UN rights office estimates up to 1,400 killed in crackdown on protests
in Bangladesh
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[February 12, 2025]
By JAMEY KEATEN
GENEVA (AP) — The U.N. human rights office on Wednesday estimated that
up to 1,400 people may have been killed in Bangladesh over three weeks
last summer in a crackdown on student-led protests against the
now-ousted former prime minister.
In a new report, the Geneva-based office says security and intelligence
services “systematically engaged” in rights violations that could amount
to crimes against humanity and require further investigation.
Citing “various credible sources,” the rights office said it estimated
that as many as 1,400 people may have been killed in the protests
between July 15 and Aug. 5 — the day longtime Prime Minister Sheikh
Hasina fled to India amid the uprising.
Thousands more were injured in the weeks leading up to and after the
protests, and the vast majority of those killed and injured “were shot
by Bangladesh’s security forces,” the report said.
Over 11,700 people were detained, the report said, citing information
from security services. It said that about 12 to 13% of people estimated
to have be killed —- or as many as about 180 people — were children.
In some cases, “security forces engaged in summary executions by
deliberately shooting unarmed protesters at point blank range,” it said.
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U.N. human rights chief Volker Türk cited signs that “extrajudicial
killings, extensive arbitrary arrests and detentions, and torture” were
conducted with the knowledge and coordination of the political
leadership and top security officials as a way to suppress the protests.
The U.N. fact-finding team was deployed to Bangladesh at the invitation
of the country's interim leader, the Nobel Peace laureate Muhammad Yunus,
to look into the uprising and violent crackdown.
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People carry an injured protester in a cycle rickshaw to a hospital
after he was shot at by the police during a protest against Prime
Minister Sheikh Hasina and her government, in Dhaka, Bangladesh,
Aug. 5, 2024. (AP Photo/Rajib Dhar), File
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The team of investigators said the interim government has reportedly
made 100 arrests in connection with attacks on religious and
indigenous groups. The report said “many perpetrators of acts of
revenge, violence and attacks on distinct groups apparently continue
to enjoy impunity.”
The human rights situation in Bangladesh continues to raise
concerns, the U.N. office said.
While the government has changed, “the system has not necessarily
changed," Rory Mungoven, head of the rights office's Asia-Pacific
region, told reporters. "Many officials and people who had served or
been appointed under the previous regime continue to function,” he
said.
Such a situation creates “a potential conflict of interest” and
could impede reforms and accountability, Mungoven added.
The investigators issued dozens of recommendations to the
government, such as steps to improve the justice system and setting
up a witness protection program. It also recommended banning the use
of lethal firearms by security forces to disperse crowds unless they
are faced with “imminent threat of death or serious injury.”
What began as peaceful demonstrations by students frustrated with a
quota system for government jobs unexpectedly grew into a major
uprising against Hasina and her ruling Awami League party.
A High Court decision in early June that reinstated the quota system
was the “immediate trigger” to the protests, which were also fueled
by long standing grievances about economic inequality and a lack of
rights, the report said.
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