According to officials and press reports from Bangladesh on Monday, 41 former officials have been detained. They are one of 1,059 past policemen accused of committing crimes during the 2024 student-led action that led to the resignation of prime minister Sheikh Hasina.
Following anti-discrimination student protests against the quota system turning into a motion and removing her 16-year government from power, Awami League leader Hasina resigned and fled to India on August 5, 2013. During the demonstrations in July and August, approximately 1,400 people lost their lives.
Surviving victims of the atrocities or the families of the slain victims ‘ families have filed hundreds of cases with police stations and courts, according to the mass-read Prothom Alo newspaper, which quoted unnamed police headquarters ( PHQ ) officials.
41 past police officers have been detained so much.
According to the PHQ, former police commissioners from Dhaka and Chattogram, Mohammad Asaduzzaan and Mian Saiful Islam, as well as two former inspector generals ( IG ) Chowdhury Abdullah Al Mamun and AKN Shahidul Haque, were also detained.
These soldiers were serving up until Hasina left the country after serving aside from Haq.
Harunur Rashid, a former addition director to the Bangladesh Metropolitan Police, is currently a runaway. In total, 174 instances have been filed.
Arrested past IGP Al Mamun faces 159 situations.
According to the officials, many older officers, including further police chiefs and a police commissioner, were reportedly on the run while others were thought to have eluded the land.
Bangladesh is now under the control of an interim government led by Muhammad Yunus, who the anti-discrimination learners action appointed as its main advisor.
In each of Bangladesh’s eight officers ranges, former inspector standard of officers Baharul Alam previously stated that committees led by senior police officers may be looking into the cases involving the July-August rebellion.
The UN freedom office reviewed the position of the officers and other security forces, claiming they used force to carry out” systematic and widespread extrajudicial murders as part of a coordinated plan of repression,” according to a fact-finding report last month released on the 2024 murder in Bangladesh.
According to the high commissioner for human rights ( OHCHR ), Bangladesh’s security forces shot the majority of the people who were killed in the uprising.
According to the information presented, OHCHR has reasonable grounds to believe that as part of a coordinated plan of repression, police and military state protection forces resorted to forceful acts against protesters, including comprehensive and widespread illegal killings, according to the statement.
The security forces “deliberately killed or deposed defenceless protesters by shooting them at point-blank variety,” according to the report, which included “disproportionate power” being used to disperse “yet quiet assemblies,” particularly by shooting military rifles and shotguns loaded with lethal material pellets.
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