
DHAKA: On Sunday, a jury in Bangladesh filed a lawsuit against Sheikh Hasina and 33 others who were accused of carrying out a large murder by firing arbitrary weapons at a rally held there in 2013. Babul Sardar Chakhari, chairman of the Bangladesh People’s Party ( BPP ), applied to the court of Dhaka Metropolitan Magistrate Zaki-Al-Farabi, the Dhaka Tribune newspaper reported.
The organization was charged with “mass death” on May 5, 2013, at a protest at Shapla Chattar in Motijheel.
The court took the defendant’s speech into court and said it would follow up with an opinion on the matter.
With this, 76-year-old Hasina, who resigned from the league and fled to India on August 5 following a mass uprising, then faces 11 situations, including eight for death, one for violence, and two for committing crimes against humanity and murder, in Bangladesh.
More than 600 people have died in Bangladesh as a result of the violent outbursts that erupted across the nation after the Hasina government’s drop, more than 600 of whom have been killed since the government’s large protests against a controversial quota system of government jobs, which first started in the middle of July.
The former prime minister and nine others are facing charges of murder and crimes against humanity, which were brought against them by Bangladesh’s International Crimes Tribunal on Wednesday as a result of a student protest against her state.
After the Hasina-led plan was overthrown, an interim government was established, and 84-year-old Nobel prize Muhammad Yunus was chosen as its Chief Adviser.