§ indicates events in the internal resistance movement linked to the Indo-Pakistani War. ‡ indicates events in the Indo-Pakistani War linked to the internal resistance movement in Bangladesh.
In 1971, the
Pakistan Army and their local collaborators, most notably the extreme right wing militia group
Al-Badr, engaged in the
systematic execution of
Bengali intellectuals during the
Bangladesh Liberation War of 1971. Bengali intellectuals were abducted, tortured and killed during the entire duration of the war as part of the
1971 Bangladesh genocide. However, the largest number of systematic executions took place on 25 March and 14 December 1971, two dates that bookend the conflict. 14 December is commemorated in Bangladesh as
Martyred Intellectuals Day.
On 25 March 1971, the Pakistan army launched an extermination campaign, codenamed
Operation Searchlight, against the Bengali people in East Pakistan.[2] A number of professors, physicians and journalists were abducted from their homes by armed Pakistani soldiers and their local collaborators, and executed during this operation and its aftermath.[3][4]
14 December executions
As the war neared its end and
Pakistani surrender became apparent, the Pakistan Army made a final effort to eliminate the intelligentsia of the new nation of Bangladesh.[5] On 14 December 1971, over 200 Bengali intellectuals including professors, journalists, doctors, artists, engineers, and writers were abducted from their homes in
Dhaka by the
Al-Badr militia and the Pakistan Army. Notable novelist
Shahidullah Kaiser and playwright
Munier Choudhury were among the victims. They were taken blindfolded to torture cells in Mirpur, Mohammadpur,
Nakhalpara, Rajarbagh and other locations in different parts of the city. Later they were executed en masse, most notably at Rayerbazar and Mirpur. In memory of the martyred intellectuals, 14 December is mourned in Bangladesh as Shaheed Buddhijibi Dibosh, or
Day of the Martyred Intellectuals.[6]
After the liberation of Bangladesh a list of Bengali intellectuals was discovered in a page of Major General
Rao Farman Ali's diary left behind at the Governor's House. The existence of such a list was confirmed by Ali himself although he denied the motive of genocide. The same was also confirmed by
Altaf Gauhar, a former Pakistani bureaucrat. He mentioned an incident in which Gauhar asked Ali to remove a friend's name from the list and Ali did so in his presence.[7]
Notable victims
Many notable intellectuals who were killed from 25 March to 16 December 1971 in different parts of the country include:
On 3 November 2013, a Special Court in Dhaka has sentenced two former leaders of the al-Badr killing squad to death for war crimes committed in December 1971.
Chowdhury Mueen-Uddin, based in London, and
Ashrafuz Zaman Khan, based in the US, were sentenced in absentia after the court found that they were involved in the abduction and murders of 18 intellectuals – nine Dhaka University professors, six journalists and three physicians – in December 1971. Prosecutors said the killings were carried out between 10 and 15 December, when Pakistan was losing the war in Bangladesh (then East Pakistan), and were part of a campaign intended to strip the newborn nation of its intellectuals.[43]
On 2 November 2014,
International Crimes Tribunal, Bangladesh sentenced
Mir Quasem Ali to death for war crimes which include the killings of intellectuals. It was proved in the tribunal that he was a key organiser of the
Al-Badr, which planned and executed the killing of the intellectuals on 14 December 1971.[44][45]
Statistics
The number of intellectuals killed is estimated in
Banglapedia[1] as follows:
Academics – 991
Journalists – 13
Physicians – 49
Lawyers – 42
Others (litterateurs, artists and engineers) – 16
The district wise break-up of the number of martyred academicians and lawyers published in 1972[46] was as follows –
Martyred academicians (not affiliated to universities) = 968
Martyred university teachers = 21
Total martyred academicians = 989
Administrative districts and divisions mentioned here are as they were in 1972.
Denial of genocidal intent
In a 2018 article
Christian Gerlach rejected the claims of
coordinated attempt to exterminate the Bengali intelligentsia by using statistical measures: "if one accepts the data published by the Bangladesh propaganda ministry, 4.2 per cent of all university professors were killed, along with 1.4 per cent of all college teachers, 0.6 per cent of all secondary and primary school teachers, and 0.6 per cent of all teaching personnel. On the basis of the aforementioned Ministry of Education data, 1.2 per cent of all teaching personnel were killed. This is hardly proof of an extermination campaign."[47]
Martyred Intellectuals Day is held annually to commemorate the victims. In
Dhaka, hundreds of thousands of people walk to
Mirpur to lay flowers at the
Martyred Intellectuals Memorial. The president and the prime minister of Bangladesh and heads of all three wings of the Bangladesh armed forces pay homage at the memorial.[48]
^Mamoon, Muntassir (June 2000). The Vanquished Generals and the Liberation War of Bangladesh. Translated by Ibrahim, Kushal. Somoy Prokashon. p. 29.
ISBN984-458-210-5.
^Bangladesh – The Victory Day Memento published by the government of
People's Republic of Bangladesh, 16 December 1972; Editor – Syed Ali Ahsan
^Gerlach, Christian (20 July 2018). "East Pakistan/Bangladesh 1971–1972: How Many Victims, Who, and Why?". The Civilianization of War the Changing Civil–Military Divide, 1914–2014: 116–140.
doi:
10.1017/9781108643542.007.
ISBN9781108643542.