Govt guilty of criminal negligence over Bangladesh hangings: Siraj

0
136

 

Ameer Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) Pakistan, Senator Sirajul Haq has strongly condemned the silence of rulers in Islamabad over THE execution of pro-Pakistan leaders in Bangladesh.

Addressing a massive demonstration on the Shahrah-e-Quid e Azam, Karachi, to protest against the oppression of the Dhaka regime, Sirajul Haq said the government of Hasina Wajid was executing the loyalists of Pakistan. the rulers in this country were playing role of silent spectators, which was surprising and also condemnable. The rally was attended by a large number of women and children.

He said that the youth and the aged people of Bangladesh had sacrificed their lives for this country but the rulers in Islamabad did not bother to raise this issue with the international forums, which showed their indifference and their deviation from the country’s ideology. He said the ruler’s talk of a liberal Pakistan was tantamount to rubbing salt on the wounds of the martyrs of Kashmir and Bangladesh.

Sirajul Haq said that those who had been executed in Bangladesh had not been fighting for power. Love of Pakistan and its ideology was part of their faith and they had offered their lives for the love of this country.

He said that Pakistan was the second state coming into being after the state of Madina and its security and service was the highest form of Jihad, Those who had offered their lives for the sublime cause were Mujahideen.

Sirajul Haq said that Indian Prime Minister Modi had stated in Dhaka that he had reached Dhaka from Delhi with the Mukti Bahini to disintegrate Pakistan. He wondered why the Pakistani rulers could not approach the international court of justice against Modi and Hasina Wajid for their violation of the tripartite agreement in 1971.

He said that the indifference of the Pakistani rulers over the execution of JI leaders in Bangladesh and the trials of Prof. Ghulam Azam and others who had bravely faced trials and hardships in Bangladesh, the present rulers had proved themselves guilty in the eyes of the nation. Had the government taken up the matter with the international court of justice in time, the lives of some of these people could have been saved. Such a move by the rulers could have proved the rulers’ loyalty to those offering their lives for this country.  He said that because of the rulers’ indifference, as many as 45 people had been given the death sentence, while more than 4,000 other people were in jails.

The JI chief strongly condemned President Mamoon Husain’s suggestion to the Ulema to search out a room for interest and said such a frivolous proposal could not be expected from an aged man like the president. He said that next time, some other ruler could seek similar concession for drinking, and debauchery.

Addressing the gathering, JI Punjab chief Mian Maqsood Ahmed, expressed hope that Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and Army Chief Gen. Raheel Sharif would end their silence over the oppression going on in Bangladesh. He said that Hasina Wajid was fighting India’s war and said that Islamabad should fight the war of Pakistan and foil the conspiracies against this country.

He said that in 1971, the Pakistan armed forces and the people of Pakistan were struggling to save the country and if that was a crime, the president and the prime minister of Pakistan at that time, were also committing crime, and a case against them could also be moved in some court any time.

Condemning the government’s attitude over the hangings carried out in Bangladesh, Siraj said that 4,000 people are still in Bangladesh jails and 25 have been sentenced to death but Pakistan government is still a silent observer.