Bangladeshi prosecutors today slapped six war crime charges, including genocide, against a senior leader of fundamentalist Jamaat-e-Islami, a day after the party's second-highest ranked official was sentenced to death for atrocities during the country's 1971 war of independence.
"We have brought six charges against Jamaat-e-Islami's (detained) assistant secretary general A T M Azharul Islam... the court (International Crimes Tribunal or ICT) has fixed July 24 to issue orders on the indictment of the accused," prosecutor A K M Saiful Islam told a press briefing.
He said the prosecution sought to try him on specific charges like murders, genocide, abduction, persecution and rape, siding with the Pakistani troops during the 1971 liberation war.
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In a related development, the ICT today issued an arrest warrant against an incumbent but fugitive mayor of a town in western Faridpur to face justice for war crimes charges.
Prosecution lawyers said Mayor of Nagarkanda Zahid Hossain Khokan, also a local leader of main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party was a self-declared collaborator of the Pakistani troops as he used to say "I was a Razakar (collaborator), still am, and want to die as a Razakar."
Khokon, who previously was a Jamaat activist, however, went into hiding since investigations were launched to unearth his 1971 role.
The development came as Jamaat enforced a nationwide general strike protesting the death sentence handed out to its secretary general Ali Ahsan Mohammad Mojaheed, who led the infamous Al Badr force.
Al-Badr is particularly castigated for carrying out a systematic cleansing campaign against the Bengali intelligentsia during the Liberation War.