Human rights in Bangladesh
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2005 was a bad year for national security in Bangladesh. Nearly every day was marked by bombings, and on one day in particular, August 17, 2005, four hundred bombs exploded in all but one of the nation's sixty-four districts[1]. Consequentially, Bangladesh's record for human rights, which was already in question, has deteriorated. Bangladeshi security forces continue to be accused by Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch of grave abuses of human rights, including extrajudicial summary executions, excessive use of force and the use of custodial torture.[2]. Reporters and defenders of human rights continue to be harassed and intimidated by the authorities, worsened by the impunity afforded in legislation in 2003 to the country’s security forces that shields them from prosecution and public scrutiny [3]. The rights of such minorities as Hindus and Ahmadis are in a compromised state, and corruption is still a major problem, to the extent that Transparency International has listed Bangladesh as the most corrupt country in the world for five years running[4].
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[edit] Extrajudicial killings
In the 2001 national elections to the Jatiyo Sangshad, the right-wing Bangladesh Nationalist Party gained a majority, largely on the basis of their policy commitment to fight crime and terrorism within Bangladesh. Two years later, as a part of this drive, the government established the Rapid Action Battalion, an elite 'anti-crime' unit composed of armed personnel from several of the existing security branches. Since the RAB was set up, it has been constantly alleged that extrajudicial killings and instances of custodial torture have surged.
Between January and October 2005, an estimated 300 civilians having criminal records died due to 'encounter' killings[5], at the hands of law enforcement agencies and the RAB. Human rights groups have recorded many of these killings, and have demanded that each death be investigated, but the government have refused to meet these requests. The government has defended RAB for having cut serious crime by fifty percent, and have, as of 2006, dismissed international condemnation of RAB——against whom the European Parliament have issued a strong resolution[6]by saying that 'encounter killings' happen all over the world.
The government's tolerance towards human rights abuses is not a new phenomenon. Operation Clean Heart, an anti-crime operation that ran nationwide from October 2002 to January 2003, led to the death of approximately sixty people, the maiming of around three thousand individuals, and the arrest of more than forty-five thousand[7]. On the day that Operation Clean Heart was announced by the government as having ended, an ordinance was ratified that prohibited law-suits or prosecutions for human rights violations during that period, giving the armed forces and police impunity from being prosecuted for their actions[8].
[edit] Torture
RAB and other security agencies have been accused of using torture during custody and interrogation. One allegation of such came from a young man who was arrested in Dhaka for protesting against the assault of an old man by plainclothes RAB agents. He was later severely tortured[9]. On July 27, 2005, two brothers from Rajshahi, Azizur Rahman Shohel and Atiquer Rahman Jewel, were arrested on fabricated charges, beaten with batons and subjected to electric shocks [10]. It is alleged that this brutality stemmed from the brothers' family being incapable of paying a sufficient bribe. The brothers were tortured to such an extent that they were hospitalised at the Rajshahi Medical School Hospital under police custody[11].
[edit] Persecution of minority communities
Although Bangladesh is a party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, a covenant designed to ensure freedom of religion and of expression, it has tolerated violent assaults on religious minority communities by extremists.
In January 2004, the government succumbed to an ultimatum from their coalition partner, the Islami Okiya Jote, and from the extremist vigilante Khatme Nabuwat Movement to declare that Ahmadi people are not Muslims[12]. Not wishing to lose its majority, Ahmadiyya publications were declared as banned nationwide by the government. A constitutional court suspended the ban, but Islamist groups are threatening legal challenge to this.
Attacks on the homes and places of worship of Ahmadiyya are still prevalent, but the government has chosen neither to prosecute those responsible, nor discipline police officers who failed to protect victims. Other religious minorities have come under attack, with abductions, desecration of religious sites, and forced conversions[13] persistently reported. There have been many reports of Hindus having been evicted from their properties, and of Hindu girls being raped[14], but the police have refused to investigate, to this point. Due to this climate of religious persecution, several hundred thousand Buddhists, Hindus and Christians have quit the country[15].
[edit] Freedom of religion
Although initially Bangladesh opted for a secular nationalist ideology as embodied in its Constitution, the principle of secularism was subsequently replaced by a commitment to the Islamic way of life through a series of constitutional amendments and government proclamations between 1977 and 1988. The Constitution establishes Islam as the state religion but provides for the right to practice--subject to law, public order, and morality--the religion of one's choice. [16] The Government generally respects this provision in practice; however, some members of the Hindu, Christian, Buddhist, and Ahmadiya communities experience discrimination. The Government (2001-2006) led by an alliance of four parties Bangladesh Nationalist Party, Jamat-e-Islami Bangladesh, Islami Oikya Jote and Bangladesh Jatiyo Party banned the Ahmadiya literatures by an executive order.
[edit] Intimidation of Human rights defenders, journalists, and the opposition
Voices of opposition are ever more at risk in Bangladesh, as groups who document or speak out against the actions of the government have found themselves increasingly threatened and under attack. On January 27, 2005, Shah Abu Mohamed Shamsul Kibria, former Finance Minister and senior member of the secular Bangladesh Awami League, was assassinated[17]. This followed a 2004 attempt to assassinate the leader of the Awami League, Sheikh Hasina, in a bomb and grenade blast. She survived, but twenty-three members of her party were killed[18]. Other AL members, junior and senior alike, have reported harassment and intimidation.
Human rights organisations also operate under the threat of assault from the authorities and government supporters[19]. On August 8, 2005, a group of BNP members attacked two human rights activists, who had been investigating torture against an Ahmadi[20]. Journalists face the same fate: for three years, the organisation Reporters sans Frontières, has named Bangladesh the country with the largest number of journalists physically attacked or threatened with death. The government has no intention of protecting journalists, whereas Islamist groups continue to intensify their intimidation of the independent news media[21].
[edit] AIDS and Homosexuality in Bangladesh
Reported cases of HIV/AIDS are growing at an alarming extent, with over a million AIDS sufferers in Bangladesh[22]. Whilst this rise of AIDS is not confined to Bangladesh in particular, the government is doing nothing to prevent the spread of AIDS and is not prosecuting police who rape homosexual men.
Politically vulnerable groups at risk of HIV infection, such as sex workers and men who have sex with men, have not been educated about the risk of AIDS, nor protected by the authorities, and they have found themselves regularly assaulted, abducted, raped, gang raped, and subjected to extortion by the police and by powerful criminals [23]. Organisations have been established to stem the development of AIDS through education, but such projects have been curbed by police brutality towards members who work on them[24].
[edit] Notes and references
- ^ [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/4616594.stm Bangladesh 'militant' sentenced
- ^ Amnesty International
- ^ http://web.amnesty.org/report2004/bgd-summary-eng Ibid
- ^ http://ww1.transparency.org/cpi/2005/cpi2005_infocus.html
- ^ Bangladesh to probe nearly 300 extrajudicial killings by law enforcers : South Asia News Onlypunjab.com- Onlypunjab.com Latest News
- ^ http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?pubRef=-//EP//NONSGML+MOTION+B6-2005-0265+0+DOC+PDF+V0//EN
- ^ http://www.swadhinata.org.uk/misc/HUMAN%20RIGHTS%20WATCH%20REPORT%202006.doc
- ^ Bangladesh: Operation Clean Heart: Dhaka’s dirty war
- ^ http://www.redress.org/publications/Bangladesh.pdf
- ^ Bangladesh Human Rights Networks - banglarights.net
- ^ BANGLADESH: Brutal torture of two young men by the Boalia police in Rajsahi
- ^ Essential Background: Overview of human rights issues in Bangladesh (Human Rights Watch, 31-12-2005)
- ^ http://southasia.net/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=672
- ^ Bangladesh: Attacks on members of the Hindu minority | Amnesty International
- ^ Attacks on Hindu Minorities in Bangladesh
- ^ [1] Article 2A
- ^ The Daily Star Web Edition Vol. 5 Num 592
- ^ ULFA’s Involvement in Assassination Attempt on Sheikh Hasina - Bangladesh Monitor - Paper No. 5
- ^ Bangladesh: Human rights defenders under attack | Amnesty International
- ^ Essential Background: Overview of human rights issues in Bangladesh (Human Rights Watch, 31-12-2005)
- ^ Reporters sans frontières - Bangladesh - Annual report 2005
- ^ HIV and AIDS in Bangladesh,HIV in Bangladesh,AIDS in Bangladesh,Indicators,Estimates,Figures,HIV situation
- ^ AEGiS-AFP News: Bangladesh-AIDS-rights: Bangladesh could face AIDS 'epidemic' if police are not reformed: HRW - August 20, 2003
- ^ HRW: Ravaging the Vulnerable: Abuses Against Persons at High Risk of HIV Infection in Bangladesh
[edit] External links
- Human Rights Congress for Bangladesh Minorities
- Litigation Against Government of Bangladesh for the Protection of Country's Minority communities who are deprived of their fundamental rights.
- The Genocide in Chittagong Hill Tract of Bangladesh.
- Human Rights Watch's overview of human rights issues in Bangladesh
- Human Rights Watch's Bangladesh index
- Censorship in Bangladesh - IFEX
- Human Rights Congress for Bangladesh Minorities (HRCBM): Atrocities against Minorities in Bangladesh.
- Human Rights Congress for Bangladesh Minorities of Dallas Fort-Worth (HRCBM-DFW): Atrocities against Minorities in Bangladesh.
- The AHRC's report on 'brutal' torture of Rahman Shohel
- Article2's long list of alleged abuses of human rights
- ECT: Why Gay men flee Bangladesh
- UNDP: AIDS in Bangladesh
- Murder in the Hill tracts
- serious Bangladesh human rights issues in detail, including torture, extrajudicial killing, impunity and failed administration of justice.Important documents in Bangla
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