No country should grant asylum to killers: Bangladesh Minister
The Hindu
Killers should not get shelter in any country, Bangladesh Minister of Liberation War Affairs A.K.M. Mozammel Huq said
Killers should not get shelter in any country, Bangladesh Minister of Liberation War Affairs A.K.M. Mozammel Huq said on Thursday in reference to the killers of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the country’s founding father and former President, who fled to Canada. He also condemned Israeli actions in Gaza, referring to the attacks on civilians.
“We condemn that, because they are killers. No country should shelter killers in the name of asylum. Who gets political asylum? Those who may be oppressed, possibility that they may not get justice. They already killed the father of the nation, they cannot get asylum. We condemn it,” Mr. Huq said, adding that Dhaka had been requesting Canada and other countries to extradite the killers. He was speaking to the media on the sidelines of an event at the Bangladesh High Commission.
The event saw the honouring of Indian soldiers killed in the Liberation War of Bangladesh in 1971 as well awarding of the Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman student scholarship to the direct descendants of soldiers and officers of the Indian armed forces who were killed or critically wounded during the war.
Scholarships of $500 and $1,000 were presented to high school and under graduate students, respectively. Ten scholarships were presented and officials said 10 more would be presented later.
The prime accused in the assassination of Rahman, popularly known as Bangabandhu, is Noor Chowdhury, a former Bangladesh Army officer, who has been living in Canada since 1996.
Dhaka has made several requests for his extradition, but they were rejected by Ottawa on the grounds that under Canada’s Extradition Act, a fugitive cannot be deported if he or she is facing death penalty.