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Thursday, September 8, 2011
Front Page
Army probe wanted to quiz Hasina
Army probe wanted to quiz Hasina
Star Report
A military inquiry committee wanted to interrogate Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina after the BDR mutiny in 2009, a proposal that annoyed the premier who outright rejected it.
Hasina disclosed the matter to the then US ambassador to Dhaka James F Moriarty during a meeting on April 27 that year, reveals a US diplomatic cable published by the whistle-blowing website WikiLeaks on August 30 this year.
Following the gruesome murder of 57 army officers and 17 civilians by the BDR rebels at Pilkhana headquarters on February 25, 2009, the army on March 2 formed a 20-member probe committee. Led by Lt Gen Jahangir Alam Chowdhury, the committee acted separately from the government one to probe the two-day mayhem.
"Hasina expressed exasperation at a separate army probe that initially was to be limited to strictly military issues such as accounting for arms and ammunition lost during the mutiny," the cable said quoting the meeting with the prime minister.
"She related with evident anger how military investigators had sent a letter to the Ministry of Home Affairs demanding to question senior government officials, including the Prime Minister herself. She said she had rejected the request, noting such interviews were the responsibility of the police investigators."
In the same meeting with the US ambassador, Sheikh Hasina claimed that security personnel were also forcing the detained BDR men to make statements implicating government officials from her Awami League in the mutiny.
Hasina and Moriarty also spoke on strengthening civil-military relationship.
The ambassador gave Hasina a read-out of the Pacific Area Special Operations Conference in Hawaii he had attended along with the then Bangladesh state minister for home Tanjim Ahmad Sohel Taj.
Moriarty said they had visited the Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies, which wanted to facilitate a workshop on civilian-military relations for the Bangladesh government, military and political leaders.
The PM voiced support for the proposal, the cable said.
Front Page
Army probe wanted to quiz Hasina
Army probe wanted to quiz Hasina
Star Report
A military inquiry committee wanted to interrogate Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina after the BDR mutiny in 2009, a proposal that annoyed the premier who outright rejected it.
Hasina disclosed the matter to the then US ambassador to Dhaka James F Moriarty during a meeting on April 27 that year, reveals a US diplomatic cable published by the whistle-blowing website WikiLeaks on August 30 this year.
Following the gruesome murder of 57 army officers and 17 civilians by the BDR rebels at Pilkhana headquarters on February 25, 2009, the army on March 2 formed a 20-member probe committee. Led by Lt Gen Jahangir Alam Chowdhury, the committee acted separately from the government one to probe the two-day mayhem.
"Hasina expressed exasperation at a separate army probe that initially was to be limited to strictly military issues such as accounting for arms and ammunition lost during the mutiny," the cable said quoting the meeting with the prime minister.
"She related with evident anger how military investigators had sent a letter to the Ministry of Home Affairs demanding to question senior government officials, including the Prime Minister herself. She said she had rejected the request, noting such interviews were the responsibility of the police investigators."
In the same meeting with the US ambassador, Sheikh Hasina claimed that security personnel were also forcing the detained BDR men to make statements implicating government officials from her Awami League in the mutiny.
Hasina and Moriarty also spoke on strengthening civil-military relationship.
The ambassador gave Hasina a read-out of the Pacific Area Special Operations Conference in Hawaii he had attended along with the then Bangladesh state minister for home Tanjim Ahmad Sohel Taj.
Moriarty said they had visited the Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies, which wanted to facilitate a workshop on civilian-military relations for the Bangladesh government, military and political leaders.
The PM voiced support for the proposal, the cable said.