Leaked recordings hint ex-PM directed brutal crackdown


Audio recor­dings analysed by the BBC suggest the nation’s fugitive ex-prime minister, Sheikh Hasina, ordered a deadly crackdown on protests last year, allegations for which she is on trial.

Up to 1,400 people were killed between July and August 2024, according to the United Nations, when Hasina’s government order­ed a crackdown on protes­ters in a failed bid to cling to power.

Hasina, 77, fled to India at the culmination of the student-led uprising and has defied orders to return to Dhaka, where her trial in absentia for charges amounting to crimes against humanity opened on June 1.

The BBC Eye Investigations team analysed audio alleged to be of Hasina – and which forms a key plank of the evidence for the prosecution – which was leaked online.

In the recording, dated July 18, 2024, a voice alleged to be Hasina is heard authorising security for­ces to “use lethal weapons” against protesters and that “where­ver they find (them), they will shoot”.

The BBC said audio forensics experts had found no evidence that the speech had been edited or manipulated and that it was “highly unlikely to have been synthetically generated”.

Bangladesh police have also matched the audio with verified recordings of Hasina.

Protests began on July 1, 2024, with university students calling for reforms to a quota system for public sector jobs.

Student ambitions to topple Hasina’s iron-fisted rule seemed a fantasy, just months after she won her fourth consecutive election in a vote without genuine opposition.

But the protests gathered pace, and a fuse was lit when police launch­ed a deadly crackdown on July 16.

Hasina’s state-appointed lawyer – who says they have not been in contact with her – have sought to throw out the charges.

Her now-banned Awami League party said it “categorically denies the charges that its senior leaders, and the prime minister personally, directed the use of lethal force against crowds during the protests of last summer”.

It instead said that “breakdowns in discipline among some members of the security forces on the ground in response to instan­ces of violence led to (a) regrettable loss of life”. — AFP

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