Thursday, April 18, 2013

Killing Spree of Jamat Takes New Turn


Jamat-e-Islami Bangladesh, a terrorist outfit, orchestrated a mob attack on ruling Awami League’s anti-shutdown procession by supporters of the Jamaat-e-Islami and Hifazat-e Islam on Thursday (11th April 2013) left at least three people dead in Chittagong’s Fatickchari Upazila. The Islami Chhatra Shibir, Jamaat’s student front, had called the shutdown for Thursday demanding release of their President Delwar Hussen. Witnesses said, reports news media, the procession was attacked near Kazir Haat under Bhujpur Police Station at around 1:30pm following a call made on the loudspeakers of a mosque in the area. Three firefighters were also attacked as they tried to extinguish the fire of the vehicles, and a fire service vehicle was vandalised by the attackers. When the procession neared Bhujpur, an announcement was made from the loudspeakers of Kazir Haat’s ‘Boro Madrassa’ mosque saying criminals were approaching to attack the madrasa, ASP AFM Nizam Uddin of Hathazari circle said quoting witnesses. Students of the madrasa and local Jamaat supporters began hurling brickbats at the procession and attacked them with bamboo sticks and sharp weapons.

Regarding the incident, one of the leading dailies of Bangladesh reports, Local Jamaat-Shibir men, including Bhujpur union parishad Chairman Shafiul Alam Nuri, were involved in Thursday’s attacks on law enforcers and an Awami League procession in the union, according to primary police investigation. Nuri and 34 others of more than 5,000 accused in the case filed in connection with the attack were produced before a Chittagong court yesterday.... “From footage, local sources and witnesses, we have confirmed that Jamaat-Shibir men, particularly the Bhujpur union parishad chairman, and its member Taskeer, were involved in the attack,” he said. On Thursday, alleged Jamaat-Shibir men, joined by several thousand villagers, attacked an AL motor procession and law enforcers following a rumour that the marchers had killed a madrasa teacher and were about to attack the Kazirhat mosque and a Hefajat-run madrasa. Three people were killed and more than 100 people, including 15 policemen, four fire fighters and two border guards, were injured in the attack. The attackers also set fire to around 100 vehicles, including 50 motorbikes and a fire-fighting vehicle.

Another report of Daily Star, informs, “Grassroots-level activists of Jamaat-e-Islami are preparing to unleash again vicious protests in the country sensing the international crimes tribunals may convict their former chief Ghulam Azam and leader Kamaruzzaman of war crimes charges. The two tribunals are set to deliver any day the verdicts in the cases against the two top figures of the party. Some district-level senior Jamaat leaders yesterday told The Daily Star that they would enforce hartals and other sorts of protests from the moment the tribunals deliver verdicts convicting the Jamaat leaders.”

The reports reveal few alarming aspects of violence and terror used by Jamat-e-Islami Bangladesh in recent months. It is true that Jamat-e-Islami is using medieval forms of violence (such as cutting of veins and limbs or slaughtering its opponents and religious minorities) from its very emergence. However, in recent months, it is using violence within a targeted approach of spreading insecurity at large to dismantle the on going trails of its leaders for crimes against humanity. In this regard, after attacking the uniform and legal institutions, it targeted public infrastructures and utilities so that the government is pressed to negotiate with Jamat. Given this sequential patterns of these waves of violence, it was only a matter of that Jamat had targeted political activists and leading political figures (such as Faruk Iqbal Bipul, Vice-President of Youth League, killed by Jamat on 11th April) . So what’s new?

-         First; jamat is playing with the emotion of general Muslims to create mob attacks by spreading rumors of attacks either on Islam or on Islamic values or on Islamic institutions etc. by alleged groups of “atheists”. It is important to note that as Jamat has no respect for the Islamic values of peace, harmony and tolerance- it has no limitation in fabricating and thereby misleading the mass to meet their violent goals.
-         Second, Jamat has masked its organization within a fake identity of an Islamic-social-movement called the Custodian of Islam (Hifazat-e-Islam). They are using this platform to portray as if those who are not politically linked with Jamat are supporting its cause as it would “protect” Islam. This ploy is revealed through the conversations between Jamat leader and leader of Hifazat-e-Islam telecasted in national news media. In this scandalous recording Jamat was found to instruct the Hifazat leadership.
-         Third, Jamat is not merely carrying out violent actions against political oppositions, at this stage; it is using a strategy of raising death-toll at any cost. This means, along with targeted attacks and killings by its killing-squad- it is pushing misled crowd to attack armed law enforcing authorities to an extent that it leads to causalities at both ends.
-         Last, Jamat is documenting all the killings on visual media and web-casting these to meet two objectives- primarily to spread fear and then to inspire all of its supporters to take on similar path of violence. During the latest attack in Chittagong, when the chased activists took refuge inside a school, Jamat’s killing-squad surrounded them and brutally jumped on them in medieval fashion. At the same time, they were making video clips on modern gadgets which could later found on YouTube. If these footage are viewed by anyone s/he will not have any hesitation in supporting the position of Bangladesh, in its move to ban this terrorist outfit.

Soon another verdict will be announced by the International Crime Tribunal of Bangladesh. This time it is Golam Azam- a man facing a strong probability of receiving the highest punishment for being the mastermind behind the paramilitary force accused of committing genocide during 1971. It is important to note that Golam Azam has been always treated as a war criminal of the Bangladesh liberation war by the general mass because there is no shortage of evidence against him. Jamat-e-Islam did not consider this negative public image of the man as a liability. In fact, Jamat did not choose to remove any of the self-proclaimed or socially branded war criminals from its rank during the last forty odd years. As for example Golam Azam was the Ameer of Jamaat-e-Islami Bangladesh until 2000.

Verdict of Golam Azam is critical as Jamat is certainly looking at this as an opportunity of accelerating its violent campaign. As it is a fascist and undemocratic outfit, Jamat cannot be negotiated through dialogue. It is high time to ban this undemocratic instrument of atrocity. Only then can there be a fair chance of practicing Islam in Bangladesh by real Muslims for whom Islam stands for peace, harmony and tolerance.