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Jinjira massacre

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Jinjira massacre (Bengali: জিঞ্জিরা গণহত্যা, romanizedJiñjirā gaṇahatyā) was a planned killing of civilians by the Pakistan army during the Bangladesh liberation war of 1971.

Jinjira massacre
Part of Bangladesh genocide
LocationJinjira, Dhaka, East Pakistan
DateApril 1, 1971
TargetMostly Bengali Hindus
Attack type
massacre, ethnic cleansing
VictimsEstimated to about 3,000
PerpetratorsPakistani Army

The killing took place at the unions Jinjira, Kalindi and Shubhadya of Keraniganj Upazila across the Buriganga River from Dhaka.[1]

Background

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The 1971 Bangladesh atrocities began as the Pakistan army launched Operation Searchlight on 25 March 1971 to suppress the Bengali uprising in then East Pakistan. As a reaction, people from Dhaka flocked to Keraniganj on the other side of the river. The union Jinjira and nearby areas were inhabited by a large number of Hindu families.[1] The elements of Pakistan army, now in control of Dhaka city after the crackdown of 25 March marked Jinjira and surrounding area as a target for military operation.

Massacre

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The army started to amass forces around Keraniganj from midnight of 1 April.[2] They took control of the Mitford Hospital by the river. At around 5 am, they commenced the attack by throwing flares from the roof of the mosque adjacent to the hospital.[1] The army moved into Jinjira and opened fire on people. The massacre continued for nearly nine hours. One of the largest such executions took place beside a pond near Nandail Dak Street, where 60 people were lined up and shot. The soldiers also fired on the houses using gunpowder[clarification needed].[2] More than a thousand people died in this massacre.[3]

Cover-up in the Pakistani media

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In the night of 2 April Pakistan Television broadcast news about strong military action against separatist miscreants taking shelter at Jinjira of Keraniganj on the other side of Buriganga.[1] On 3 April The Morning News came up with the headline "Actions taken against miscreants at Jinjira".[4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d Atmokotha 1971 (My story 1971) by Nirmalendu Gun, Bangla Prokash, 2008 (page 147)
  2. ^ a b Swadhinota Juddher Dolilpatra the 8th edition (Page 376-378)
  3. ^ The Daily Bangla, 13 November 1972
  4. ^ Ekatturer Dinguli (Days of 71) by Jahanara Imam, Shandhani publications, 2005 (page 56)