DHAKA–Incidents
of child murders are rising alarmingly in Bangladesh, with some of the most
recent ones allegedly perpetrated by victims’ mothers.
Human rights experts say a culture of impunity is indirectly encouraging
the perpetrators to target children. One of the most recent child murders was
that of Mahathir Mohammad of Kishoreganj by his mother Salma Khatun on March 5.
Police officials of the Kishoreganj model police station informed Asia
Times that Khatun, who lived with her husband and three children in Parabhanga
village of Maria Union, had slit the throat of one-and-a-half-year-old Mahathir
as he was crying for food.
Khatun had a history of mental depression, according to
officer-in-charge Mir Mosharrof Hossain of Kishoreganj model police station.
“Salma woke up around noon and killed the baby-boy soon after by
slitting his throat with a locally-made sharp weapon. After relatives witnessed
the incident, they informed the police,” he said.
Salma was arrested within the hour.
On the same day, Mahfuza Malek Jasmine, a woman in Dhaka who was accused
of killing her two children at their home, confessed for the second time that she had killed her two
children on February 29, 2016 at their home in Banasree residential area.
That afternoon, Nusrat Aman Oroni (14) and her brother Alvi Aman (6)
were found unconscious in their family home. The Dhaka Medical College
authorities declared the siblings dead after they were taken there.
Initially, the family members claimed that the children had died of food
poisoning, after they had dinner during the previous night from a local
restaurant. But post mortem reports revealed wounds on the bodies of the
children.
Later, officials from the Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) brought the
parents of the two children back to Dhaka from their village in Jamalpur.
Eventually, Jasmine confessed to killing her children as she was worried “about
their education and future”, according to RAB Director (legal and media wing)
Mufti Mahmud Khan.
These two latest incidents have provided a new dimension to a growing
concern related to rise in child murders. According to several child rights
organizations, murders of children have been on the rise over the past four
years.
Based on reports published by national dailies, at least 1,114 children
were murdered over the last 49 months in Bangladesh. Of these, around 658
children were murdered in 2015 and 2014 while 427 children were murdered in
2013 and 2012.
From January till mid-February this year, nearly 40 children were
murdered in various incidents.
The most gruesome of this was the murder of four schoolboys in Habiganj.
On February 12, Jakaria Ahmed Shuvo, Tajel Mia, Monir Mia, and Ismail Hossain
went missing from Sundrateki village in Bahubal upazila. The buried corpses of
the boys were found by police on February 17.
Locals and police officials suspect that the boys became scapegoats of
rivalry that existed between a gang of killers and the victims’ parents.
About the alarming rise in crimes against children, a faculty member
from the criminology department of Dhaka University said children in Bangladesh
are becoming ‘soft targets’ as “it is easy to obtain ransom after kidnapping a
child. Often the kidnappers murder the children if they suspect that the child
can identify them after being freed.”
Human rights activists say that most murder cases related to children
are yet to be resolved. For some cases which had occurred in 2012 and 2013, the
trial process is yet to begin.
Such has been the fate with the murder case of Tanwir Muhammad Taki, an
Advanced Level student of Narayanganj and the eldest son of social organiser
Rafiur Rabbi, who went missing on March 6, 2013. After two days, his body
bearing severe wounds was found floating on the river Shitalakshya.
One of the suspected murderers, Sawkat aka Bhramar gave his statement in
a trial court on November 12, 2013, naming the nephew of the ruling party
lawmaker of Narayanganj. RAB-11, who were investigating the case at the time,
had assured that they will frame the final charges against 11 suspects for the
killing. Three years after the murder, the charge sheet is yet to be submitted.
While talking to Asia Times, Rafiur Rabbi said, “Most people in
Narayanganj, including the investigators, know where Taki was tortured and
killed and who was behind the murder. But these people were never arrested as
they hail from the ruling party.”
“When criminals are not tried for such heinous crimes, it’s likely that
this will encourage others into committing similar acts,” he said.
“If the government wills it, the resolution of murder cases can occur
within the shortest possible time. For example, in the cases of Rakib and Rajon, their murderers were arrested and
tried within months,” he added.
Advocate Towhida Khondker, director of Bangladesh National Woman Lawyers
Association, pointed out that despite plenty of Acts and Children Policy,
“There is little or no awareness about this among the stakeholders including
the law enforcement officials, government departments, parents, and members of
the society.”
“Also, most communities in the country do not know what the rights of
the child entail… these instruments need to be implemented,” she said.
A senior official within the ministry of women and children affairs in
Bangladesh said the government is monitoring the progress of unresolved murder
cases.
To curb the alarming rise in child murders, “the government is planning
to place some of these cases under speedy tribunal”, said the official.
Syed Tashfin Chowdhury is a Dhaka-based freelance
journalist and editor of Xtra, the weekend magazine of New Age, a leading
English daily in Bangladesh.
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