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Bangladesh finds UK and US accused guilty of war crimes | Bangladesh finds UK and US accused guilty of war crimes |
(34 minutes later) | |
A UK Muslim leader and a US citizen have been sentenced to death over crimes committed during Bangladesh's 1971 war of independence. | |
UK-Bangladeshi Muslim community leader Chowdhury Mueen-Uddin and Ashrafuzzaman Khanwas were being tried in absentia by a special tribunal in Bangladesh. | |
They were found guilty on 11 charges relating to the abduction and killing of 18 independence supporters. | They were found guilty on 11 charges relating to the abduction and killing of 18 independence supporters. |
Verdicts in similar cases have sparked violent reactions in Bangladesh. | Verdicts in similar cases have sparked violent reactions in Bangladesh. |
The proceedings of the International Crimes Tribunal have come under criticism from several rights groups, including the New York-based Human Rights Watch, which has described the trials as flawed. | |
'Encouraged killings' | |
Prosecutors said Mueen-Uddin was a member of the al-Badr militia group which fought alongside the Pakistani army, against independence for what was then East Pakistan, later Bangladesh. | |
They said he was involved in the killing of pro-independence activists, including academics and journalists, in the final days of the war. | |
"They encouraged, they gave moral support to and participated in the killing of 18 intellectuals," judge Mujibur Rahman Mia told a packed court in Dhaka, reported the AFP news agency. | |
Later senior judge Obaidul Hassan told the court: "Justice will not be done if they are not awarded capital punishment," AFP said. | |
Mueen-Uddin, who lives in London, and Khan, a New York resident, both originally come from Bangladesh. | |
The tribunal's attempts to get them into the dock failed. They denied the charges against them, which their lawyers have described as politicised. | |
Their trial was completed within just over three months - largely because the tribunal-appointed defence lawyers did not have the co-operation of the families of the accused, reported Bangladesh's Daily Star. | |
The lawyers could not even get one defence witness to testify whereas the prosecution called 25, it said. | |
The court's previous judgements include death sentences for former and current senior leaders of Bangladesh's main Islamic party, the Jamaat-e-Islami and the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party. | The court's previous judgements include death sentences for former and current senior leaders of Bangladesh's main Islamic party, the Jamaat-e-Islami and the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party. |
More than 100 people have died since January in violent protests set off by those verdicts handed down by the International Crimes Tribunal. | More than 100 people have died since January in violent protests set off by those verdicts handed down by the International Crimes Tribunal. |
It was set up in 2010 by the current Awami League-led government to try alleged local collaborators of the Pakistani army during the war of independence, when three million people died, according to official figures. | It was set up in 2010 by the current Awami League-led government to try alleged local collaborators of the Pakistani army during the war of independence, when three million people died, according to official figures. |
But opposition parties have accused it of pursuing a political vendetta against its opponents. |