16 December 1971, the darkest day in History of Pakistan

Quaid’s Pakistan broke in 1971 when majority Pakistanis left Pakistan to form new country Bangladesh. 16 December 1971 was the darkest day in history of Pakistan.

Revisiting 1971: What if they elected traitors? - Blogs - DAWN.COM

Revisiting 1971: What if they elected traitors?
Tahir Mehdi
Updated about 13 hours ago
Bengal’s Awami League swept Assembly elections in 1970. But General Yahya and the establishment could never digest that. —Illustration by Tahir Mehdi

Most Pakistanis feel uneasy coming to terms with the reality that is Bangladesh. They hide themselves behind a shoddy narrative of 1971, and neatly categorise the whole thing as a ‘conspiracy’. It might well have been one. But who conspired against whom and when? What were the Bengalis up to? And how did they reach breaking point?

This article is the Part 3 of a four-part series that looks back at the events of 1971 in Pakistan from the perspective of the development of democracy in this country. Read Part 1 and Part 2.

Pakistan started counting traitors before it actually became a nation. There has hardly been a time since its birth that it did not find itself on a crossroad, crying foul at the top of its voice.

Those in power had very strong ideas about what kind of state and government they wanted and demanded an electoral democracy only to legitimise their plans.

Poor democracy, however, lacked the capacity to oblige, despite all the sincere efforts made by its administrators. They wanted it to come back again and again to square-one, but democracy would insist on producing more numbers than required. It can’t be by coincidence that all of Pakistan’s traitor-designates or traitor-suspects were voted feverishly by the people.

Also read: Bangladesh sentences another top JI leader to death

Let me illustrate my point with an example:

Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan moved the Objectives Resolution in the Constituent Assembly of Pakistan on March 7, 1949. The Assembly gathered in Karachi for its fifth session in its 20-months life. It was the first day of proceedings, starting at 4 o’clock in the afternoon when Liaquat Ali Khan moved the resolution and made a lengthy speech. Immediately afterwards, opposition leaders – Hindus from East Bengal – rose and raised many objections apprehending that the Prime Minister wanted to bulldoze through the Resolution.

Quoting from the debate (official document):

Mr Sris Chandra Chattopadhyaya: … We need time to study it, in consultation with our friends in East Bengal and for the sake of clarification. In fact when we left East Bengal this time we had no idea that such a Resolution was to be brought forward. There was no indication of it in the Agenda papers circulated. The budgetary session is almost at an end. The attendance in the House is very thin. Many members of my province - East Bengal - the Prime Minister (of Bengal) who might very well give us advice and guidance have left already. I presume they had no idea about it. There are some Members who did not attend the session at all. Surely they would have attended this meeting to take part in the discussion of such a Resolution if proper notice was given to them. Practically no notice was given to them. I, therefore, venture to suggest that the consideration of an important matter like this should be postponed and the Resolution be circulated for eliciting public opinion, till the next session or a special session may be convened for this purpose …

Read on: Objectives Resolution: the root of religious orthodoxy

The Honourable Mr Liaqat Ali Khan: Sir, I am afraid there is a lot of contradiction in the arguments that have been advanced by the Honourable Members who have moved the motion for circulation of this Resolution. One of the chief arguments that has been advanced is that the House is very thin as most of the members have left and are not here and that they have not had enough time. As far as the Members of my Honourable friend’s party are concerned, every single of them is present in the House except one, who unfortunately is not well but is present in Karachi. So far as absence of Members is concerned I do not think that this is really very valid ground.

Mr Sris Chandra Chattopadhyaya: There is no party of mine. I will deal with every one.

The Honourable Mr Liaqat Ali Khan: When I said ‘party’ I meant the non-Muslim Members of the House, because after all if anything can be said about this Resolution, if any objection can be raised, it can only be from the non-Muslim Members of this House, and I said just now, every one of them is present here …

So the prime minister did not consider it important for the Muslim members to be present in the Assembly at the time when he tabled the most important constitutional instrument of our history. In fact, he did not want them to forward any arguments, or, God forbid, make any objection. They were expected to nod their heads like brides do, from underneath the pile of exotic fabric that is piled up on them, when approached by the nikah khwan. No good Muslim should even think about opposing anything (including rule) being done in the name of Islam.

But good Muslims were in short supply in East Bengal as they kept demanding their rights. They wanted a constitution drafted by an assembly that is elected directly by the people. They wanted Pakistan to be a federation that treats all of its units with equality and justice. They wanted maximum provincial autonomy and effective safeguards against economic exploitation. They demanded respect for their language and culture.

All of this was not acceptable to what we have known as our ‘establishment’. But none of it could be suppressed because whenever democracy was allowed to prevail, people enthusiastically supported all of the Bengali demands. So, for around a quarter of a century, they tried to remodel democracy to suit them.

See: A leaf from history: Advice that went down the drain

Nothing worked. By 1969, the civil-military establishment came to this depressing conclusion that they have to accept at least some of the Bengali demands.

So, general elections were announced. The principle of one-person-one-vote was accepted and people were to directly elect a Constituent Assembly (as opposed to the indirect elections introduced by General Ayub). East Bengal was given representation in the assembly proportionate to its population. So it had 162 of the 300 general seats and seven of 13 reserved for women. Polling was held in December 1970, and the results were as following:

Awami League led by Sheikh Mujibur Rehman swept all the East Bengal seats except two. It definitely was the strongest possible verdict. It gave the Awami League agenda legitimacy of the highest order. Its leaders stood victorious and vindicated. They had passed the toughest of the tests with flying colors.

Explore: 1970 polls: When election results created a storm

The elected Assembly was supposed to draft a constitution for the country within 120 days of its first meeting. General Yahya announced to hold the first meeting of the Assembly on March 3, 1971 and Awami League’s parliamentary committee announced the salient features of the constitution on February 27.

Since the party had simple majority in the House, there was no way it could be stopped from adopting the basic principles in its inaugural meeting. This would have effectively ended the rule of the Pakistani establishment over at least East Bengal, if not the entire country.

Yahya postponed the inaugural session and engaged in talks with Mujib and Bhutto, which remained fruitless. The General soon admitted his defeat on the democratic front and challenged Bengalis on the other.

Pakistan army declared war on East Pakistan on the night of March 25.

Explore: 1971 war: A textbook case

They left behind tremendous evidence of their hatred for free-thinking people, who were fearless while giving verdicts as well. Bengalis swear that these people were in millions. I will share only one with you here.

Within days, the military campaign changed into a full-scale civil war as Bengalis were ready for the worst. The assembly elected in December 1970 did not meet. Pakistan banned the Awami League and disqualified 76 of its 160 elected members for being traitors. So, the Awami League was cut down to size with its strength reduced from the commanding 167 to just 84 in the House of 313. That was at par with PPP, which had 81 in Punjab and Sindh. A divided and hung parliament is always in ‘the best national interest’.

The General was, however, living in a fool’s paradise. He amended his LFO in September 1971 to facilitate the Election Commission to organise by-elections on these ‘vacated seats’ of East Bengal. By that time, it was simply out of question for the government of Pakistan to perform in Bengal.

Religious parties saw an opportunity in this absurd and bleak situation. Six of them, led by Jamaat Islami, met and decided to field joint candidates on these seats knowing that their nominees will return uncontested as no one else considered the exercise legitimate. So on November 11, the EC found only one candidate each on 63 of these seats. All of them thus, were returned uncontested. This is how each party fared on these seats:

Jamaat Islami — 15
Pakistan Democratic Party — 12
Pakistan Muslim League — Council 7
Nizam-e-Islam — 6
Pakistan Muslim League — Convention 6
Pakistan Muslim League — Qayyum 5
Pakistan People’s Party — 5

PPP initially flayed the by-elections but later found the loot sale too tempting and joined the fray. 63 seats were decided and the EC announced to hold polls on the rest of the 15 from December 7 to 20, 1971. Curtains fell on this theatre of the absurd on December 3, as war broke out on the western front as well and the EC announced postponement of by-elections.

Explore: A leaf from history: When the war began

ZA Bhutto became the President and the Chief Martial Law Administrator on December 20, four days after the Pakistan Army surrendered in Dhaka. Bhutto nullified the by-elections on December 23, depriving Jamaat Islami of its biggest ever electoral triumph.


Restored attachments:

Re: 16 December 1971, the darkest day in History of Pakistan

95000 army personnel surrendered to Indian General on that day.

https://fbcdn-sphotos-a-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-xfa1/v/t1.0-9/10430889_10153371799502646_634759094953099431_n.jpg?oh=efcd1931f1f154415b1af4396226a33d&oe=54FAEFE3&__gda__=1427210856_69429b2695ef04dd007e8595bbcc819f

Re: 16 December 1971, the darkest day in History of Pakistan

Abul Kalam Azad’s predictions about Pakistan…well, most of them have come true.

read and decide for yourself:

**the LINK: **Abul Kalam Azad

some of the predictions were:

  1. The incompetent political leadership will pave the way for military dictatorship as it has happened in many Muslim countries.

  2. The heavy burden of foreign debt.

  3. Absence of friendly relationship with neighbours and the possibility of armed conflict.

  4. Internal unrest and regional conflicts.

  5. The loot of national wealth by the neo-rich and industrialists of Pakistan.

  6. The apprehension of class war as a result of exploitation by the neo-rich.

  7. The dissatisfaction and alienation of the youth from religion and the collapse of the theory of Pakistan.

  8. The conspiracies of the international powers to control Pakistan

**The post Abul Kalam Azad’s Predictions about Pakistan

**start watching at 3:27 min mark

MAULANA ABUL KALAM AZAD (r.a) 1947 LAST SPEACH TO MUSLIMS OF HIND

](http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x1u57cu_abul-kalam-azad-s-predictions-about-pakistan_news?start=5)

Maulana Abulkalam azad predictions about Pakistan

Re: 16 December 1971, the darkest day in History of Pakistan

ok aap happy rahien apnay mahan hindustan may…

kabiee lahore ana howa, let us know and we will show you pakistan as well…we are not doing that bad!

Re: 16 December 1971, the darkest day in History of Pakistan

bhai we know that…bariee meharbani pic post kar dee aap nay!

Re: 16 December 1971, the darkest day in History of Pakistan


you are shooting the messenger...please read and listen to the video/audio. kia unhoN ne Ghalat pesheengoii kii? kia unkii saarii baateN saHeeH saabit nahiiN huiiN? think about it.

janaab e 'aalii, maulaana Azad kii ek ek baat solah aane sach saabit huii...unke zamaane meN Muslim LeagiyoN ne unkii muKhaalifat kii...ab dekhiye k kaun ziyaada door andesh aur saHeeH thaa.

** can you deny any of his predictions?**

Re: 16 December 1971, the darkest day in History of Pakistan


yaad e maazii 'azaab aur takleef deh hotii hai magar yaqeen jaaniye insaan Thokar khaane ke ba'd hii seekhtaa hai aur jo na seekhe use kia kaheNge?

meraa ek siggy huaa kartaa thaa vo yaad aa gayaa...agar chaahiye to maiNH aapko vo PM kar saktaa huN. :)

Re: 16 December 1971, the darkest day in History of Pakistan

many of those predictions are pretty generic for example

  1. The heavy burden of foreign debt

so many third world countries have this problem.

  1. Absence of friendly relationship with neighbours and the possibility of armed conflict
    as if India has friendly relationship with all of his neighbors!!!...lol....sir jee every neighbor has a problem with india..sir lanka, Pakistan, bangala desh, nepal

  2. Internal unrest and regional conflicts...
    *and india doesn't!!! so many separatist movements going on in india... many regional conflicts as well. *

  3. The loot of national wealth by the neo-rich and industrialists of Pakistan.
    oh..and india has no corruption?"....if you ever look at the scale of corruption in india, you will forget pakistani corruption....under congress in last 5 years, there were massive and I mean massive massive corruption scandals

  4. The apprehension of class war as a result of exploitation by the neo-rich.

and india has no class war? really...........dalits? and rich is getting richer in india whrereas over 1/3 population still has to go to open toilets everyday

  1. The dissatisfaction and alienation of the youth from religion and the collapse of the theory of Pakistan.

*dissatisfactionand alienation of youth from religion? wrong...we have an opposite problem. youth is too much into religion!
*

Re: 16 December 1971, the darkest day in History of Pakistan

All i know that 3 Muslim generations of my family, me, my father and my grandfather would have never gotten the same type of opportunities in united india what they got in Pakistan.

Re: 16 December 1971, the darkest day in History of Pakistan

:smack: ab maiN kia kahuuN…you great! … wallah, maulana Abul Kalam Azad kii zihaanat aapkii zihaanat ke aage maand paR gaii. :rotfl:

apnii Khayaali dunyaa meN Khush rahiye! :slight_smile:

Re: 16 December 1971, the darkest day in History of Pakistan


so good for you but can you say the same thing for the masses? i'm sure you will say yes because you see and think better than Maulana Azad. :D

Re: 16 December 1971, the darkest day in History of Pakistan

well, what can i say…zahanat Allah Mian kee dain hai…jis ko mil jayee. but thank you.

wisay barkhudar..hum abu kaalam azad kay bhot baray fan hain..Ghubar-e-Khatir bee paarh rakhie hai ..tarjuman ul quran say bee istafada ky hai..and also saw some of his alhilal work. He was indeed a great scholar.

and I also appreciate his taste…he always dressed up very nice and he had a great taste in wine.

Re: 16 December 1971, the darkest day in History of Pakistan

all 3 generations of my family belong to masses. thx

Re: 16 December 1971, the darkest day in History of Pakistan

masha Allah, subHaan Allah…yaqeenan Allah MiyaaN kii den hai tabhii to arz kiyaa k aap Maulana Azad se bhii kuchh zaayad zaheen lagte haiN…masha Allah. :slight_smile:

maulana ko sharaabii kahne se pahle zaraa soch hii liyaa hotaa k agar yeh baat saHeeH na huii to is meN aapkii pakaR hogii na. afsos huaa k aap aise logoN par keechaR uchaalte haiN jise aap Khud maante haiN k vo ek 'azeem insaan aur mazhabii peshvaa the.

you said “he was indeed a great scholar” and “you have benefited from his work to a great deal”…yet you put him down by saying that he said GENERIC things in his speech…bahot Khoob!

ustaad agar bachchoN se istifaada na Haasil kare to vo shaagirdoN kii zihaanat kaa miraasi kiu ho…right?

aap to Panasonic kii commercial waali baat kar rahe haiN k:

**“i’m slightly ahead of my time!” **:rotfl:

lolz…i’m talking about a huge segment of society which isn’t as lucky as your are…un bechaaroN kaa to koii pursaan-e-Haal nahiiN hai…vo zinda dar gor haiN…na jeete haiN, na marte haiN. sad! :frowning:

Re: 16 December 1971, the darkest day in History of Pakistan

[quote=“KKF, post:3680, topic:324728”]

I am absolutely not putting him down…i really mean it that he will always be among top 5 islamic scholars of 20th century .

As far for Molanaa’s taste in wine…aap nay khuswant singh ka naam suna hai? and have you read Truth, Love & A Little Malice by khuswant…

Re: 16 December 1971, the darkest day in History of Pakistan

Tiger General A A Khan Niazi

Dushman meri lash par say guzar ka Dhaka main dakhal ho ga , Aajkal us kay Khandan ka aik aur Tiger maidan main nikla hoa hay .

Re: 16 December 1971, the darkest day in History of Pakistan

From what I have read there were about 60,000 troops and the rest were civilians.

Re: 16 December 1971, the darkest day in History of Pakistan

Here is an insightful and scholarly e-book that I came across, written by an East Pakistani who lived in BD until 1973.
He debunks myths and exposes a lot of lies and fabrications.
Pakistanis who are sick and tired of the prevalent bullying, insidious and sinister Indian propaganda will find this short book very revealing and enlightening.
Pakistanis should know and accept the bad that their state did but should not accept blatant and ludicrous lies propagated on them by those hateful Indians who were/are always bent on destroying Pakistan since day one.
East and West Pakistan should have been two nations to start with because it was an unnatural union. Such a union needed a LOT of political maturity and fairness to keep intact. Absent that and a conspiring India surrounding East Pakistan, the separation was inevitable. The separation could have been a lot less bloody if it was not for the evil role that India played to make this as bloody a separation as possible so that both wings would lick the physical and psychological wounds for decades to come.
Pakistanis continue to bear a huge psychological burden for crimes committed by their state, the attributed scale of which is far from the truth.
On the other hand, BD keeps propping up its national identity on a tragedy the scale of which has been based on ludicrous and asinine numbers and unquestionable falsehoods. Some national identity that is.
How can these two nations ever reconcile?
While India continues to bully and abuse both at the same time. How nice.

Behind the Myth of 3 million

Another soul-searching and truth-seeking article written by a BD author from an old GS thread:

Bangladesh Gets No Sympathy for 1971

By Mohammad Shahidullah
Lately, a lot of attention has been focused on trial of the Pakistani army personnel who were responsible for the killing of so many innocent people in Bangladesh (then East Pakistan) in 1971. I will try to provide some explanations why such a large-scale killing did not receive the kind of international and human rights groups’ attention it deserved, and why the world did not move for any justice in this case. I will also reflect on how that impacts our psyche as a nation. 1) Credibility: Bangladesh govt. crudely and arbitrarily made up the number of deaths during the 9-month period of 1971. Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, when released from Pakistani prison in Januray 1972, stated the death toll to be 1 lakh in London airport, 1 million in New Delhi airport and 3 million when landed in Dhaka. (Some people suggest that Sheik Mujibur Rahman confused million as English for lakh. But that is a different story). Obviously the number was not based on facts. Later, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman formed a commission to make a survey of the killings and come up with the real number.

The commission, after an exhaustive work, came up in 1973 with a death toll number, which was a 5-digit number. The results were published in newspapers briefly. The govt., in an apparent attempt to save it from a big embarrassment, hushed up the commission report and a high level decision was made to continue with the 3 million number publicly. (This is possible only for politicians of third world). Now, a casualty of 20,000 or 40,000 or 60,000 people in a matter of months is not a trivial thing, and is not to be taken lightly. It is a serious tragedy of mankind by any standard and in comparison to other events of the century, which deserved appropriate judicial action. Specially, the people killed were totally innocent to be a target of any army. We, Bangladeshis should not have anything to be ashamed of if the human sacrifice we made for our independence is not in millions, but in tens of thousands.

Not many peoples have made that kind of sacrifice for their countries. But as the over-enthusiastic Awami League leadership wanted to take the whole credit for independence to themselves, they thought that by putting a large figure of deaths, they would increase their price in front of everybody. 2) Exaggeration: Another thing to note is that world community is not ready to buy this number of 3 million deaths. They are not as gullible as simple people of Bangladesh who hardly do any diligence behind the numbers. (Even people in India in their private conversations agree that the 1971 death toll number is absurd). They do hair-splitting investigation of everything. A death toll of 3 million over a period of 8 and a half months (266 days) means over eleven thousand people were killed everyday on an average! There is hardly any mechanism that any army can employ to kill that many people in one day (may be except by nuclear bombs) for so many days in a row. It is not possible for any force to kill that many people individually or in groups when the whole population was against the army. (Carpet bombing in Vietnam did not kill nearly as many people as someone would expect). Also, 1971 was in very modern time, and communication was quite developed then. It was highly unlikely that Pakistanis would get away with such a big genocide and the world would not know about it or not do anything about it. India and USSR were very much on Pakistan affairs then, and at least they would not let it slip unnoticed. I would even ask all of us who were adults in 1972 to take a sample survey. How many people did you know personally or your relatives who were killed in 1971? Or how many people did you know who had their relatives killed? Bangladesh is a country where people know each other unlike in USA. It is not difficult to know if people get killed. If 4% of the population was killed in a matter of months, then everybody should have some of their relatives killed. That was not the case. If you consider all the links, you will find that the death toll could not have been higher than what Sheikh Mujib’s commission found out. 3) Political Motive:

Bangladesh govt. was never interested in bringing to books the war criminals of the Pakistani forces. All they wanted was to make a political issue out of it and keep it alive. They were afraid that a trial of the criminals (at least 197 by the Awami League govt. account) would bring the matter to a closure, which would deprive them of a propaganda weapon. They wanted to maintain the hatred in public mind so that the Awami League govt. could cover their incompetence and failures in running the country. It also fit well their agenda to keep the Islamic forces in the country suppressed in the pretext that they were a party to the killings and until a trial happens, they will remain guilty in front of the nation. A fair trial of the Pakistani army officers would reveal facts that would cause embarrassments for many big Awami League leaders and clear the names of many of their political opponents who are always accused for taking part in killing without a charge sheet to this day. 4) Lack of Sincerity: The Awami League govt. was hardly concerned about the emotional side of the relatives and friends of the victims. In reality, very few of the Awami League leaders (even lower level ones) had lost loved ones during the 9-month period. (That can be a topic of another article). So there was no sensitivity or sense of urgency for them to work for justice for the relatives of the victims. Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, who did not lose anybody close to him, made behind the curtain deals with the Pakistani premier Bhutto (the person who was probably most responsible for the tragic events of 1971) in exchange of the war criminals.

But he continued his high pitch rhetoric in public to keep his political enemies at bay. To this date, the same tactics are being used by the Awami League. When the identified war criminals were in their hands, they let them go and now they are behaving as if the Pakistani govt. rescued their army personnel by some military action. They are fooling the countrymen by their humdrum and shouting in the air for war crime trial knowing fully well that nothing will happen. 5) National Character: We have demonstrated time again how unreliable we are as a nation in giving out information. Especially our politicians have earned such notoriety as far as honesty is concerned that we do not need to elaborate. Even today, we lie about our population. When our population is nearing 150 million, we state it as over 120 million to avoid the disappointment of the donor agencies. We routinely exaggerate the numbers like percentage of literacy by a big percentage. The govts. in Bangladesh are only good at propagating lies, deceptions and falsehoods. They promise things in a flash that they know are not deliverable. They always claim credit for things that have really not happened, and for things they do not have any contribution. When our national budget’s 50% comes from foreign aid, we always boast to pass a ‘surplus’ budget every year, which is totally farcical. These things are good for domestic consumption, but world community knows what goes in our country. Just because everybody is not blunt as Henry Kissinger was does not mean that people outside do not notice things or know things.

They just tend to ignore things as petty matters in their big picture. The world community is sensitive enough not to insult the event by openly questioning the 3 million figure, but they all know it is an outrageous lie. So when the world community is consciously working to redress human tragedies in Bosnia, Kosovo, Rwanda, Kashmir, E. Timor, Chili, nobody is inclined to talk about 1971 tragedy of Bangladesh. The western world does not even recognize it as an important event of the century. It is not in the list of top genocides of the century for obvious reasons, although killings of less than half a million people got into the list (Time magazine). Apart from the fact that a considerable time has passed, we ourselves have weakened the case by our continuous dishonesty in this matter. We still hammer on the unrealistic 3 million number and are not willing to reconcile to truth. Because, in some of our hearts, we find our ego getting hurt to admit a mistake. Many of us do not really want a trial of the culprits, but are more interested in keeping a tension current in the region. This gives a good preoccupation for a section of our country, and suits the political agenda of many. Even today when 5 skulls are discovered in a grave in Mirpur, we drum it up as a ‘MASS’ grave. We try to sensationalize a thing that everybody already knows or expects. Because, it fits well with political timing of some special quarters. The situation now is very much like early seventies, and the party in power needs to create a lot of distraction to cover up their misdeeds. We discovered graves with many more skulls in 1972, but then we kept quiet. Why? This is the contradiction we suffer from. If we really believe 3 million people were killed in 1971, then why are we so excited to find a few skulls now? Are not ‘millions’ more

supposedly buried in unknown graves? Discovery of 5 skulls does not go any distance to substantiate the 3 million number anyway. Some people will argue that it is an insult to the dead even to question the number of deaths now. But is it? And only ‘anti- liberation’ forces would do so. That is a typical response to many problems that our nation has come to face today. But if you think it carefully, we have insulted their memory more by making a farcical matter it has been reduced to. We have used them as a pawn in the narrow interest of the political parties. That is how we have treated our freedom fighters. Now we are politicizing even the children of the martyrs and using them for selfish propaganda. This is precisely why the sacrifice of our people did not (and does not) get the respect it deserved. This is the reason we did not get any justice in bringing the perpetrators of the crime to book. This has only reduced the honor of the nation to a level that we did not want. The present generation of Bangladeshis are only more confused by all these contradictions.

The publicized sacrifice of a huge number “3 million” does not inspire the nation for doing any good for the country and the society. Nobody cares to honor the people who laid down their lives (except for some politically motivated photo ops on certain days of the year). Why? We have deprived the nation of truth by distorting the history. Unless we become conscientious and do the right thing and face the truth, it may be too late to rectify the situation and we, as a nation will live a lie forever! This is called self-deception. Nothing can be more unfortunate for a nation.

[The author is a Bangladeshi journalist.]

Re: 16 December 1971, the darkest day in History of Pakistan

Bangladesh 1971: War Crimes, Genocide and - Kean University http://www.kean.edu/~bgsg/Conference09/Papers_and_Presentations/Anis%2520Ahmed_Paper_Operat
The genocide committed in Bangladesh in 1971 is widely considered to be one of the worst genocides in recent history. … I must admit that the … Major General Fazal Muqeem Khan , the official historian of Pakistan Army wrote: The army

Re: 16 December 1971, the darkest day in History of Pakistan

President Yahya Khan talks about East Pakistan c. 1971
c. 1971: (Then) President of pakistan](Facebook) Mr. Yahya Khan speaking on the issue of East Pakistan (now bangladesh](Facebook)) — with Ishtiaq Ahmed and 12 others.

[https://fbexternal-a.akamaihd.net/safe_image.php?d=AQA2PKeNILcRSw1o&bust=1&url=https%3A%2F%2Ffbcdn-vthumb-a.akamaihd.net%2Fhvthumb-ak-xap1%2Fv%2Ft15.0-10%2F10840874_921967291161683_921965414495204_4151_2682_b.jpg%3Foh%3D49c4d038b19ba5e5299d30d066e2afb4%26oe%3D54FA6CB3%26__gda__%3D1430220901_cb7304fb07a24dacf4da9bd32043d3d6&jq=100

The traitor , Ayash , Sharabi who destroyed us](138K views · 857 reactions | c. 1971: (Then) President of #Pakistan Mr. Yahya Khan speaking on the issue of East Pakistan (now #Bangladesh) | Archive150)