In the period between General Yahya Khan’s arrival in Dhaka on 15 March 1971 for talks with Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and his secret departure for Karachi ten days later, the Pakistan army had sufficiently reinforced itself in terms of men and materiel necessary for military action against the Bengalis. The negotiations were a façade. The reality was the intrigue progressively shaping up in the military hierarchy since the results of the December 1970 election had given the Awami League a mandate to form Pakistan’s first elected government.
Proposal of Reconfiguration from Federation to Confederation
By the evening of 25 March, all hopes for a political solution to the crisis in Pakistan had all but vanished. A day earlier, on 24 March, sensing the sinister intentions of the Yahya Khan junta, Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman instructed his aides to propose to the regime that a wholesale transformation now needed to redefine the concept of the state of Pakistan. The country would no more be a federation, but would or could be reconfigured as a confederation.
The message was duly conveyed to the junta. Lt.Gen. SGMM Peerzada, a leading member of the junta, promised to get back to the Awami League the next morning. Dr. Kamal Hossain and other leaders of the Awami League waited all day on 25 March for the call. The call did not come, of course, even though the Awami League had not quite given up hope about a proclamation being issued by President Yahya Khan on the modalities of a transfer of power through a withdrawal of martial law.
‘Khadem, it is tonight.’
Things were quite different in the military establishment, though. Having received the green signal from Yahya Khan, General Tikka Khan phoned General Khadem Husain Raja on 25 March and told him: ‘Khadem, it is tonight.’ That was the first sign of an impending military assault on Bengalis. Through the afternoon and evening, Pakistani army officers helicoptered across the province, to spread the word among the various army formations that they had to be on standby for military operations to get under way. A number of West Pakistani political leaders visited Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman at his residence in Dhanmondi to bid him a sad farewell. Among them were Mir Ghaus Bux Bizenjo and Khan Abdul Wali Khan.
Sometime after dusk, General Yahya Khan, in stealthy manner and without officially bringing the on-going negotiations to an end, boarded at Tejgaon airport a Pakistan International Airlines flight for Karachi. The orders were that the military assault, codenamed Operation Searchlight, would not begin until his aircraft had safely landed in Karachi. The junta was obviously afraid that if the killing mission began once Yahya’s flight took off, the Indian authorities could force his aircraft to touch down somewhere before it reached Pakistan.
Imminence of Attack
By 10 pm, it had become clear to Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman that an armed assault on citizens was on the way. He exhorted the senior leaders of his party to move to safety. Even so, when Kamal Hossain met him at around 10 pm, he asked him if there had been any phone call from the regime. Hossain replied in the negative before leaving Bangabandhu’s residence. Tajuddin Ahmad tried persuading Mujib to leave the city along with other party leaders. For his part, Mujib instructed him and the others to find safe sanctuary while he waited for the army to come for him.
Rumours of an imminent strike by the army led students of Dhaka University and citizens in general into putting up barricades in different parts of the city to thwart movements by the soldiers. No one, at that point, could visualize the scale of the ferocity with which the army planned to strike.
The Sky Lit Up
The Pakistan army pounced on the people of Bangladesh between 11.30 pm and midnight. Different units of the army fanned out in various directions. Tanks, armoured cars and trucks loaded with soldiers headed for Dhaka University, the Shaheed Minar, Bangabandhu’s residence on Road 32 Dhanmondi, the Police Lanes at Rajarbagh, the Peelkhana headquarters of East Pakistan Rifles (EPR), Hotel Intercontinental and Old Dhaka. Tracer fire lit up the night sky, with guns roaring all across town. The army moved to remove all foreign journalists from the Intercontinental and put them on flights out of the province. And then began the long night of killing – of academics, students, Bengali police personnel as well as members of the East Pakistan Rifles, rickshaw pullers and citizens in general.
The Shaheed Minar, long the symbol of Bengali nationalism, was reduced to rubble. The Kali Mandir would suffer a similar fate within a couple of days. At Jagannath Hall and other halls of Dhaka University, soldiers stormed into the rooms and dormitories and murdered hundreds of students. They killed Professor Gobinda Chandra Dev of the department of philosophy and Professor Rafiqul Islam of mathematics. They grievously wounded Professor Jyotirmoy Guhathakurta of the department of English. Guhathakurta was to die of his wounds a few days later. Hundreds of students were murdered and buried in mass graves in the DU campus.
An academic, Professor Nurul Ula, spent an entire night recording, from within the safe confines of his quarters in the university area, the shooting of students by the soldiers. On the morning of 26 March, the soldiers gunned down Commander Moazzam Hossain, who had been a prominent accused in the Agartala Conspiracy Case in 1968-69. The offices of the radical newspaper The People was burned down by the soldiers. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, chairman of the Pakistan People’s Party, watched Dhaka burn from his suite in the Intercontinental Hotel.
The Declaration of Independence
Senior leaders of the Awami League, including Syed Nazrul Islam, Tajuddin Ahmad, M. Mansoor Ali and AHM Quamruzzaman made their way out of Dhaka in line with Bangabandhu’s instructions. For his part, as the hour struck midnight, Bangabandhu made a declaration of Bangladesh’s independence, which message was passed on to Chittagong Awami League leader M.A. Hannan on wireless.
Soon after he had declared Bangladesh a free nation, Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman was taken into custody by the Pakistan army. Over the next few days, he would be kept at Adamjee Cantonment College in Dhaka before being flown to West Pakistan.
Throughout the night between 25 March and 26 March, the Pakistan army killed Bengalis. All day long on 26 March, the killings went on. An overseas journalist would report that on those two days, no fewer than 7,000 people would be murdered by the army.
The genocide would go on for nine months, leaving three million Bengalis dead, 200,000-plus Bengali women raped by Pakistan’s soldiers and countless villages and towns destroyed.
About the Author
Syed Badrul Ahsan is the Chief Editorial Adviser of The Confluence; a journalist and author. He previously served as the Press Minister at the High Commission of Bangladesh, London and authored a biography on the Founder of Bangladesh, Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman entitled From Rebel to Founding Father: Sheikh Mujibur Rahman.