Skip to content

Security personnel use excessive forces against BNP-Jamaat: IRCT

Staff Reporter :
International Rehabilitation Council for Torture Victims (IRCT) has said that the security forces are pursuing a policy of unlawful, disproportionate and excessive force against demonstrators from the main opposition parties, Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) and Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami ahead of the general election.

“In the run-up to next January’s general elections, human rights violations are increasing in Bangladesh.

Allegations of torture and ill-treatment by the security forces are multiplying, so are cases of judicial harassment of political opponents and human rights defenders, as well as attacks on minority groups,” the IRCT said on its website on Thursday.

Amid this worrying context, signatories to the global consortium United Against Torture call on the government to end state violence and respect its human rights obligations.

Over the past year, opposition demonstrations have been repeatedly broken up by police firing shotgun pellets, teargas, rubber bullets, and beating with batons, leaving hundreds of protesters seriously injured.

These types of weapons should not be used against unarmed, peaceful protesters, IRCT said.

“Our members in Bangladesh tell us torture is on the rise as democracy and the rule of law are being undermined on a daily basis,” said Lisa Henry, Secretary General of the International Rehabilitation Council for Torture Victims (IRCT), one of six international anti-torture organisations forming the EU-funded UAT consortium.

“Survivors have a right to justice and healing which is why we will work together to support our members and partners in Bangladesh to document cases of torture to ensure accountability and to provide rehabilitation to survivors,” the Secretary General said.

IRC said that Bangladesh has failed to turn its constitutional commitment to prohibit torture into reality for the Bangladeshi people.

Dhaka acceded to the UN Convention Against Torture in 1998 and in 2013 passed the Torture and Custodial Death (Prevention) Act which criminalises torture.

Nonetheless, Bangladesh refused to report to the Committee Against Torture (CAT) until 2019.

In the same year Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, who has been in power since 2009, pledged only that “no innocent person should fall victim to torture and harassment”, it mentioned.

The 2019 CAT review urged Bangladesh to make a public commitment to tackle “the routine commission of torture and ill-treatment by law enforcement officers” and to “state unambiguously that torture and ill-treatment will not be tolerated under any circumstances or against any person.”

In recent years, however, Human Rights Watch has reported an increase in torture and other grave human rights violations, with the notoriously abusive paramilitary Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) having been sanctioned by the United States in 2021 for extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances, it further said.

The police often accuse the protesters of attacking them first as they seek to disperse what the government and the courts consider to be acts of subversion.

However, analysis by Amnesty International’s digital verification lab concluded that the videos they have access to show protestors beaten by the police whilst lying on the floor or unarmed and running away.

As the UN Guidance on Less Lethal Weapons states, batons should “not be used against a person who is neither engaged in nor threatening violent behaviour.”

The Bangladeshi police and armed forces, as well as supporters of the ruling Awami League, have also reportedly attacked human rights defenders, torture survivors and their families, and members of minority groups, including LGBTI+ people and Rohingya refugees, in what local human rights organisations describe as a climate of intimidation against perceived dissent, IRCT said.

A recent report in the New York Times detailed how Bangladesh’ multi-party democracy “is being methodically strangled” as tens of thousands of members of the BNP are prosecuted in the absence of evidence.

Nobel Prize-laureate Professor Muhammad Yunus, known as the “banker to the poor”, is facing jail after being the target of numerous lawsuits, it said.

As global leaders in torture prevention, rehabilitation, evidence gathering, and strategic litigation, we will support our members and other human rights organisations in Bangladesh with capacity building to address the current crisis while advocating with national authorities to end torture and ill-treatment, end judicial harassment, and provide reparation to victims.