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End disappearances and secret detentions, HRW urges Bangladesh govt

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End disappearances and secret detentions, HRW urges Bangladesh govt
Tribune Desk
Published at 11:10 AM July 06, 2017
hrw-690x450.jpg

According to HRW, 48 disappearances were reported in the first five months of 2017
The law enforcement authorities in Bangladesh have illegally detained hundreds of people since 2013, including scores of opposition activists, and held them in secret detention, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said in a report released on Thursday.

The 82-page report titled, “‘We Don’t Have Him’: Secret Detentions and Enforced Disappearances in Bangladesh,” says at least 90 people were victims of enforced disappearance in 2016 alone.

HRW urged the Bangladesh government to stop this widespread practice of enforced disappearances immediately, order prompt, impartial, and independent investigations into these allegations, provide answers to families, and prosecute security forces responsible for such egregious rights violations.

Most of detainees were produced in court after weeks or months of secret detention,the report said, but it also documented 21 cases of detainees who were later killed, and nine others whose whereabouts remain unknown.

According to the report, the 90 cases include three sons of prominent opposition politicians who were picked up over several weeks in August 2016; one was released after six months of secret detention, while the other two remain disappeared.

In the first five months of 2017, 48 disappearances were reported. There are allegations of severe torture and ill-treatment while in secret custody.

“The disappearances are well-documented and reported, yet the government persists in this abhorrent practice with no regard for the rule of law,” said Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “Bangladesh security forces appear to have a free hand in detaining people, deciding on their guilt or innocence, and determining their punishment, including whether they have the right to be alive.”

The report also documents the continuing disappearance of 19 opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) activists. The 19 men were picked up by law enforcement authorities in eight separate incidents over a two-week period in or around Dhaka in the weeks before the January 2014 elections.

Human Rights Watch interviewed more than 100 people, including family members and witnesses, to document these cases. Details of police complaints and other legal documents are included in the report. The Bangladesh authorities failed to respond to letters seeking their views on these cases.

Witnesses and family members told Human Rights Watch that most of the abuses were carried out by the Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) or the Detective Branch of the police (DB), both of which have long-recorded histories of abuse. In the case of the 19 opposition party members, witnesses said that eight were taken by RAB, six by DB, and the rest by unknown security forces.
Human Rights Watch
✔@hrw

Bangladesh: End Disappearances and Secret Detentions http://ow.ly/hJqv50cCBYN

9:16 AM - 6 Jul 2017
CiAssaz5

Bangladesh: End Disappearances and Secret Detentions
Bangladesh law enforcement authorities have secretly and illegally detained hundreds of people since 2013. In 2016 alone, 90 people were victims of enforced disappearance, 21 of whom were killed...


Ruhul Amin Chowdhury, who saw RAB take away his son, Adnan Chowdhury, on December 5, 2013, said he had trusted RAB to release his son the next day. “They said, ‘We are taking him. We will bring him back,’” he said. “They betrayed us.”

The HRW report also says, a senior RAB official privately admitted to family members of Sajedul Islam Sumon, a well-known local BNP leader who disappeared on December 4, 2013, that he had had Sumon and five other men in his custody, but that they were removed by other RAB officials after he refused orders to kill them. The official assumed the six men had all been killed.

Law enforcement authorities repeatedly deny the arrests, with government officials backing these claims, often by suggesting that the men are voluntarily in hiding, Human Rights Watch said. The police do not allow families to file complaints alleging that their relatives have been picked up by law enforcement authorities.

In addition to enforced disappearances, there is an alarming trend of deaths occurring in secret detention of state authorities.

In one such case, on June 13, 2016, Shahid Al Mahmud, a student activist of the Jamaat-e-Islami party, was “dragged outside [his house] and taken into a black microbus,” his father, Rajab Ali, told Human Rights Watch.

Rajab Ali said that police officers were present during the arrest, although they later denied they were holding his son. Two weeks later, on July 1, police said they found Shahid’s body after a gunfight with criminals. Shahid’s father told Human Rights Watch that the police are lying: “The police abducted my son and staged a ‘gunfight’ drama to justify the killing.”

Although the ruling Awami League party came to power in 2009 with a promise of “zero tolerance” for human rights violations, the practice of extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances has persisted, with human rights organizations reporting at least 320 cases of disappearances since 2009. These include people suspected of criminal activities and militancy, as well as political opposition members.

Under international law, a forced disappearance is the deprivation of liberty by agents of the state, followed by a refusal to acknowledge the deprivation of liberty or by concealment of the fate or whereabouts of the disappeared person, which place such a person outside the protection of the law.

The Bangladesh government should invite the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights to investigate these allegations and make appropriate recommendations to ensure justice, accountability, and security force reform, Human Rights Watch said.

The Bangladesh government should also invite UN experts, including the Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances and the special rapporteur on torture, for an official country visit, allowing them full, unimpeded access to the places and people they seek to visit.

“The Bangladesh government is making a habit of complete disregard for human rights, human life, and the rule of law,” Adams said. “The government doesn’t even bother denying these abuses, instead remaining silent and relying on silence from the international community in return. This silence needs to end.”

http://www.dhakatribune.com/banglad...-secret-detentions-hrw-urges-bangladesh-govt/
 
11:05 AM, July 06, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 11:29 AM, July 06, 2017
HRW raps govt over enforced disappearances
Star Online Report


Human Rights Watch (HRW) today criticised Bangladesh government over the enforced disappearances carried out allegedly by the law enforcement agencies in the country.

In a long report, the international rights group also recommended prompt investigation into the allegations of such disappearances, “locate and release those held secretly”.

Read the full report

The HRW especially highlighted the “disappearance” cases of the ruling Awami League’s political opponents – Jamaat-e-Islami and the BNP.

The report it prepared, published today, provides details of some of the over 90 reported disappearances that took place during 2016.

It also slammed the government over “crossfires” or “gunfights” and also pushed for investigation into those cases.
http://www.thedailystar.net/country...vernment-over-enforced-disappearances-1429123
 
শত শত মানুষকে গোপন স্থানে আটকে রেখেছে বাংলাদেশের আইনশৃঙ্খলা বাহিনী-হিউম্যান রাইটস ওয়াচ
তারা বললো, আমরা তাকে নিয়ে যাচ্ছি, আমরাই আবার তাকে ফেরত দিয়ে যাবো।
কিন্তু তারা আমাদের সঙ্গে প্রতারণা করেছে''
 
indian and awami league cheer leaders has no answer for their crime. All are documented and waiting to get them sooner or later.
 
Political opponents held in secret detention: HRW
SAM Report, July 6, 2017
Audience-at-International-Day-of-the-Victims-of-Enforced-Disappearance-programme-held-in-Dhaka-on-Saturday-.jpg


Bangladesh security agencies have secretly detained scores of opposition activists many of whom have later been killed, an international rights group said Thursday.

Amid heightened political tensions, the Human Rights Watch report was released only days after a high-profile government critic briefly disappeared.

HRW said Bangladeshi authorities have detained hundreds of people in secret locations since 2013, including at least 90 last year.

The New York-based group said it has documented 21 cases of detainees who were later killed, and nine others whose whereabouts are unknown.

“Bangladesh security forces appear to have a free hand in detaining people, deciding on their guilt or innocence, and determining their punishment, including whether they have the right to be alive,” Brad Adams, HRW’s Asia director said.

“The disappearances are well-documented and reported, yet the government persists in this abhorrent practice with no regard for the rule of law,” he said.

Among those missing is Sajedul Islam Suman, 37, a Dhaka neighbourhood chief of the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP).

Sumon’s sister Sanjida Islam said Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) officers detained her brother and five other BNP activists on December 4, 2013. This was one month before a controversial 2014 general election which the BNP boycotted.

“Some 20 construction workers who were on the site told us RAB officers picked them up and led them away on a RAB van. They were never returned,” Islam told AFP.

“For the last three years and eight months we’ve knocked on doors, gone to every agency’s office and met the home minister to know my brother’s whereabouts,” she said.

The RAB and police have denied involvement in the disappearance.

Political tensions are growing again as a national election is widely expected next year. And mothers of 22 of the missing activists have set up a group, Mayer’s Daak (Mother’s Call), to seek government answers on the cases.

Islam said the family was hopeful her brother, a father of two, would be found, just as police found a prominent government critic this week just 18 hours after he was allegedly abducted.

Authorities said Farhad Mazhar, a poet, writer and dissident, was found on a coach around 200 kilometres (120 miles) from the Dhaka, where he lives.

The 69-year-old was escorted back to the capital and a kidnapping case was filed.

“He was blindfolded, picked up on a vehicle and taken away,” Abdul Baten, joint commissioner of detective police, quoted Mazhar as saying.

According to HRW, in the first five months of 2017, 48 disappearances were reported. Local rights groups said at least 326 people have disappeared since 2009, mostly opposition activists.

Officials of the BNP and its ally Jamaat-e-Islami, the largest Islamist party, have said tens of thousands of their activists and supporters have been arrested by the government in recent years.
http://southasianmonitor.com/2017/07/06/political-opponents-held-secret-detention-hrw/
 
Good. Hopefully more people are abducted and taken care of so more polarisation can happen...and BD people attack each other over it as much as possible. At same time BD institutional ranking and corruption is also made worse. Killing two birds with one stone, SHW is doing a great job for India....but she must accelerate it, this is nowhere near enough. Wipe out BNP and its proxies altogether....and salt the grounds where they came from.
 
Good. Hopefully more people are abducted and taken care of so more polarisation can happen...and BD people attack each other over it as much as possible. At same time BD institutional ranking and corruption is also made worse. Killing two birds with one stone, SHW is doing a great job for India....but she must accelerate it, this is nowhere near enough. Wipe out BNP and its proxies altogether....and salt the grounds where they came from.
What's with this strange obsession? You keep repeating this. BNP is done. And not many left worth abducting. And the country is not polarized. Because average people stopped caring about politics.


I don't think majority people have a favourable view of AL. But that's exact same with BNP. People have seen both of then rule and people have survived. I don't see any unrest happening unless terrorism increases drastically. Which is currently being taken cared of by our police forces. And I'd say they are doing a good job. Your obsession is weird. You need to ask your BD friends who tells you these things, "how much BD people care about politics today?" And how much likely it is that "BD people will fight each other over political matters?"

BD present day is doing better than it was ding ever. Economy is in best shape since it's independence. Infrastructure are being built like never before. There are few things to take care of like corruption and make sure terrorists stay out of BD. Then improve the education standard as well as our manufacturing base and BD will be doing much better than it is doing now. And BD isn't doing worse by any standards compared to it's past.
 
David Bergman
14 hrs ·
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And as to the Home Minister's response to the HRW report ... well as soon as you have a politician claiming that a human rights organisation has conducted a 'smear campaign' against the country, you know he has absolutely nothing of substance to say about the detailed allegations that are grounded in detailed witness testimony. Moreover, his absurd claim that the UN is unconcerned about enforced disappearances in Bangladesh, perhaps he needs to read the comments earlier this year from three UN Special Rapporteurs (see below) and also comments from the UN Human rights Committee - (set out here: https://bangladeshpolitico.blogspot.co.uk/…/uns-14-key-dema…)
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OHCHR | UN expert group urges Bangladesh to stop enforced disappearances
GENEVA (24 February 2017) – United Nations human rights experts* are calling on Bangladesh to act now to halt an increasing number of enforced…
OHCHR.ORG

বাংলাদেশে সরকারী বাহিনী কর্তৃক গুমের ঘটনা নিয়ে
Human Rights Watch এর ফেসবুক লাইভ প্রশ্নোত্তর ও পর্যালোচনা


 
David Bergman
21 hrs ·
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Bangladesh's National Human Rights Commission chair has asked HRW to provide a list of the secretly detained and disappeared. If he actually reads the report, he will, for a start, get the full list of names of: (a) 21 people picked up by Law Enforcement Authorities in 2016 and who were subsequently killed: (b) 9 people picked up by LEAs in 2016 and who are still disappeared; and (c) 21 opposition BNP Dhaka-based activists picked up in a two week period in Nov/Dec 2013 and who are still disappeared. Perhaps someone can tell him about these lists - and actually get the NHRC to actually carry out its mandate on enforced disappearances.
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Home minister rejects HRW report on disappearances
Home minister Asaduzzaman Khan Kamal on Thursday rejected the Human Rights Watch’s report on secret detentions and enforced disappearances in Bangladesh calling it a “smear campaign” against the country. “This organisation had launched…
EN.PROTHOM-ALO.COM
 
July 7, 2017 1:34PM EDT Dispatches
No, Bangladesh, The Truth is Not a ‘Smear Campaign’
Instead of Investigating, Authorities Reject Report of Enforced Disappearances
Meenakshi Ganguly
South Asia Director mg2411

Relatives hold portraits of disappeared family members at an event calling for the end of enforced disappearances, killings, and abductions, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, August 30, 2014.
© 2014 Zakir Hossain Chowdhury/ ZUMA Wire/Alamy
Just hours after Human Rights Watch released an 82-page report on secret detentions and enforced disappearances in Bangladesh, Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan claimed it was a “smear campaign.” Callously ignoring victims’ families who are desperately waiting for answers, he told local media: “Whom will you say disappeared? Many businessmen went into hiding failing to repay their loans in this country. Some people went missing after developing extramarital relationship.”

Under international law, a “disappeared person” is someone held (or last seen) in the custody of agents of the state, followed by a refusal to acknowledge the deprivation of liberty or whereabouts of the person, which places them outside the protection of the law.

Bangladesh law enforcement authorities have illegally detained hundreds of people since 2013, including scores of opposition activists, and held them in secret detention.

Human Rights Watch has produced a detailed analysis of cases where individuals were picked up, often in front of witnesses or family members by security forces who identified themselves as members of the Rapid Action Battalion (RAB), Detective Branch (DB), or the “administration.” When these people were not produced in court within 24 hours, as required under Bangladeshi law, family members repeatedly approached police and other officials, who denied the person was detained. While many of these men were eventually produced in court, after a period of weeks or months of illegal detention, others were released with warnings to stay silent. Several were later found killed in so-called gunfights or “cross-fire,” and scores remain “disappeared.”

Instead of committing to investigate these incidents, Khan declared his government will “reject the report outright.” As head of the ministry responsible for internal security, Khan claimed the United Nations had never mentioned enforced disappearances. In fact, like the detailed letters sent by Human Rights Watch requesting comment on these abuses, the Bangladesh government has ignored repeated queries from the UN Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances. The Human Rights Committee has also issued stern warnings.

The prime minister, Sheikh Hasina Wazed, while in opposition, repeatedly highlighted human rights violations and promised an end once she gained office. Now nearing the end of its second consecutive term, her Awami League government is not just echoing its abusive predecessors, but its security forces are secretly detaining and disappearing its political opponents and critics, as well as others it deems to be criminals. Party leader Hasan Mahmud accused Human Rights Watch of bias, ignoring previous work condemning opposition violence and its work on the United States. Bangladesh can and should do better.

https://www.hrw.org/news/2017/07/07/no-bangladesh-truth-not-smear-campaign
 
2:05 PM, July 08, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 12:19 PM, July 08, 2017
Report on enforced disappearances: HRW criticises Bangladesh minister for comments


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Relatives hold portraits of disappeared family members at an event calling for the end of enforced disappearances, killings, and abductions, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, August 30, 2014. Photo taken from Human Rights Watch website.

Star Online Report

Human Rights Watch has criticised Bangladesh Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan for his comments on the rights body’s recent report on secret detentions and enforced disappearances in the country.

Just hours after Human Rights Watch released the 82-page report on Thursday, the home minister termed it a “smear campaign.”


Read more: HRW calls for free probe, prosecution

Instead of committing to investigate these incidents, Khan declared his government will “reject the report outright,” the New York-based human rights body said in a release yesterday.

It claimed that the minister callously ignored victims’ families “who are desperately waiting for answers”.

“Whom will you say disappeared? Many businessmen went into hiding failing to repay their loans in this country. Some people went missing after developing extramarital relationship,” HRW quoted Khan as saying.

HRW in the report urged the Bangladesh government to launch an independent investigation into the allegations of secret detentions and enforced disappearances and “prosecute security forces responsible for such egregious rights violations”.

According to the report, Human Rights Watch has produced a detailed analysis of cases where individuals were picked up, often in front of witnesses or family members by security forces who identified themselves as members of the Rapid Action Battalion (RAB), Detective Branch (DB), or the “administration.”

When these people were not produced in court within 24 hours, as required under Bangladeshi law, family members repeatedly approached police and other officials, who denied the person was detained, it said.

While many of these men were eventually produced in court, after a period of weeks or months of illegal detention, others were released with warnings to stay silent, it claimed. Several were later found killed in so-called gunfights or “cross-fire,” and scores remain “disappeared”, it added.

Against the home minister’s claim that the United Nations had never mentioned enforced disappearances, HRW said that, in fact, like the detailed letters sent by Human Rights Watch requesting comment on these abuses, the Bangladesh government has ignored repeated queries from the UN Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances. The Human Rights Committee has also issued stern warnings.

The rights body also said that Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, while in opposition, repeatedly highlighted human rights violations and promised an end once she gained office, however, as her government is nearing the end of its second consecutive term, it is just echoing its abusive predecessors.

The security forces are secretly detaining and disappearing its political opponents and critics, as well as others it deems to be criminals, HRW claimed.

Bangladesh's law enforcement authorities have illegally arrested and detained hundreds of people in secret detention since 2013, the HRW said in the report, adding that at least 90 people were victims of enforced disappearance last year alone, while 21 of the detainees were reportedly killed.
http://www.thedailystar.net/country...m_medium=newsurl&utm_term=all&utm_content=all
 
What's with this strange obsession? You keep repeating this. BNP is done. And not many left worth abducting. And the country is not polarized. Because average people stopped caring about politics.


I don't think majority people have a favourable view of AL. But that's exact same with BNP. People have seen both of then rule and people have survived. I don't see any unrest happening unless terrorism increases drastically. Which is currently being taken cared of by our police forces. And I'd say they are doing a good job. Your obsession is weird. You need to ask your BD friends who tells you these things, "how much BD people care about politics today?" And how much likely it is that "BD people will fight each other over political matters?"

BD present day is doing better than it was ding ever. Economy is in best shape since it's independence. Infrastructure are being built like never before. There are few things to take care of like corruption and make sure terrorists stay out of BD. Then improve the education standard as well as our manufacturing base and BD will be doing much better than it is doing now. And BD isn't doing worse by any standards compared to it's past.

Its not an obsession. Its called jamati triggering. A fun thing to engage in. Takes a minute to write up and dominates days even months of their thinking. Well worth it.
 
এবার লন্ডনের টিভিতে ইলিয়াস আলীর সন্ধান, বন্দি ভারতের কারাগারে! Hard Way
Published on Jul 19, 2017

Abducted Illayas Ali,MP, of BNP in Indian Jail: Broadcasted from the U.K.
বিএনপির নিখোঁজ নেতা এম ইলিয়াস অালী ভারতের কারাগারে বন্দি আছেন, এমন খবর দিয়েছেন তার ভাই। যা লন্ডনের একটি টিভিতে প্রচার হয়। এবার লন্ডনের টিভিতে ইলিয়াস আলীর সন্ধান, বন্দি ভারতের কারাগারে!

 
The Opposition Disappears in Bangladesh
By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
JULY 28, 2017
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More than 320 people have been unlawfully detained or have disappeared in Bangladesh since Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s Awami League party took office eight years ago, according to Odhikar, a Dhaka-based human rights group. Plucked from their homes or off the streets by plainclothes members of Bangladesh’s rapid action battalion or the detective bureau of the Dhaka police, the victims increasingly include members of the political opposition, as well as suspected criminals and Islamist militants.

Among the 90 people who disappeared last year, according to Odhikar, of which 21 were killed and nine remain missing, was Mir Ahmad Bin Quasem, a lawyer for the opposition Jamaat-e-Islami political party. The men who took Mr. Quasem from his home in August, as his wife, sister and two young daughters watched, refused to identify themselves. Mr. Quasem has not been seen since.

Alarmed by these practices, the United Nations called in February for “Bangladesh to act now to halt an increasing number of enforced disappearances in the country.” But the pace of disappearances only appears to be quickening.

Ms. Hasina’s government has responded by denouncing its accusers, making a mockery of international and Bangladeshi law when faith in democratic institutions is crucial for the nation’s struggle to counter terrorism.

When Human Rights Watch published a meticulously documented report this month on the disappearances, Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan responded with sneering contempt, “This organization had launched a smear campaign against us.”

“Whom will you say disappeared?” Mr. Khan said. Insulting the anguished loved ones of victims, who can get no answers about their fates from Bangladeshi authorities or action from its courts, he continued: “Many businessmen went into hiding failing to repay their loans in this country. Some people went missing after developing extramarital relationship.”

Mr. Khan further disparaged the report, and legitimate alarm about government thuggery, by falsely claiming the United Nations had expressed no similar concerns.

If Mr. Khan respects the United Nations, his government should invite the organization’s human rights chief, Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein, to conduct an investigation. Only then can the government face honestly its people, world opinion and the truth.

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/07/28/opinion/the-opposition-disappears-in-bangladesh.html?mcubz=0
 
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