Amnesty Int'l terms mutineers' death penalty 'perversion of justice'
The Amnesty International has termed Tuesday's death penalty 'a perversion of justice' which was handed down to 152 people for the 2009 massacre at paramilitary force BDR headquarters.
Justice has not been served with the ruling, "which, if carried out, will only result in 152 more human rights violations", Polly Truscott, Amnesty International’s Deputy Asia-Pacific Director, said following the pronouncement of the verdict.
Those sentenced were among hundreds of troops from the Bangladesh Rifles convicted of engaging in unlawful killings, hostage taking and other human rights violations committed during the February 2009 mutiny, said the statement posted on AI website.
Amnesty International has previously condemned the violence and called for those responsible to be brought to justice in fair trials.
"There is no question that the 2009 mutiny was a brutal series of events that left in its wake scores of people dead and a traumatised population. It is understandable that the Bangladeshi authorities want to draw a line under this episode, but to resort to the use of the death penalty can only compound the suffering," said Truscott.
"With these sentences, Bangladesh has squandered an opportunity to reinforce trust in the rule of law by ensuring the civilian courts deliver justice. Instead, the sentences seem designed to satisfy a desire for cruel revenge. The death penalty is the ultimate cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment and has not been proven to be a deterrent to crime."
Large-scale mutiny broke out at the erstwhile BDR headquarters at Pilkhana in the capital on February 25, 2009, just two months after a newly elected government took office, resulting in the deaths of 74 people including 57 army officers.
Thousands of BDR personnel were detained because of their alleged role in the mutiny.
In 2009, Amnesty International gathered testimony from family members of detainees accused of taking part as well as government officials, said the statement.
Scores -- or possibly hundreds -- suffered torture, and some were denied the assistance of a lawyer for weeks or months, AI said.
Amnesty International documented some of the torture methods described by detained BDR suspects, including sleep deprivation for days on end, beatings, the use of pliers to crush testicles, the insertion of needles under the nails and electric shocks, according to the statement.
"This widespread use of torture may have contributed to the death of dozens of BDR detainees in custody," it added.
“While Bangladesh certainly has a duty to ensure that the many victims of these horrific abuses and their families receive justice, the death penalty is the ultimate cruel and inhuman punishment. Bangladesh must establish a moratorium on all executions, as a first step towards abolition of the death penalty,” said Truscott.
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