logo
Ousted Bangladesh leader Sheikh Hasina formally charged with crimes against humanity

Ousted Bangladesh leader Sheikh Hasina formally charged with crimes against humanity

Independent2 days ago

Prosecutors in Bangladesh have formally charged ousted prime minister Sheikh Hasina with crimes against humanity for her alleged involvement in mass killings during last year's anti-government protests.
Ms Hasina fled by helicopter to India after a student-led protest turned into an anti-government uprising against her 15-year-long authoritarian rule in the South Asian country.
The UN estimates up to 1,400 people were killed between July and August last year during the monsoon protests when Ms Hasina's Awami League government launched its crackdown on demonstrators in Dhaka.
Bangladesh's International Crimes Tribunal (ICT) found that Ms Hasina 'directly ordered' state security forces, her party and affiliated groups to conduct operations, which resulted in mass casualties.
"Upon scrutinising the evidence, we reached the conclusion that it was a coordinated, widespread and systematic attack," Mohammad Tajul Islam, ICT chief prosecutor, told the court.
"The accused unleashed all law enforcement agencies and her armed party members to crush the uprising," he added.
Mr Islam had filed charges against Ms Hasina and two other officials, who were also officially charged on Sunday, for "abetment, incitement, complicity, facilitation, conspiracy, and failure to prevent mass murder during the July uprising".
Prosecutors argued that Ms Hasina, as the then-head of the government, was responsible for the security force operations during the unrest.
The ICT in October last year issued arrest warrant for the former prime minister as well as 45 of her cabinet ministers, advisors, and military and civil officials. She continues to live in New Delhi, close to the corridors of power in the capital, evading an extradition bid.
The power vacuum in Bangladesh was quickly filled with a caretaker government led by long-time Hasina critic and Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus, who returned to the country to be named interim leader. Almost a year since the protests, Bangladeshis await a democratic election to pick their new leader.
However, in a controversial move, Bangladesh's Election Commission this month cancelled the registration of Awami League, preventing it from participating in the next national election, which is expected to be held by June next year.
The interim government said it outlawed all activities 'including any kind of publication, media, online and social media" as well as "any kind of campaign, procession, meeting, gathering (or) conference until the trial of the leaders and activists … is completed".

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Stalker shoots dead beauty influencer TikTok star hours after she posted final video cutting her 17th birthday cake
Stalker shoots dead beauty influencer TikTok star hours after she posted final video cutting her 17th birthday cake

Daily Mail​

time8 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Stalker shoots dead beauty influencer TikTok star hours after she posted final video cutting her 17th birthday cake

A man has been arrested in Pakistan for shooting a TikTok star dead just hours after she posted a video of herself celebrating her 17th birthday, according to police. Sana Yousaf, who turned 17 last week and had more than a million followers across her social media accounts, was killed at her home in the capital Islamabad on Monday evening. The 22-year-old man arrested on suspicion of her murder had spent hours loitering outside her home in the lead up to her death, police said. 'It was a case of repeated rejections. The boy was trying to reach out to her time and again,' Islamabad police chief Syed Ali Nasir Rizvi said during a news conference. 'It was a gruesome and cold-blooded murder,' Rizvi added. Yousaf had more than 800,000 followers on TikTok, a wildly popular platform in Pakistan, where she posted lip-sync videos, skincare tips, and promotional content for beauty products. The last video posted on her account was hours before her murder, in which she was seen cutting a cake for her birthday. The comments section of the video was flooded with tributes from fans and fellow TikTok creators, with many reading: 'Rest in Peace' and 'Justice for Sana'. Influencer Waliya Najib wrote: 'This doesn't feel real. You were glowing, just being 17. I'm so sorry this world didn't protect you. Rest in peace, sweetheart.' UK-based content creator Kashaf Ali wrote: 'This is so awful. A literal 17 year old with so much innocence, killed for what?' Violence against women is pervasive in Pakistan according to the country's Human Rights Commission, and cases of women being attacked after rejecting marriage proposals are not uncommon. Earlier this year, a father who moved his family from the United States to Pakistan was arrested after shooting his daughter dead in an alleged 'honour killing' over her use of social media. Anwar ul-Haq, believed to be a US citizen, was charged with murder after he admitted to shooting his 15-year-old daughter Hira dead. Mr ul-Haq had reportedly forbidden his daughter from making TikTok videos which he deemed 'inappropriate', and decided to kill her when she continued to post. Hira's family 'had an objection to her dressing, lifestyle and social gathering,' according to police. He said the father of the 15-year-old girl initially suggested that an unidentified gunman had killed his daughter, but after he was taken into custody for questioning he confessed to the crime. In 2021, 27-year-old Noor Mukadam was beheaded by her Pakistani-American boyfriend, Zahir Jaffer, after she rejected his marriage proposal in a case that sparked widespread anger. In 2016, Khadija Siddiqui survived being stabbed 23 times by a jilted ex-boyfriend. Yousaf's death comes after another TikTok beauty influencer was brutally murdered last month. Valeria Marquez, a 23-year-old TikToker and aesthetician, was shot multiple times while broadcasting live from inside her beauty salon in western Mexico. Her senseless killing was just another example of the violence against women epidemic which Mexico is grappling with. The country has long been plagued by 'machismo' culture and violence against women, which can range from comments on the street to, in its most extreme form, acid attacks and brutal murders.

Bradford healthy diet courses focus on South Asian communities
Bradford healthy diet courses focus on South Asian communities

BBC News

time18 hours ago

  • BBC News

Bradford healthy diet courses focus on South Asian communities

"Our South Asian diet is a high-carb diet and actually high sugar as well," says Shanaz Begum."People struggle to eat healthily and to know what healthy eating is."That chapati, how much sugar has it got? You wouldn't think it's got that much sugar in it, but it actually has."Ms Begum is a former NHS employee who gives up some of her free time to volunteer at sessions on healthy eating and weight management in helps to run a free 12-week course, funded by Bradford Council, focusing on South Asian organisers say those communities face particular challenges when it comes to their health, diet and lifestyle. At today's session, those attending sit and chat enthusiastically as they discuss the merits - or otherwise - of various cooking learn about the nutritional values of a range of foods, from South Asian staples to traditional breakfast cereals, as well as sharing recipes and cooking session ends with 10 minutes of Maheshwari, project lead, says: "South Asians tend to gather their fat around the visceral organs, around the waist, so their BMI [Body Mass Index] is slightly different."The festivals, eating patterns, cooking styles and traditional foods are different, so it is very important to focus on that population." BMI is used by the NHS to assess whether people are a healthy weight and is calculated by dividing a person's weight in kilograms by the square of their height in white people, a BMI of 25 or higher is classed as overweight, but for people from black or Asian backgrounds, this figure is means people of the same height and weight can be classed as "healthy" if they are white, but they can be considered "overweight" if they are black or to the NHS, this is because "people from an Asian, Black African, African-Caribbean or Middle Eastern ethnic background have a higher chance of developing health problems at a lower BMI".Dietician Nusrat Kausar, based in Bradford, says her home city provides its own challenges when it comes to staying healthy."In Bradford, there are a lot of takeaways," she says, with a rueful smile."We have a lot of food shops, streets and streets of desserts, fried food."So, a lot of the environment doesn't make it easy to eat healthily." Bimla Devi, who has recently started attending the sessions in Bradford along with her daughter and a friend, says there were good reasons for getting involved."In the past, I was pre-diabetic," she explains."I've gained weight again and had to go to the doctors. That's how I found out about this."Ms Devi says she thought the free sessions in Bradford were "new and different" compared to other weight-loss programmes."So, I thought I'd give it a go and, hopefully, it'll help my health and help my daughter and my friend as well." Meanwhile, fellow participant Gurdev Kaur says the course will "definitely" make her and her family healthier."It makes you more aware," she says."You look at the labels, you talk about exercise, you talk about well-being and you just learn from each other so much. "As a Sikh, your life journey is to learn things every day."Ms Begum says the courses taking place in Bradford are all about "sharing"."People are sharing their journeys, their recipes, what changes they're making and people are adapting it to their lifestyles as well. That is really powerful."This kind of group, it motivates people. I've seen the difference, I've learned from others, which has been brilliant, actually." Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.

Tulip Siddiq's aunt is charged with crimes against humanity in Bangladesh 'for her involvement in mass killings'
Tulip Siddiq's aunt is charged with crimes against humanity in Bangladesh 'for her involvement in mass killings'

Daily Mail​

timea day ago

  • Daily Mail​

Tulip Siddiq's aunt is charged with crimes against humanity in Bangladesh 'for her involvement in mass killings'

The aunt of Labour MP Tulip Siddiq has been charged with crimes against humanity for allegedly participating in mass killings during anti-government protests in Bangladesh. Arrest warrants have been issued for both the ousted Bangladeshi prime minister, Sheikh Hasina, and former interior minister Asaduzzaman Khan, who are understood to be in India. Chowdhury Abdullah Al Mamun, former police chief, has been arrested. It comes after Ms Hasina fled to India following student-led protests, which later became an anti-government uprising, saw the end of her 15-year rule in the South Asian state last August. According to the UN, as many as 1,400 people are believed to have been killed during protests last Summer after her Awami League government clamped down on marchers in Dhaka. Bangladesh's International Crimes Tribunal (ICT) said the autocratic ruler 'directly' instructed state security forces, her party as well as its associates to implement actions that led to mass killings and injuries. They also allege such operations saw targeted violence against women and children, wounded being denied medical treatment, and bodies being burnt. In an investigative report last May, the 77-year-old was named as a 'mastermind, conductor and superior commander' of the brutalities against protesters. The authoritarian leader provoked violence during a press conference at Ganabhaban on July 14, according to charges. One of the charges says Ms Hasina reportedly ordered for protesters to be killed using, lethal weapons, helicopters, and drones. Another alleges under similar instructions, officers shot and burned six unarmed protesters in the Bangladeshi capital on August 5, 2024. Manynul Karim, the International Crimes Tribunal prosecutor, claimed to the Telegraph: 'Eyewitness testified that a young protester among them was burned alive after being shot and left wounded. He was still alive as the bodies burned.' The charges part of a wider probe against Ms Hasina, whose premiership saw allegations of election-rigging to maintain her grip on the state, as well as accusations of human rights violations. The alleged human rights violations facing the 77-year-old include torture, extensive arbitrary arrests, extrajudicial executions as well as enforced disappearances of adults and children. 'We have strong evidence, including telephonic conversations, that Hasina, under her superior command responsibility, ordered crimes against humanity, including murder of students,' Mr Karim told the publication. 'If proven guilty, she will face capital punishment. If she doesn't join the trial, it will be presumed that she is involved in the crimes against humanity, and the court might start a trial in absentia.' Ms Hasina has not yet answered the charges placed against her, but if found guilty she could face a death sentence for the alleged crimes. A diplomatic row is currently brewing between India and Bangladesh after India confirmed they had received communication regarding Ms Hasina's extradition but had declined to comment further. It comes after the country's Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) has launched a larger probe into the reported illegal allocation of state-owned land and property by Ms Hasina to her children as well as family, which includes former Labour MP, Ms Siddiq. The investigation also involves claims Ms Siddiq and four family members embezzled £4 billion through a nuclear powerplant deal struck with Russia, Ms Siddiq resigned as City minister in January – after a corruption probe into her family had begun. Her family deny all the charges against them. Earlier this year, her lawyers sent a letter to the ACC accusing it of launching 'targeted and baseless' investigations into her, claiming the corruption allegations against their client are 'false and vexatious.' £90 million worth of properties tied to the ex Bangladeshi regime have since been frozen by the National Crime Agency (NCA) in the UK.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store