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168 BDR Members Released from Jail After 16 Years

Rtv News

  23 Jan 2025, 11:43
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After 16 long years, members of the Border Guard Bangladesh (BDR), who had been granted bail in an explosive case, were finally freed from prison. A total of 168 individuals were released from Dhaka Central Jail and Kashimpur Jail in Gazipur on Thursday (January 23).

Release of the BDR Members
Among them, 41 individuals were released from Dhaka Central Jail, 26 from Kashimpur-1, 89 from Kashimpur-2, and 12 from Kashimpur High Security Jail, totaling 168 individuals.

Regarding this, Additional Inspector General of Prisons, Colonel Mohammad Mustafa Kamal, informed the media that the authorities received the list of 168 names, and they were subsequently released.

On January 21, the judge of Dhaka’s Special Tribunal-2, Mohammad Ibrahim Miah, published the names of 178 accused who were granted bail. The prison authorities received the list of 168 individuals from this group.

Background of the BDR Mutiny and Legal Proceedings
The incident in question dates back to February 25 and 26, 2009, when a rebellion broke out at the BDR headquarters in Pilkhana, Dhaka. The mutiny resulted in the deaths of 74 individuals, including 57 army officers. Two cases were filed following the incident, one for murder and one for explosives.

The trial for the murder case concluded on November 5, 2013, with the sentencing of 850 individuals. Of these, 152 were sentenced to death, 160 received life imprisonment, and 256 were given various prison terms. 278 individuals were acquitted.

On November 27, 2017, the death reference and appeals of the case were finalized by the High Court. The court upheld the death sentences of 139 accused, gave life sentences to 185, and imposed various prison terms on 228 others. 283 were acquitted.

Before the High Court verdict, 54 accused, including 15 individuals, had died. Following the High Court’s verdict in the murder case, 226 accused appealed, and some filed leave to appeal. Additionally, the prosecution has filed leave to appeal against the acquittals and reduced sentences of 83 accused in the High Court.

In 2010, the trial for the explosives case involving 834 accused also began.

After the interim government took office, there were demands to reopen the investigation into the BDR mutiny. On December 19, family members of the martyrs presented a complaint to the International Crimes Tribunal.

To facilitate the reinvestigation, the government formed a commission headed by A.L.M. Fazlur Rahman on December 24, providing a 90-day timeframe for the investigation to be completed.

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