After several convictions, it is unclear whether the
country’s war crimes tribunal is truly about justice.
Towards the end of his
testimony, the prosecution asked their witness, 72-year-old Sunil Kanti
Bardhan, to point out his attacker. Bardhan, who was testifying at Bangladesh’s
ongoing International Criminal Tribunal (ICT), had already described his arrival
in a torture center during the Liberation War of 1971. “As I was dumped in a
room of Dalim Hotel, Mir Quasem Ali, appearing on the spot, started grilling
me,” he said, adding that Quasem had threatened to kill him.
The accused, Mir Quasem Ali, is
currently a senior official at Diganta, a news media organization that reaches
into millions of Bangladeshi homes. But 43 years ago, this politically powerful
Islamist is alleged to have played a very different role, as a commander at the
“Dalim Hotel,” an improvised prison in Chittagong, Bangladesh, where
pro-liberation militia members were tortured and killed.
Quasem is one of over a dozen men
indicted by Bangladesh’s war crimes tribunal, a belated effort to address the
atrocities that occurred in the war that made Bangladesh, then a territory of
Pakistan, an independent state. The tribunal has convicted several men and
executed one. But as it awaits Quasem’s verdict, it’s unclear whether the
tribunal has offered justice – or simply revenge.
The tribunal reflects political
divisions that date to the 1971 war itself. On one side, there were those who
desired an independent country defined by Bengali ethnicity and language. On
the other, there was Pakistan, plus Bengalis who preferred the area to remain a
Pakistani province defined by Islam. Four decades on, the victorious ethnic
nationalists still feel ire for the old pro-Pakistan factions – who have
nonetheless retained power through Islamic fundamentalist party
Jamaat-e-Islami.
This conflux of guilt and influence
is where the war crimes tribunal has focused its attention. In 2010, the
government began indicting upper-echelon members of Jamaat, and by early 2013
began delivering convictions.
But if the guilt of many individuals
is plausible, the tribunal’s flaws have cast doubt on its proceedings.
International observers note that political convenience appears to motivate the
charges, as Jamaat and nearly only Jamaat leadership stand accused.
Reports of corruption abound. A statement from Human Rights Watch alleges
collusion between the prosecution and judges, which, it says, “calls into
serious question the impartiality of the court.”
The tribunal brooked little of the
ample criticism, reacting to Human Rights Watch’s letter by holding the organization
in contempt of court. It did the same to David Bergman, a British journalist at
Bangladesh’s New Age, for his published remarks on the tribunal’s
improprieties. John Cammegh, an international war crimes barrister and
assistant to the defense, has described the removal of legal protections and
unwillingness to hear critique as “a means of political vendetta, cynically and
unlawfully implemented” and “a shameful advertisement for the [Bangladeshi]
government.”
The death penalty appears to be what the Bangladeshi
public wants. Last February, the court convicted Abdul Quader
Mollah of murders and rape. With a nod to the limited evidence, the court
handed him a life sentence. The perception of leniency incited public fury, and
a protest movement of some 200,000 Bangladeshis demanded the sentence be
changed to death by hanging. The movement was blatant in its disregard for the
rule of law, pressing the government to retroactively overturn a rule that
limited appeals, so that Quader Mollah’s sentence could be increased. It
succeeded. In December, the government executed Mollah in Dhaka Central Jail to
the cheers of crowds outside. The movement has since demanded hangings for all
accused, irrespective of trial outcomes.
Rather than fair-minded justice, in
other words, Bangladesh’s war crime tribunal appears to be an effort to exact
revenge on targeted individuals. But why would a country so blatantly reject
law and order in favor of revenge?
It may be part of the broader
culture. Psychology researchers have discovered that collectivistic cultures —
in other words, those that emphasize communal togetherness over individuality –
may be more prone to revenge. A study of collectivism worldwide found that
Bangladesh is one of the most collectivist cultures in the world – so much so,
in fact, that study participants did not respond accurately to questions on self-esteem.
Bangladesh’s collectivism may discourage public commitment to the rights of the
accused.
Revenge is also valued by societies
that cannot rely on a properly functioning criminal justice system. This was,
in fact, what drove pro-death protestors in Bangladesh. Amid the country’s
famed corruption many feared political dealings would free the convicted
criminals after short imprisonments. This made death, the only punishment that
cannot be undone, appealing to protestors. Their goal, in other words, began
with the expectation that no one would uphold the rule of law.
This works in part through a
deterrent effect. In an evolutionary biology sense, revenge is useful as a way
to remind assailants that one is not to be trifled with. Indeed, this fear
drives the public outcries for retribution; one freedom fighter even says he
fears Pakistan attacking Bangladesh again.
But if revenge sounds sweet, recent
science suggests it is otherwise. A 2008 study by American psychologists
assessed this question by involving participants in a game played with money,
and then offering them a chance to use their winnings to punish a cheater.
Prior to the game, they’d been asked to predict the emotional consequence of
revenge, and most said it would increase their happiness. Afterwards, though,
they reported the revenge they’d taken had made them less happy, not
more. Their expectation, in other words, was precisely wrong.
The study’s importance to
traumatized individuals is unclear. “About the generalizability of the
results,” Timothy Wilson, one of the study’s coauthors, says, “we simply don’t
know.”
But it is these people who often
most desire catharsis. In fact, revenge orientation has long been noted as a
symptom of post-traumatic mental health problems. Since trauma is linked to
depression and emotional volatility, these individuals may be most vulnerable
to lowered mood after taking revenge. The war crimes tribunal includes no
process for offering support to any survivors of the war, leaving this risk
unaddressed.
Moreover, researchers point out that
revenge’s deterrent effect might be ineffective. Revenge can function as a
warning system against future aggressors. But it does not necessarily do so in
a country in which polarized and violent political battles are already raging.
In any case, what feels fair to one side can appear excessive to the other and
lead to retaliation. Indeed, in 2013 Islamist fundamentalists in Bangladesh,
alleging the war crimes tribunal was a sham, mounted a counter-protest movement
that killed hundreds.
In addition, Jamaat-affiliated
attackers have killed one prosecution witness and attacked others. Indeed, this
might be the war crimes tribunal’s most profound injustice: despite favoring
their accounts, the government has refused to provide witness protection from
the risk of deadly retaliation. For 72-year-old Sunil Kanti Bardhan, who in the
tribunal courtroom pointed out Mir Quasem Ali as his would-be killer, seeking
justice might involve a risk to his life nearly as serious as the one he
endured in 1971.
For Mir Quasem Ali, the threat is
even more certain.
M. Sophia Newman, MPH, was a
2012-2013 Fulbright grantee to Bangladesh who lives in Dhaka and works as a
freelance writer.
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