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Mar 25 Genocide Day proposal sent to United Nations; Cabinet clears announcement bid.

http://www.thedailystar.net/frontpage/genocide-1971-govt-moves-get-un-recognition-1379065

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At the end of his ruthless massacre and war against an unarmed people, General Amir Abdullah Khan Niazi who led the Pakistan army in the killings, described the genocide of Bangalis in his book “Betrayal of East Pakistan” as “a display of stark cruelty more merciless than the massacres at Bukhara and Baghdad by Chengis Khan and Halaku khan or Jallianwala Bagh by the British General Dyer.”

The world hardly paid heed to the ruthless killings going on in Bangladesh in those long nine months. The tales of the macabre were told and retold by countless many here. And yet, the world did not have time to listen.

Forty-six years after the bloodbath that hardly left any family untouched, Bangladesh has finally taken initiatives to get recognition of the Pakistan army led genocide by the UN.

Ahead of Bangladesh observing March 25, the day when the Pakistan army unleashed its war machine against a sleeping population, as Genocide Day, the government will send two senior officials to the UN headquarters in New York and the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) headquarters in Geneva.

They will talk to senior UN officials to start the process of getting UN recognition of the Pakistani atrocity.

“This is a tall task, needing support from many,” Shahriar Alam, state minister for foreign affairs, told The Daily Star yesterday. “We will approach those countries like Russia, India and the UK which had supported our cause in 1971 so that these countries pass resolutions in their own parliaments to recognize the killings in Bangladesh as genocide.”

Shahriar said the foreign ministry has also set up a desk with two secretaries which will monitor the task.

The UN has recognized two massacres as genocide – the Holocaust and the Rwanda genocide.

Although the world leaders did not pay heed to the grisly murders in this part of the world, often considered as a backwater in the then geopolitical map dominated by the Soviet Union, China, Pakistan, India and Indo-China, concerns were raised by the world press at the time.

The New York Times in a piece in May of 1971 called the killing "one of the bloodiest slaughters of modern times."

In April that year, New York Times, in an editorial headlined "Bloodbath in Bengal," condemned Washington's silence on what it called the "indiscriminate slaughter of civilians and the selective elimination of leadership groups in East Bengal."

The Sunday Times published articles and editorials under headlines of "Genocide."

The US Consul General in Dhaka, Archer Blood, sent a telegram to Washington headed with the phrase "Selective Genocide."

The recently published book by Prof Gary Bass, based primarily on the declassified White House tapes, has been named as Blood Telegram: Nixon, Kissinger and a Forgotten Genocide."

The then UN Secretary General, U Thant, on June 3, 1971, wrote to the President of the Security Council saying "The happenings in East Pakistan constitute one of the most tragic episodes in human history. Of course, it is for future historians to gather facts and make their own evaluations, but it has been a very terrible blot on a page of human history."

But world leaders would not pay much attention to these pleas in the then complicated geo-politics. The onus of having it recognised internationally as genocide and for the dead to be recognised as victims of genocide fell on Bangladesh.

The cabinet yesterday at a meeting with Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina approved March 25 to be observed as Genocide Day, clearing all formalities to recognise the brutal genocide committed on this day in 1971.

On March 11, the Jatiya Sangsad passed a resolution to observe the day as Genocide Day.

From now on, the Government of Bangladesh will observe March 25 as Genocide Day.

“The foreign ministry has started efforts to have the day recognised internationally,” Cabinet Secretary M Shafiul Alam said in a press briefing after the meeting.

What significance will UN recognition have? First, it will officially document the atrocities of war against this population by a brutal regime. For humanity to move forward, it has strong significance. A crime has been committed and that has to be recognised as a crime. Otherwise, humanity will see recurrence of genocides. It is also a process of shaming the perpetrators.

Secondly, if Bangladesh takes forward charges against the Pakistani leaders and soldiers for war crimes in international courts, this recognition will help it happen as such recognition has been in the case of the Bosnian genocide.
 
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Genocide by Indian sponsored terrorist organization such as Mutki Bahini must be investigated and all those involved must be punished severely.

Indian sponsored terrorist organization have killed already millions in the region for the last 50+ years.

Punishing and sanctioning them will send a strong signal.

While we are at it, the Indian genocide in Kashmir, Gujrat, Sri Lanka and elsewhere should also be taken into account.
 
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Genocide by Indian sponsored terrorist organization such as Mutki Bahini must be investigated and all those involved must be punished severely.

Indian sponsored terrorist organization have killed already millions in the region for the last 50+ years.

Punishing and sanctioning them will send a strong signal.

While we are at it, the Indian genocide in Kashmir, Gujrat, Sri Lanka and elsewhere should also be taken into account.
Ok Sir, Please update your thoughts to the deligation defending your case... :-)
 
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India will support this resolution to help bangladesh get justice against genocide caused by pakistan in 1971.
Go ahead bangladesh.
 
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Ok Sir, Please update your thoughts to the deligation defending your case... :-)

Indian financed/armed Mukti Bahini terrorists have killed hundreds of thousands in Bangladesh
Indian financed/armed LTTE terrorists have killed hundreds of thousands in Sri Lanka
Indian financed/armed BLA and TTP have killed thousands in Pakistan
Indian army is currently busy in genocide in Kashmir
Indian hindu fanatics have lynched thousands from minorities in India

It is high time that Indian atrocities are highlighted whenever India plays victim card and spits venom against Pakistan anywhere in the world.
 
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Indian financed/armed Mukti Bahini terrorists have killed hundreds of thousands in Bangladesh
Indian financed/armed LTTE terrorists have killed hundreds of thousands in Sri Lanka
Indian financed/armed BLA and TTP have killed thousands in Pakistan
Indian army is currently busy in genocide in Kashmir
Indian hindu fanatics have lynched thousands from minorities in India

It is high time that Indian atrocities are highlighted whenever India plays victim card and spits venom against Pakistan anywhere in the world.
lol, Did you read through the OP, it is your own ex-countrymen of east pakistan now bangladesh wants to bring genocide recognitions and you are blaming India... who is playing a dehati aurat here ... ?:azn:
 
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Indian financed/armed Mukti Bahini terrorists have killed hundreds of thousands in Bangladesh
Indian financed/armed LTTE terrorists have killed hundreds of thousands in Sri Lanka
Indian financed/armed BLA and TTP have killed thousands in Pakistan
Indian army is currently busy in genocide in Kashmir
Indian hindu fanatics have lynched thousands from minorities in India

It is high time that Indian atrocities are highlighted whenever India plays victim card and spits venom against Pakistan anywhere in the world.
Coming form world Champions of Self Victimization.. this sounds hilarious...
 
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lol, Did you read through the OP, it is your own ex-countrymen of east pakistan now bangladesh wants to bring genocide recognitions and you are blaming India... who is playing a dehati aurat here ... ?:azn:

I am just saying that the real responsible of that "genocide" should be named and shamed first. And that is without any doubt India...
 
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I am just saying that the real responsible of that "genocide" should be named and shamed first. And that is without any doubt India...
ahh first means.. , infact that means you admit Pakistan has manythins to be blamed for... either 1st or 2nd or Thrid... thanks mate...:tup:
 
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What a waste of time. The world has moved on and has more important things to worry about like situation in Syria or rise of ISIS in Afghanistan or refugees in Europe.

Nobody has time for this BS except BD and India. Let the two fools continue with the buffoonery.
 
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People are starving in BD and they want a crusade on what happened in 1971. Does anyone care now. What's done is done. Move on
 
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it won;t be successful because then what about genocides of hitler, oh forget that stalin... oh wait not yet, Mao yeah he killed people indiscriminately.... oh wait .... the mongols aka genghis khan.... that guy is suppsoed to be the lord of death or something.... my point is .... bangladesh is not the only country that has been the victims of genocide... there are countless others who suffered way worse.... they will raise demands too.....
 
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To be honest, there is indeed certain evidence of "systematic" atrocities in 1971, particularly against the Bengali Hindus...

But then, the way we have politicized the issue, it's really hard to get international recognition for that... And the recent sham trials in the so-called International Crimes Tribunal has just made it a losing cause...
 
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India will support this resolution to help bangladesh get justice against genocide caused by pakistan in 1971.
Go ahead bangladesh.
India is no friend of Bangladesh. You fake sympathy with Bangladesh just to get back at Pakistan. How pathetic can you people be? You have no remorse in your heart for this?
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Shooting young children on your borders? We can all see the fickle nature of Indians here.
 
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