Yahoo - AFP News, 31 January 2013
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Activists
of the ruling Bangladesh Awami league beat an activist of the
Jamaat-e-Islami
party (C) during a rally in Dhaka on January 30, 2013
|
Police
fired rubber bullets and tear gas at protesters in Bangladesh on Thursday as a
nationwide strike called to protest war crimes trials brought much of the
country to a halt.
The
Jamaat-e-Islami party called the strike to protest the prosecution of its main
leaders for atrocities they are alleged to have committed during the 1971 war
of independence against Pakistan.
Clashes
occurred in the capital Dhaka, where the protesters torched and damaged
vehicles, and several other towns across the country. Many schools and private
businesses were shut and inter-city motorways deserted.
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A
Bangladeshi bystander uses a bucket to
try and put out a fire on a police car
allegedly set alight by Jamaat-e-Islami
members in Dhaka on January 28, 2013.
|
"He
was declared dead after we brought him to a hospital. Doctors think the clashes
could have contributed to his cardiac arrest," he said, adding police
fired rubber bullets to disperse the protesters.
At
Sanarpar, outside Dhaka, police fired rubber bullets and tear gas at the
strikers who set ablaze a lorry, local police chief Abdul Matin told AFP. Four
protesters were detained there, he added.
The
normally congested streets of Dhaka were largely empty. Security was tight as
more than 10,000 policemen patrolled the roads and key flashpoints, police
said.
"We've
adequate security to prevent violence," Dhaka police spokesman Masudur
Rahman told AFP. Local media reported explosions of several small hand-made
bombs and the torching of three vehicles in Dhaka.
The main
opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) backed the strike, the seventh in
the past two months, as two of its senior officials are also being tried for
war crime charges.
Both Jamaat
and the BNP called the charges false and the trials politically motivated.
International rights groups have expressed concern over the fairness of the
proceedings and shortcomings of the laws.
Last week a
former television preacher was sentenced to death in absentia in the first
ruling by the much-criticised war crimes tribunal. Verdicts against two Jamaat
leaders are expected in early February.
The
government says three million people were killed in the war. Many including
some of the country's top professors, doctors and journalists were murdered by
pro-Pakistan collaborators who allegedly included Jamaat members.


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