2015-02-18 08:45
Dhaka - Bangladesh's war crimes tribunal ordered the execution of
a senior Islamist leader Wednesday after convicting him of atrocities
during the country's 1971 independence war, triggering violence outside
the court.
Three Molotov cocktails thrown by suspected
anti-government activists exploded outside the courthouse in central
Dhaka as Abdus Subhan, a vice president of Bangladesh's largest Islamist
party, Jamaat-Islami, was found guilty of murder, genocide and torture.
The
verdict is expected to further inflame tensions in Bangladesh where an
alliance of opposition parties, including Jamaat, is trying to topple
the government of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina.
At least 87
people have died since early January when the leader of the main
opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) called on supporters to
blockade roads, railways and waterways to force Hasina to call new
polls.
Justice
Obaidul Hassan, head of the International Crimes Tribunal (ICT), handed
down the sentences, saying the 79-year-old leader would be "hanged by
the neck until his death".
"He was found guilty of six out of nine
charges. As a leader of Jamaat, he collaborated with Pakistan army and
he carried out in the name of Islam," prosecutor Sultan Mahmud told
reporters.
Subhan
is the 17th person and the 12th and the last Islamist to be convicted
by the court, which is a domestic tribunal set up by Hasina's government
without any international oversight.
Prosecutors said Subhan was
the head of Jamaat and a pro-Pakistani militia in the northwestern
district town of Pabna and he actively took part in the murder of
hundreds of innocent villagers and minority Hindus in the 1971 conflict
when the then East Pakistan seceded from Islamabad.
Defence lawyers said they would appeal the verdict as the charges against Subhan were "false and baseless".
The
war crimes court has mostly focused on the trials of the Jamaat leaders
who opposed the break-up of Pakistan and saw the liberation war by
Bengalis as a conspiracy by majority-Hindu India.
Previous death
sentences handed down against Jamaat leaders, including its supreme and
spiritual leaders, plunged Bangladesh into its deadliest unrest in 2013.
Thousands
of Islamists clashed with police in nationwide protests over the
verdicts and other issues and some 500 people were killed.
BNP
leader Khaleda Zia and Jamaat say the trials are aimed at eliminating
opposition leaders rather than rendering justice while rights groups
have said they fall short of international standards.
The
government maintains they are needed to heal the wounds of the war,
which it says left three million people dead. Independent researchers
put the toll much lower.
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