DHAKA: A Bangladesh court on Tuesday delayed a verdict against the top leader of an Islamist party charged with war crimes after the defendant became ill.

A special tribunal was set to deliver the verdict for Jamaat-i-Islami chief Motiur Rahman Nizami, who faces 16 charges, including genocide, murder, torture, rape and destruction of property during the war in 1971.

The head of a three-judge panel, M. Enayetur Rahim, said a new date for the verdict would not be set until the judges saw a detailed medical report about Nizami.

Rahim delayed the verdict after jail authorities told the tribunal that Nizami could not be in the court for the verdict because of his illness. “We don’t think it will be logical to announce the verdict under current circumstances,” Rahim told a packed courtroom.

Some people, who were demanding the death penalty for Nizami, alleged that the postponement was “a conspiracy”.

“We will continue to campaign for justice,” said Imran H. Sarkar, who is campaigning for a death sentence. “We will not accept any compromise with the people who killed our people in 1971.”

Thousands of extra security officials had been deployed across Bangladesh ahead of a verdict because of worries it could spark violence as similar court cases have in the past.

There was no immediate comment from the government on the delay.

Two special tribunals set up by Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to try people for war crimes have delivered nine verdicts in which 10 people have been convicted. One senior leader of Jamaat-i-Islami party has already been hanged for his role in killing people in 1971.

The prosecution alleged that Nizami acted as the supreme commander of a militia group, Al-Badr, which carried out a systematic plan to torture and execute pro-liberation supporters during the war. He faces charges of personally carrying out or ordering the deaths of nearly 600 Bangladeshis.

The prosecution has asked for a death sentence for Nizami, while the defence argued the charges were politically motivated. Niza­mi was a cabinet minister during former prime minister Khaleda Zia’s last term in 2001-2006, and he was sentenced to death in January in a huge arms cache case.

Jamaat-i-Islami party campaigned against independence, but the party has denied committing atrocities.

Bangladesh’s war crimes court, called the Internatio­nal Crimes Tribunal, is a domestic body with no international or United Nations oversight. Rights groups say it falls short of international standards.

Defence lawyers say the court is biased and is a “travesty of justice”. They have accused the prosecution of forcing a witness to give false testimony against Nizami.

The latest verdict would be the first since Sheikh Hasina won general elections in January, which were marred by widespread fraud and a boycott by all opposition parties. Jamaat was barred from the polls.

Published in Dawn, June 25th, 2014

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