UN Fact-Finding Team Arriving Bangladesh for Month-Long Probe
A United Nations fact-finding team is set to arrive in Bangladesh to investigate the brutal suppression of the recent student movement by the former Awami League government. Initially, the team will conduct a month-long investigation, with the option to extend their stay if needed.
Two of the eight members are arriving in Dhaka on Monday (September 16), followed by three more on Tuesday (September 17), when the official investigation will begin. The remaining members will join in the following days.
The team will examine 15 human rights violations, including extrajudicial killings that occurred between July and early August. They will visit all eight divisional cities to gather evidence, interview victims and witnesses, and collect data on the violence.
The report is expected to be submitted to the interim government by late November.
The recent unrest, which took place from July 16 to August 11, resulted in the deaths of at least 650 Bangladeshis. A preliminary report, titled 'Preliminary Analysis of Recent Protests and Unrest in Bangladesh,' was released in Geneva on August 15.
The investigation will consider allegations of state and private involvement in the violence. The probe will cover 15 types of human rights violations, including crimes against humanity, extrajudicial killings by security forces, torture by political and private parties, excessive use of force, enforced disappearances, internet shutdowns, and destruction of property.
Comments