
Ex-Bangladesh leader authorised deadly crackdown, leaked audio suggests
In the audio, which was leaked online in March, Hasina says she authorised her security forces to "use lethal weapons" against protesters and that "wherever they find [them], they will shoot".
Prosecutors in Bangladesh plan to use the recording as crucial evidence against Hasina, who is being tried in absentia at a special tribunal for crimes against humanity.
Up to 1,400 people died in last summer's unrest, according to UN investigators. Hasina, who fled to India, and her party reject all charges against her.
A spokesperson for her Awami League party denied the tape showed any "unlawful intention" of "disproportionate response".
The leaked audio of Hasina's conversation with an unidentified senior government official is the most significant evidence yet that she gave direct authorisation to shoot anti-government protesters, tens of thousands of whom had taken to the streets by last summer.
The protests began against civil service job quotas for relatives of those who fought in the 1971 war of independence and escalated into a mass movement that ousted Hasina, who had been in power for 15 years. It is the worst violence Bangladesh had seen since the 1971 war.
Some of the bloodiest scenes occurred on 5 August, the day Hasina fled by helicopter before crowds stormed her residence in Dhaka.
The BBC World Service investigation established previously unreported details about a police massacre of protesters in the capital - including a much higher death toll.
Hasina was at her residence in Dhaka, known as the Ganabhaban, for the duration of the call which took place on 18 July, a source with knowledge of the leaked audio told the BBC.
It was a crucial moment in the demonstrations. Security officials were responding to public outrage at police killings of protesters captured on video and shared across social media. In the days following the call, military-grade rifles were deployed and used across Dhaka, according to police documents seen by the BBC.
The recording the BBC examined is one of numerous calls involving Sheikh Hasina that were made by the National Telecommunications Monitoring Centre (NTMC), a Bangladeshi government body responsible for monitoring communications.
The audio of the call was leaked in early March this year - it's unclear by whom. Since the protests, numerous clips of Hasina's calls have appeared online, many of them unverified.
The leaked 18 July recording was voice matched by the Criminal Investigation Department in the Bangladesh Police with known audio of Sheikh Hasina's voice.
The BBC conducted its own independent verification by sharing the recording with audio forensics experts Earshot, who found no evidence the speech had been edited or manipulated and said it was highly unlikely to have been synthetically generated.
Earshot said the leaked recording was likely to have been taken in a room with the phone call played back on a speaker, due to the presence of distinctive telephonic frequencies and background sounds. Earshot identified Electric Network Frequency (ENF) throughout the recording, a frequency that's often present in audio recordings due to interference between a recording device and mains-powered equipment, an indicator that the audio has not been manipulated.
Earshot also analysed Sheikh Hasina's speech – the rhythm, intonation and breath sounds - and identified consistent noise floor levels, finding no evidence of synthetic artefacts in the audio.
"The recordings are critical for establishing her role, they are clear and have been properly authenticated, and are supported by other evidence," British international human rights barrister Toby Cadman told the BBC. He is advising Bangladesh's International Criminal Tribunal (ICT), the court hearing cases against Hasina and others.
An Awami League spokesperson said: "We cannot confirm whether the tape recording referenced by the BBC is authentic."
Alongside Sheikh Hasina, former government and police officials have been implicated in the killings of protesters. A total of 203 individuals have been indicted by the ICT, of whom 73 are in custody.
BBC Eye analysed and verified hundreds of videos, images and documents detailing police attacks against demonstrators across 36 days.
The investigation found that in one incident on 5 August in Jatrabari, a busy Dhaka neighbourhood, at least 52 people were killed by police, making it one of the worst incidents of police violence in Bangladesh's history. Initial reports at the time suggested 30 dead in Jatrabari on that day.
The BBC investigation uncovered new details about how the massacre started and ended.
Gathering eyewitness footage, CCTV and drone imagery, BBC Eye established that police opened fire indiscriminately on protesters immediately after army personnel, who were separating the police from the protesters, vacated the area.
For more than 30 minutes the police shot at fleeing protesters as they tried to escape down alleyways and on the highway, before the police officers sought shelter in a nearby army camp. At least six police officers were also killed as protesters retaliated hours later, setting fire to the Jatrabari police station.
A spokesperson for the Bangladesh Police told the BBC that 60 police officers had been arrested for their role in the violence in July and August last year.
"There were regrettable incidents in which certain members of the then police force engaged in excessive use of force," said the spokesperson. "Bangladesh Police has launched thorough and impartial investigations."
Sheikh Hasina's trial began last month. She has been charged with committing crimes against humanity, including issuing orders that led to mass killings and targeted violence against civilians, as well as incitement, conspiracy and failure to prevent mass murder.
India has so far failed to comply with a Bangladeshi request for her extradition. It is unlikely that Hasina will return to the country for the trial, Mr Cadman said.
The Awami League maintains that its leaders are not liable for the force used against protesters.
"The Awami League categorically denies and rejects claims that some of its senior leaders, including the prime minister herself, were personally responsible for or directed the use of lethal force against crowds," a spokesperson for the party said.
"The decisions made by senior government officials were proportionate in nature, made in good faith and intended to minimise the loss of life."
The party has rejected the findings of United Nations investigators, who said they had found reasonable grounds to believe the actions of Hasina and her government could amount to crimes against humanity.
The BBC approached the Bangladesh army for comment but did not receive a response.
Since Hasina's fall, Bangladesh has been ruled by an interim government led by Nobel Prize winner Muhammad Yunus.
His government is preparing for national elections. It's unclear if the Awami League will be allowed to contest the vote. — BBC

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Arab News
an hour ago
- Arab News
Palestine envoy to Ireland praises author for support of group banned in UK
LONDON: The Palestinian ambassador to Ireland has praised author Sally Rooney for her support of the group Palestine Action, which is banned in the UK. 'Sally Rooney is using her voice to call out international law and human rights violations in Palestine,' Dr. Jilan Wahba Abdalmajid said on Monday. 'I hope these calls result in practical actions that will stop the horrors we're witnessing carried out by Israel in Palestine; to stop the genocide and forced displacement and end the Israeli occupation.' It comes after the award-wining writer said she would use earnings from BBC adaptations of her books to support Palestine Action following its proscription in the UK as a terrorist organization after a series of incidents, including activists breaking into a Royal Air Force base in England and spraying red paint on two military planes. Support for, or membership of, a proscribed group in the UK carries a potential prison term of up to 14 years. The 'Normal People' author wrote in the Irish Times that she would use her money and platform to support the group's 'direct action against genocide in whatever way I can,' and that if doing so 'makes me a 'supporter of terror' under UK law, so be it.' The BBC has said Rooney, who does not live in the UK, has never been employed by the corporation, and that her views and money are her own to do with as she chooses. 'Matters relating to proscribed organisations are for the relevant authorities,' a BBC spokesperson said in a statement.


Saudi Gazette
7 hours ago
- Saudi Gazette
War-torn Myanmar to hold first general election since 2021 coup
SINGAPORE — Myanmar will begin its general elections on 28 December, its military government announced, in a phased poll widely condemned as a sham that will be used to entrench the junta's power. This will be the first vote since the junta seized power in a bloody coup in 2021, and imprisoned democratically elected leader Aung San Sung Kyi. Myanmar has been embroiled in a civil war since, with deadly battles between the military and ethnic armed groups, many of whom have said they would not permit voting in their areas. Previous plans to hold an election were repeatedly delayed as the military has struggled to contain an opposition insurgency which has gained control over much of the country. Some 55 parties have registered for the polls, state media said Monday, adding that nine of them plan to compete for seats nationwide. "The first phase of the multi-party democratic general election for each parliament will begin on Sunday, 28 December 2025," Myanmar's election commission said in a statement."Dates for the subsequent phases will be announced later."With large parts of Myanmar under opposition control and in a state of war, holding this election is a formidable logistical exercise for the country's military the junta's leader Min Aung Hlaing, who led the catastrophic coup four and a half years ago, has said the vote must go ahead, and has threatened severe punishment for anyone who criticises or obstructs the National League for Democracy, led by Suu Kyi, which won landslides in the two elections prior to the coup, will not be allowed to contest this planned election has been widely dismissed, but it has the support of Myanmar's most powerful neighbour China, which views stability in the South East Asian nation as a vital strategic believe the junta will use the polls to maintain its power through proxy political Andrews, the United Nation's special rapporteur on the rights situation in Myanmar, had in June accused the junta of designing a "mirage of an election exercise" to give itself a veneer of called on the international community to reject the elections to "not allow the military junta to... get away with this fraud".Thousands of people have been killed across Myanmar since the coup, which has destroyed the economy across much of the country and left a humanitarian has also been hit by a devastating earthquake in March and international funding cuts, that have left vulnerable people in desperate and dangerous junta would be "delusional" to think that an election held under the current circumstances will be considered "remotely credible", Human Rights Watch told the BBC earlier this year."As a precursor to elections, they need to end the violence, release all those arbitrarily detained, and allow all political parties to register and participate instead of dissolving opposition parties," the NGO said. — BBC


Saudi Gazette
10 hours ago
- Saudi Gazette
Thousands cross Channel in small boats since new migrant deal with France
LONDON — More than 2,500 migrants have crossed the Channel in small boats in the 11 days since the new "one in, one out" agreement with France took effect, figures from the UK's Home Office show. The plan proposes that for each migrant the UK returns to France, another person with a strong case for asylum in Britain will be allowed to stay. Around 28,000 people have reached the UK in small boats so far this year and more than 50,000 have crossed since Labour came into power in July 2024. Meanwhile, a boat holding more than 100 people was reportedly sighted in the Channel this week. A Home Office spokesperson said the people-smuggling gangs "do not care if the vulnerable people they exploit live or die, as long as they pay". "That is why this government is implementing a serious and comprehensive plan to break the business model of the gangs, including enhanced cooperation with France to prevent small boat crossings and a pilot scheme to detain and return small boat migrants back to France." Rob Lawrie, a volunteer aid worker, told the BBC's Today Programme on Friday smugglers estimate they can send up to 150 people on boats. "That's a lot more people, overcrowding an extra large boat," he said. "We've already had reports of children getting crushed, not only in the rush but within the dinghy itself." He added it was unclear how many people were falling overboard during crossings. Crossings tend to increase in the summer months when the weather is calm in the Channel. Last August, more than 4,000 people made the journey. These numbers can vary depending on factors including the supply of boat parts and how actively the police are patrolling the beaches in northern France, to try to prevent boats from launching. The "one in, one out" pilot scheme was set up as part of a deal announced by Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and French President Emmanuel Macron during his state visit to the UK in July. The first group of people to arrive under the scheme were detained in Dover earlier this month. Removals to France have yet to take place and could take up to three months. When Labour came to power it promised to smash the gangs organising the crossings, but warned that it would not be quick or easy to do. Ministers are now under pressure to deliver results, though the deterrent effect of the returns deal may not become clear until deportations begin in earnest and increase in number. Speaking about the first detentions earlier this month, Sir Keir said: "If you break the law to enter this country, you will face being sent back. When I say I will stop at nothing to secure our borders, I mean it." Set to last 11 months, the project will see the UK accepting an equal number of asylum seekers who have not tried to cross and can pass security and eligibility checks. At the time, shadow home secretary Chris Philp criticised the government's new deal as "having no deterrent effect whatsoever". The National Crime Agency said it has had some success in disrupting the business model of the smugglers. Last week, 20 inflatable boats believed to be destined for the Channel were seized from a lorry in Bulgaria — the second such discovery in less than three weeks. The government says it's an illustration of the need for international cooperation to tackle illegal immigration. Afghans were the top nationality arriving by small boat in the year to March 2025, according to Home Office figures. Syrians made up the second largest group, followed by people from Iran, Vietnam and Eritrea. These five nationalities accounted for 61% of all arrivals. In 2024, almost one third of the 108,000 people who claimed asylum in the UK arrived on a small boat. The Home Office can remove people with no legal right to stay in the UK, or refuse to let them enter. But the 1951 Refugee Convention establishes the right to claim asylum in a foreign state if an applicant can prove they face a serious threat to life or freedom in their country of origin. — BBC