By Sohail Parwaz
Only few of the pertinent and
relevant excerpts for the interest, from the renowned Indian author and
researcher Sarmila Bose’s book, “Dead Reckoning: Memories of 1971 Bangladesh
War”, would be sufficient for the readers to evaluate reality and the
intentions of such propaganda. For example a most common and propagated myth is
that over 3 million Bengalis were killed during the military operations.
However, the reality was analysed
by the author and the fable is logically undressed,
“Examination of the available
material on the 1971 war in both Bengali and English showed that while the
allegation of ‘genocide’ of ‘three million Bengalis’ is often made in books,
articles, newspapers, films and websites it is not based on any accounting or
survey on the ground. Sisson and Rose state that the figure of three million
dead was put out by India, while some Bangladeshi sources say it was the figure
announced on his return to Dhaka by Sheikh Mujib, who in turn had been ‘told’
that was the death toll
when he emerged from nine months
in prison in West Pakistan. It is unclear who ‘told’ Sheikh Mujib this and on
what basis. However, Sheikh Mujib’s public announcement of ‘three million dead’
after his return to the newly created Bangladesh was reported in the media. For
instance, on 11 January 1972 in The Times Peter Hazlehurst reported from Dhaka
on Mujib’s emotional home-coming: in his first public rally in independent
Bangladesh Mujib is reported to have said, ‘I discovered that they had killed
three million of my people’.”………… “As the earlier chapters indicate, my own
experience in Bangladesh was very similar, with claims of dead in various
incidents wildly exceeding anything that could be reasonably supported by
evidence on the ground. ’Killing fields’ and mass graves were claimed to be
everywhere, but none was forensically exhumed and examined in a transparent
manner, not even the one in Dhaka University. Moreover, as Drummond pointed out
in 1972, the finding of someone’s remains cannot clarify, unless scientifically
demonstrated, whether the person was Bengali or non-Bengali, combatant or
non-combatant, whether death took place in the 1971 war, or whether it was
caused by the Pakistan Army. Ironically, as Drummond also points out, the
Pakistan Army did kill, but the Bangladeshi claims were ‘blown wholly out of
proportion’, undermining their credibility. Drummond reported that field investigations
by the Home Ministry of Bangladesh in 1972 had turned up about 2000 complaints
of deaths at the hands of the Pakistan Army.”
(Sarmila Bose, Dead Reckoning:
Memories of 1971 Bangladesh War, Pages 175, 177)
Another parable which was given
wide circulation and substance was that, West Pakistani Army was the ‘occupying
force’ whereas Indian Army was a ‘liberation army’. Interestingly, this
allegory was also ragged by Sarmila through a logical analysis,
“The Pakistan army is also
constantly referred to in the Bangladeshi literature as an occupying force’, or
‘hanadar bahini’ (invading force, raiders). This is a mindless
misrepresentation of reality. In 1971 East Pakistan was a province of Pakistan,
a country created in 1947 as a homeland for South Asia’s Muslims, through a
movement in which East Bengal played a significant role. The Pakistan army was
present in the province as it was in other provinces of the newly created
state. Bengalis served both in the existing units of the army and in the special
Bengal regiments raised later. Just as West Pakistanis served in East Pakistan,
Bengali officers were posted in West Pakistan. Bengalis who later decided they
wanted to secede from Pakistan and fight for an independent country could have
termed the Pakistan army ‘shotru’ ‘enemy forces’ whom they wished to eject,
instead of resorting to pointless attempts to erase history by labelling them
‘occupying’ or ‘invading’ forces, as though they had suddenly appeared from a
foreign land. Moreover, many Bengalis did not support the idea of secession and
continued to consider the Pakistan regime the legitimate government, and some
Bengali officers continued to serve in the Pakistan army, defending what was
still Pakistani territory. There was only one ‘invading force’ in East Pakistan
in 1971 that was India.”
(Sarmila Bose, Dead Reckoning:
Memories of 1971 Bangladesh War, Page 163)
And finally a firsthand account
by a Pakistani author Ikram Sehgal, who in fact served in East Pakistan and
who, by narrating his personal experience negated the myth that Pakistan Army
was alone responsible for all violence. The writer states that,
“By the time I reached my unit,
my world had been turned topsy-turvy the writing clearly on the wall.
One could never believe that the
2E Bengal had killed their West Pakistani colleagues. Sadly, it was true. The
massacre of the family of Subedar Ayub was especially heinous and
unforgiveable. All these officers had repeatedly been warned by West Pakistani
officers that they would be killed if they did not leave the unit. During those
critical days, some Bengali officers even advised them to take leave or go to
Dacca on some pretext. All of them without exception refused to take the easy
exit by abandoning the unit. It was unthinkable on their part to do so,
particularly at such a juncture. They all were of the sentiment that if they
stood their ground, they will be able to stop any action that might be taken
against their unit. But they proved to be gravely wrong. They were murdered –
their martyrdom proves that they were heroes by all means. Their killing is a
dark stain on history and can never obliterate the fact that they were a fine
battalion.”
(Ikram Sehgal, Escape from
Oblivion: the Story of a Pakistani Prisoner of War in India, Page 6)
These are just few of the
examples out of a large number of impartial and unbiased analyses about the
myths created by the Indians and the Awami League which are enough to reflect
the intentions and minds of the enemies of Pakistan.
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