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Bangladesh will demand unconditional Apology from Pakistan for 1971 crimes

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Bangladesh
NAVIGATION
Dhaka may demand apology from Islamabad for its ‘71 atrocities
Online Desk | Update: 20:27, Aug 30, 2016

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Bangladesh will raise the long-pending issue of seeking unconditional and formal apology from Pakistan for the barbarities of its forces on innocent Bangladeshi civilians in 1971 during the next round of Foreign Office Consultation (FOC) to be held here on Thursday, reports UNB news agency.



Bangladesh will also raise Pakistan’s repeated ‘brazen attempts’ to meddle in internal affairs centring on trials for crimes against humanity seeking an end to such interference as the trial is a people’s demand, a diplomat told UNB on Tuesday.

Talking to this correspondent, a senior foreign ministry official, however, said the FOC is taking place after a long six-year gap, it will be a ‘friendliness’ one.

As review plea against death for a Jamaat-e-Islami leader Mir Quasem Ali was dismissed on Tuesday, now there is no bar to the start of process for executing Quasem.

Bangladesh does not want to see any reaction from Pakistan on this issue this time as it had reacted in past cases, sources at the ministry said.

Another official told UNB that trade and investment issues with focus on simplifying process, enhancing cultural exchange, visa process, stranded Pakistani issue and other unresolved ones will come up in ‘different shapes’ during the discussion.

Holding trial of the accused 195 military personnel for their brutal role in 1971 and giving compensation to the victim families in Bangladesh may also be discussed in the FOC.

Pakistan foreign secretary Aizaz Ahmed Chaudhary arrives in Dhaka on Wednesday to hold the FOC with his Bangladesh counterpart M Shahidul Haque. Chaudhary will lead a four-member delegation.

Bangladesh high commissioner in Islamabad Tarik Ahsan is already in Dhaka to join the Bangladesh delegation, said an official.

Meanwhile, an inter-ministerial meeting was held at the foreign ministry with foreign secretary Shahidul Haque in the chair on Tuesday.

The planned FOC was cancelled several times for various reasons, including diplomatic row between the two countries, following the trial for the crimes against humanity in Bangladesh.

The last bilateral consultation between the countries was held in Islamabad in 2010. Then foreign secretary Mohamed Mijarul Quayes led the Bangladesh side in the talks.

Asked whether the recent development following Balochistan issue would have any negative impact on the upcoming FOC in Dhaka, the foreign ministry official said there will be no negative impact.

Recently, Pakistan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs summoned Bangladesh high commissioner in Islamabad Tarik Ahsan to know about the recent comment made by information minister Hasanul Haq Inu on Balochistan during his visit to India.

Speaking to Indian daily The Hindu on 17 August, Inu said Balochistan was facing the brunt of Pakistan’s military establishment, which ‘targeted’ the Bengalis in East Pakistan in 1971 before the creation of Bangladesh.

“Pakistan has a very bad track record as far as addressing aspiration of nationalities is concerned. They learnt nothing from the defeat of 1971 and continued to practise the same policy of repression and are now targeting the Baloch nationalists,” Inu said.

“Bangladesh is constitutionally bound to support liberation struggles and we’ll soon declare an official policy on Balochistan,” he added.

http://en.prothom-alo.com/bangladesh/news/118807/Dhaka-may-demand-apology-from-Islamabad-for-its
 
Orders passed on from New Delhi. They're still living in 1971.
 
Musharraf apology to Bangladesh


By David Blair in Islamabad


12:01AM BST 31 Jul 2002



President Pervaiz Musharraf of Pakistan took a bold step yesterday when he implicitly apologised for the atrocities that scarred Bangladesh's war for independence from his country in 1971.

Gen Musharraf's expression of "regret", the first by a Pakistani military ruler, came during an official visit to Bangladesh.

His words received a mixed response, with the Bangladeshi government welcoming them but the country's opposition denouncing his gesture as inadequate.

Gen Musharraf visited a war memorial at Savar, near the capital, Dhaka, and left a handwritten note in the visitors' book.

"Your brothers and sisters in Pakistan share the pain of the events in 1971," he wrote. "The excesses committed during the unfortunate period are regretted. Let us bury the past in the spirit of magnanimity. Let not the light of the future be dimmed."
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor.../1403185/Musharraf-apology-to-Bangladesh.html








Bangladesh welcomes Musharraf's 'apology'

Wednesday
July 31, 2002
0005 IST

Bangladesh on Tuesday welcomed visiting Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf's statement of regret over 'excesses' during its liberation war three decades ago.

"We welcome what President Musharraf wrote in Savar and (said) at the banquet last night," Bangladesh Foreign Minister Morshed Khan told reporters.

"We don't want to embarrass a guest by discussing issues like an apology for the 1971 war situation. It is the spirit of the people of the two countries that will decide that," he said.

Musharraf, the first Pakistani army ruler to visit Bangladesh since the independence of this country in 1971, while paying homage at the National Martyrs' Memorial, near Dhaka, had described the events of 1971 'unfortunate' and the excesses 'regrettable'.

"Your brothers and sisters in Pakistan share the pains of the events of 1971. The excesses committed during the unfortunate period are regrettable," Musharraf said at the banquet on Monday night.

"Let us bury the past in the spirit of magnanimity. Let not the light of the future be dimmed. Let us move forward together," Musharraf said, adding that 'courage to compromise is greater than to confront'.

Left-wing groups and some members of Bangladesh's main opposition Awami League have been pushing for a formal apology by Musharraf and compensation over the war in which an estimated three million people were killed.

However, renowned poet Shamshur Rahman, said, "This falls short of unconditional apology. We do not accept this."

The Awami League was not available for reaction.
http://www.rediff.com/news/2002/jul/30bang.htm





case closed .................!!!!
 
lol good luck ... just like turkey has never apologized for armenien genocide , pak will never apologize for bangla genocide. Birds of a feather and all.
 
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Bangladesh
NAVIGATION
Dhaka may demand apology from Islamabad for its ‘71 atrocities
Online Desk | Update: 20:27, Aug 30, 2016

0Like

Bangladesh will raise the long-pending issue of seeking unconditional and formal apology from Pakistan for the barbarities of its forces on innocent Bangladeshi civilians in 1971 during the next round of Foreign Office Consultation (FOC) to be held here on Thursday, reports UNB news agency.



Bangladesh will also raise Pakistan’s repeated ‘brazen attempts’ to meddle in internal affairs centring on trials for crimes against humanity seeking an end to such interference as the trial is a people’s demand, a diplomat told UNB on Tuesday.

Talking to this correspondent, a senior foreign ministry official, however, said the FOC is taking place after a long six-year gap, it will be a ‘friendliness’ one.

As review plea against death for a Jamaat-e-Islami leader Mir Quasem Ali was dismissed on Tuesday, now there is no bar to the start of process for executing Quasem.

Bangladesh does not want to see any reaction from Pakistan on this issue this time as it had reacted in past cases, sources at the ministry said.

Another official told UNB that trade and investment issues with focus on simplifying process, enhancing cultural exchange, visa process, stranded Pakistani issue and other unresolved ones will come up in ‘different shapes’ during the discussion.

Holding trial of the accused 195 military personnel for their brutal role in 1971 and giving compensation to the victim families in Bangladesh may also be discussed in the FOC.

Pakistan foreign secretary Aizaz Ahmed Chaudhary arrives in Dhaka on Wednesday to hold the FOC with his Bangladesh counterpart M Shahidul Haque. Chaudhary will lead a four-member delegation.

Bangladesh high commissioner in Islamabad Tarik Ahsan is already in Dhaka to join the Bangladesh delegation, said an official.

Meanwhile, an inter-ministerial meeting was held at the foreign ministry with foreign secretary Shahidul Haque in the chair on Tuesday.

The planned FOC was cancelled several times for various reasons, including diplomatic row between the two countries, following the trial for the crimes against humanity in Bangladesh.

The last bilateral consultation between the countries was held in Islamabad in 2010. Then foreign secretary Mohamed Mijarul Quayes led the Bangladesh side in the talks.

Asked whether the recent development following Balochistan issue would have any negative impact on the upcoming FOC in Dhaka, the foreign ministry official said there will be no negative impact.

Recently, Pakistan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs summoned Bangladesh high commissioner in Islamabad Tarik Ahsan to know about the recent comment made by information minister Hasanul Haq Inu on Balochistan during his visit to India.

Speaking to Indian daily The Hindu on 17 August, Inu said Balochistan was facing the brunt of Pakistan’s military establishment, which ‘targeted’ the Bengalis in East Pakistan in 1971 before the creation of Bangladesh.

“Pakistan has a very bad track record as far as addressing aspiration of nationalities is concerned. They learnt nothing from the defeat of 1971 and continued to practise the same policy of repression and are now targeting the Baloch nationalists,” Inu said.

“Bangladesh is constitutionally bound to support liberation struggles and we’ll soon declare an official policy on Balochistan,” he added.

http://en.prothom-alo.com/bangladesh/news/118807/Dhaka-may-demand-apology-from-Islamabad-for-its

Pakistanis should have recognized this fact in 1971 itself.

What are you going to do with this apology? Add a few % to gdp growth? :lol:


I think If Pakistan express formal apology for their wrong doing in 71 will not harm Pakistan and getting a formal apology from Pakistan will not any benefit to us either . we are not getting any benefit by sticking our self in 71. we need to look forward for a better prosperous meaningful brotherly relation with our Pakistani brother for the benefit of both country .
 
Musharraf apology to Bangladesh


By David Blair in Islamabad


12:01AM BST 31 Jul 2002



President Pervaiz Musharraf of Pakistan took a bold step yesterday when he implicitly apologised for the atrocities that scarred Bangladesh's war for independence from his country in 1971.

Gen Musharraf's expression of "regret", the first by a Pakistani military ruler, came during an official visit to Bangladesh.

His words received a mixed response, with the Bangladeshi government welcoming them but the country's opposition denouncing his gesture as inadequate.

Gen Musharraf visited a war memorial at Savar, near the capital, Dhaka, and left a handwritten note in the visitors' book.

"Your brothers and sisters in Pakistan share the pain of the events in 1971," he wrote. "The excesses committed during the unfortunate period are regretted. Let us bury the past in the spirit of magnanimity. Let not the light of the future be dimmed."
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor.../1403185/Musharraf-apology-to-Bangladesh.html








Bangladesh welcomes Musharraf's 'apology'

Wednesday
July 31, 2002
0005 IST

Bangladesh on Tuesday welcomed visiting Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf's statement of regret over 'excesses' during its liberation war three decades ago.

"We welcome what President Musharraf wrote in Savar and (said) at the banquet last night," Bangladesh Foreign Minister Morshed Khan told reporters.

"We don't want to embarrass a guest by discussing issues like an apology for the 1971 war situation. It is the spirit of the people of the two countries that will decide that," he said.

Musharraf, the first Pakistani army ruler to visit Bangladesh since the independence of this country in 1971, while paying homage at the National Martyrs' Memorial, near Dhaka, had described the events of 1971 'unfortunate' and the excesses 'regrettable'.

"Your brothers and sisters in Pakistan share the pains of the events of 1971. The excesses committed during the unfortunate period are regrettable," Musharraf said at the banquet on Monday night.

"Let us bury the past in the spirit of magnanimity. Let not the light of the future be dimmed. Let us move forward together," Musharraf said, adding that 'courage to compromise is greater than to confront'.

Left-wing groups and some members of Bangladesh's main opposition Awami League have been pushing for a formal apology by Musharraf and compensation over the war in which an estimated three million people were killed.

However, renowned poet Shamshur Rahman, said, "This falls short of unconditional apology. We do not accept this."

The Awami League was not available for reaction.
http://www.rediff.com/news/2002/jul/30bang.htm





case closed .................!!!!
They don't want apology from a dictator. They want it from a govt. which represent people of Pakistan. Or sahi mayano mai wahi apology hogi.
 
They don't want apology from a dictator. They want it from a govt. which represent people of Pakistan. Or sahi mayano mai wahi apology hogi.

Lol why wouldn't you want the apology of the army? And is being accused of war crimes. The one that was actually involved. You want an apology from the corrupt ogre? Are you daft?
 
An I'm surprised to see Bangladeshi members here on PDF never demanded apology from Pakistan. May be most of them are 'Jamati'
 

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