has gone public with tapes that she said prove her husband was murdered in a set-up, causing a sensation in Bangladesh as the police crackdown faces its first real scrutiny.

Ayesha Begum said the phone conversations she recorded with Haque on the night he died contradict the official narrative – that he was armed and shot at police, who returned fire in self-defence.

“They killed him in cold blood,” Begum said from Teknaf in southeast Bangladesh, where her husband, a local councillor, was gunned down on May 27.

“They said it was a shoot-out. But his hands were tied when he was killed. Someone was told to untie his hands after he was shot,” she said, describing what she heard over the phone.

An AFP reporter listened to the audio but cannot independently verify that the voices belonged to Haque, his wife and young daughter.

Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan said police had copies of the recordings and were investigating, but would not elaborate.

Students protest against anti-drug measures in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Photo: EPA

Rights groups say that if true, the chilling tapes – which have gone viral in Bangladesh – are proof that police have committed extrajudicial killings in the campaign that began on May 15 and has also seen 15,000 people arrested.

The recordings have cast doubt on what many Bangladeshis considered a legitimate effort to stamp out drugs, most notably yaba, a cheap and hugely popular methamphetamine pill.

There have been calls for an immediate inquiry, with some drawing parallels to the Philippines, where the rule of law has been eroded as thousands of bodies have piled up from a deadly drug war.

A letter co-signed by 10 high-profile Bangladeshis, including independence heroes and celebrated writers, said the allegations were “unimaginable in any democratic state and society”.

“One such incident is enough to question the entire campaign and terrorise the people,” the widely published letter said.

Relatives of the deceased drugs suspect receive his coffin at a morgue in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Photo: EPA

Police say all the people killed so far were wanted drug kingpins, and all died in late-night gang wars or shoot-outs with police. No officers have been seriously injured.

Haque was no different, they say.

They allege he was a “top godfather” of the yaba trade in Teknaf, a key transit town for the little red pills crossing the border from labs in Myanmar.

As is the case with almost all the other shoot-outs, police say they found drugs and weapons on his body – in Haque’s case 10,000 yaba tablets, two guns and rounds of live ammunition.

But Haque’s family said the father of two was innocent.

“If he were a yaba dealer, we would have many properties. Yet we struggle to pay our daughters’ school fees,” his wife Begum said.

She released four recordings to the media on May 31. Haque spoke to his daughter briefly in the first three, but in the fourth he said nothing into the phone as the tape rolled.

Dhaka police arrest several men for alleged involvement in the drugs trade. Photo: EPA

Sometime later, gunshots ring out and Begum said her husband could be heard moaning. Another man is then heard discussing how to best plant loaded guns, bullets and yaba at the scene.

Rights groups say Bangladesh’s security forces have a record of staging executions and Haque’s alleged murder fit a pattern.

“We have documented in the past, that all too often they engage in extrajudicial killings and then make up stories of these deaths in an armed exchange or in crossfire,” said Human Rights Watch South Asia director Meenakshi Ganguly.

Local rights activist Nur Khan Liton said Haque’s case was not the first one bearing the hallmarks of a set-up.

“Some families said the victims were arrested first … and then killed in what appeared to be staged gun battles,” he said.

The main opposition party – whose leader was jailed this year ahead of a general election – said the killings have a political angle, with five of their supporters gunned down so far.

“They are murdering innocent people to create a climate of fear, so nobody can hold protests against the government,” said Bangladesh Nationalist Party spokesman Rizvi Ahmed.

The government estimates 400 million yaba tablets hit the streets in 2017, despite seizures numbering in the tens of millions of pills.

The drugs crisis has expanded beyond urban areas, authorities say, with addicts found in rural areas of the Muslim-majority country.

Even more pills are expected to flood the market this year after Rohingya refugees fleeing Myanmar for Bangladesh were employed as drug mules, police said.

The government has vowed to eradicate the “menace” with the same aggression it used to choke home-grown Islamic extremism.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has defiantly stated that “no (drug) godfather will be spared”.

“I can say this because whenever I deal with something, I use an iron fist,” she said.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Widow plays chilling tapes to accuse drugs police of murder
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