Bangladesh war crimes : BNP leader Abdul Alim gets life imprisonment
Last Updated : 09 Oct 2013 01:19:59 PM IST
A special Bangladeshi tribunal sentenced opposition BNP's 83-year-old leader Abdul Alim to jail until death for committing large-scale killings and other war crimes during the 1971 liberation war against Pakistan.

"He shall be kept in jail till he is dead," pronounced chairman of the three-member International Crimes Tribunal Obaidul Hassan in a packed courtroom as wheelchair-bound Alim was brought to the dock.
Hassan said the prosecution had been able to prove Alim's involvement beyond a shadow of doubt in nine of the 17 charges, including the one of genocide.
He said Alim deserved death sentence for his crimes but his old age and physical condition prompted the panel to relax the punishment.
"No physically or mentally unfit person should be made to face the gallows," Hassan said, adding the convict is old and cannot walk on his own.
Once a Muslim League leader, the fallen politician is the second BNP leader to be convicted and the third former minister to be found guilty of crimes committed to stop Bangladesh emerge as a sovereign nation.
The 191-page judgement came as the prosecution lawyers last month wrapped up their arguments demanding the capital
punishment for Alim, while the tribunal indicted him two years ago on 17 specific charges of crimes against humanity.
This is a 191-page judgement," an official of the International Crimes Tribunal told reporters as the 83-year-old leader appeared on the dock.
The judgement comes as the prosecution lawyers last month wrapped up their arguments demanding the capital punishment
for Alim, while the tribunal indicted him two years ago on 17 specific charges of crimes against humanity.
According to the charges, Alim killed or ordered killings of some 600 people. In one such incidents he raided a village inhibited by minority Hindus along with his men, dragged some 370 residents out of their homes, lined them up and shot them dead at northwestern Joypurhat, his hometown.
Alim was also accused of looting, arson, deportation and detention of unarmed civilians being the then chairman of so-called Peace Committee and leader of Razakar Bahini, an auxiliary force which was manned by Bengali-speaking collaborators of the Pakistani troops in 1971.
A former minister in slain president and Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) founder Zia-ur Rahman's cabinet in late 1970s, Alim was arrested from his home in northwestern Joypurhat after the tribunal issued a warrant against him.
He obtained a bail on heath grounds but the tribunal ordered him to be resent to the jail on September 22 after wrapping up the hearing.
Alim was reportedly arrested by freedom fighters after Bangladesh's December 16, 1971 victory and he was kept for days in a steel cage in a public place in Joypurhat.
But he eventually managed to evade the peoples' wraths and later rehabilitated himself in politics to become a lawmaker and minister, joining the BNP, now being headed by former prime minister Khaleda Zia.
Last week, prominent BNP lawmaker Salauddin Quader Chowdhury, 65, was sentenced to death by the tribunal for genocide during the 1971 liberation war against Pakistan, becoming the first MP and seventh person to be convicted of crimes against humanity.