B'desh: Freedom fighters express displeasure over Sarah Hossain's inclusion in UN panel - Dhaka News
by IANS | Updated Feb 02, 2023

Hossain, a Bangladeshi lawyer, will serve the mission as its chair with Shaheen Sardar Ali of Pakistan and Viviana Krsticevic of Argentina as two other members of the panel. The three member panel will inquire over the "state of repression" unleashed by Iranian government to "suppress the movement against Hijab".
The freedom fighters are questioning "how UN can select someone for the mission on alleged human rights violations who had a record of defending war criminals who slaughtered and raped tens of thousands for religious absolutism".
They argue that Hossain with her British husband David Bergman "defended and lobbied hard to save local self-confessed and convicted war criminals from Jamaat-e-Islam, some of whom are accused for committing genocide, rape and arson during the 1971 Bangladesh liberation war".
Former Justice Shamsuddin Chowdhury Manik has termed the inclusion Hossain, "who defended the war criminals akin to the Iranian mullahs, in the UN committee on Iran a big blunder".
"A classic case of a double-standard practiced by the UN and Western countries, driving their agenda, has become evident with the inclusion of Hossain in the UN committee set up to investigate atrocities against women in Iran," Justice Manik asserted.
Bergman and Hossain, whose father Kamal Hossain emerged as the Prime Ministerial face of the Islamist coalition before 2018 parliament polls, have "stoutly defended the Jamaat-e-Islami and BNP leaders accused of heinous war crimes".
Self-confessed war criminals, mostly Jamaat members are said to have poured in millions in "lobbying focused on the US and the UK policymakers to cover up their horrendous war crimes and hired journalists as well".
Bergman defended war criminals with his blog, peddling narratives that undermine harrowing crimes, that sparked a call for his boycott by the country's popular movement which sought justice for millions of Bengali families who waited four long decades to see the trial. Even the country's court warned Bergman not to repeat such "malicious and prejudicial" criticism of historically settled issues.
Recently the Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention, an US-based institution, has recognised the brutal killings of Bangladeshis by the Pakistani forces in 1971 as a "genocide", serving some relief to the country's five decades of wait for UN recognistion of the worst war crimes in 100 years history.
Member of the central committee of Awami League, Tarana Halim, has also questioned the UN's "much coveted principle of fairness as it still put on hold the recognition of 1971 genocide committed by Jamat Al-Badr Razakar, the auxiliary forces of Pakistan Army".
Related Articles
- Sikh professor deported in 2021 returns to Fiji
- Israeli fighter jets strike Gaza military post in response to rocket fire
- Cambodia revokes West-backed VOD radio's license over 'slanderous' broadcast
- Sedition case against ex-Pak Finance Minister for 'sabotaging negotiations' with IMF
- 6.1-magnitude quake hits New Zealand
- US-China rivalry will not split the world, globalisation is here to stay: Study
- S.Korean civic group accuses Army man of covering up suicide of bullied conscript
- Questions about spate of high-altitude objects shot down over North America
- Cambodian Prime Minister visits Laos; discusses strategic partnership, border
- Venezuelan Prez urges youths to defeat US blockade on National Youth Day