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Secretary General of Jamaat e Islam, Ali Ahsan Mohammad Mujahid (left) waves from a police vehicle as he is transported to the central jail following his court verdict in Dhaka on Wednesday. Photo: AFP

Bangladesh Islamist leader gets death penalty for war crimes

AFP

A Bangladesh court on Wednesday sentenced a senior leader of the country’s largest Islamic party to death for crimes committed during the 1971 liberation war against Pakistan.

Ali Ahsan Mohammad Mujahid, 65, was found guilty of five charges, including abduction and murder, and was sentenced to death by the much-criticised International Crimes Tribunal.

“In three out of five charges he was given the death sentence,” the country’s junior attorney general and prosecutor MK Rahman said.

Justice Obaidul Hassan ordered Mujahid be “hanged by the neck” after the panel of three judges read out the verdict to the packed courtroom in the capital Dhaka, amid tight security.

Mujahid is currently the second highest-ranked member of the Jamaat-e-Islami party and also an influential leader in the 18-party opposition alliance.

The verdict is the second this week by the tribunal after Jamaat’s 90-year-old spiritual leader Ghulam Azam was convicted on Monday and sentenced to 90 years in prison for masterminding atrocities during the war.

That verdict prompted a nationwide strike by Jamaat supporters who took to the streets, sparking violent clashes with police that killed five people.

The trials have divided the country, with secularists demanding the execution of all the accused and Islamists branding the trials a sham, aimed at eliminating their leaders.
People try to extinguish a fire set by activists of the Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami party in Naraynganj after the International Crimes Tribunal sentenced Ghulam Azam, former Jamaat chief, to 90 years in prison. Photo: Reuters
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