Bangladeshi authorities yesterday moved to hang a top Muslim leader for overseeing a massacre during the nation’s 1971 independence war, after he refused to seek clemency from the nation’s president.
Mohammad Kamaruzzaman, the third-most senior figure in the Jamaat-e-Islami party, was originally expected to be hanged in the early hours yesterday morning, but the execution was postponed at the last minute.
No official reason was given for the delay, but Bangladeshi State Minister for Home Affairs Asaduzzaman Khan told reporters the 62-year-old was set to be hanged in the capital’s main jail yesterday.
“The hanging of Kamaruzzaman ... will take place today [Saturday],” Khan said in remarks published by the mass circulation Bengali daily Prothom Alo.
On Friday, security was stepped up outside the jail where Kamaruzzaman was being held, the police said.
Two magistrates visited him in prison to find out whether he would seek clemency from Bangladeshi President Abdul Hamid, but the pair made no comment after the visit.
However, Khan said the authorities had decided Kamaruzzaman would not be granted any more time to seek mercy.
“No, he won’t be given any more time,” the minister told reporters.
The move to execute him comes after the nation’s highest court rejected Kamaruzzaman’s final legal appeal on Monday, upholding the original death sentence handed down to him by a controversial domestic war crimes court in May 2013.
Kamaruzzaman was convicted of abduction, torture and mass murder, including a slaughter in a remote northern hamlet that has since become known as the “Village of Widows.”
The conviction confirmed allegations that Kamaruzzaman was one of the chief organizers of a pro-Pakistan militia that killed thousands of people.
The conflict led to the creation of an independent Bangladesh from what was then East Pakistan.
If the execution is carried out, Kamaruzzaman would become the second Muslim so far hanged for war crimes in the nation, although several others have been handed death sentences.
The UN on Wednesday urged Bangladesh against carrying out the sentence, saying his trial did not meet “fair international” standards.
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