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Strong Indian pledge needed to stop border killing: discussion
Staff Correspondent
New Age | Newspaper
The Workers Party of Bangladesh president, Rashed Khan Menon addresses a meeting on human rights violations by Indias border guards organised by Odhikar at a city hotel on Saturday. New Age photo
Political leaders, former diplomats and rights activists at a meeting on Saturday said that the atrocities of the Indian Border Security Force could not be stopped without a strong political commitment of the Indian government.
The killing of unarmed Bangladeshi civilians on the border strained the relations between the two countries, they told a national advocacy meeting in the capital.
They also called for implementing the Joint India-Bangladesh Guidelines for Border Authority 1975 to stop killings on the frontiers as the guidelines stipulated that anyone held for crossing the border would be handed over to law enforcers instead of hurting him.
BSF would continue atrocities in the border until the border guidelines of 1975 remained unimplemented, said ALM Fazlur Rahman, former chief of Bangladesh Rifles, now Border Guard Bangladesh.
Successive governments [in Bangladesh] have failed to bring down the border killing to the zero level, said Workers Party of Bangladesh president Rashed Khan Menon.
Bangladesh Nationalist Party vice chairman Shamsher Mobin Chowdhury said India had backed away from the promise it made during the recent visit of the BNP chief, Khaleda Zia, that it would stop border killings.
They [Indian authorities] have broken the promise...We have come to know that India continues border atrocities as a Bangladeshi civilian has already been killed, Shamsher Mobin told the discussion titled Human Rights Violation at the Indian Bangladesh-Border organised by the Dhaka-based rights organisation, Odhikar.
The Odhikar put forth a set of recommendations to stop border violence.
Daily Samakal managing editor Abu Sayeed Khan said that the atrocities by the BSF would continue until the Indian leaders made a political commitment to make the border peaceful.
Former diplomat Md Asafuddowla, daily Amar Desh acting editor Mahmudur Rahman, and New Age joint news editor Shahiduzzaman, among others, spoke at the programme.
Habibur Rahman Habu of Chapainawabganj, who sustained critical injuries after being stripped and tortured by BSF in December 2011, and Shafikul Islam, a relative of Mohammad Sanaul Haq, who was shot dead by the Indian border guards, narrated the atrocities committed by the BSF.
Shafikul demanded compensation and justice for the killing of his brother-in-law.
Some 966 Bangladeshi citizens were killed by the Indian border guards while 754 were injured, 1,032 abducted and 14 raped between January 2000 and October 2012.
Odhikar secretary Adilur Rahman Khan termed the India-Bangladesh border as the bloodiest border in the world.
Odhikar called upon the United Nations bodies to investigate such violation of international law and human rights.
Staff Correspondent
New Age | Newspaper

The Workers Party of Bangladesh president, Rashed Khan Menon addresses a meeting on human rights violations by Indias border guards organised by Odhikar at a city hotel on Saturday. New Age photo
Political leaders, former diplomats and rights activists at a meeting on Saturday said that the atrocities of the Indian Border Security Force could not be stopped without a strong political commitment of the Indian government.
The killing of unarmed Bangladeshi civilians on the border strained the relations between the two countries, they told a national advocacy meeting in the capital.
They also called for implementing the Joint India-Bangladesh Guidelines for Border Authority 1975 to stop killings on the frontiers as the guidelines stipulated that anyone held for crossing the border would be handed over to law enforcers instead of hurting him.
BSF would continue atrocities in the border until the border guidelines of 1975 remained unimplemented, said ALM Fazlur Rahman, former chief of Bangladesh Rifles, now Border Guard Bangladesh.
Successive governments [in Bangladesh] have failed to bring down the border killing to the zero level, said Workers Party of Bangladesh president Rashed Khan Menon.
Bangladesh Nationalist Party vice chairman Shamsher Mobin Chowdhury said India had backed away from the promise it made during the recent visit of the BNP chief, Khaleda Zia, that it would stop border killings.
They [Indian authorities] have broken the promise...We have come to know that India continues border atrocities as a Bangladeshi civilian has already been killed, Shamsher Mobin told the discussion titled Human Rights Violation at the Indian Bangladesh-Border organised by the Dhaka-based rights organisation, Odhikar.
The Odhikar put forth a set of recommendations to stop border violence.
Daily Samakal managing editor Abu Sayeed Khan said that the atrocities by the BSF would continue until the Indian leaders made a political commitment to make the border peaceful.
Former diplomat Md Asafuddowla, daily Amar Desh acting editor Mahmudur Rahman, and New Age joint news editor Shahiduzzaman, among others, spoke at the programme.
Habibur Rahman Habu of Chapainawabganj, who sustained critical injuries after being stripped and tortured by BSF in December 2011, and Shafikul Islam, a relative of Mohammad Sanaul Haq, who was shot dead by the Indian border guards, narrated the atrocities committed by the BSF.
Shafikul demanded compensation and justice for the killing of his brother-in-law.
Some 966 Bangladeshi citizens were killed by the Indian border guards while 754 were injured, 1,032 abducted and 14 raped between January 2000 and October 2012.
Odhikar secretary Adilur Rahman Khan termed the India-Bangladesh border as the bloodiest border in the world.
Odhikar called upon the United Nations bodies to investigate such violation of international law and human rights.