blood and tears
My son, Mohammad Yasin, had gone to his office. She said:“Hundreds of teenage girls were kidnapped from our locality by the Bengali rebels. Miraculously, an Awami Youth patrol spotted us and in the nick of time, pushed in quickly between us and the assailants, beating them off with their own poles and deftly herding us down narrow alley ways to safety in a local Awami League headquarter…………”Malcolm Browne of the New York Times, who visited East Pakistan early in May, wrote in a Dacca despatch in the NYT on May 6, 1971: “General Tikka Khan, the Military Governor of East Pakistan, said today that his staff estimated that 150 persons were killed in Dacca on the night of March 25 when the Army moved to re-assert control over this province……. I presume that the thugs killed him. The White Paper -would have made more impact, in spite of its inadequacy of details, and its foreign readers would have reacted in horror over the Awami League’s racist pogrom if it had been published before the end of April 1971. The Dacca University Campus served as the operational base of the Awami League militants and its laboratories were used for manufacturing different varieties of explosives. “In the night of March 23, 1971, an armed gang of Awami League thugs raided our house. My conclusion is that we did the same crime what Pakistanis and Biharis did. My husband, who was heart-broken, kneeled in prayer to the Almighty God. One of the Pakistani newsmen who went on this tour of East Pakistan was Anthony Mascarenhas, Assistant Editor of Karachi’s English Daily Morning News and Pakistan Correspondent of the Sunday Times of London. They had spent nearly two and a quarter years in a Red Cross Relief Camp in Chittagong. My husband, Maqsood Alam, who was an excellent marksman, complied with their instructions and gave up his gun….. “In the third week of March, roving bands of armed Awami Leaguers terrorised the non-Bengalis and extorted money from them. But the federal military force in the province was too inadequate to contain swiftly the challenge and revolt of the more than 176,000 armed Bengali rebels. My three young sons were away from the house when the raid took place. He escaped the massacre of non-Bengalis. We had no money left for medicines, and proper medical treatment for the non-Bengalis in the hospitals was difficult to get.” Zainab Bibi, 55, who lived with her two teenage sons in Quarter No. India is making dams on their water and bangladeshi cant even speak to them. Awami League cadres used to reap huge cuts by getting sanctions for larger cash with drawals by the non-Bengalis. The Times of London reported on April 6th, 1971: “Thousands of helpless Muslim refugees settled in Bengal at the time of Partition, are reported to have been massacred by angry Bengalis in East Pakistan during the past week……….”. one thing i told to bangla nation that you behave your father of nation then no body can trust you. They inundated the American press with grisly, highly exaggerated accounts of the Army’s toughness towards the rebels and ignored the virtual annihilation of a massive segment of the non-Bengali population by the Bengali rebels in March-April, 1971. Others went to live with their relatives who had survived the massacre……………” Eye-witnesses gave heart-rending accounts of the murder of non-Bengali employees in the Usmania Glass Works on March 27, and in the Hafiz Jute Mills and the Ispahani Jute Mills in Chittagong in March and April 1971. The Japanese version of the song w… They warned us not to leave our house because all the escape routes were blocked. In Joydebpur, 22 miles from Dacca, an armed mob, led by Awami League militants, put up barricades on the rail track and the main highway to block troop movement on March 19, 1971. Living conditions in these camps were dreadful. Her four captors took turns to rape her. Thsese are not friend of us… these are the enemy of BD. In two days of terror and fire, Fcrozeshah Colony looked like an atom-bombed township………….” Noor Mohammad lost most of his relatives in the March 1971 massacres in East Pakistan. A killer squad stormed my house; they stole every article of value that we had. All through this week, the Awami League militants were beefing up their strength with the defectors from the East Pakistan Rifles and the paramilitary Ansar force. Awami League militants and student activists took away at gunpoint jeeps, cars and microbuses owned by non-Bengalis. Her husband, Abdus Salam, was employed as a driver in the Dacca office of the Pakistan International Airlines. In Chittagong, I lived in a quarter in the Nasirabad Housing area. Sheikh Mujibur Rahman took the salute at an armed March Past at his residence on which the Bangladesh flag was ceremoniously unfurled. The Awami League had built up a base of influence amongst the Bengali workers and since the first week of March 1971, party cadres were inciting the Bengali workers against the non-Bengalis……… “On March 19, a killer gang of Awami League militants, armed with guns, sickles, daggers and staves came into our factory. A jingo barked out the order that Bengalis and non-Bengalis should fall into separate lines. All other press services and news¬papers in West Pakistan were given similar instruction. I had identified, after some considerable research, 55 towns and cities in East Pakistan where the abridgement of the non-Bengali population in March and early April 1971 was conspicuously heavy. But neither the world press nor the press in West Pakistan reported the gory carnage of the innocents which had made them fugitives from the Awami Leagues grisly terror. They kidnapped non-Bengali young women by the thousands; many were ravished and some brutally killed………”Shahid Hussain Abdi, 24, whose father worked as a Stores Officer in the Ispahani Jute Mills in Chittagong, gave this harrowing account of the massacre of non-Bengalis in the Mill area and its neighbourhood and the fiendish human abattoir set up by the rebels in the Workers’ Recreation Club in the Mill premises in March 1971:“We lived in the staff quarters of the Ispahani Jute Mills. “March 25, 1971 was the horrible day on which I was widowed by the Bengali rebels”, said 30-year-old Zaibunnissa who lived in the Ferozeshah Colony in Chittagong. Killer gangs burst into homes, asked no questions and sprayed gunfire on the inmates. The Awami Leaguers had red-marked our houses in the middle of the month. I lost my senses and was unconscious. The killer gang promised to bring back my husband after some questioning. Not more than 15 per cent of the non-Bengali population in this locality survived the massacres on March 23, 25 and 27, 1971. In a matter of minutes, the killer gang killed him and chopped up his dead body before flinging it into the sea. They looted it and set it ablaze. Many thousands of non-Bengalis were killed, their families were driven out of their repaired homes and the survivors were herded in Relief Camps set up by the Red Cross. When I spoke to a friendly Senator at Capitol Hill about the massive burst of violence let loose all over East Pakistan by the Awami Leaguers on West Pakistanis, Biharis and other non-Bengalis during the murderous month of March 1971 and told him that more than 100,000 non-Bengalis had perished in this dreadful carnage, he looked at me in disbelief “Why was not the massacre reported in the press in March?” was his logical query. Three gunmen overpowered my husband and shot him dead. Awami League demonstrators, at many places, tore up Pakistan’s national flag and trampled under their feet photographs of Quaid-i-Azam Mohammed Ali Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan. Palit’s “The Lightning Campaign” in which he has heaped invectives and abuses on the Pakistan Army units stationed in East Pakistan, and Olga Olson’s “Doktor” in which she has exaggerated the suffering of the Bengali population during the Army operations in 1971. I learnt that the Bengali rebels, in their March 25 raid, kidnapped non-Bengali men by the hundreds. Their evidence gave me the impression that the non-Bengali death toll in the murderous period of March-April 1971 was in the vicinity of 500,000. There have been some tears, but thankfully, far more of them have been tears of joy than tears of pain or sadness. A dozen Bihari young men of our locality, including my husband, used to patrol the area at night to keep marauders at bay. After they had accomplished their satanic acts, the killer gang shot the girl and melted away in the void of the night. The federal Army’s operations against the rebels in Dacca were so swift and effective that by the dawn of March 26 it was in full control of the city. About 50 of them, led by a prominent pro-Pakistan Bengali leader of our locality, came to our rescue and grappled with the raiders. I have a question. The killers dragged my husband to a waiting truck outside the mosque and sped away to what I learnt was a human abattoir set up by the Bengali rebels for murdering the non-Bengali men. The next moment I saw him slashing the throat of my helpless husband. They hurled many of the dead bodies into the blazing houses…..” Mohammed Israil underwent fresh ordeals after December 17, 1971 when India seized East Pakistan. The main culprit were Indian Agents- Awami League and Mukti Bahini. Rebel soldiers of the East Bengal Regiment and the East Pakistan Rifles looted all the cash from the Karnaphuli Paper and Rayon Mills and spared the lives of some senior staff members after they paid them huge sums of money as ransom. A portion of the Jagannath Hall was used for torturing and murdering kidnapped non-Bengalis. They freed 200 non-Bengali women and children who were held captive in another camp in Chandraghona. I was the sole occupant of my quarter and I slipped into the house of a very dear Bengali friend when the Awami League’s raid began. After the March 3 nocturnal baptism of fire, the rebels felt emboldened to attack other non-Bengali habitations in the city. When tension was sparked off at these places in the middle of March, 1971, many non-Bengali families fled to Chittagong city. They said that they would set free my husband if my father signed a bogus document of sale of our house to the leader of the killer gang. The incidence of raids on the homes of non-Bengalis mounted sharply. I thought of suicide and headed towards the railway line. Awami League demonstrators marched past the Presidential Mansion in Dacca where General Yahya was staying and shouted obscenities against him and the federal Army. From time to time, the Awami League volunteers extorted money from us. Our house was looted and burnt by the rebels in the course of raids on our locality in the past few weeks…………“On March 27, about 500 armed rebels, some brandishing machine guns, stormed our building. To win the sympathy of the Indian military officers stationed in Chittagong, the local Awami Leaguers dug up the dead bodies of hundreds of non-Bengalis from shallow mass graves and showed them as the skeletons of Bengalis murdered by the Pakistan Army. They looted the houses of non-Bengalis, machine gunned the inmates and burnt many houses. It was RAW who was holding this so-called liberation movement. When the Pakistan Army re-occupied Chittagong, I brought my aged mother from her gutted house to our home. Late at night, a gang of armed Bengalis raided our house, grabbed my husband and trucked him away. At night, women whose husbands or sons had been slaughtered before them would shriek and wail as the memory of their dear ones haunted them”. They tied my hands with strong ropes and marched me to a large hall where many roped non-Bengali captives squatted on the ground………… “The student jingo who had asked me to write the ransom letter paced towards a hapless victim at the far end of the hall. Thus one of the bloodiest slaughters of modern times went largely unreported in the international press. He gave a new dimension of cold-blooded violence to the Awami League’s terror apparatus. In the afternoon of March 28, we spotted some Pakistani troops and my brother ran towards them. Brandishing sten guns, the raiders ordered her to leave the house at once as the Bengalis returning from India had to be accommodated. Those who tried to escape were shot. Translator: Larbre Studio Editor: Larbre StudioThe group of Angels was chased by the Trifoot Carnivorous Insects and ran everywhere. I snatched his gun but I did not know how to fire it. Many shops and stores in the posh Jinnah Avenue shopping centre, owned by non-Bengalis, were looted. In this period of hell and fire, many more thousands of non-Bengalis were butchered en masse. In the night of March 25, a Bengali mob, led by Awami League militants, tried to loot the houses of non-Bengalis in our locality but the cowards melted away when the news of the Army’s action against the rebels reached them……….. “On December 16, when the surrender decision of the Pakistan Army in Dacca to the Indian Army was announced, violent crowds of Bengali militants went on the rampage against the non-Bengalis in Narayanganj. Dacca and Chittagong were the only two cities from where sketchy reports of the slayings of non-Bengalis had trickled to me in Karachi, mostly through the escapees I met at the Karachi Airport on their arrival from East Pakistan. They said our Bengali captors were planning our murder in the building and we were saved in the nick of time.” Some eye-witnesses from Dacca said that their relatives had been subjected to violence by the Awami league militants at a number of places not far from Dacca. The Army tried to trace him but the presumption was that he was ambushed and killed as was the fate of my other male relatives in Dacca and other places in East Pakistan”, said Saira Khatoon. Rahim Afindi, who was employed in a shipping firm in Chittagong and who had a miraculous escape from death when the Bengali insurgents murdered non-Bengalis in the Chittagong port area, gave this account of his hair-raising experience in March 1971:“I was employed in the shipping firm of Messrs. Yaqub Ah and Sons in Chittagong. He was devoted to the ideology of Pakistan and was active in the local Muslim League. Pakistan’s rejoinder to the flood of anti-Pakistan literature which has gushed from India’s propaganda mills since the Ides of March 1971 has been tragically weak and inadequate. They burnt and looted a number of houses owned by non-Bengalis and kidnapped a number of non-Bengali menfolk……..”“On March 25, a gang of armed rebels smashed the front door of our flat and overpowered my husband. Destruction by Bengali militants of property owned by West Pakistanis in some East Pakistan towns has been heavy………”, “….The telephone link between East and West Pakistan remains nearly unusable and only a skeleton air service is being operated between Karachi and Dacca……”. Many of the American journalists in this motley crowd of foreign reporters (whose souls were saturated with compassion for the Bengali victims of the November 1970 cyclone tragedy) were so charmed by the public relations operatives of the Awami League that they were just not prepared to believe that their darlings in this fascist organization could commit or instigate the murder of the non-Bengalis. She massaged the child’s head and heart but tile baby died on the road. The soundtrack to an independent movie, Blood and Tears includes tracks from some of the biggest names in underground street rap on the West Coast -- Rappin' 4-Tay, Above the Law, Mac Mall, Spice 1, and Magic Mike, among others. “In the night of March 26, at about 9 o’clock, a huge mob of Bengalis, with blazing guns, attacked the houses of non-Bengalis in the Wireless Colony. I have also pored over mounds of records, documents and foreign and Pakistani press clippings of that period. Mohammed Sharfuddin, 40, who lived in House No. In the fight that ensued, three of the raiders were killed and the others escaped. After the federal army took over Chittagong, I searched every nook and corner of Chittagong to locate my missing sisters-in-law but there was no trace of them. I threw myself at the feet of the raiders and begged them to spare my husband. Their testimony showed that the Awami Leaguers and the rebels from the East Pakistan Rifles and the East Bengal Regiment were the first to massacre the non-Bengali innocents and that the tornado of violence and death which swept the province in March-April 1971 stemmed from the Awami League’s lust for power. It showed the rubble of homes and shopping blocks shot up or put to the torch by the rebels but it gave very little evidence of the infernal slaughter-houses and torture chambers set up by the rebels in March 1971 to liquidate many thousands of their non-Bengali victims. This was obviously with the intention of eliminating evidence and witnesses of their crimes. Mohammed Israil, 40, who lived in Quarter No. The next day, at midnight, a gang of armed Mukti Bahini soldiers attacked the Mohammedpur locality and they continued machine-gunning her house till the early hours of the morning. The crowd yelled ‘Joi Bangla’ (Long Live Bengal) and ‘Bangladesh Shadheen’ (Independent Bengal). I have no news of him. Repatriated to Karachi in March 1974, he said: “After the mid-1960’s, most of the non-Bengali traders in Narayanganj and Dacca were apprehensive that some day it would become difficult for them to do business in East Pakistan. Aged 15, my sister was a student in the 9th class in school. This video clearly proves the brutality and animal nature of Mukti Bahini. I begged them to spare an old, ailing man but they said they had instructions to kill every male non-Bengali. He was repatriated to Karachi in November 1973. Hello Moinul Hasan you are listening one sided story and are passing your comments without knowing actual facts. Bengali troops from the East Bengal Regiment mutinied and joined the rebel force. In Chittagong, the federal troops regained control over strategic parts of the city, such as the Port and the Airport, swiftly but a large number of residential localities remained under the terror rule of the rebel gunmen till April 9, 1971. They looted arms and ammunition from the Rifle Club in the nearby industrial township of Narayanganj. Repatriated to Karachi from Dacca with her children, in October 1973, Anwari said: “In the March 1971 massacre of non-Bengalis in East Pakistan, every member of my family, including my parents, was slaughtered in Dinajpur where my father owned a house and some property. I grappled with one of the killers when he trained his gun at one of my small children. We went on board the ship and Mr. Yaqub Ali talked to the Captain. On March 7, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman announced his long-range action programme against the federal government at a mass meeting on the Ramna Race Course ground. But our neighbours were decent people and they assured us that we were safe. Even today there are vast numbers of them who are braving the pain and agony of endless incarceration in hundreds of jails in Bangladesh because of their loyalty to Pakistan — a country in whose creation their noble forebears played a leading role. Blood, sweat, and tears represent the suffering and work that go into doing something difficult. It took them from three days to three weeks to rout the more than 176,000 Awami League-led rebels who conducted “Operation Loot, Kill and Burn” with savage ferocity against the non-Bengali element in the population. March 23, Pakistan’s national festival day, was designated as “Resistance Day” by the Awami League High Command. I had spoken to him in broken Bengali and he knew that I was a non-Bengali. 100 in the Raufabad locality in Chittagong, gave this account of the brutal murder of her aged husband by the Bengali rebels in March 1971: “A killer gang of rebels had raided our locality a number of times since their first murderous assault on March 3. A posse of federal troops arrested him at his residence in Dhanmandi in Dacca at about 1-30 a.m. on March 26. All through the first fortnight of March, the process of phased liquidation of the non-Bengali male population was continued in Chittagong and its neighbouring areas. Word of the mushrooming, organised violence against non-Bengalis in East Pakistan reached West Pakistan through the West Pakistanis who fled from the Awami League’s terror regime in planes and ships. Repatriated to Karachi in January 1974, she said: “On March 5, a killer gang stole into our house. A Mukti Bahini gang raided Najmunnissa’s house in the evening of December 18th and told her that her husband had been executed. A killer gang ransacked my house and looted everything, except the ceiling fans and wardrobes. In effect, the Awami League leadership had on that day chosen the path of secession and loosed forces whose goal was an independent, racist Bengali state. 78/K in the Sagoon Bagan locality in Chittagong, said that her eldest son died of a heart attack when a killer gang attacked their house and looted it on March 3, 1971. Although the eye-witness accounts contained in this book put the focus on the largely-unreported horror and beastiality of the murderous months of March and April 1971, I have, in many a case, incorporated the brutality suffered by the witnesses after India’s occupation of East Pakistan and the unleashing of the Mukti Bahini’s campaign of terror and death against the helpless non-Bengalis and pro-Pakistan Bengalis from the third week of December 1971 onwards. A few non-Bengali families in Cox’s Bazar were also the victims of genocidal violence. The majority of eyewitnesses consist of the parents who saw their children slam, the wives who were forced by the rebels to witness the murder of their husbands, the girls who were ravished and the rare escapees from the rebel-operated human slaughterhouses. “My only daughter has been insane since she was forced by her savage tormentors to watch the brutal murder of her husband”, said Mukhtar Ahmed Khan, 43, while giving an account of his suffering during the Ides of March 1971 in Dacca. “I am the lone survivor of a group of ten Pathans who were employed as Security Guards by the Delta Construction Company in the Mohakhali locality in Dacca; all the others were slaughtered by the Bengali rebels in the night of March 25, 1971”, said 40-year-old Bacha Khan. Bengali civilians and liberation troops began mass slaughter of Mohajirs (Indian migrants) from the Indian State of Bihar and raced through market places and settlements, stabbing, shooting and burning, sometimes stopping to rape and loot………….” The Washington Evening Star, in its May 12, 1971 issue, also carried the following despatch of the Associated Press of America wire service: “Newsmen visiting this key port yesterday said there was massive shell and fire damage and evidence of sweeping massacre of civilians by rebels……….“At the jute mills owned by the influential Ispahani family, newsmen saw the mass graves of 152 non-Bengali women and children reportedly executed last month by secessionist rebels in the Mills’ recreation club.“Bloody clothing and toys were still on the floor of the bullet pocked Club. Danzig can be seen as the third stage in Glenn Danzig's musical career, preceded by the punk band The Misfits and the deathrock band Samhain. He said in Karachi, after his repatriation from Chittagong, in February 1974:“Between March 15 and 26, Halishahar was a special target of attack by the rebels. She was old and looked a saintly woman. I asked them to find out whether my father who lived in Santahar was alive. Fatema said: “Murder and loot were the principal motives of the aimed rebels when they raided the homes of non-Bengails. We were told that any one found escaping would be shot. 3,000 within 24 hours. I also glanced over two fat volumes of the Bangladesh documents, mass distributed by the Indian Government in the United States, in which India is projected as an angel of peace who showed Job-like patience in the face of Pakistan’s alleged villainy and barbarity in East Pakistan. His neck was severed and some parts of his body were mutilated. The dreadful scene of the slaughter of my two sons haunted me day and night. In Baidya Bazar, the rebel gangs wiped out a dozen non-Bengali families and looted their property. For three months, I had frequent attacks of delirium. All of us spoke excellent Bengali but our mother tongue was Urdu. In this dungeon, even water was denied to us. It was God’s mercy that I escaped their murderous onslaught. They looted my house and carried all the loot with them……… “In the afternoon, a Bengali boy, who had known our family, brought me the shocking news that the rebels had murdered my father and my brother and thrown their bodies into the river. Subsequently, I learnt that in March 1971, this house was used as a slaughter-house by the rebels and they had killed many women and children in it………. Amongst them were quite a few American journalists of eminence and influence. Definition of blood, sweat and tears in the Idioms Dictionary. I was appalled by the doubts which India’s smear campaign against Pakistan had created about us as a nation even in the minds of our brothers-in-faith and friends. Some non-Bengalis, who tried to escape from their burning houses, were mowed with rifle-fire; many perished in the conflagration………..”“A killer gang looted my hut and then set it ablaze. We were rescued by the federal troops”. Ok, I admit, there hasn't been much blood. He said that I should not shelter any non-Bengali friends otherwise I and my children would be done to death. Repatriated to Karachi from Chittagong in February 1974, he said:“A little more than half of the population of some 50,000 people in Halishahar consisted of non-Bengalis. But no newspaper in the Western Wing of the country dared report it in print. They overpowered my husband. “I estimate that some 1,000 non-Bengalis were killed or wounded in barely three hours in the Adamjee Nagar New Colony in Dacca on March 19, 1971”, said Mohammed Farid, 26, who was employed as Assistant Supervisor in the Spinning section of the Adamjee factory. My daughter also resisted the attackers but they were far too many and they were well-armed. On the front lawn before the dormitories, a senior officer took newsmen over a training area of barbed wire entanglements and high stonewalls where he said students had trained for the clash that was to come…………” About the captured Indian soldiers whom foreign newsmen met in Dacca and the seized Indian arms and ammunition shown to them on May 7, 1971, Maurice Quaintance of Reuters cabled: “In Dacca, three Khaki-clad soldiers on Friday confessed they were captured prisoners sent from India to Pakistan last month to help the dissident East Pakistan Rifle units supporting the secessionists. My husband had, in the past, worked in the Daily Pasban and was well-known as an Urdu writer and journalist………. 1,491 talking about this. The 170 eye-witnesses, whose tragic accounts of their splintered and trauma-stricken lives are contained in this book, were picked from amongst nearly 5000 families repatriated to Pakistan from Bangladesh between the autumn of 1973 and the spring of 1974. Mahila lived in a shack in the Wireless Colony in Chittagong. The federal government prohibited their publication in the West Pakistan Press to prevent reprisals against the local Bengalis. Life in the captivity of the Mukti Bahini in this prison was a hell. It was in her article of May 2, 1971, in the Magazine section of the New York Times, about the Pakistan Army’s alleged atrocities on the Bengali rebels that Peggy Durdin referred to the xenophobia unloosed by the Awami League’s agitation and admitted for the first time that she and her husband were attacked by Bengali demonstrators in Dacca in the first few days of March 1971. Chittagong was our home town; we loved it. Repatriated to Karachi in January 1974, along with her 4 year old orphaned daughter, from a Red Cross Camp in Dacca, Nasima gave this hair-raising account of her travail in 1971:“Since March 3, there was tension in Narayanganj. I wailed; I screamed and I entreated but the killers forced him into a jeep and drove away. After the federal army liberated Chittagong from the demonic rule of the rebels, the non-Bengali survivors resumed the broken threads of their lives and repaired their burnt out and devastated houses. Since that dreadful day, 6she has been mentally ill. She trembles and she raves many a time as memory remindsher of that grisly event in her broken life………..”“We sought refuge, with our wounded father in the woods near Tongi, a suburb in Dacca, and lived there on water and wild fruits for three days”, said Ayesha Khatoon, 22, on her repatriation to Karachi from Dacca in February 1974. In writing and publishing this book, I am not motivated by any revanchist obsession or a wish to condemn my erstwhile Bengali compatriots as a nation. The Red Cross Officials tried their best to trace out my missing husband but he was not found. etched in blood of mine. But she wrote not a word about their manhandling by the Bengalis in any issue of her great newspaper either in March or April 1971. It highlighted the Awami League’s pogrom against West Pakistanis, Biharis and other non-Bengalis which was waged in March 1971. খুবই মর্মান্তিক একটা ইতিহাস পড়লাম যা অত্যন্ত সুচারুভাবে এতদিন ধামাচাপা দেওয়া হয়েছিল। বাংলাদেশে এরকম কোন বই আজপর্যন্ত কখনই প্রকাশ করতে দেওয়া হয় নাই। এসব খুনি চরিত্রহীন মুক্তিযোদ্ধাদেরকেই এখন পরিচিত করা হচ্ছে দেশের সেরা সন্তান বলে!!!! Osman Ghani was repatriated to Pakistan in December 1973. It had torture cells and a chamber of horror where blood was drained through syringes from the bodies of non-Bengali victims before they were killed by their inhuman captors.The killing of the non-Bengali employees and their families in the Usmania Glass Works, Hafiz Jute Mill, Ispahani Jute Mill and other factories in Chittagong and the Amin Jute Mills at Bibirhat and the Karnaphuli Paper and Rayon Mills at Chandraghona and its neighbourhood surpassed the savagery of the Huns.
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