Nilgiri
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I agree with you on this 100%. Guess why they did that, I suspect they saved their fellow North Indian a**. Niazi surrendered to a Sikh, Indira a Kashmiri Pandit saved the lives of the surrendered 90,000, many of them I am sure committed war crimes. This was a big injustice to Bangladesh and this would not have happened if India did not intervene so early and let the war take its due course and allow the Mukti Bahini to slowly and surely choke the Pak army to death and do whatever we needed to do with them. Instead India intervened and saved them. For this Pakistan should be eternally grateful to India, but see what they are doing now out of gratitude.
Hindsight is 20/20. There was much call from Mukti Bahini for direct intervention at earliest opportunity. Also if India waited too long, then China/US friendship would have progressed that much longer and increased the chance of their intervention/extra pressure at some level....not to mention how many more victims and intellectuals would have been massacred by Pakistan (leaving Bangladesh even worse off economically when actual full liberation came).
Anyways it was a foolish, distasteful, arrogant thing done by India. We got that much result and leverage and squandered it all away just to feel better as gracious victors or whatever (Urdu/Hindi bonhomie)....rather than going for the cold hard justice. India - Bangladesh relations could have been much different if things did not start that way.
But now its time to accept the mistakes and move on.
What should be done by Bangladesh is rather than demand this from Pakistan, you should demand recognition of the genocide that happened. Still today I only hear holocaust, cambodia, rwanda etc...and even darfur being mentioned as official "genocides" in the major media circles. Bangladesh should seek to have that changed....maybe make 1 or 2 movies or a really good international quality mini-series or something like that about the events leading up to 1971 and 1971 itself....just so at least the world does not forget it.
Apart from the Kashmiris, most Pakistanis from big cities (especially Lahore) are very secular in nature and the trend is the same everywhere else. Because of the terror attacks people get this idea that Pakistan is a Islamic hub, but that doesn't particularly mean everyone there is religious minded.
Is this really an indication of such high secular principles?:
Muslim Beliefs About Sharia | Pew Research Center
Or you are saying islamic law is secular?