August 31, 2016

Page 1

SECOND EDITION

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 31, 2016

|

Bhadra 16, 1423, Zilqad 26, 1437

|

Regd No DA 6238, Vol 4, No 126

|

www.dhakatribune.com | 32 pages | Price: Tk10

Gallows upheld for Mir Quasem n Ashif Islam Shaon Mir Quasem Ali, a notorious war criminal during the 1971 Liberation War who later became a top Jamaat-e-Islami financier enjoying impunity, has to walk the gallows as the apex court yesterday turned down his last plea against his death penalty. Now the only option he has to save his life is seeking presidential clemency admitting the offences he had committed during Bangladesh's war of independence. The president has so far showed no mercy to any convicted war criminal since the ruling government initiated the historical trial. It implies that Quasem, an al-Badr

commander of Chittagong during the Liberation War, will be executed in a few days. Jamaat-e-Islami has called a

countrywide shutdown for today protesting the dismissal of its leader's review petition. Chief Justice Surendra Kumar

All his efforts go in vain n Bangla Tribune Quasem first tried to negotiate with the witnesses by offering them money. When failed, his men issued threats

Spending handsome amount of money to prolong the trial, intimidating prosecution witnesses and making the country unstable through subversive acts were the techniques death-row convict war criminal Mir Quasem resorted to to save his head. It is already proved that he has spent $25m to make the ongoing trial of war criminals controversial. According to the receipt dated October 6, 2010, Quasem appointed US lobbyist firm Cassidy and Associates for campaigning against the trial. Some documents recovered show that the firm received the money to provide “professional services to the war criminal.” Since the agreement, many foreign diplomats and organisations criticised the International Crimes Tribunal for lacking international standards and demanded “fair and

transparent trails” by giving the defence more scopes to prove the accused innocent. The pressure groups also issued statements at times to stop executing the convicted war criminals, most of who are from Jamaat-e-Islami – a religion-based party that opposed the birth of Bangladesh in 1971. Even a day before the review verdict, Attorney General Mahbubey Alam said that he was tensed over Quasem's activities. In the full text of the appeals verdict, which upheld his death sentence on one charge, the Appellate Division observed that as a rich person, Mir Quasem was capable of spending the money. The government also blames Jamaat for carrying out subversive activities in the name of demonstrations and shutdowns opposing the trial, and for patronising  PAGE 2 COLUMN 1

INSIDE

‘No scope to commute sentence’

Where have all disappeared gone?

Stalking now ends up in murders

Mir Quasem’s counsels even tried to earn sympathy of the apex court talking about Quasem’s “contribution towards the economic development of the country.”  PAGE 3

When her husband went missing, Farzana Akhter was desperately hoping that he would return home any time soon – carrying the birthday gift he had left to buy.  PAGE 5

There has been an alarming rise of murders resulting from violent sexual harassment. On August 3, a student of class eight in Sunamganj was stabbed by her stalker.  PAGE 32

Sinha, who led a five-member Appellate Division bench, pronounced the order around 9am in a courtroom packed with lawyers and journalists, many tensed as the high-profile Jamaat leader has always tried to influence the trial. A large contingent of law enforcers was deployed in and around the court while war crimes trial campaigners were waiting outside the court to hear the judgement. “The petition is dismissed. We found him guilty. Conviction is maintainable,” the chief justice said in his judgement. Campaigners and state counsels cheered the verdict while Quasem's lawyers expressed discontent when talking to reporters later.

The court also made a correction in its review verdict given on March 9 regarding charge 14. The charge, framed for torturing Nasiruddin at Dalim Hotel, earned him 10-year jail and the sentence was maintained by the Appellate Division. But it was not earlier mentioned in the verdict's operating part. Attorney General Mahbubey Alam said the government now could go ahead with preparations to execute the verdict as “there is no legal bar. But Mir Quasem can pray for presidential mercy as a citizen, but it is not a legal step.” He said: “All tension is dissolved. We are satisfied with the court order as the expectation of the  PAGE 2 COLUMN 2


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
August 31, 2016 by DhakaTribune - Issuu