Former military captain Abdul Majed, convicted for killing Sheikh Mujibur Rahman arrested after 34 years

Abdul Majed being produced in a Dhaka court, Tuesday

Dhaka: A former Bangladeshi military captain, who was convicted for killing the country’s founder Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, was arrested by the police here Tuesday.

Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan Kamal confirmed ex-captain Abdul Majed’s arrest and said he had been sent to court to ‘exhaust legal options’.

Majed was one of the six absconding ex-Army officers who were handed down capital punishment after their trial in absentia. Minister Kamal said previous reports indicated Abdul Majed was hiding in India and he was arrested here upon his return.

The minister said Majed, a ‘self-confessed killer’, was not only involved in Sheikh Mujibur Rahaman’s killing August 15, 1975 at his private Dhanmandi residence but was also involved in the subsequent murder of four national leaders in high security Dhaka Central Jail, November 3 in 1975.

Abdul Majed’s predawn arrest was led by the Counter Terrorism and Transnational Crime (CTTC) unit of the police in Mirpur based on a tip-off.

“Majed was near a shrine in Mirpur when policemen arrested him,” an official said. After the arrest, a magistrate court sent the sacked army captain to jail. Majed appeared in Old Dhaka Court Complex wearing a white shirt and pants. He was handcuffed with a bulletproof police jacket and helmet.

Legal experts said a report on his arrest would now be sent to the Dhaka District Judge’s Court, which originally tried the killers of Sheikh Mujibur Rahaman.

“The stipulated time for appeal against death penalty expired long ago. Abdul Majed now can just seek Presidential mercy unless the Supreme Court decides to consider any plea on his part,” a Supreme Court lawyer said.

Twelve ex-military officers were sentenced to death for the August 15, 1975 killing of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman along with most of his family members and five of them were executed in 2010 while one died of natural causes.

The five were hanged at Dhaka Central Jail, January 28, 2010, after protracted legal procedure. The trial process began in 1996 when an indemnity law was scrapped as it was protecting the assassins.

Majed was one of the remaining fugitives believed to be hiding abroad with no confirmed whereabouts. After the August 15, 1975 carnage, Majed was rehabilitated in civil service during the subsequent regime of former military dictator-turned politician Ziaur Rahman as an ex-cadre official and posted as the director of National Savings Department.

Majed fled the country while serving later in the finance ministry along with most of the other 1975 coup plotters as the 1996 general elections brought Awami League back to power which vowed bring justice to the killers of Bangabandhu.

Agencies

 

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