The Myth of Genocide in East Pakistan in 1971

The anti-Muslim, anti-Islam grievance culture of “Bangladeshi” nationalism, of which Spittoon boss Faisal Gazi is a prime example, is largely based on the myth of a “genocide” in East Pakistan by Pakistani forces and anti-Nazi allies during the anti-terrorism battle of 1971.

Amongst the myths promoted is that the Pakistani army engaged in mass rape of Bengali women. Thankfully though this myth has been exposed by the brilliant heretic Sarmila Bose. She shows that the ridiculous figures made up by the new Hitler, Mujib ur Rahman, could never have occurred:

Ms. Sarmila Bose in her paper entitled “Losing the Victims: Problems of Using Women as Weapons in Recounting the Bangladesh War” paints a picture of the Pakistani military as a disciplined force that spared women and children. She writes:
During my field research on several incidents in East Pakistan during 1971, Bangladeshi participants and eyewitnesses described battles, raids, massacres and executions, but told me that women were not harmed by the army in these events except by chance such as in crossfire. The pattern that emerged from these incidents was that the Pakistan army targeted adult males while sparing women and children.
She also quotes the passage from the Hamoodur Rahman Commission Report that I cited above to support her assertion that so many rapes could not have occurred. 20,000-34,000 could not have raped 200,000 to 400,000 women in the space of nine months.
She states in the introduction:
That rape occurred in East Pakistan in 1971 has never been in any doubt. The question is what was the true extent of rape, who were the victims and who the perpetrators and was there any systematic policy of rape by any party, as opposed to opportunistic sexual crimes in times of war.
To try to bolster her argument that the Pakistani forces in Bangladesh could not have raped so many women, she claims:
The number of West Pakistani armed forces personnel in East Pakistan was about 20,000 at the beginning of the conflict, rising to 34,000 by December. Another 11,000 men — civil police and non-combat personnel — also held arms.
For an army of 34,000 to rape on this scale in eight or nine months (while fighting insurgency, guerrilla war and an invasion by India), each would-be perpetrator would have had to commit rape at an incredible rate.

There are numerous reports out there now which negates the well established beliefs. The declassified US reports, Indian military officers account, Pakistan military officers account, General Niazi’s memoirs, Sharmila Bose, Hamoodurahman commission report.

The lies of the Nazi Awami League are further exposed here:

Many myths have been formed around the creation of Bangladesh. Among them is the fiction that the defeated Pakistan Army savagely killed three million people and raped three hundred thousand women during their less than nine months unsuccessful fight to preserve the integrity of a united Pakistan.

In May 1973, Abdul Gaffar Choudhury, a well known newspaper columnist and close associate of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, said: ‘We are now saying three million Bengali’s have been martyred. Without any survey we are telling three million Bengali’s have died.’ [1] After openly raising doubts about the alleged figure, Choudhury left Bangladesh for good for Britain.

It took another twenty years for the question to be raised again. Participating in a debate in the National Assembly of Bangladesh on 15 June 1993, Col. Akbar Hussain, a decorated ‘Mukti Juddha’ and a Cabinet Minister under both General Ziaur Rahman and Mrs Khaleda Zia, returned to the question. Making a pointed attack on the Awami League for its ‘propensity to falsify history’, he said that the Awami League had created the myth of ‘three million killed’, whereas in reality it was closer to a tenth of that figure. On the following day Shudhangshu Shekar Haldar, a Hindu member of Awami League, challenged Col. Hussain to substantiate his assertion with ‘recorded proof’. Responding to the challenge, the Minister told the National Assembly that after the creation of Bangladesh an announcement was made to pay Tk. 2,000 to every family that suffered loss of life where upon only three hundred thousand families had claimed such compensation. Had there been three million individuals dead, their families would have claimed for compensation. Poignantly, Haldar could not, and did not, challenge the figure of those actually claimed compensation. Nor could he give any satisfactory explanation for the missing two million seven hundred thousand. Instead, he began inquiring as to what could have prompted the Minister to question’ a well-known fact’.

The tactic was “a clear one: if you cannot ‘kill’ the message, ‘kill’ the messenger. Having done that however, he requested the presiding Deputy Speaker to expunge Col. Hussain’s remarks from the proceedings of the Assembly. At this point Abdus Samad Azad, standing in for the Awami League leader, stood up and spoke in support of his party colleague’s demand for the effacement of the remarks. His argument was: ‘So far no one, including General Ziaur Rahman, has challenged the figure of three million. We had it from our leader Sheikh Mujib and it must stand as correct’. [2]

1.2. Mujib’s Part in the Myth Making:
Indeed, it was Mujib’s stamp of approval which gave the oft quoted number both its life and respectability. On 10 January 1972, the very day of his return to Bangladesh from prison in West Pakistan, he publicly announced:

….. “Three million people have been killed. I believe that there is no parallel in the history of the world of such a colossal loss of lives for the struggle for freedom.” [3]

He repeated the same charge before the world in a television interview given to the British broadcaster David Frost. In the same interview, which was recorded at his private residence in Dhaka and was broadcasted from New York on 18 January 1972, he also made the astounding claim that the very house in which the interview was taking place had been destroyed by the Pakistani Army! [4] A day earlier the Time Magazine quoted Mujib saying,

‘if Hitler could have been alive today he would be ashamed’ [5]

During the following weeks and months, his insistence on the three million figure grew and it became his all-purpose ‘opening song’. Let me give an example.

“The vice-secretary asked me to sit in the corridor crowded with at least 50 persons. He then walked into the office and informed Mujib of my presence. I heard a terrible growl and the poor man reappeared shaken, asking me to wait. I waited. One hour, two hours, three hours, four hours, then at eight o’clock I was still there in that damned corridor. At 8-30 a miracle occurred: Mujib was ready to receive me. I was asked to enter. I entered into a large room with a sofa and two armchairs. Mujib was sprawled all over the sofa and two fat ministers were seated in the armchairs with their bellies in the air. No one rose. No one made a greeting and no one responded to mine. There was a very long silence until Mujib gestured to me to sit down. I sat on a small corner of the sofa and opened up the tape recorder preparing the first question. But, I didn’t have time for that. Mujib started to shout: ‘Hurry up, quick, understand?’ ‘I have no time to waste, is that clear?’ ‘The Pakistanis have killed three million people, is that clear? Yes, three, three, three.’ (How he arrived at that figure, I’ll never understand. The Indians speaking of the victims have never gone over the one million figure). I said: ‘Mr Prime Minister…’ Mujib started to shout again: ‘They killed my women in front of their husbands and children, the husbands in front of their sons and wives, the sons in front of their fathers and mothers, the nephews before their grandfathers and grandmothers, the grandfathers and grandmothers in front of their nephews, cousins in front of cousins, aunts in front of uncles, brother-in-law in front of sister-in-law .. . ‘Mr Prime Minister, I would like .. .’ ‘Listen to her, she would like! She would like. You have no right to want anything, understand? Is that clear?”

This is the account of the well-known Italian journalist Oriana Fallaci’s interview with Mujib. [6]

Yet, only on 8 January 1972 in London, on his way back to Bangladesh, the same Mujib had claimed that ‘one million people had been killed in Bangladesh.’ [7] One might wonder who updated the figure for Mujib? Was it done between his journey from London to Dhaka, via New Delhi or immediately after his arrival in Dhaka? It has been claimed by one of the ‘involved’ Indian organisers of the ‘Freedom Movement’ that ‘By and by he [Mujib] came to know more details and later in Dacca he put the figure at 3.5 million’ .[8] Since Mujib focussed on three million, rather than on his long time benefactor’s averred three and a half million, one might think he was still hesitant to paddle out everything his ‘involved’ benefactors were handing him out. But, where did he get this figure form?

1.3. The Myth Makers at Work:

However inventive Mujib was with facts and however insistent he became with the fiction of ‘three million killed’ and ‘three hundred thousand raped’, as we shall see he himself did not fabricate it. He simply parroted in public, what was given to him in private. In fact, the figure which he was eventually handed out, went through several updates at the hands of a number of involved quarters.

1.4. The Swadhin Bangla Betar:
Up to 10 December 1971, Mujib’s own Awami League colleagues, few of whom ever ventured out to face the Pakistan Army and most of whom had reportedly spent their Indian sojourn in enjoyment with their friends and families [9] had been circulating an estimated casualty figure of three hundred thousand, through the ‘Swadhin Bangla Betar’. [10] Even years later his party Vice President, Zahirul Qayyum, would implicitly contest the myth of three million by pointing to this estimate broadcasted by the official organ of the Bangladesh Government in exile.[II]

1.5. Indian Authorities:
Yet, on 7 January 1972 the Press Trust of India, quoting Sheikh Abdul Aziz, the newly appointed Communication Minister of Bangladesh [12], reported from Calcutta a casualty figure of over one million. However, the news communicated by the Indian national news agency stressed that the casualty toll was a provisional one and disclosed that the Government of Bangladesh was going to collect statistics in order to obtain the actual figure. Apparently, to give some credibility to the Minister’s newly updated estimate, he was quoted as saying that in his own village the Pakistan Army had killed 107 persons. [13] There was no explanation as to how the estimated death toll rose by three-fold in a matter of three weeks, during most of which the ‘culprit’ Pakistan Army had been under Indian custody.

To be fair to the Minister, this figure of one million killed was floating around from the beginning of the insurgency. One Asad Choudhury wrote a poem, called ‘Report 1971’ at the start of the insurgency. In it he told his readers that the Pakistani Army had, by then, massacred one million Bengalis and have raped forty thousand women. [14] Likewise, on 24 June 1972 the ‘Swadhin Bangla Betar’ broadcasted a speech, supposedly written by Maulana Bhashani, which, inter alia, claimed that ‘after sacrificing one million invaluable lives, the struggling masses of independent Bengal would not accept any thing else. Their only road is either full independence or death.’ [15] But, one might still want to know, why the Minister suddenly found this preferable over the ‘Swadhin Bangla Betar’s’ hitherto ‘official’ figure of three hundred thousand?

In this connection, it is to be noted that the Indian authorities, including India’s military establishment, have consistently maintained that so far as they were concerned the casualty figure stood at one million.
What is more interesting, M.R.Akhtar Mukul, who as the head of the’ Swadhin Bangla Betar’ and the presenter of its best known programme ‘Charampatra’ (Dire Letter) had been regularly disseminating out the three hundred thousand figure up to 10 December 1971, in his book of recollection ‘Ami Bijoy Dekhechi’ (I Have Seen Victory) he piously authenticated the one million casualty toll without ever mentioning his old vaunted death toll. [16] Those who are familiar with Mukul’ s professed willingness to lie for facilitating Indian cover-ups [17] would not be surprised at his volte face. Nor would they doubt that like Mukul, Sheikh Abdul Aziz was also made to endorse the figure deemed appropriate for the occasion by the Indian authorities.

In his reminiscence Field Marshall Sam Manekshaw simply presented the figure as a ‘well-known fact’ and expressed utter incredulity at the figure of three million with which Mujib’s name became inextricably linked. [18] Likewise, in a mass produced video interview Lt Gen. Jagjit Singh Aurora said that ‘all of us knew’ that the Pakistan Army had brutally killed ‘about a million people’; yet Sheikh Mujib who ‘was more an agitator and less an administrator’ decided to ‘make it more brutish’ by saying that the Pakistan Army had killed three million Bengalis. He pointed out that Mujib’s figure was ‘absolutely impossible’, because the Pakistan Army had ‘simultaneously fought within the country and at the borders’. [19] Earlier, Maj.Gen.D.K.Palit, who also had a hand in ‘the birth of Bangladesh engineered by the Indian Army’, gave the same one million figure as if it was an indubitable fact which required no supporting proof. [20] Despite Palit’s stance, one should heed the significance of the fact that neither Manekshaw nor Aurora have vouched for the authenticity of the Indian figure beyond that it was a ‘well-known fact’ or some how ‘known to us’.

The ‘absolutely impossible’ figure of three million to which Mujib publicly tied up his own name was not absolutely his own invention. The ‘credit’ for its fabrication was due to one Ehtesham Haider Choudhury, editor of the Dhaka daily Purbadesh and his Russian friend, the Pravda representative in Dhaka.

1.6. The Purbadesh/Pravda/ENA:
In a signed editorial under the heading of ‘Hang the Yahya Junta’ on the 22 December 1971 issue of the Purbadesh, Choudhury claimed that the ‘enemy occupation forces have savagely killed about three million innocent people and more than two hundred intellectuals’. [21] Curiously enough, only on the previous day the same daily printed an eight column red coloured banner heading, asking: ‘How many people of Bengal have been killed?’ In it Ershad Majumdar, the paper’s senior reporter, categorically said that ‘every where people are asking: How many people of Bangladesh have been killed? How many ‘lakhs’ (unit of hundred thousand)? 10,20,30,40 or 50 lakhs? No one seems to have the answer. But the people are not likely to leave the question unanswered. Answer we must have.’ [22]

Within days the Pravda printed a news claiming that over three million people have been killed by the Pakistan Army. The Soviet daily carried the news without mentioning the Purbadesh editorial. The report was credited to its Special Correspondent. ENA, the Bangladesh news agency, lifted the Pravda news and reproduced it in all major Dhaka dailies under the beading: ‘Pak Army Killed Over 30 Lakh People’. Now it read

“The Communist Party Newspaper Pravda has reported that over 30 lakh persons were killed throughout Bangladesh by the Pakistani occupation forces during the last nine months, reports ENA.

Quoting its Special Correspondent stationed in Dacca, the paper said that the Pakistani military forces immediately before their surrender to Mukti Bahinis and the Allied Forces had killed about 800 intellectuals in the capital city of Bangladesh alone.[23]

The change from ‘less than three million’ of the Purbadesh editor into ‘over three million’ is to be marked. The effortless four-fold increase in the number of intellectuals allegedly killed is also to be noticed. We may also keep in mind Jyoti Sen Gupta’s false claim regarding Mujib’s announcement that 3.5 million people have been killed.

1.7. How Mujib Took to Parroting the Last Figure:
It was reported that on his arrival in Dhaka on 10 January 1972 the lobby behind the fabrication of the ‘absolutely impossible’ figure promptly briefed the returning Bangladesh leader with the added ‘fact’ of three hundred thousand women raped, who in turn immediately went on parroting it. [24] Thus, the self-serving fiction of ‘three million killed’ and ‘three hundred thousand women raped’ was created.

In other words the figure of “3 million” is simply a made up creed promoted by Mujibur Rahman which his worshippers refuse to admit is false, despite all the evidence!!

Even more encouragingly the legendary feminist Germaine Greer has also join the bandwagon of truth, (something that has deeply upset defenders of the Awami League Fourth Reich as the title indicates)

This entry was posted in 1971 war, Anti-Hindu hatred, Bengali Extremism, Freedom of Speech, Sarmila Bose. Bookmark the permalink.

7 Responses to The Myth of Genocide in East Pakistan in 1971

  1. Bongol Mongol Division says:

    Atrocities were committed on both sides

    Like

  2. Bigland Boy says:

    Once when my dad went out to buy some cigarettes and claim his giro my mum gathered us around our tiny smelly council flat and explained what REALLY happened in 1971:

    Basically we Bengali men have very very tiny willies and cannot satisfy our women. When the Pakistani army, full of well hung Punjabi and Pathan hunks, arrived in East Pakistan, my mum said, the Bengali women thought they had died and gone to heaven. They took every oppurtunity they could for a proper shagging from REAL men!!!

    Sadly the Indian army invaded in support of the terrorist Awami League and Mukhti Bahini and their Nazi propoganda created the myth of “mass rape” that is used to this day!.

    Like

  3. banana brain says:

    b’shit

    although it has been proved that there was no genocide if the pakistani army had done as the awami league claimed they would be acting according to the holy dictates of the 613 mitzvots:

    601. Not to keep alive any individual of the seven Canaanite nations (Deut. 20:16) (negative).
    604.To deal with a beautiful woman taken captive in war in the manner prescribed in the Torah (Deut. 21:10-14) (affirmative).
    613. To destroy the seed of Amalek (Deut. 25:19) (CCA77).
    http://www.jewfaq.org/613.htm

    therefore any criticism of their action is anti-judaism and anti-semitic

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  4. Pingback: Faisal Gazi’s guide to Judaism | Spittoon watch

  5. abidbahar says:

    MYSTERY AND MYTHS ABOUT THE WAR!

    The biggest mystery though is, while Mujib surrendered to the army on the 25th of March, without declaring independence, and was safe in Pakistan during the war, but surprisingly his entire family including Hasina’s remained safe in Dhaka and were even receiving monthly allowance from the Pakistani rulers. This remained a mystery until today whether Mujib was a hero or a betrayer to the nation, for he was known to be a master of deception.

    While Bengali men and women were killed during the war, after the war, Mujibbadis also killed Bihari men and raped their protection less women and also repossessed their properties. After returning from Pakistani jail, Mujib did nothing to stop it. In this Mujibbadi carnage, the most killed were the Biharis (who supported the Pakistan army or some even some supported Bangladesh). Obviously, as expected Mujibadis had no mercy for the men ( whether criminals or innocent victims). But the worst sufferers of the war were the Bihari women sheltered in concentration camps all over Bangladesh.

    Mujibadi Mukthi juddha or any Awami would take Bihari women to their homes, or hotels at random along with wine and rape them by night and drop them at the camps in the morning. Some of these cursed men happen to be my Muktijuddha friends. After the war, the train leaving from Chittagong railway station toward Nazirhat direction carried these victims of Awami rape. While traveling by train, one afternoon, I saw all these young, middle aged Muslim pregnant women get off at Zaothola Bihari colony station. I asked a fellow traveler about who they were. The answer was, these protection less women were made pregnant by Mukthibahini and Awami people. Despite my own background in Mukthi juddha, but for humanity’s sake, I found this part of Awami crime unforgivable. These women traveled to the city to work and returned to the camp in the afternoon. Another time my own brother reported to me that he saw one of my Mujibbadi Muuktijuddha friends entering into a hotel room with a wine bottle in one hand and holding a poor Bihari woman on the other. The friend of mine was a Mujibbadi Hindu Muktijoddha.

    Disgusted at Mujib leadership, and his gang of Mujibadi wolf like gangs roaming Bangladesh at the time, I wondered as to who to believe to distinguish between the war victim or the victor! After 1971, Mujib installing the BKSAL one party government and his reign of Rakhi killing of the innocents made things a little more clear the myths about his role in the war and why the exact figure of the 1971 victims was not officially prepared!

    Like

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