Families of Bangladesh genocide victims call for justice
The Bangalee community in Europe stepped up efforts to have Pakistan’s actions in Bangladesh in 1971 recognised as genocide by demonstrating in the Netherlands' Hague.
Activists gathered outside the International Criminal Court on March 23rd in demand of international action, reads a press release issued in this regard.
“Bangladesh cannot move forward until it faces its past,” said Shomi Kaiser, whose father was killed by the Pakistani army when she was a child. “The fight for justice is a long battle,” the press release quotes her as saying.
Kaiser also said it was appropriate to focus the campaign on the Hague because it is regarded as “the city of justice” due to its history of court cases trying crimes against humanity.
More than three million people were killed when the Pakistani Army used force to suppress an independence campaign. There was widespread sexual violence against women, including rape.
Dr Wolfgang-Peter Zingel, from the University of Heidelberg in Germany, told the European Bangladesh Forum: “The genocide in Bangladesh was not an accident of history.”
Drawing comparisons with the Holocaust of Jews by the Nazis, Dr Zingel warned: “If you want to prevent such atrocities happening again, you must look in detail at their causes and record them.”
British political analyst Chris Blackburn said international cooperation was the best way to respond to human rights violations and noted that many of the issues from 1971 are still relevant to South Asia.
“Some people say, ‘let sleeping dogs lie’,” said Blackman. “But these are not sleeping dogs – these are dogs which are still biting.”
The event in Hague included the screening of a documentary film entitled “Blockade” which examined the response of the peace movement to Pakistan’s violence in the early 1970s.
The film’s director, Arif Yousuf, said he wanted to highlight the support by the United States government for the Pakistani army at that time, which he said was part of President Nixon’s strategy to contain Communism in Asia.
Following the screening, campaigners marched on the International Criminal Court, holding up banners calling for justice.
The Bangladesh Ambassador to the Netherlands, Sheikh Mohammad Belal, said: “No other country should face the injustice and trauma that Bangladesh has endured.”
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