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DHAKA: Families of prisoners arrested during the recent student protests and those who disappeared since Bangladesh's ousted Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina was elected in 2009, wait outside the Directorate General of Forces Intelligence office in Dhaka on August 6, 2024. — AFP
DHAKA: Families of prisoners arrested during the recent student protests and those who disappeared since Bangladesh's ousted Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina was elected in 2009, wait outside the Directorate General of Forces Intelligence office in Dhaka on August 6, 2024. — AFP

Families of political prisoners in Bangladesh demand answers

People wait for news of loved ones after some believed to be missing get released

DHAKA: Families of political prisoners secretly jailed in Bangladesh under the autocratic rule of ousted premier Sheikh Hasina waited desperately Tuesday for news of their relatives, as some of those missing were released. "We need answers," said Sanjida Islam Tulee, a coordinator of Mayer Daak, meaning "The Call of the Mothers", a group campaigning for the release of people detained by Hasina's security forces.

Rights groups accused Hasina's security forces of abducting and disappearing some 600 people — including many from the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party and the banned Jamaat-e-Islami, the country's largest Islamist party. Tulee told AFP that at least 20 families gathered outside a military intelligence force building in a northern Dhaka neighborhood, waiting for news of their relatives.

Former prime minister Khaleda Zia, a bitter rival of Hasina, was also released from years of house arrest. Army chief General Waker-Uz-Zaman announced Monday that Hasina had resigned after weeks of deadly protests, and the military would form a caretaker government.

Hours later President Mohammed Shahabuddin — after a meeting with the army chief — said it had been decided to free all those arrested during the student protests, as well as key opposition leader Zia. "People who were detained between July 1 and August 5 as part of the anti-discrimination protests are being freed, and already many have been freed," Shiplu Zman, a press secretary of the president, said.

'What happened to others?'

Among the most high profile of those released on Tuesday was opposition activist and lawyer Ahmad Bin Quasem, son of Mir Quasem Ali, the executed leader of Jamaat-e-Islami. "He was released from secret detention this morning," family friend and relative Masum Khalili told AFP. "He had a medical check-up, his condition is stable."

Quasem, a British-educated barrister, was abducted — allegedly by security forces in plainclothes — in August 2016. Others released include former brigadier-general Abdullahil Aman Azmi, abducted in 2016, Jamaat-e-Islami said in a statement.

His father Ghulam Azam, the former head of Jamaat-e-Islami, died in prison in 2014. Security forces during Hasina's rule were accused of detaining tens of thousands of opposition activists, killing hundreds in extrajudicial encounters, and disappearing their leaders and supporters.

Human Rights Watch last year said security forces had committed "over 600 enforced disappearances" since Hasina came to power in 2009, and nearly 100 remain unaccounted for. Hasina's government denied the allegations of disappearances and extrajudicial killings, saying some of those reported missing drowned in the Mediterranean while trying to reach Europe. "We heard Ahmad Bin Quasem has been released," Tulee said. "But what happened to others?" — AFP

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