Looking
at the tragic events of March 1971 in retrospect, I must confess that
even I, although my press service commanded a sizeable network of
district correspondents in the interior of East Pakistan, was not fully
aware of the scale, ferocity and dimension of the province-wide massacre
of the non-Bengalis.
Mukti Bahini trained by the Indian Army to conduct terror in Muslim Bengal
I
must stress, with all the force and sincerity at my command, that this
bock is not intended to be a racist indictment of the Bengalis as a
nation. In writing and publishing this book, I am not motivated by any
revanchist obsession or a wish to condemn my erstwhile Bengali
compatriots as a nation. Just as it is stupid to condemn the great German people for the sins of the Nazis, it would be foolish to blame the Bengali people as a whole for the dark deeds of the Awami League militants and their accomplices.
I
have incorporated in this book the acts of heroism and courage of those
brave and patriotic Bengalis who sheltered and protected, at great
peril to themselves, their terror-stricken non-Bengali friends and
neighbours. On the basis of the heaps of eye-witness accounts, which I
have carefully read, sifted and analysed, I do make bold to say that the
vast majority of Bengalis disapproved of and was not a party to the
barbaric atrocities inflicted on the hapless non-Bengalis by the Awami
League’s terror machine and the Frankensteins and vampires it unloosed.
This silent majority, it seemed, was awed, immobilised and neutralised
by the terrifying power, weapons and ruthlessness of a misguided
minority hell-bent on accomplishing the secession of East Pakistan.
Jessore murders of Biharis by Mukti Bahani blamed on Pakistani Army
The
sheaves of eye-witness accounts, documented in this book, prove beyond
the shadow of a doubt that the massacre of West Pakistanis, Biharis and
other non-Bengalis in East Pakistan had begun long before the Pakistan
Army took punitive action against the rebels late in the night of March
25, 1971. It is also crystal clear that the Awami League’s terror
machine was the initiator and executor of the genocide against the
non-Bengalis which exterminated at least half a million of them in less
than two months of horror and trauma. Many witnesses have opined that
the federal Government acted a bit too late against the insurgents. The
initial success of the federal military action is proved by the fact
that in barely 30 days, the Pakistan Army, with a combat strength of
38,717 officers and men in East Pakistan, had squelched the Awami
League’s March-April, 1971, rebellion all over the province.
Typical
of the open-air, human abattoirs operated by the Awami League-led
rebels in East Pakistan in 1971 is this photograph of
multiple-executions done by a Mukti-Bahini killer squad in Dacca Race
Course. The pro-Pakistan Bengali and non-Bengali victims were tortured
before being slain. The hundreds of eye-witnesses from towns and cities
of East Pakistan, whose testimonies are documented in this book, are
unanimous in reporting that the slaughter of West Pakistanis, Biharis,
and other non-Bangalis and of some pro-Pakistan Bengalis had begun in
the early days of the murderous month of March 1971.
Jessore massacre of Biharis by Mukti Bahani. Bihari corpses litter the area while soldiers marhc past in total bewelderment
Looking
at the tragic events of March 1971 in retrospect, I must confess that
even I, although my press service commanded a sizeable network of
district correspondents in the interior of East Pakistan, was not fully
aware of the scale, ferocity and dimension of the province-wide massacre
of the non-Banglis.
I
must stress, with all the force and sincerity at my command, that this
bock is not intended to be a racist indictment of the Bengalis as a
nation. In writing and publishing this book, I am not motivated by any
revanchist obsession or a wish to condemn my erstwhile Bengali
compatriots as a nation. Just as it is stupid to condemn the great
German people for the sins of the Nazis, it would be foolish to blame
the Bengali people as a whole for the dark deeds of the Awami League
militants and their accomplices.
A Bihari victim grabbed by Mukti-Bahini killers, begging for mercy.
I
have incorporated in this book the acts of heroism and courage of those
brave and patriotic Bengalis who sheltered and protected, at great
peril to themselves, their terror-stricken non-Bengali friends and
neighbours. On the basis of the heaps of eye-witness accounts, which I
have carefully read, sifted and analysed, I do make bold to say that the
vast majority of Bengalis disapproved of and was not a party to the
barbaric atrocities inflicted on the hapless non-Bengalis by the Awami
League’s terror machine and the Frankensteins and vampires it unloosed.
This silent majority, it seemed, was awed, immobilised and neutralised
by the terrifying power, weapons and ruthlessness of a misguided
minority hell-bent on accomplishing the secession of East Pakistan.
Eye gouging and burning the skin of Biharis by Uniformed Mukti Bahani soldier aided and abetted by Indian Army
The
170 eye-witnesses, whose testimonies or interviews are contained in
this book in abridged form have been chosen from a universe of more than
5,000 repatriated non-Bengali families. I had identified, after some
considerable research, 55 towns and cities in East Pakistan where the
abridgement of the non-Bengali population in March and early April 1971
was conspicuously heavy. The collection and compilation of these
eye-witness accounts was started in January 1974 and completed in twelve
weeks. A team of four reporters, commissioned for interviewing the
witnesses from all these 55 towns and cities of East Pakistan, worked
with intense devotion to secure their testimony. Many of the interviews
were prolonged because the Witnesses broke down in a flurry of sobs and
tears as they related the agonising stories of their wrecked lives. I
had issued in February 1974 an appeal in the newspapers for such
eye-witness accounts, and I am grateful to the many hundreds of
witnesses who promptly responded to my call.
A scene of Mukti Bahini mass murder of Biharis in Dacca on December 18, 1971. A rebel soldier lifts his boot to strike a bleeding bayoneted boy who showed signs of life. Dead bodies of other slain non-Bengalis lie in the foreground.
A scene of Mukti Bahini mass murder of Biharis in Dacca on December 18, 1971. A rebel soldier lifts his boot to strike a bleeding bayoneted boy who showed signs of life. Dead bodies of other slain non-Bengalis lie in the foreground.
Mukti-Bahini killer plunged his bayonet in to the writhing Bihari’s chest.
“I
am the lone survivor of a group of ten Pathans who were employed as
Security Guards by the Delta Construction Company in the Mohakhali
locality in Dacca; all the others were slaughtered by the Bengali rebels
in the night of March 25, 1971”, said 40-year-old Bacha Khan.
“I
heard the screams of an Urdu-speaking girl who was being ravished by
her Bengali captors but I was so scared that I did not have the courage
to emerge from hiding” said a 24-year-old Zahid Abdi, who was employed
in a trading firm in Dacca. He escaped the slaughter of the non-Bengalis
in the crowded New Market locality of Dacca on March 23, 1971 and was
sheltered by a God-fearing Bengali in his shop. The killers raped their
non-Bengali teenage victim at the back of the shop and later on slayed
her.
Mukti
Bahani massacres of Biharis: Typical of the open-air, human abattoirs
operated by the Awami League-led rebels in East Pakistan in 1971 is this
photograph of multiple-executions done by a Mukti-Bahini killer squad
in Dacca Race Course. The pro-Pakistan Bengali and non-Bengali victims
were tortured before being slain
“My
only daughter has been insane since she was forced by her savage
tormentors to watch the brutal murder of her husband”, said Mukhtar
Ahmed Khan, 43, while giving an account of his suffering during the Ides
of March 1971 in Dacca….“In the third week of March 1971, a gang of
armed Bengali rebels raided house of my son-in-law and overpowered him.
He was a courageous Youngman and he resisted the attackers. My daughter
also resisted the attackers but they were far too many and they were
well armed. They tied up my son-in-law and my daughter with ropes and
they forced her to watch as they slit the throat of her husband and
ripped his stomach open in the style of butchers. She fainted and lost
consciousness. Since that dreadful day she has been mentally ill.”
Shamim
Akhtar, 28, whose husband was employed as a clerk in the Railway office
in Dacca, lived in a small house in the Mirpur locality there.
She described her tragedy in these words:
“On
December 17, 1971, the Mukti Bahini cut off the water supply to our
homes. We used to get water from a nearby pond; it was polluted and had a
bad odour. I was nine months pregnant. On December 23, 1971, I gave
birth to a baby girl. No midwife was available and my husband helped me
at child birth. Late at night, a gang of armed Bengalis raided our
house, grabbed my husband and trucked him away. I begged them in the
name of God to spare him as I could not even walk and my children were
too small. The killers were heartless and I learnt that they murdered my
husband. After five days, they returned and ordered me and my children
to vacate the house as they claimed that it was now their property.”
Zaibunnissa
Haq, 30, whose journalist husband, Izhar-ul-Haque, worked as a
columnist in the Daily Watan in Dacca, gave this account of her travail
in 1971:
A copy of the ads and the forms used for soliciting testimony from the victims.
“….On December 21, a posse of Mukti Bahini soldiers and some thugs rode into our locality with blazing guns and ordered us to leave our house as, according to them, no Bihari could own a house in Bangladesh. For two days, we lived on bare earth in an open space and we had nothing to eat. Subsequently, we were taken to a Relief Camp by the Red Cross.”
A copy of the ads and the forms used for soliciting testimony from the victims.
“….On December 21, a posse of Mukti Bahini soldiers and some thugs rode into our locality with blazing guns and ordered us to leave our house as, according to them, no Bihari could own a house in Bangladesh. For two days, we lived on bare earth in an open space and we had nothing to eat. Subsequently, we were taken to a Relief Camp by the Red Cross.”
In
Pubail and Tangibari, the Awami League militants and their rebel
confederates murdered dozens of affluent Biharis. Shops owned by the
Biharis were favourite target of attack.
“Four
armed thugs dragged two captive non-Bengali teenage girls into an empty
bus and violated their chastity before gunning them to death”, said
Gulzar Hussain, 38, who witnessed the massacre of 22 non-Bengali men,
women and children on March 21, 1971, close to a bus stand in
Narayangang. Repatriated to Karachi in November 1973, Gulzar Hussain
reported: “….On March 21, our Dacca-bound bus was stopped on the way,
soon after it left the heart of the city. I was seated in the front
portion of the bus and I saw that the killer gang had guns, scythes and
daggers. The gunmen raised ‘Joi Bangla’ and anti-Pakistan slogans. The
bus driver obeyed their signal to stop and the thugs motioned to the
passengers to get down. A jingo barked out the order that Bengalis and
non-Bengalis should fall into separate lines. As I spoke Bengali with a
perfect Dacca accent and could easily pass for a Bengali, I joined the
Bengali group of passengers. The killer gang asked us to utter a few
sentences in Bengali which we did. I passed the test and our tormentors
instructed the Bengalis to scatter. The thugs then gunned all the male
non-Bengalis. It was a horrible scene. Four of the gunmen took for their
loot two young non-Bengali women and raped them inside the empty bus.
After they had ravished the girls, the killers shot them and half a
dozen other women and children.”
She described her tragedy in these words:
As
the victim did not die in a single bayonet strike, another Mukti-Bahini
killer plunged his bayonet in to the writhing Bihari’s chest. Dead
bodies of Bihari and Bengali victims lie strewn over the execution
ground as Mukti-Bahini killers and their accomplices watch the butchery
with sadist pleasure.
“On
December 17, 1971, the Mukti Bahini cut off the water supply to our
homes. We used to get water from a nearby pond; it was polluted and had a
bad odour. I was nine months pregnant. On December 23, 1971, I gave
birth to a baby girl. No midwife was available and my husband helped me
at child birth. Late at night, a gang of armed Bengalis raided our
house, grabbed my husband and trucked him away. I begged them in the
name of God to spare him as I could not even walk and my children were
too small. The killers were heartless and I learnt that they murdered my
husband. After five days, they returned and ordered me and my children
to vacate the house as they claimed that it was now their property.”
Zaibunnissa
Haq, 30, whose journalist husband, Izhar-ul-Haque, worked as a
columnist in the Daily Watan in Dacca, gave this account of her travail
in 1971: “….On December 21, a posse of Mukti Bahini soldiers and some
thugs rode into our locality with blazing guns and ordered us to leave
our house as, according to them, no Bihari could own a house in
Bangladesh. For two days, we lived on bare earth in an open space and we
had nothing to eat. Subsequently, we were taken to a Relief Camp by the
Red Cross.”
Nasima
Khatoon, 25, lived in a rented house in the Pancho Boti locality in
Narayanganj. Her husband, Mohammad Qamrul Hasan, was employed in a
Vegetable Oil manufacturing factory. Repatriated to Karachi in January
1974, along with her 4-year-old orphaned daughter, from a Red Cross Camp
in Dacca, Nasima gave this hair-raising account of her travail in 1971:
A Bihari victim grabbed by Mukti-Bahini killers, begging for mercy.
A Bihari victim grabbed by Mukti-Bahini killers, begging for mercy.
“At
gun point, our captors made us leave our house and marched us to an
open square where more than 500 non –Bengali old men, women and children
were detained. Some 50 Bengali gunmen led us through swampy ground
towards a deserted school building. On the way, the 3-year-old child of a
hapless captive woman died in her arms. She asked her captors to allow
her to dig a small grave and bury the child. The tough man in the lead
snorted a sharp ‘NO’, snatched the body of the dead child from her
wailing mother and tossed it into the river”
The
Awami League’s rebellion of March 1971 took the heaviest toll of
non-Bengali lives in the populous port city of Chittagong. Although the
Government of Pakistan’s White Paper of August 1971 on the East Pakistan
crisis estimated the non-Bengali death toll in Chittagong and its
neighbouring townships during the Awami League’s insurrection to be a
little under 15,000, the testimony of hundreds of eye-witnesses
interviewed for this book gives the impression that more than 50,000
non-Bengalis perished in the March 1971 carnage. Thousands of dead
bodies were flung into the Karnaphuli river and the Bay of Bengal.
Savage
killings also took place in the Halishahar, Kalurghat and Pahartali
localities where the Bengali rebel soldiers poured petrol and kerosine
oil around entire blocks, igniting them with flame-throwers and
petrol-soaked jute balls, then mowed down the non-Bengali innocents
trying to escape the cordons of fire. In the wanton slaughter in the
last week of March and early April, 1971, some 40,000 non-Bengalis
perished in Chittagong and its neighbourhood. The exact death toll,
which could possibly be much more will never be known because of the
practice of burning dead bodies or dumping them in the river and the
sea.
The
uniformed killer puffing the cigarette to singe the eyes of the
terrified prey. Eye gouging and burning the skin of victims was a
favourite torture method of the rebels.
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