Bengla Genocide - one of the top 5 genocides in the 20th century.

Muhammad Ikhlaq Siddiqui

Minister (2k+ posts)
Genocide
we were told to kill the hindus and Kafirs (non-believer in God). One day in June, we cordoned a village and were ordered to kill the Kafirs in that area. We found all the village women reciting from the Holy Quran, and the men holding special congregational prayers seeking Gods mercy. But they were unlucky. Our commanding officer ordered us not to waste any time.

Confession of a Pakistani Soldier

It all started with Operation Searchlight, a planned military pacification carried out by the Pakistan Army started on 25 March, 1971 to curb the Bengali nationalist movement by taking control of the major cities on March 26, and then eliminating all opposition, political or military, within one month. Before the beginning of the operation, all foreign journalists were systematically deported from Bangladesh. The main phase of Operation Searchlight ended with the fall of the last major town in Bengali hands in mid May.
According to New York Times (3/28/71) 10,000 people were killed; New York Times (3/29/71) 5,000-7,000 people were killed in Dhaka; The Sydney Morning Herald (3/29/71) 10,000 100,000 were killed; New York Times (4/1/71) 35,000 were killed in Dhaka during operation searchlight.

The operation also began the 1971 Bangladesh atrocities. These systematic killings served only to enrage the Bengalis, which ultimately resulted in the secession of East Pakistan later in December, 1971. The international media and reference books in English have published casualty figures which vary greatly; 200,0003,000,000 for Bangladesh as a whole.
There is only one word for this: Genocide.
Genocide in Bangladesh, 1971
The mass killings in Bangladesh (then East Pakistan) in 1971 vie with the annihilation of the Soviet POWs, the holocaust against the Jews, and the genocide in Rwanda as the most concentrated act of genocide in the twentieth century. In an attempt to crush forces seeking independence for East Pakistan, the West Pakistani military regime unleashed a systematic campaign of mass murder which aimed at killing millions of Bengalis, and likely succeeded in doing so.
In national elections held in December 1970, the Awami League won an overwhelming victory across Bengali territory. On February 22, 1971 the generals in West Pakistan took a decision to crush the Awami League and its supporters. It was recognized from the first that a campaign of genocide would be necessary to eradicate the threat: Kill three million of them, said President Yahya Khan at the February conference, and the rest will eat out of our hands. (Robert Payne,Massacre [1972], p. 50.) On March 25 the genocide was launched. The university in Dacca (Dhaka) was attacked and students exterminated in their hundreds. Death squads roamed the streets of Dacca, killing some 7,000 people in a single night. It was only the beginning. Within a week, half the population of Dacca had fled, and at least 30,000 people had been killed. Chittagong, too, had lost half its population. All over East Pakistan people were taking flight, and it was estimated that in April some thirty million people [!] were wandering helplessly across East Pakistan to escape the grasp of the military. (Payne, Massacre, p. 48.) Ten million refugees fled to India, overwhelming that countrys resources and spurring the eventual Indian military intervention. (The population of Bangladesh/East Pakistan at the outbreak of the genocide was about 75 million.)
The Guinness Book of Records lists the Bangladesh Genocide as one of the top 5 genocides in the 20th century.

The gendercide against Bengali men
The war against the Bengali population proceeded in classic gendercidal fashion. According to Anthony Mascarenhas:
There is no doubt whatsoever about the targets of the genocide. They were: (1) The Bengali militarymen of the East Bengal Regiment, the East Pakistan Rifles, police and para-military Ansars and Mujahids. (2) The Hindus We are only killing the men; the women and children go free. We are soldiers not cowards to kill them I was to hear in Comilla [site of a major military base] [Comments R.J. Rummel: "One would think that murdering an unarmed man was a heroic act" (Death By Government, p. 323)] (3) The Awami Leaguers all office bearers and volunteers down to the lowest link in the chain of command. (4) The students college and university boys and some of the more militant girls. (5) Bengali intellectuals such as professors and teachers whenever damned by the army as militant. (Anthony Mascarenhas, The Rape of Bangla Desh [Delhi: Vikas Publications, 1972(?)], pp. 116-17.)

Mascarenhass summary makes clear the linkages between gender and social class (the intellectuals, professors, teachers, office bearers, and obviously militarymen can all be expected to be overwhelmingly if not exclusively male, although in many cases their families died or fell victim to other atrocities alongside them). In this respect, the Bangladesh events can be classed as a combined gendercide and elitocide, with both strategies overwhelmingly targeting males for the most annihilatory excesses.
London, 6/13/71). The Sunday Times..The Governments policy for East Bengal was spelled out to me in the Eastern Command headquarters at Dacca. It has three elements:
1. The Bengalis have proved themselves unreliable and must be ruled by West Pakistanis;
2. The Bengalis will have to be re-educated along proper Islamic lines. The Islamization of the masses this is the official jargon is intended to eliminate secessionist tendencies and provide a strong religious bond with West Pakistan;
3. When the Hindus have been eliminated by death and fight, their property will be used as a golden carrot to win over the under privileged Muslim middle-class. This will provide the base for erecting administrative and political structures in the future.

Bengali man and boys massacred by the West Pakistani regime.
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Younger men and adolescent boys, of whatever social class, were equally targets. According to Rounaq Jahan, All through the liberation war, able-bodied young men were suspected of being actual or potential freedom fighters. Thousands were arrested, tortured, and killed. Eventually cities and towns became bereft of young males who either took refuge in India or joined the liberation war. Especially during the first phase of the genocide, he writes, young able-bodied males were the victims of indiscriminate killings. (Genocide in Bangladesh, in Totten et al., Century of Genocide, p. 298.) R.J. Rummel likewise writes that the Pakistan army [sought] out those especially likely to join the resistance young boys. Sweeps were conducted of young men who were never seen again. Bodies of youths would be found in fields, floating down rivers, or near army camps. As can be imagined, this terrorized all young men and their families within reach of the army. Most between the ages of fifteen and twenty-five began to flee from one village to another and toward India. Many of those reluctant to leave their homes were forced to flee by mothers and sisters concerned for their safety. (Death By Government, p. 329.) Rummel describes (p. 323) a chilling gendercidal ritual, reminiscent of Nazi procedure towards Jewish males: In what became province-wide acts of genocide, Hindus were sought out and killed on the spot. As a matter of course, soldiers would check males for the obligated circumcision among Moslems. If circumcised, they might live; if not, sure death.
Robert Payne describes scenes of systematic mass slaughter around Dacca (Dhaka) that, while not explicitly gendered in his account, bear every hallmark of classic gender-selective roundups and gendercidal slaughters of non-combatant men:
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In the dead region surrounding Dacca, the military authorities conducted experiments in mass extermination in places unlikely to be seen by journalists. At Hariharpara, a once thriving village on the banks of the Buriganga River near Dacca, they found the three elements necessary for killing people in large numbers: a prison in which to hold the victims, a place for executing the prisoners, and a method for disposing of the bodies. The prison was a large riverside warehouse, or godown, belonging to the Pakistan National Oil Company, the place of execution was the river edge, or the shallows near the shore, and the bodies were disposed of by the simple means of permitting them to float downstream. The killing took place night after night. Usually the prisoners were roped together and made to wade out into the river. They were in batches of six or eight, and in the light of a powerful electric arc lamp, they were easy targets, black against the silvery water. The executioners stood on the pier, shooting down at the compact bunches of prisoners wading in the water. There were screams in the hot night air, and then silence. The prisoners fell on their sides and their bodies lapped against the shore. Then a new bunch of prisoners was brought out, and the process was repeated. In the morning the village boatmen hauled the bodies into midstream and the ropes binding the bodies were cut so that each body drifted separately downstream. (Payne, Massacre [Macmillan, 1973], p. 55.)
Strikingly similar and equally hellish scenes are described in the case-studies ofgenocide in Armenia and the Nanjing Massacre of 1937.
How many died?
Bangladeshi authorities claim that 3 million people were killed, while the Hamoodur Rahman Commission, an official Pakistan Government investigation, put the figure as low as 26,000 civilian casualties. The fact is that the number of dead in Bangladesh in 1971 was almost certainly well into seven figures. It was one of the worst genocides of the World War II era, outstripping Rwanda (800,000 killed) and probably surpassing even Indonesia (1 million to 1.5 million killed in 1965-66).

As R.J. Rummel writes:
The human death toll over only 267 days was incredible. Just to give for five out of the eighteen districts some incomplete statistics published in Bangladesh newspapers or by an Inquiry Committee, the Pakistani army killed 100,000 Bengalis in Dacca, 150,000 in Khulna, 75,000 in Jessore, 95,000 in Comilla, and 100,000 in Chittagong. For eighteen districts the total is 1,247,000 killed. This was an incomplete toll, and to this day no one really knows the final toll. Some estimates of the democide [Rummel's "death by government"] are much lower one is of 300,000 dead but most range from 1 million to 3 million. The Pakistani army and allied paramilitary groups killed about one out of every sixty-one people in Pakistan overall; one out of every twenty-five Bengalis, Hindus, and others in East Pakistan. If the rate of killing for all of Pakistan is annualized over the years the Yahya martial law regime was in power (March 1969 to December 1971), then this one regime was more lethal than that of the Soviet Union, China under the communists, or Japan under the military (even through World War II). (Rummel, Death By Government, p. 331.)
People regard that the best option is to regard 3 million as not an absolute but an arbitrary number. The proportion of men versus women murdered is impossible to ascertain, but a speculation might be attempted. If we take the highest estimates for both women raped and Bengalis killed (400,000 and 3 million, respectively); if we accept that half as many women were killed as were raped; and if we double that number for murdered children of both sexes (total: 600,000), we are still left with a death-toll that is 80 percent adult male (2.4 million out of 3 million). Any such disproportion, which is almost certainly on the low side, would qualify Bangladesh as one of the worst gendercides against men in the last half-millennium.
Who was responsible?
For month after month in all the regions of East Pakistan the massacres went on, writes Robert Payne. They were not the small casual killings of young officers who wanted to demonstrate their efficiency, but organized massacres conducted by sophisticated staff officers, who knew exactly what they were doing. Muslim soldiers, sent out to kill Muslim peasants, went about their work mechanically and efficiently, until killing defenseless people became a habit like smoking cigarettes or drinking wine. Not since Hitler invaded Russia had there been so vast a massacre. (Payne,Massacre, p. 29.)
There is no doubt that the mass killing in Bangladesh was among the most carefully and centrally planned of modern genocides. A cabal of five Pakistani generals orchestrated the events: President Yahya Khan, General Tikka Khan, chief of staff General Pirzada, security chief General Umar Khan, and intelligence chief General Akbar Khan. The U.S. government, long supportive of military rule in Pakistan, supplied some $3.8 million in military equipment to the dictatorship after the onset of the genocide, and after a government spokesman told Congress that all shipments to Yahya Khans regime had ceased. (Payne, Massacre, p. 102.)
The genocide and gendercidal atrocities were also perpetrated by lower-ranking officers and ordinary soldiers. These willing executioners were fuelled by an abiding anti-Bengali racism, especially against the Hindu minority. Bengalis were often compared with monkeys and chickens. Said Pakistan General Niazi, It was a low lying land of low lying people. The Hindus among the Bengalis were as Jews to the Nazis: scum and vermin that [should] best be exterminated. As to the Moslem Bengalis, they were to live only on the sufferance of the soldiers: any infraction, any suspicion cast on them, any need for reprisal, could mean their death. And the soldiers were free to kill at will. The journalist Dan Coggin quoted one Punjabi captain as telling him, We can kill anyone for anything. We are accountable to no one. This is the arrogance of Power. (Rummel, Death By Government, p. 335.)

Pakistani Army Desecrated Churches in 1971
Eyewitness accounts
The atrocities of the razakars in killing the Bengalis equaled those of their Pakistani masters. An excerpt from an article written in the Azad, dated January 15, 1972, underscores the inhuman atrocities of the Pakistani troops and their associates, the razakar and al-Badr forces:
.The people of Narail can bear witness to the reign of terror, the inhuman atrocities, inflicted on them after (General) Yahya let loose his troops to do what they would. After March 25, many people fled Jessore in fear of their lives, and took refuge in Narail and its neighboring localities. Many of them were severely bashed by the soldiers of Yahya and lost their lives. Very few people ever returned. Bhayna is a flourishing village near Narail. Ali Akbar is a well-known figure there. On April 8, the Pakistani troops surrounded the village on the pretext that it was a sanctuary for freedom fighters. Just as fish are caught in a net so too were the people of this village all assembled, in an open field. Then everyone- men, women, and childrenwere all forced to line up. Young men between the ages of 25 and 30 were lined up separately. 45 people were shot to death on the spot. Three of Ali Akbars brothers were killed there. Ali Akbar was able to save himself by lying on the ground. But no one else of that group was as fortunate. Nadanor was the Killing field. Every day 20 to 30 people were taken there with their hands tied behind their backs, and killed. The dead bodies would be flung into the river. Apart from this, a slaughter house was also readied for Bengalis. Manik, Omar, and Ashraf were sent to Jessore Cantonment for training and then brought to this slaughter house. Every day they would slaughter 9 to 12 persons here. The rate per person was Taka ten. On one particular day, 45 persons were slaughtered here. From April 15 to December 10, the butchery continued. It is gathered that 2,723 people lost their lives here. People were brought here and bashed, then their ears were cut off, and their eyes gouged out. Finally they were slaughtered : The Chairman of the Peace Committee was Moulana Solaiman. With Dr. Abul Hussain and Abdul Rashid Mukhtar, he assisted in the genocide. Omar would proudly say, During the day I am Omar, at night I am Shimar( legendary executioner famous for extreme cruelty). Dont you see my dagger? There are countless Kafirs (heretics) on it.
Chuknagar: The largest genocide during the Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971

Chuknagar is a small business town located in the Dumuria Thana of Khulna district and very close to the India Bangladesh border. In 71 thousands of refugees gathered in Chuknagar to go to Kolkata. According to a conservative account around ten thousand people were in Chuknagar waiting to cross the border.
In the early morning of May 10, the fatal day around 10am two trucks carrying Paki troops arrived at Kautala (then known as Patkhola). The Pakis were not many in number, most possibly a platoon or so. As soon as the Paki trucks stopped, the Pakis alighted from the truck carrying light machine guns (LMGs) and semi automatic rifles and opened fire on the public. Within a few minutes a lively town turned into a city of death.
The accounts of the two hundred interviewees were same. They differed only in details. There were piled up dead bodies. Dead Kids on dead mums laps. Wives hugging their beloved husbands to protect them from killer bullets. Dads hugging their daughters to shield them. Within a flash they all were just dead bodies. Blood streamed into the Bhadra river, it became a river of corps. A few hours later when the Paki ******** ran out of bullets, they killed the rest of the people with bayonet.
Source: Muntassir Mamun, The Archive of Liberation War, Bangabandhu and Bangladesh Research Institute
 

Umair King

Voter (50+ posts)
Bloody Self Hating Liberals

What about Afghanistan and Iraq ????

ooo you got these pearls of wisdom from Bangladesh's Archives; hehehe

Pak Army Zinadabad
Pakistan Paindabad
 

mehwish_ali

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
میرا نہیں خیال کہ اتنے بڑے پیمانے پر کوئی قتل عام ہوا تھا۔ یہ پروپیگنڈہ ہے۔

اور یہ بھی یاد رکھئیے کہ قتل یکطرفہ نہیں تھا، بلکہ دو طرفہ تھا۔

مکتی باہنی ہر اُس معصوم شہری کو قتل کر رہی تھی جو کہ پاکستان کی بات کرتا تھا، پاکستان سے وفاداری دکھاتا تھا، خصوصا مغربی پاکستان کے شہری جو کہ اُس وقت وہاں مقیم تھے، اور ساتھ ہی ساتھ میں بیہاری مسلمان جو کہ پکے پاکستان کے وفادار تھے، اور انہیں اسی جرم میں بلا دریغ قتل کیا جاتا تھا۔

 

hans

Banned
Why are you so upset.. its truth and truth never taste good in your mouth.

Do not compare Afghan or Iraq... then you have to compare not USA but Saddam

Compare your deeds with Mulsims against Muslims. Like what Taliban do with other Muslims.

that is anotherr topic if you consider Taliban as Muslims.

Bloody Self Hating Liberals

What about Afghanistan and Iraq ????

ooo you got these pearls of wisdom from Bangladesh's Archives; hehehe

Pak Army Zinadabad
Pakistan Paindabad
 

ramses2x1

MPA (400+ posts)
and what does it prove ?? didnt u get asylum in sweden on the basis that you are ahmadi and persecuted in pakistan ?? when u will answer that i will talk more ..
 

ramses2x1

MPA (400+ posts)
i will talk and talk precisely , nothing less nothing more .. the indian guy .. will talk to you later at some other time :) .. you take a lot of my time .. its always hrd to talk to idiots and bigots
 

Muhammad Ikhlaq Siddiqui

Minister (2k+ posts)
میرا نہیں خیال کہ اتنے بڑے پیمانے پر کوئی قتل عام ہوا تھا۔ یہ پروپیگنڈہ ہے۔

اور یہ بھی یاد رکھئیے کہ قتل یکطرفہ نہیں تھا، بلکہ دو طرفہ تھا۔

مکتی باہنی ہر اُس معصوم شہری کو قتل کر رہی تھی جو کہ پاکستان کی بات کرتا تھا، پاکستان سے وفاداری دکھاتا تھا، خصوصا مغربی پاکستان کے شہری جو کہ اُس وقت وہاں مقیم تھے، اور ساتھ ہی ساتھ میں بیہاری مسلمان جو کہ پکے پاکستان کے وفادار تھے، اور انہیں اسی جرم میں بلا دریغ قتل کیا جاتا تھا۔

Guinness book of world record marked it in the top five genocides of the last century considering it a huge massacre.
 

Typhoon

Senator (1k+ posts)
All this is poor documented. A big planted lie to build up bangali nationalism. The pro indian lobby in bangladesh and the bengali nastionalists are creating and upholding these lies.
The truth is that indian backed Mukti Bahni killed thousands of non bengalis and pro pakistanis. Dhaka ke fall ke baad ye saare qatal pakistan ke khate mein daal diye gae.
 

Typhoon

Senator (1k+ posts)
Guinness book of world record marked it in the top five genocides of the last century considering it a huge massacre.

Guinness book of record wale waha dekh rahe the ke koun kis ko maar raha he? Read some serious factual books rather than guinness book of record. Are u braindead or what?
Guinness book wale sirf wohi likhte hein jo unko serve kia jata he. They were not present durin ghte happenings ke wo sath sath record banate jate.
 

tariisb

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)


کتنے افراد قتل ہوۓ ، کتنی عزتیں تار تار ہوئیں ؟؟؟ اندازے اپنی جگہ ، مگر بنگلہ دیش بن چکا


اس علیحدگی کے بعد ہم نے ، بقیہ ماندہ پاکستان میں بنیادی حقوق ، تعلیم ، صحت اور تحفظ کے لیے کتنی کوشش کی ؟؟؟


اندرون سندھ ، مکمل بلوچستان ، پنجاب کے دیہی علاقے ، اور پختونخواہ ، قدم قدم ہماری کارکردگی نمایاں ہے


کلمہ کی بنیاد پر ایک قوم بنائی تو جا سکتی ہے ،
مگر مسلمانوں کو کلمہ کے واسطے دے کر ایک نقشہ کا پابند نہیں بنایا جا سکتا
 

mehwish_ali

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)


کتنے افراد قتل ہوۓ ، کتنی عزتیں تار تار ہوئیں ؟؟؟ اندازے اپنی جگہ ، مگر بنگلہ دیش بن چکا


اس علیحدگی کے بعد ہم نے ، بقیہ ماندہ پاکستان میں بنیادی حقوق ، تعلیم ، صحت اور تحفظ کے لیے کتنی کوشش کی ؟؟؟


اندرون سندھ ، مکمل بلوچستان ، پنجاب کے دیہی علاقے ، اور پختونخواہ ، قدم قدم ہماری کارکردگی نمایاں ہے


کلمہ کی بنیاد پر ایک قوم بنائی تو جا سکتی ہے ،
مگر مسلمانوں کو کلمہ کے واسطے دے کر ایک نقشہ کا پابند نہیں بنایا جا سکتا

علی ابن ابی طالب کا قول ہی دل کی گہرائیوں میں ہر دفعہ اتر جاتا ہے۔


معاشرے کفر پر تو زندہ رہ سکتے ہیں، ناانصافی پر نہیں۔


 

tariisb

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)

علی ابن ابی طالب کا قول ہی دل کی گہرائیوں میں ہر دفعہ اتر جاتا ہے۔


معاشرے کفر پر تو زندہ رہ سکتے ہیں، ناانصافی پر نہیں۔



ہم معاشروں کو نظریات کی بنیاد پر قائم رکھنے کی بھونڈی کوشش کرتے ہیں ،


مگر اطراف میں جاری ظلم جو ہر شکل اور ہر انداز سے عوام پر مسلط ہے ، اس کی کوئی فکر نہیں
قول علی ، قوموں کے عروج و زوال کی بحث میں ایک کنجی ہے ، جو سب اشکالات کو بآسانی رفع کر دیتی ہے



 

aamir_uetn

Prime Minister (20k+ posts)

علی ابن ابی طالب کا قول ہی دل کی گہرائیوں میں ہر دفعہ اتر جاتا ہے۔


معاشرے کفر پر تو زندہ رہ سکتے ہیں، ناانصافی پر نہیں۔



الطاف بھائی کے دل میں بھی اتاریں کبھی یہ قول ، کیوں کہ محض معاشرہ ہی نہیں سیاسی جماعت بھی ظلم و نا انصافی پر قائم نہیں رہ سکتی
 

Muhammad Ikhlaq Siddiqui

Minister (2k+ posts)
Guinness book of record wale waha dekh rahe the ke koun kis ko maar raha he? Read some serious factual books rather than guinness book of record. Are u braindead or what?
Guinness book wale sirf wohi likhte hein jo unko serve kia jata he. They were not present durin ghte happenings ke wo sath sath record banate jate.

Pak Army didn't kill innocent Bengalis in 1971.They didn't rape hundreds of thousands of Bengali girls. Mukti Bahini(an indigenous Bengali freedom movement) killed their Bengali fellows and defamed Pak Army. Those in Mukti Bahini were indians not Bengalis. There was no injustice or cruelty done by our Army. It was we who were on the right side. General Tikka khan was not named as butcher by Bengalis. Bengalis did not want Bengladesh. They were Indians who wanted to create Bangladesh. The fall of Dhaka was as a sad incident for Bengalis as it is for Pakistan. Bengalis can't be blamed, Pakistan can't be blamed. The whole world lies because they want to defame pakistan. The truth can only be found in our Syllabus books which is being taught for years and any other source is what braindead people quote to destroy the facts of history because Pakistan Text Book board was the only authentic source, who were actually present at that moment to cover all events. No other(Bengla or rest of the world) books, articles, news are factual.
 

sarbakaf

Siasat.pk - Blogger
genocide ????
or was it reaction against the rebels ?

secondly i hope before posting this crap you looked at the meaning of word genocide.

lastly , all killings in bengal civilian or military by civilians are condemnable .

and people like the thread poster always bring something to show that our nation and army is always wrong..

please refer to the political aspects which led to this seperation and involvement of india ...........but may be this is not your agenda to reveal the truth.
 

bons

Minister (2k+ posts)
MUHAMMAD IKHLAQ SIDDIQUI,

Huay tum dost jis kay, dushman us ka asmaan kioon ho

Kuch apnay SIDDIQUI hone ka hi bharam rakh lena tha.

Rasool pbuh ka farmaan hay: Insaan ke jhoota hone ke liye yehi kaafi hay keh woh suni sunai baat ko bagher tehqeeq kiye aagay bayan kar de.

Do you know what is the basis of Guiness' claim?
have you read other side of the story?
or just wanted to post something and did copy/paste of whater you found?
 

bons

Minister (2k+ posts)
Why are you so upset.. its truth and truth never taste good in your mouth.

Do not compare Afghan or Iraq... then you have to compare not USA but Saddam

Compare your deeds with Mulsims against Muslims. Like what Taliban do with other Muslims.

that is anotherr topic if you consider Taliban as Muslims.

Same question to you, why are you so upset?
How can you claim that it is true? only because it goes against Pakistan?
Why do you compare East Pakistan with Karachi?
 

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