Bangladesh War Crimes Convicts Could be Executed 'Anytime'

DHAKA: The execution of two top Bangladeshi hardline Islamist leaders convicted for war crimes committed during the 1971 Liberation War against Pakistan could take place "anytime" after completion of necessary procedures, the country's Home Minister said today.

Home Minister Asaduzzman Khan Kamal said the execution of fundamentalist Jamaat-e-Islami Secretary General Ali Ahsan Mohammad Mujahid and BNP leader Salahuddin Quader Chowdhury, was now only a "matter of time".

"They could be executed anytime on completion of necessary procedures," he told reporters on the sidelines of a function.

67-year-old Mujahid and 66-year-old Chowdhury could seek a presidential pardon as per their "constitutional right" but so far they have not opted for it.

Law Minister Anisul Huq said, "They were given time to think until this morning if they would seek the presidential pardon but until now (afternoon) I have no report that they decided to seek the clemency...let us wait for the subsequent development," Huq told PTI.

A prison official, on condition of anonymity, said preparedness for the execution of the two leaders has been "completed (and) we are discharging our responsibilities as per law and conventions."

Jail authorities last night had read out the written text of the Supreme Court order to the death row convicts.

Supreme Court's Appellate Division issued the full text of the final verdict yesterday, a day after it rejected the review petitions of Mujahid and Chowdhury, paving the way for their execution.

The apex court judgement was immediately forwarded to Bangladesh's International Crimes Tribunal, which originally handed down the capital punishment to them for committing crimes against humanity during the 1971 Liberation War.

Close relatives of Mujaheed and Chowdhury met them yesterday at Dhaka Central Jail two days after they were transferred to the facility from the suburban high security Kashimpur Central Jail.

Talking to reporters after meeting Mujahid, his son Ali Ahsan Mabru yesterday told reporters that his father would "send a special prayer to the president, but it will not be a mercy petition."

Meanwhile, there was a nationwide security vigil in Bangladesh amid fears of a backlash over the execution with the government saying plots were being hatched to thwart the war crimes trial.

The Awami League government has been pointing fingers at ex-prime minister Khaleda Zia's BNP and its crucial ally Jamaat for plotting to halt war crimes trials and executions.

Previously, two war crimes convicts – Jamaat leaders Abdul Kader Mollah and Mohammad Quamaruzzaman - have been executed since Bangladesh in 2010 initiated the process to expose the Bengali-speaking collaborators of Pakistan Army for crimes against humanity during the 1971 Liberation War.

None of them had sought the presidential clemency.

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