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Bangladesh families of enforced disappearance victims hopeful after Hasina’s downfall

  • More than 700 became victims of enforced disappearances during Sheikh Hasina’s rule, a Bangladeshi human rights group alleges

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Holding the photo of her father, an alleged victim of enforced disappearance in Bangladesh, a girl breaks down in a rally in Dhaka on June 24, 2023. Photo: Abdur Rajjak
When Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina resigned and fled the country on Monday, 41-year-old Nasrin Jahan Smrity was relieved and hopeful that she would find her husband alive.
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Smrity’s husband Ismail Hossain Baten, a businessman in Dhaka, was allegedly abducted by members of the paramilitary force Rapid Action Battalion [RAB] in 2019. Since then, Smrity has run from pillar to post searching for Baten.

The RAB, police and other security agencies have for years denied holding Baten in their custody, telling Smrity they knew nothing of his whereabouts.

On Tuesday, Smrity was among scores of families who assembled at the Dhaka headquarters of the Directorate General of Forces Intelligence [DGFI], the military intelligence authority of the country, calling for a fresh search for those who became victims of so-called enforced disappearance during Hasina’s reign.

“I wrote to ministers. I met senior RAB and other security agency officers. I found no way to trace my husband. Despite many appeals, the police did not launch a proper investigation into the case.

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“But with the regime being changed, I think, the security agencies will be forced to release those held captive for years,” Smrity told This Week in Asia, adding that she knew of some missing persons who were “released” just a day before.

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