A court in Bangladesh yesterday sentenced British Member of Parliament Tulip Siddiq to two years in jail after a judge ruled she was complicit in corrupt land deals with her aunt, the country’s deposed prime minister Sheikh Hasina.
A judge found Siddiq, the Labour MP for Hampstead and Highgate, guilty of misusing her “special influence” as a British politician to coerce Hasina into giving valuable pieces of land to her mother, brother and sister.
Siddiq’s mother, Sheikh Rehana, was given seven years in prison and considered the prime participant in the case.
Photo: AP
The trial had been carried out in absentia: Neither Hasina, Siddiq, Rehana nor more than a dozen other members of her family accused in the case were in the court as the verdict was read out.
The UK does not have an extradition treaty with Bangladesh and it is unlikely Siddiq would serve the sentence.
Siddiq had denied the charges, claiming that much of the evidence presented by prosecutors was forged. She had been put on trial as a Bangladeshi citizen, with a passport and tax ID, even though she said she had not held a Bangladeshi passport since childhood and had never paid taxes there.
After the verdict, Siddiq said she hoped it would be met with the “contempt it deserves.”
“This whole process has been flawed and farcical from the beginning to the end,” she said.
“The outcome of this kangaroo court is as predictable as it is unjustified. I hope this so-called ‘verdict’ will be treated with the contempt it deserves. My focus has always been my constituents in Hampstead and Highgate and I refuse to be distracted by the dirty politics of Bangladesh,” she added.
Last week, a group of leading Brtish lawyers, including a former Conservative justice secretary, told Bangladesh’s ambassador that the trial against Siddiq was “artificial, contrived and unfair.”
Due to their absence, the accused in the case were denied access to defense lawyers, and a lawyer who attempted to represent Siddiq and others alleged she was threatened and put under house arrest.
Siddiq, a former Cabinet minister, claimed had been caught up in a politically motivated attack on her aunt Hasina, whose 15-year rule of Bangladesh was marred with authoritarianism, corruption and human rights abuses.
Last month, Hasina was sentenced to death for crimes against humanity by a special tribunal in Dhaka, for her role in the massacre of more than 1,000 people who took part in anti-government protests last year that eventually led to her downfall. Last week, she was given a further 21-year prison sentence on corruption charges.
Hasina has remained in exile in India since her fall from power in August last year, and the country has yet to respond to extradition requests by Bangladesh for her to return to serve her sentence.
During Hasina’s tenure, Siddiq was pictured several times with Hasina in Bangladesh. In January, she stepped down as Treasury minister amid allegations that she had used properties linked to the Hasina regime, though an inquiry later found she had broken no rules.
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