The BNP chief's paying tribute to Martyred Intellectuals' Memorial
was nothing but a mockery, Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina said yesterday,
adding no one in the world could stop the war crimes trial initiated by
her government.
The Pakistani occupation forces and their local collaborators,
including Razakars, Al-Badr and Al-Shams, killed poets, writers,
teachers, journalists, doctors and many other intellectuals from
different fields on December 14, 1971 in the then East Pakistan.
Their aim was to make the country to be born, Bangladesh,
intellectually bankrupt, the PM said at a discussion organised by the
ruling party at the Institution of Engineers in the capital to mark
Martyred Intellectuals Day.
"Those who committed such crimes are now undergoing trial and their
trial will go on alongside the war crimes trial," said Hasina, chief of
the ruling Awami League.
Earlier, a one-minute silence was observed remembering the martyrs of
December 14, 1971, four martyred national leaders and all the martyrs
of the Liberation War, democratic movements of the country and the
August 15, 1975 carnage.
The BNP chief is following in the footsteps of her husband Ziaur
Rahman, the PM said, criticising Khaleda Zia for making those, executed
for war crimes, ministers during her tenure as prime minister.
How she could pay tribute to the martyred intellectuals after making war criminals ministers, Hasina questioned.
"This is nothing but a mockery.... She (Khaleda) thinks our people do not understand anything, but they understand everything.”
Before the recent execution of two war criminals, Khaleda returned
from London in a hurry, Hasina said, in a bid to save them through
waging a movement.
The Prime Minister also took a swipe at those freedom fighters who accompanied Khaleda to the memorial.
Hasina continued saying that following the assassination of Father of
the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman along with most of his
family members on August 15, 1975, Bangladesh lost its glory and dignity
it had attained through the war.
But as the Awami League assumed power after 21 years, she said, Bangladesh began regaining its lost glory.
Neither of the Pakistani occupation forces and their collaborators
could forget their defeat and so they want to destroy the spirit of the
Liberation War, halt the economic development of the country and force
Bangladesh into slavery again, the PM said.
"Their conspiracy is going on and will go on, but we must move on foiling all the conspiracies.”
Hasina said some considered Ziaur Rahman the proclaimer of independence and a freedom fighter.
“If Zia were a true freedom fighter, he could not have put war criminals in state power."
Hasina also reiterated her resolve not to bow to anyone and lead
Bangladesh into becoming a hunger and poverty-free prosperous country by
2041.