TANKS CRUSH REVOLT IN PAKISTAN
7,000 Slaughtered: Homes burned
BY SIMON DRING in Bangkok, who was in Dacca during the
fighting—In the name of "God and a united Pakistan,' Dacca is today a
crushed and frightened city.
After 24 hours of ruthless, cold-blooded shelling by the
Pakistan Army as many as 7,000 people are dead, large areas have been levelled
and East Pakistan's fight for independence has been brutally put to an end.
Despite claims by President Yahya Khan, head
of the country's military government, that the situation is now calm tens of
thousands of people are fleeing to the countryside, the city streets are almost
deserted and the killings are still going on in other parts of the province.
But there is no doubt that troops supported by
tanks control the towns and major population centres and that resistance is
minimal and so far ineffective.
Even so people are
still being shot at the slightest provocation, and buildings are still being
indiscriminately destroyed. And the military appears to be more determined each
clay to assert its control over the 73 million Bengalis in the East wing.
It is impossible
accurately to assess what all this has so far cost in terms of innocent human
lives, But reports beginning to filter in from the outlying areas, Chittagong,
Comilla, and Jessore put the figure, including Dacca, in the region of 15,000
dead.
Only the horror of
the military action can be properly gauged—the students dead in their beds, the
butchers in the markets killed behind their stalls, the women and children
roasted alive in their houses, the Pakistanis of Hindu religion taken out and
shot 'en masse' the bazaars and shopping areas razed by fire and the Pakistani
flag that now flies over every building in the capital.
Military casualties are not known but at least
two soldiers have been wounded and one officer killed. The Bengali uprising
seems to be well and truly over for the moment. Sheikh Mujibur Rahman was seen
being taken away by the Army and nearly all the top members of his Awami League
party have also been arrested.
Armoured Attack
Leading political activists have been taken in, others have been murdered and the offices of two newspapers which supported the Sheikh's movement have been destroyed.
Leading political activists have been taken in, others have been murdered and the offices of two newspapers which supported the Sheikh's movement have been destroyed.
But the first target as the tanks rolled into Dacca on the
night of the 25th was the students. An estimated three battalions of troops
were used in the attack on Dacca—one armoured, one artillery and one infantry.
They started leaving the barracks shortly before 10 p.m. By 11 p.m. firing had
broken out and the people who had started hastily erecting makeshift
barricades—overturned cars,” trees stumps, furniture, concrete piping—became
early casualties as the troops rolled into town. Sheikh Mujib was telephoned
and warned that something was happening, but he refused to leave his house.
"If I go into hiding they will burn the whole of Dacca to find me,"
he told an aide who escaped arrest.
200 Students Killed
The students were also warned but those who
were still around later said that most thought they would only be arrested. Led
by American supplied M24 World War II tanks, one column of troops sped to Dacca
University shortly after mid-night. Troops took over the British Council
library and used it as a fire-base to shell nearby dormitory areas. Caught
completely by surprise, some 200 students were killed in Iqbal Hall,
headquarters of the militantly anti-government students' union, as shells
slammed into the building and their rooms were sprayed with machine-gun fire.
Two days later bodies were still smoldering in their burnt out rooms, others
were scattered outside and more floated in a nearby lake. An art student lay
sprawled across. His easel. Seven teachers died in their quarters and a family
of 12 were gunned down as they hid in an out-house. The military removed many
of the bodies, but the 30 still there could never have accounted for all the
blood in the corridors of Iqbal Hall. At another hall the dead were buried by
the soldiers in a hastily-dug mass grave and then bulldozed over by tanks.
People living near the university were caught in the fire
too and 200 yards of shanty houses running alongside a rail-way line were
destroyed. Army patrols also razed a nearby market area, running down between
the stalls, killing their owners as they slept. Two days later, when it was
possible to get out and see all this, some of the men were still lying as
though asleep, their blankets pulled up over their shoulders. In the same
district the Dacca Medical College received direct bazooka fire and a mosque
was badly damaged.
Police H.Q. Attacked
As the university came under attack columns of troops moved
in on the Rajarbag headquarters of the East Pakistan police on the other side
of the city. Tanks opened fire first and then the troops moved in and levelled
the men's sleeping quarters, firing incendiary rounds into the buildings. It
was not known, even by people living opposite how many died, but out of the
1,100 police based there, not many are believed to have escaped. As this was
going on other units had surrounded the Sheikh's house. When contacted shortly
before 1 a.m. he was expecting an attack any minute and that he had sent
everyone except his servants and a bodyguard away to safety. A neighbour said
that at 1.10 a.m. one tank, an armoured car and trucks loaded with troops drove
down the street firing over the house. "Sheikh you should come down,"
an officer called out in English as they stopped outside. Sheikh Mujibur Rahman
replied by stepping out on to his balcony and saying ‘`Yes. I am really but
there is no need to fire ; all you need to have done was call me on the
telephone and I would have come". The officer then walked into the garden
of the house and told the Sheikh: "You are arrested," He was taken
away, along with ,three servants, an aide and his bodyguard who was badly
beaten up when he started to insult the officer.
Documents Taken.
As he was driven off—presumably to Army headquarters the
soldiers moved into the house, took away all documents, smashed everything in
sight, locked the garden gate, shot down green, red and yellow
"Bangladesh" (Free Bengal) flag and drove away. By 2 a.m. on the 26th
fires were burning all over the city. Troops had occupied the university and
surrounding areas and were busy killing off students still in hiding and
replacing independence flags with Pakistani national standards. There was still
heavy shelling in some areas but the fight-ing was noticeably beginning to
slacken. Opposite the Intercontinental Hotel, a platoon of troops, stormed the
empty offices of Dacca's 'People' newspaper, burning it down along with most
houses in the area and killing a lone night-watchman. Shortly before dawn most
firing had stopped arid as the sun came up an eerie silence settled over the
city, deserted and completely dead except for the noise of the crows and the
occasional convoy of troops. But the worst was yet to come. At midday, again
without any warning, columns of troops poured into the old section of the city
where more than a million people live in a sprawling maze of narrow, winding
streets. For the next 11 hours they proceeded systematically to devastate large
areas of the old town, where Sheikh Mujib had some of his strongest support
among the people in Dacca. English Road, French Road, Niar Bazaar, City Bazaar
meaningless names but home to thousands of people were burnt to the ground.
"They suddenly appeared at the end of the street" said one old man
living in the French Road-Niar Bazaar area. "Then they drove down it firing
into all the houses." The lending unit was followed by soldiers carrying
cans of petrol. Those who tried to escape were shot. Those who vtayed were
burnt alive. About 700 men; women and children died there that day between
midday and two o'clock.
The same was repeated in at least three other areas, all of
them covering anything up to half a square mile or more. As they left the
soldiers took those dead they could away with them in trucks and moved on to
their next target. Police station in the old town were also attacked. ‘`I am
looking for my constables," a Police Inspector said on Saturday morning as
he wandered through the ruins of one of the bazaars. 'I have 240 in my district
and, so far I have found only 30 of them—all dead." One of the biggest
massacres of the entire operation in. Dacca took place in the Hindu area of the
old town. There the soldiers made the people come out of their houses and then
just shot them in groups. This area, too, was eventually razed. The troops
stayed on in the old city in force until about 11 p.m. on the 26th driving
about with local Bengali informers. The soldiers would fire a flare and the
informer would point out the houses of staunch Awami League supporters. The
house would then be destroyed—either with direct tank or recoilless rifle fire
or with a can of petrol. Meanwhile, troops of the East Bengal Regiment were
being used in the suburbs, to start moving out towards the industrial areas of
the city—Tongi and Narayanganj—against centres of Leftist support for the
Sheikh. Firing continued in these areas until early on Sunday morning but the
main bulk of the operation in the city was completed by the night of the
26th—almost exactly 24 hours after it began. One of the last targets was the
Bengali language daily newspaper `Ittefaq'. Over 400 people had taken shelter
in its offices when the fighting started. At 4 o'clock on the afternoon of the
26th four tanks appeared in the road outside. By 4.30 p.m. the building was an
inferno. By Saturday morning only the charred remains of corpses were left.
As quickly as they appeared the troops disappeared off the
atrcots. On Saturday morning the radio announced the curfew would be lifted
from 7 a.m. until 4 p.m. It then repeated the Martial Law Regulations banning
all political activity, announcing Press censorship and ordering all Government
employees to report back for work and for all privately-owned weapons to be
handed in.
Thousands Flee
Magically the city returned to life and panic
set in. By 10 a.m., with palls of black smoke still hanging over large areas of
the old town and out in the distance towards the industrial areas, the streets
were packed with fleeing people. By car, in rickshaw but mostly on foot
carrying their possessions with them the people of Dacca were leaving. By
midday they were on the move in their tens of thousands. "Please give me a
lift, I'm an old man," "In the name of Allah help me."
"Take my children with you," came the pleas. Silent and unsmiling
they passed and saw what the Army had done. It had been a thorough job,
carefully planned and meticulously executed and they looked the other way and
kept on walking. Down near one of the markets a shot was heard. Within second
2,000 people were running, but it had only been some-one going to join the
queues already forming to hand in their weapons. The Government offices
remained almost empty. Most employees were leaving for their villages. Those
who were not fleeing wandered aimlessly around the smoking debris of what were
once their homes, lifting the blackened, twisted sheets of corrugated iron used
in most shanty areas as roofing materials to save what they could from the
ashes. Nearly every other car, if it was not taking people out into the
countryside, was flying a Red Cross and convoying dead and wounded to the
hospitals.
And in the middle, of it all occasional convoys of troops
would appear, the soldiers. peering unsmiling down the muzzles of their guns at
the silent .crowds. On the Friday night as they pulled back to their barracks they
shouted "Narai Tukbir", an old Arabic war cry' meaning "We have
won the war." On Saturday when they spoke it was to shout "Pakistan
Zindabad", `‘Long live Pakistan". Most people took the hint. Before
the curfew was re-imposed the national flag of Pakistan, apatt from petrol,_
was the hottest selling item on the market. As if to protect their property in
their absence; the last thing a family would do before they locked up their
house would be to raise the flag. At four o'clock the streets emptied again,
the troops reappeared and silence fell once more over Dacca. But firing broke
out again almost immediately. "Anybody out of doors after four will be
shot," the radio had announced. A small boy running across the street
outside the Inter-continental two minutes after curfew was stopped, slapped
four times in the face by an officer and taken away in a jeep. Another
unfortunate night-watchman, this time at the Dacca Club, a leftover bar from
the colonial days, was shot when he went to shut the gate of the club. A group
of Hindu Pakistanis living around a temple in the middle of the racecourse were
all killed, apparently for no reason at all except they were out in the open.
And refugees who came back into the city when they found roads leading out were
blocked by the Army told how many had been killed as they tried to walk across
country to avoid the troops. Beyond those roadblocks is more or less a no man's
land, where the clearing operations are still going on. What is happening out
there is anybody's guess—except the Army's. Many people took to the river to
try to escape the crowds on the roads. But they ran the risk of being left
stranded waiting for a boat when curfew fell.
Where one such group was sitting on Saturday afternoon,
there were only bloodstains next morning. "Traitors" Charge
Hardly anywhere was
there evidence of organised resist-once to the troops in Dacca or anywhere else
in the province. Even the West Pakistani officers scoffed at the idea of
any-body putting up a fight. "These men," said one Punjabi
lieutenant, "could not kill us if they tried," "Things are much
better now," said another officer. "Nobody can speak out or come out.
If they do we will kill them. They have spoken enough. They are traitors and we
are not. We are fighting in the name of God, and a united Pakistan." The
operation, apparently planned and led by Gen. Tikka Khan, the West Pakistani
military governor of the East, has succeeded in driving every last drop of
resistance out of the people of Bengal. Only the propaganda machine of the
Indian Government la keeping the fight going apart from a Leftist underground
group operating a clandestine "Bangla Desh" radio somewhere outside
Dacca. Even if time erases the scars that marks the end of the dream that the
people of East Pakistan thought was democratically theirs, it will take more
than a generation before they IlVa down the fear instilled in their minds by
the tragic and 1101711'y ni*, massacres of last week. It Anything is to be
salvaged from the ruins of Sheikh MnjIb'm movement, it is the realisation that
the Army is not to hi tinder-estimated again and that for all the
speech-maltiat of President Yahya about the returning of power to the people, i
lie regime did not really ever intend to abide by I he moults of any election—fairly
won or not.
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