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Bangladesh's ousted prime minister sentenced to death for role in protest crackdown

Bangladesh's Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina speaks during a press conference in Dhaka, Bangladesh, on Jan. 6, 2014.
Rajesh Kumar Singh
/
AP
Bangladesh's Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina speaks during a press conference in Dhaka, Bangladesh, on Jan. 6, 2014.

DHAKA, Bangladesh — A special tribunal sentenced Bangladesh's ousted Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and one of her close aides to death on charges of crimes against humanity for her crackdown on a student uprising last year that killed hundreds of people and led to the toppling of her 15-year rule.

The International Crimes Tribunal based in Dhaka, the capital, sentenced Hasina and former Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan to death for their involvement in the use of deadly force against protesters.

Both Hasina and Khan fled to India last year and were sentenced in absentia.

A third suspect, a former police chief, was sentenced to five years in prison after becoming a state witness against Hasina and pleading guilty.

Hasina and Khan were accused of crimes against humanity for the killing of hundreds of people during a student-led uprising in July and August of 2024. The country's health adviser under the country's current interim government said more than 800 people were killed and about 14,000 were injured. The United Nations in a February report estimated that up to 1,400 may have been killed.

Hasina's response

Hasina says the charges are unjustified, arguing that she and Khan "acted in good faith and were trying to minimize the loss of life."

"We lost control of the situation, but to characterize what happened as a premeditated assault on citizens is simply to misread the facts," she said Monday in a statement denouncing a verdict she called "biased and politically motivated."

"I mourn all of the deaths that occurred in July and August of last year, on both sides of the political divide," she said. "But neither I nor other political leaders ordered the killing of protesters."

Hasina cannot appeal the verdict unless she surrenders or is arrested within 30 days of the judgment.

The verdict comes as the country still grapples with instability after Hasina was ousted on Aug. 5, 2024. Bangladeshi Nobel Peace Prize laureate Muhammad Yunus took over as the head of an interim government three days after her fall. Yunus has vowed to punish Hasina and banned the activities of her Awami League party ahead of elections set for February.

A three-member tribunal, headed by Justice Golam Mortuza Mozumder, announced the tribunal's ruling, a session that was broadcast live and lasted hours.

Some of those in the packed courtroom cheered when Mazumder announced the death penalty for Hasina. He admonished them, telling them to express their feelings outside the courtroom.

Many families of the killed and the injured during last year's uprising waited for hours outside the tribunal.

Hasina's son Sajeeb Wazed, currently in the United States, said in message to The Associated Press that the "verdict is a joke and meaningless. My mother is safe in India. The trials were so legally flawed they won't survive any challenge once rule of law returns to Bangladesh."

Exile in India

In a media statement Monday, Bangladesh's Ministry of Home Affairs urged India to send both Hasina and Khan back soon.

India's foreign ministry in a statement acknowledged the tribunal's verdict but fell short of stating whether it would hand them over to Dhaka.

"As a close neighbor, India remains committed to the best interests of people of Bangladesh, including in peace, democracy, inclusion and stability in that country. We will always engage constructively with all stakeholders to that end," it said.

India previously had not responded to requests by Bangladesh to extradite Hasina and Khan to stand trial.

India's failure to extradite the pair has created some tensions between the neighboring nations.

Tensions before and after the verdict

Tensions and disruptions had grown in the country in recent days ahead of the verdict.

Nearly 50 arson attacks, mostly targeting vehicles, and dozens of crude bombs explosions were reported nationwide over the past week. Two people were killed in the arson attacks, local media reported.The interim government beefed up security ahead of the verdict, with paramilitary border guards and police deployed in Dhaka and many other parts of the country.

Hasina's Awami League party called for a nationwide shutdown to protest the verdict on Monday.

A few kilometers away from the tribunal, Hasina's opponents on Monday gathered outside her father's home-turned-museum to demolish the rest of the establishment, which was looted and damaged earlier. They brought two excavators to demolish the building.

Police charged with batons and used stun grenades to disperse the crowd even as the judges were still reading out the verdict.

In the evening more than 300 people were still there and burned tires on streets as the security officials took their position.

Authorities at the Supreme Court, in a letter to army headquarters on Sunday, requested the deployment of soldiers around the tribunal premises ahead of the verdict.

Yunus said his interim government would hold the country's next elections in February, and that Hasina's party would not get a chance to contest the race.

Bangladesh's politics under Yunus has remained at a crossroads with limited signs of stability.

Copyright 2025 NPR

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[Copyright 2024 NPR]