Barguna massacre

Barguna massacre
বরগুনা গণহত্যাকান্ড
Location Barguna, Patuakhali district, Bangladesh
Date 29–30 May 1971 (UTC+6:00)
Target Bengali Hindus and Awami Leaguers
Weapons Firearms
Deaths More than 100
Perpetrators Pakistan Armed Forces, Peace Committee

The Barguna massacre (Bengali: বরগুনা গণহত্যাকান্ড) was the mass execution of unarmed residents of Barguna in the Barguna sub-divisional jail by the Pakistan Armed Forces on 29 and 30 May 1971. More than 100 people were killed.[1] Seventy-two of them were identified; the majority were Bengali Hindus, the rest Muslims, mostly supporters of the Bangladesh Awami League and sovereign Bangladesh.[2] In 1992, a memorial was constructed with a marble plaque containing the names of the 72 victims and six other victims killed elsewhere.[3]

Background

In 1969, Patuakhali district was carved out of the erstwhile Bakerganj district.[4] The Patuakhali district consisted of the Patuakhali Sadar and Barguna sub-division. On 25 April 1971, the Pakistan Armed Forces launched Operation Barisal to capture Barisal. On 26 April, they occupied the Patuakhali district town.[2] Major Raja Nadir Pervez Khan of the 6 Punjab Regiment was appointed as the Martial Law Administrator of Patuakhali district.

On 14 May, the Pakistan Armed Forces arrived at Barguna in a gunboat and took control of the town.[5] On 15 May, they took captive some residents of Patharghata and brought them to Barguna. Some of the captives were killed on the banks of Bishkhali the rest were imprisoned in the Barguna sub-divisional jail. Lakshman Das, a noted Bengali Hindu businessman from Patharghata and his three sons were among the imprisoned.[3] The Pakistan Armed Forces then left for Patuakhali.[2]

After the Pakistan Armed Forces left Barguna, the Peace Committee members announced that the Hindus can come back to town. None of them except the caste Hindus would be killed.[6] After getting the assurance from the Peace Committee, many Bengali Hindus returned to their homes in Barguna. Service holders joined their office,[3] others opened their shops.[6]

Killings

Major Nadir Pervez (left)

On 26 May, a contingent of five soldiers led by Captain Shafayet secretly arrived from Patuakhali in a speedboat.[3] From the morning of 27 May, the Pakistani soldiers and their local collaborators raided the Barguna town. It was raining incessantly from the morning and most of the residents stayed indoors. Being unaware of the raid they did not get a chance to flee the town.[2] The raiders targeted the Hindu localities of Amtala, Karmakarpatti and Nathpatti.[6] By the evening they arrested around 500 - 600 residents, tied them with ropes and took them to the Barguna sub-divisional jail.

The captive men and women were segregated in separate male and female wards. According to eye witness accounts there were around 150 female captives.[2] The Pakistani soldiers used to pick up women according to their choice. If anybody refused, she was kicked or beaten up with the rifle butts or sometimes shot dead.[2] The women were then taken to an adjacent empty ward, where they were gang-raped by the soldiers throughout the night. Some women were sent to the C & B bunglow where the Pakistan Armed Forces and the Peace Committee members set up their temporary camp.[3] In the morning, the women were returned to the female ward of the prison. Some of the women were draped with red sarees to hide the blood stains resulting from rapes.[2]

On 28 May, Major Nadir Pervez arrived in Barguna.[7] On 29 May, Major Pervez constituted a tribunal within the Barguna sub-divisional jail for the trial of the inmates and left for Patuakhali.[2] The tribunal sentenced the Bengali Hindus and the Muslims who supported the idea of sovereign Bangladesh to death after a brief trial. When the first bell rang in the Barguna Zilla School adjacent to the jail, the Pakistani soldiers fired at their targets.[7] Lakshman Das and his son Arun Das were killed in the massacre.[3] Dr. Krishna Das, a popular doctor of Barguna did not die immediately after being shot. He tried to escape by crawling across the WAPDA road, when his head was smashed by a spade.[3]

After the killings, Peace Committee members buried the dead in the south western region of the jail compound.[7] According to eye witness accounts many women were denied the right to cremate their husbands.[2]

According to Dr. M. A. Hasan, the Convener of War Crimes Facts Finding Committee, 55 persons were killed on the first day and 36 people were killed on the next day.[7] In other accounts the death toll is mentioned in hundreds.[2]

Aftermath

Many of the survivors were taken to Patuakhali and killed.[3] Later on many people were killed in the prison compound during the course of the Bangladesh Liberation War.[2] According to Dr. M.A.Hasan thousands of innocent people were killed by the Pakistan Armed Forces in the Patharghata, Amtali, Betagi and Bamni areas of the sub-division.[7] However, no authentic data is available on the total numbers of deaths in the then Barguna sub-division or present day Barguna District.[2] The victims of the massacre has been officially recognized as martyrs of the Liberation War by the Bangladesh government.[2]

See also

References

  1. Kamal, Md. Monir Hossain (2012). "Barguna District". In Islam, Sirajul. Banglapedia (Revised 2nd. ed.). Dhaka: Asiatic Society of Bangladesh. Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Howladar, Manotosh (15 December 2013). "বরগুনা জেলখানার গণহত্যায় নিহত শহীদদের স্বজনরা এখনও উপেক্ষিত". Mathbaria Protidin (in Bengali). Retrieved 22 December 2014.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Kamal, Monir Hossain (29 May 2012). "২৯ ও ৩০ মে বরগুনা গণহত্যা দিবস". amaderbarisal.com (in Bengali). Barisal. Retrieved 28 December 2014.
  4. "Patuakhali District Information". amardesh.com. Retrieved 22 December 2014.
  5. "Barguna martyrs remembered". Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha. 29 May 2014. Retrieved 22 December 2014.
  6. 1 2 3 Das, Shankar Lal (5 April 2014). "বরগুনার গণহত্যা ॥ শহীদ স্বজনদের যন্ত্রণা". The Daily Janakantha (in Bengali). Dhaka. Retrieved 28 December 2014.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 Hasan, M. A. (14 July 2010). "যুদ্ধাপরাধ বিষয়ে বিব্রত পাকিস্তান এবং আমাদের কথা". Kaler Kantho (in Bengali). Dhaka. Retrieved 27 December 2014.

Coordinates: 22°09′15″N 90°07′35″E / 22.1541°N 90.1265°E / 22.1541; 90.1265

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/29/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.