Bangladesh’s highest court on Wednesday upheld the death sentence for the ‘Emir’ of the Jamaat-i-Islami party for crimes during the country’s 1971 independence struggle, paving the way for his execution within months.
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The Supreme Court led by chief justice S.K. Sinha dismissed an appeal by Jamaat ‘Emir’ Motiur Rahman Nizami.
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who was sentenced to be hanged for murder, rape and orchestrating the killing of top intellectuals as the head of a ruthless militia during the conflict. “The court upheld the death sentence in three out of four charges,” prosecutor Tureen Afroz told reporters. Nizami, 72, Jamaat’s leader since 2000 and a minister in a former Islamist-allied government of 2001-2006, now faces the gallows within months unless his case is reviewed by the same court or he is granted clemency by the president. Three senior Jamaat officials and a key leader of the main opposition have been executed since December 2013 for war crimes, despite global outcries over the shortcomings of their trials by a controversial war crime tribunal.
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The court dismissed previous reviews of those four opposition leaders on death row, leading to their execution, the latest in November last year. Prosecutors said Nizami was the leader of a student wing of Jamaat during the war and turned it into the Al-Badr pro-Pakistani militia, which killed top professors, writers, doctors and journalists in the most gruesome chapter of the conflict. Their bodies were found blindfolded with their hands tied and dumped in a marsh on the outskirts of the capital.