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Thursday, May 26, 2011

[chottala.com] 3 million or 3 lakh? Are they same Mujib?




So, Mujib actually exaggarated or lied to the world with the numbers about the death in 71? Or, due to mental deliquency, he skewed up the number 3 million or 3 lakh?
 
For 40 years, we were forced to believe these lies?
 
 

--- On Wed, 5/25/11, Isha Khan <bdmailer@gmail.com> wrote:

From: Isha Khan <bdmailer@gmail.com>
Subject: [notun_bangladesh] RE: Mujib's confusion on Bangladeshi deaths
To:
Date: Wednesday, May 25, 2011, 10:03 PM

 
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Zoglul Husain <zoglul@hotmail.co.uk>
Date: Thu, May 26, 2011 at 1:34 AM
Subject: Serajur Rahman: Death toll 3 lakh in 1971 war

Serajur Rahman, retired deputy head, BBC Bengali Service, London, expressed his surprise and horror at Mujib's figure of 3 million Bangladeshi war dead (because of Mujib's wild exaggeration). 

However, there are people who think that the figure of 3 million was prompted to Mujib by India. Even after 40 years of the war, there has been no national or international field investigation to determine the death toll figure. Even if it is done now, it has to be done objectively, without political bias and with no scopes for distortions. The published figures, so far, vary greatly. The Hamoodur Rahman commission of Pakistan put the figure as low as 26,000 civilian casualties, whereas published books vary with figures between 200,000 and 3 million.
 
--------------
Isha Khan wrote:

Mujib's confusion on Bangladeshi deaths

The Guardian, Tuesday 24 May 2011

Ian Jack (21 May) mentions the controversy about death figures in Bangladesh's liberation war. On 8 January 1972 I was the first Bangladeshi to meet independence leader Sheikh Mujibur Rahman after his release from Pakistan. He was brought from Heathrow to Claridge's by the Indian high commissioner Apa Bhai Panth, and I arrived there almost immediately.

Mujib was puzzled to be addressed as "your excellency" by Mr Panth. He was surprised, almost shocked, when I explained to him that Bangladesh had been liberated and he was elected president in his absence. Apparently he arrived in London under the impression that East Pakistanis had been granted the full regional autonomy for which he had been campaigning. During the day I and others gave him the full picture of the war. I explained that no accurate figure of the casualties was available but our estimate, based on information from various sources, was that up to "three lakh" (300,000) died in the conflict.

To my surprise and horror he told David Frost later that "three millions of my people" were killed by the Pakistanis. Whether he mistranslated "lakh" as "million" or his confused state of mind was responsible I don't know, but many Bangladeshis still believe a figure of three million is unrealistic and incredible.

Serajur Rahman

Retired deputy head, BBC Bengali Service

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/may/24/mujib-confusion-on-bangladeshi-deaths



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