Ziaur Rahman ‘passively involved’ in Mujib murder: US scribe
March 15th, 2011 - 3:07 pm ICT by IANS
Dhaka, March 15 (IANS) US journalist and writer Lawrence Lifschultz has alleged that Bangladesh’s founding leader Sheikh Mujibur Rahman was killed in “a plot” in August 1975 in which Ziaur Rahman was “passively involved”.
Returning to Bangladesh after 35 years, Lifschultz told a court Monday that Ziaur Rahman, the military strongman who went on to become the president and was slain in 1981, was “in the shadow of the whole episode of August 15, 1975 because he was very much one of the main players of the game”.
In reply to a question from the high court, Lifschultz said Ziaur Rahman “could have stopped the assassination of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman because he (Zia) knew of the plot”, The Daily Star reported.
Revered as father of the nation, Mujib was killed along with most of his family members in a military-led coup Aug 15, 1975.
While Mujib’s elder daughter Sheikh Hasina is the prime minister, Ziaur Rahman’s widow Khaleda Zia is the opposition leader. Khaleda has served as the prime minister for two terms.
Zia was “a complicated man. He was brutal and was the main beneficiary of (Mujib’s) assassination”, Lifschultz said. He added that Zia, himself a freedom fighter, was responsible for killing many freedom fighters among his fellow army officers.
Lifschultz said Zia’s role in Mujib’s killing had become clear from the conversations with Col Farooq Rahman and Col Abdur Rashid, convicted killers of Mujib, and from the book “Bangladesh: A Legacy of Blood” written by Anthony Mascarenhas, a Pakistani journalist who was among the first to support Bangladesh’s freedom movement in 1971.
The American journalist is here to depose before the court that is hearing a case pertaining to the trial and execution of Col. Abu Taher. Lifschultz, who partly covered Taher’s trial by a military court in 1976, was expelled.
“One man, Ziaur Rahman, decided, on his own, to take another’s life. He then asked a group of about 50 officers to endorse his decision,” Lifschultz, a Pulitzer Prize winner, told the court.
The US journalist said he had tried to go inside the so-called court but was not allowed.
“I had tried to meet Ziaur Rahman many times for taking an interview from him, but he did not allow me to do so,” he said.
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Tags: abdur rashid, american journalist, army officers, daily star, elder daughter, endo, farooq, freedom fighter, freedom fighters, freedom movement, khaleda zia, legacy of blood, mascarenhas, military court, military strongman, opposition leader, pakistani journalist, sheikh hasina, taher, writer lawrence