Former
Bangladesh PM to appear in court accused of sedition
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[January 25, 2016]
By Serajul Quadir
DHAKA (Reuters) - Former Bangladesh Prime
Minister Begum Khaleda Zia, head of the opposition Bangladesh
Nationalist Party, was ordered on Monday to appear in court to answer
the charge of sedition, a move her supporters said was driven by
politics.
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The case comes amid rising concerns over the growth of Islamist
militancy in the Muslim-majority South Asian nation, which saw a
string of deadly attacks on secular writers, minorities and
foreigners last year.
It was filed by Momtaz Uddin Ahmad Mehdi, a lawyer with the
Bangladesh Supreme Court and a supporter of the ruling Awami League.
He said that remarks Khaleda made last month about the 1971 war of
independence were seditious. She had said there were "controversies"
over the numbers who were killed.
He said the comment hurt him "as a patriot" and that as a citizen,
he had a right to file the case.
Politics in poverty-stricken Bangladesh has for decades been marred
by violent protests, nationwide strikes and bickering between
supporters of Khaleda and current Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, who
have taken it in turns to lead the country.
An affiliate BNP group called for a countrywide protest for Tuesday.
It was not immediately clear what chance the prosecution had of
success in the case. Khaleda was ordered to appear in court on March
3.
Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir, acting secretary general of the BNP,
dismissed the case as politically motivated.
"This is nothing but a mockery and its aim is to deter Khaleda from
politics," he told reporters.
"The intent of the government is to continue its repression of the
opposition by police, making confrontational politics."
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He said 17,000 opposition activists had been arrested since 2014 and
3,000 were still in jail.
East Pakistan broke away to become independent Bangladesh in 1971
after a war between India and Pakistan. About three million people
were killed, according to official accounts.
Hasina opened an inquiry into crimes committed during the war in
2010, paving the way for prosecutions by a war crimes tribunal that
Islamists have denounced as part of a campaign aimed at weakening
the Islamist Jamaat-e-Islami, a key ally of the BNP.
Four opposition politicians, including three leaders of
Jamaat-e-Islami, have been convicted and executed since late 2013.
The executions have come amidst a rise in Islamist militant
violence, with militant groups claiming the murder of two foreigners
and four secular writers and a publisher last year.
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