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1971
Bangladesh Freedom War
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March
27-28, 1971 International
Herald Tribune
YAHYA
DENOUNCES MUJIB AS TRAITOR : SHARP FIGHTING REPORTED New
Delhi, March 26 (Reuters) - Thousands of villagers have joined Awami
League volunteers fighting West Pakistani troops in the streets of
four major cities of East Pakistan, the Press Trust of India
reported to night. |
nobel-info.com
March
27, 1971 The
Statesman
BANGLA
DESH DECLARES FREEDOM- RAHMANS'S STEP FOLLOWS ARMY CRACKDOWN- CIVIL
WAR ERUPTS IN EAST PAKISTAN- AWAMI LEAGUE LEADERS GO UNDERGROUND Press
Report from Delhi on March 27, 1971 Pakistan's
eastern wing, rechristened the independent state of Bangla Desh by
sheikh mujibur rahman in a clandesting radio broadcast, was in the
throes of a civil war on friday with west wing troops restoring to
force to regain control and the people, aided by the east pakistan
rifles and the police, resisting the attempt, report uni. Heavy
fighting was going on in Dacca, Chittagong, Sylhet, Comilla and
other towns, according to reports from across the border gathered by
UNI bureaus in Shillong and Calcutta and correspondeants close to
the border in the eastern sector. Casualties were believed to be
heavy. Mr.
Rahman and other Awami Laegue leaders had gone underground according
to highly reliable reports received in Gauhati by PTI and UNI. A
later reports said Pakistan troops went hunting for them but could
not find them. Speaking over "Swadhin Bangla" (Free Bengal) Betar Kendra, Mr. Rahman later proclaimed the birth of an independent Bangla Desh.
|
nobel-info.com
March 29, 1971 The
Daily Telegraph
'NO MERCY' IN PAKISTAN FIGHTING West
Pakistan troops tightened the Army grip on the Eastern province
yesterday after a weekend in which many hundreds of civilians were
reported to have been killed. Our
staff correspondent in Delhi cabled that East Pakistan was virtually
sealed off from the outside world, but the indications were that
killing was on a mass scale. The Dacca curfew was lifted yesterday,
but last night more troops were flown to Chittagong to quell
disturbances. Bitter protests that the troops were showing no mercy and trying to terrorise the civilian population into submission came from supporters of Sheikh Mujibar Rahman's Awami League. |
March
29, 1971 The
Daily Telegraph EAST
WINGS SEALED OFF Killing on a mass scale is underway in East Pakistan, caught in the grip of a vicious civil war, according to all available indications from the province, which is now virtually sealed off from the outside world.
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March 29, 1971 The
Daily Telegraph CASUALTIES
LIKELY TO BE HEAVY Heavy civilian casualties can be expected form the Army takeover of East Pakistan. The shelling of the capital, Dacca, has been cold-blooded and indiscriminate although there was almost no sign of armed resistance.
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March
30, 1971 International
Herald Tribune TRAGEDY
IN PAKISTAN The Eastern wing of Pakistan, much the more populous, won national elections last December and began moving peaceably to take over national power. The Western wing, which has dominated and exploited the East since Moslem Pakistan was carved out of British India in 1947, correctly perceived the threat and--rather than surrender power--stalled.
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March
30, 1971 International
Herald Tribune DHAKA
CIVILIANS 'STUNNED' BY KILLINGS, WITNESS SAYS Dhaka
(AP) After two days and night of shelling in which perhaps 7,000
Pakistanis died in Dhaka alone, the Pakistan Army appears to have
crushed Sheikh Mujibur Rahman's 25 days of defiance in East
Pakistan. The
army, which attacked without warning on Thursday night with
infantry, artillery and American supplied M-24 tanks, destroyed
parts of the city. Its
attack was aimed at the university, the populous old city, where
Sheikh Mujib, the Awami League leader, had his strongest following,
and the industrial areas on the outskirts of the city of 1.5 million
people.
|
April
2, 1971 International
hearald tribune DHAKA
SAID TO BE BOMBED: ALL-OUT PAKISTAN OFFENSIVE REPORTED New
Delhi, April 1 (Reuters):- Indian press and radio reports said
tonight that the Pakistan Army, Navy and Air Force had launched an
all-out offensive to quell Sheikh Mujibur Rahman's resistance in
East Pakistan. All
India radio and the Press Trust of India News agency, quoting
reports reaching Calcutta said the drive followed the arrival of
troops reinforcements from West Pakistan. The
radio said the Pakistan Air Force had bombed Dhaka and several other
towns and that heavy fighting was going on for control of the
capital.
|
nobel-info.com
April 2, 1971 The
Libyan Times PAK.
GOVT. SAYS INDIANS ARE NOW INFILTRATING TO HELP REBELS London,
(UPI)- The Pakistan government said yesterday that armed Indians
were "inflitrating the border areas of East Pakistan." Radio Pakistan quoted a Foreign Office Spokesman as saying the Pakistan government was fully alive to the needs of the situation.
|
nobel-info.com
April 3, 1971 The
Dai ly Telegragh
MASS
KILLINGS IN TERROR CAMPAIGN BY PAKISTAN ARMY Killing
on a mass scale are reported to be continuing in East Pakistan,
indicating that the Army has shown no let-up in the terror campaign
begun after President Yahya Khan gave it his "full authority'
to restore central Government control.
|
nobel-info.com
April 3, 1971 Daily american E.
PAKISTAN FORCES STILL FIGHTING OVER WIDESPREAD AREAS New
Delhi, April 2 (AP)- Sheikh Mujibur Rahman's independence forces
apparently were active in vast sections of the East Pakistan
countryside today as the Pakistan government officially acknowledged
that the province was not as normal as originally claimed. For
the first time since the civil war broke out between the West
Pakistan dominated army and the Sheikh's followers in the eastern
wing, the government-controlled Radio Pakistan did not report
normalcy throughout the province.
|
nobel-info.com
April
4, 1971 The
Observer THE
EXPLOSION OF A NATION Whatever
its military outcome, there will be no winners in the brutal
conflict now going on East Pakistan. Nor will the war, which was so
shortsighted started, damage only the interests of the two parties
most immediately engaged in the conflict--Punjabi-dominated Pakistan
and the Muslim Bengalis. It will almost certainly promote the risks
of revolutionary warfare in a particularly explosive part of Asia,
threatening India, Pakistan and Burma. And it will possibly draw
both the Russians and the Chinese into this arena.
|
nobel-info.com
April 5, 1971 Newsweek PAKISTAN
PLUNGES INTO CIVIL WAR Until
the very last moment, it looked as if the two proud men entrusted
with Pakistan's density might still be able to avert a head-on
clash. From the East Pakistani capital of Dacca came optimistic
reports that President Mohammed Yahya Khan and Mujib--as the leader
of seccesionist-minded East Pakistan is known-were about to reach a
compromise. But then, with stunning suddenness, the pieces of
Pakistan's complicated political puzzle flew apart. In the East
Pakistan cities of Rangpur and Chittagong, federal troops poured
machinegun fire into mobs of demonstrating Bengali nationalists.
Swiftly, Yahya issued orders to his army to "crush the movement
and restore the full authority of the government". In his turn,
Mujib proclaimed East Pakistan the "Sovereign, independent
People's Republic of Bangladesh (Bengali Nation)". And with
that, Pakistan was plunge into civil war.
|
nobel-info.com
April 5, 1971 Time PAKISTAN:
TOPPLING OVER THE BRINK With
the awesome fury of a cyclone off the Bay of Bengal, civil war swept
across East Pakistan last week. In city after crowded, dusty city
the army turned its guns on mobs of rioting civilians, Casualties
mounted into the thousands. Through the full toll remained uncertain
because of censorship and disorganisation in the world's most
densely populated corner (1,400 people per sq. mi.) at week's end
some estimates had 2,000 dead. Even if President Agha Mohammad Yahya
Khan is prepared to accept casualities of geomatrically greater
magnitude, the outcome is likely to be the final breakup of East
Pakistan and the painful birth of a new nation named Bangladesh
(Bengal State).
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nobel-info.com
April
5, 1971 The daily telegraph INDIA CANNOT STAND SILENT ON BENGAL, SAYS MRS.GANDHI India
could not remain a silent spectator of events in East Pakistan, Mrs.
Gandhi, Prime Minister, said yesterday, But she called on Indians to
keep emotions in check.
|
nobel-info.com
April
5, 1971 International
herald tribune PAKISTAN CHARGES INDIANS ARE GIVING ARMS TO REBEL New
Delhi, April 4 (NYT)- Radio Pakistan has charged that nine Indian
"vehicles' loaded with arms and ammunition crossed the East
Pakistan border and were stopped by West Pakistani troops.
|
nobel-info.com
April 6, 1971 International
herald tribune PAKISTANI
ARMY IN BIG CITIES : REBELS HOLD MUCH OF EAST PAKISTAN Chuadanga,
East Pakistan, April 5 (AP)- Sheikh Mujibur Rahaman's independence
forces held on today to stretches of East Pakistani territory along
the border with India, vowing to fight until they defeat the
Pakistan Army.
|
nobel-info.com
April
8, 1971 The
daily telegraph USE
OF U.S. JETS AND TANKS IN BENGAL WORRIES NIXON The
American Government, as chief supplier of arms to Pakistan, has made
it's first move to express concern over reports that American
military equipment is being used against civilians in East Pakistan. The
Assistant Secretary of State, Mr. Joseph Sisco, is reported to have
voiced this feeling in a meeting with the Pakistan Ambessador, Mr.
Agha Hilaly.
|
nobel-info.com
April 9, 1971 Daily
American PAKISTAN
SAYS INDIA MASSES FOR POSSIBLE INTERVENTION New
Delhi, April 8 (AP)- The Pakistan government said yesterday that the
Indian armed forces were preparing 'for possible operations' in East
Pakistan.
|
nobel-info.com
April 9, 1971 Daily
American REBELS CONTUNUE TO GAIN IN EAST PAKISTAN New
Delhi, April 9 (UPI)- The Bengali secessionist forces have claimed
almost complete control of the western part of East Pakistan,
reports in the Indian Press said today.
|
nobel-info.com
April 12, 1971 International
herald tribune
CONCERN GROWS IN CONGRESS OVER ARMS AID TO PAKISTAN Washington,
April 11 (NYT)- The United States is continuing to ship to Pakistan
ammunition and spare for weapons under a programme begun in 1967. There is
growing evidence that the Pakistani Army has been using American
tanks, jet aircraft and other equipment in its attempt to crush the
movement for autonomy by the predominantly Bengali citizens in the
eastern half of the country.
|
nobel-info.com
April
12, 1971 Time PAKISTAN:
ROUND 1 TO THE WEST "
There is no doubt" said a foreign diplomat in East Pakistan
last week, "that the word masscare applies to the
situation." Said another Western official: "It's a
vertable bloodbath. The troops have been utterly merciless." As
Round I of Pakistan's bitter civil war ended last week, the winner--
predictably was the tough West Pakistan army, which has a powerful
force of 80,000 Punjabi and Pathan soldiers on duty in rebellious
East Pakistan. Reports coming out of the East via diplomats,
frightened refugees and clandestine broadcasts varied widly.
Estimates of the total dead ran as high as 300,000. A figure of
10,000 to 15,000 is accepted by several Western governments, but no
one can be sure of anything except that untold thousands perished. Mass
Graves Opposed
only by bands of Bengali peasants armed with stones and bamboo
sticks, tanks rolled through Dacca, the East's capital, blowing
houses to bits. At the University, soldiers slaughtered students
inside the British Council building. "It was like Chengis
Khan," said a shocked Western official who witnessed the scene.
Near Dacca's marketplace, Urdu-speaking government soldiers ordered
Bengali-speaking townspeople to surrender, then gunned them down
when they failed to comply. Bodies lay in mass graves at the
University, in the old city, and near the municipal dump.
|
nobel-info.com
April
13, 1971 The
Time WITNESS
TO A MASSACRE IN EAST PAKISTAN An
Accounts of Three Days of Carnage at Dacca University A
student who survived the three days of carnage at Dacca University
last month has given an eyewitness account of how the West Pakistani
Army systematically shot down students and lecturers who were
trapped in the encircled dormitories. "I
jumped out of the dormitory window and hid in the top of the tree
for the night", he told a science lecturer at Notre Dame
College, Dacca, who has now sought asylum in Calcutta. "The
firing continued. In the morning there was a lull and I saw some
Pakistani soldiers giving orders to the terrified bearers. After a
while I saw the bearer dragging the bodies of students and lecturers
towards the football ground. "They
were ordered to dig a huge grave. The Pakistani soldiers told the
eight or nine bearers to sit down. After a while they were ordered
to stand and line up near the grave. The guns fired again and they
fell next to the bodies of my friends."
|
nobel-info.com
April 13, 1971 International Herald Tribune EAST
PAKISTAN PROCLAIMS ITS INDEPENDENCE New
Delhi, April 12 (AP)- An independent republic of Bangladesh (Bengali
Nation) was formed tonight, with Sheikh Mujibur Rhaman as president
of the secessionist province of East Pakistan, Indian radio monitors
reported. They
said that announcement of the government's formation was heard on a
newly set-up Free Bangladesh Radio, which had gone off the air two
weeks ago, a few days after the civil war in the province broke out
between the Sheikh's followers and the West Pakistan-dominated army. Both
of Indian's national news agencies carried the announcement. The
Free Bangladesh Radio also was quoted as announcing that Tajuddin
ahmed, a close associate of Sheikh Mujib, would be the prime
minister and foreign minister. Syed
Nazrul Islam, Vice-President of the Sheikh's outlawed Awami League,
was named vice-president Bangladesh, the radio added.
|
nobel-info.com
April 14, 1971 The Times EAST BENGAL RESISTANCE CRUMBLES AS TROOPS ADVANCE Chuadanga,
East Pakistan, April 13, Armed resistance in much of East Bengal was
crumbling fast today before the advancing columns of President Yahya
Khan's Pakistan Army.
|
nobel-info.com
April 15, 1971 International
Herald Tribune REBELS
ASK INTERNATIONAL AID: PAKISTAN ARMY PUSHES DRIVE AS THOUSANDS FLEE
TO INDIA New
Delhi, April 14 (AP)- East Pakistan independence forces appealed
today to other countries for arms and ammunition as the Pakistan
Army intensified a two-pronged offensive to crush the three-week old
rebellion in the secessionist province. Meanwhile,
refugees from East Pakistan poured into India today, fleeing from
the advancing Pakistan Army troops. 'What was a trickle has become a
stream', said a high Indian official, describing the influx of
refugees.
|
nobel-info.com
April 17, 1971 The Daily Telegraph PAKISTAN ARMY TAKES BANGLADESH CAPITAL Pakistan
Government forces last night took the town of Chuadanga, proclaimed
two weeks ago as the provisional capital of Bangladesh, the
breakaway eastern province.
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April 18, 1971 The
Observer THE
FADING DREAM OF BANGLADESH Calcutta,
17 April- Troops from West Pakistan loyal to General Yahya Khan, the
country's military ruler are now rolling up the map of Bangladesh.
They have ended, for the time being, Bengali dreams of secession and
freedom in East Pakistan. Inspite
of their passionate hopes, the unwarlike Bengalis have been no match
for the Frontier
soldiers from the West- traditionally the best and most ruthless
warriors on the Indian subcontinent. But
after a 200-mile journey through the tragic landscape of Bangladesh.
I am sure that from now on President Yahya will hold his eastern
province only by force and that his rule will be harassed by
continual resistance, however, ill-organised and futile it may be.
The Bengalis will never forget or forgive the happening of the past
few weeks.
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April
21, 1971 Wall
Street Journal A
FLICKERING CAUSE East
Pakistanis pledge to fight to the death but mostly they don't....
They lack Arms, Leadership to Prolong their Revolt; No Aid by other
Nations.
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April 24-25, 1971 International
Herald Tribune BANGLADESH
ISSUES APPEAL FOR RECOGNITION AS A NATION New
Delhi, April 23 (Reuters)- The so-called Bangladesh (Bengali Nation)
government in East Pakistan tonight sent an appeal to world
governments for recognition as the Pakistan Army gained more ground
in its push against the secessionist regime's forces.
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April 25, 1971 The Sunday Times SPECTRE
OF FAMINE OVER EAST BENGAL An
appalling picture of widespread devastation throughout the country
is given by the latest reports reaching The Sunday Times from East
Bengal. The vast, stricken area will take many weeks to make even a
partial recovery from its wounds, and 'normality' in any pre-March,
1971, sense can probably never be restored. -----
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April 26, 1971 Newsweek PAKISTAN:
VULTURES AND WILD DOGS For
more than two weeks, the Pakistani Army of President Mohammad Yahya
Khan had played curious waiting game. Siting tight in their
well-fortified cantonments in the rebellious eastern wing of their
divided country, the federal troops virtually ignored the taunts of
the secessionist 'liberation forces'. But then early last week, the
lull came to a sudden end. Springing from their strong-holds the
Punjabi regulars simultaneously staged more than a dozen devastating
attacks from one end of beleaguered East Pakistan to the other. And
when the blitzkrieg was over, it was clear that the
less-than-one-month-old Republic of Bangladesh (Bengali Nation) had
been delivered a stunning blow.
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April
27, 1971 The
Libian Times INDO-PAKISTAN
RELATIONS KEEP MOVING TO THE WORST BY THE HOUR Moscow,
(AP, UPI) - M. Arshad Hussein, special envoy of Pakistani President
Mohamed Yahya Khan met yesterday with Soviet Preminer Alexei Kosygin
for a private conference on undisclosed subjects. An
official announcement said Pakistani Ambassador to Moscow also took
part in the meeting. Arshad
Hussein arrived in Moscow about five days ago, apparently to serve
as Yahya Khan's spokesman with Soviet Officials about the trouble in
East Pakistan and the explosive India-Pakistani climate.
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May 4, 1971 International
Herald Tribune PAKISTAN
SAYS INDIA CREATES ATMOSPHERE OF CONFRONTATION Karachi,
May 3, (NYT)- Pakistan accused India today of 'creating an
atmosphere of confrontation' and said Indian border units had
shelled Pakistani positions. ----
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May
8-9, 1971 Interanational
Herald Tribune EAST
PAKISTAN MILITARY CHIEF DENIES SLAUGHTER OCCURED Dacca,
East Pakistan, May 7 (NYT)- Gen Tikka Khan, the military governor of
East Pakistan, said today that his staff had estimated that 150
persons were killed in Dacca on the night of March 25, when the army
moved to reassert control over the province. The
General speaking at a reception, said that other estimates of the
number of people killed, ranging up to 10,000 were wildly
exaggerated. --------
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May
19, 1971 International
Herald Tribune MRS.
GANDHI LAMENTS LACK OF AID FOR PAKISTAN REFUGEES New
Delhi, May 18 (AP)- Prime Minister Indira Gandhi complained today
that "no prosperous country" or any of the "upholders
of democracy has tried to help the nearly three million East
Pakistani refugees now in India.
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May
22-23, 1971 International
Herald Tribune DEATH
IN 'GOLDEN BANGLADESH' Firm
figures of massacre in East Pakistan, as anywhere, are hard to
verify. Some say thousands, others insist on two hundred thousand.
Probably 50,000 is a conservative estimate. Numbers of refugees are
more obtainable: 650,000 in four Indian states on May 1.
|
May
29, 1971 The
Weekly Economist
HOW
NOT TO FACE FACTS President
Yahya needs to acknowledge realities, Mrs. Gandhi needs to maintain
her cool, and the rest of us should be more helpful. It
is a standard practice of governments, escpecially those which are
fighting wars, to putout self-justifying propangda. This propaganda
may fail to convince, which is troublesome. Or it may convince so
well that the propagandists themselves are taken in, which is
positively dangerous. The Government of Pakistan has clearly dug
itself a credibility gap. The question now is whether it has also
buried its head in the sand.
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May
29-30, 1971 International
Herald Tribune REBELS
CALLED STILL ACTIVE IN EAST PAKISTAN CLASHES WITH ARMY TERRORISM
REPORTED New
Delhi, May 28 (NYT)- Despite official descriptions of normality in
East Pakistan, guerrilla activity and the army crackdown continue,
according to reports from the area. The
foreign informants report that the Pakistani Army has been able to
widen its control of vital installations and major towns and cities.
But they say that guerrilla and terrorist activity by Bengali
insurgents-but tressed by Bengali noncooperation in general-- has
prevented the army from establishing an effective civil
administration in most of East Pakistan.
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May
31, 1971 International
Herald Tribune CHOLERA
OUTBREAK REPORTED : INDIA PUTS PAKISTANI REFUGEES AT 4 MILLION New
Delhi, May 30 (Reuters)- Indian announced today that more than four
million East Pakistanis have fled into its territory since the
Martial-Law crackdown in their province. Reports
have said living conditions in overcrowded temporary border camps
have led to 300 deaths from cholera and gastroenteritis.
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June
4, 1971 The
Times
SECRET
CATALOGUE OF GUILT AND DISASTER OVER EAST PAKISTAN Within
the space of a few short weeks both East and West Bengal have
suddenly become international trouble sports. Millions of people
have been uprooted by civil war, thousands have been killed, famine
and disease are already beginning to stalk the countryside and a
full scale war between India and Pakistan threatens to break out at
any moment.
|
nobel-info.com
June
6, 1971 The
Sunday Times THE
ROAD FROM BANGLADESH The
life of the refugee produces its own particular kind of
hopelessness. Isolated in a foreign country, physically weak,
surrounded by strangers, these Bengalis swiftly find themselves
victims of increasing lethargy, silently awaiting any new blow from
an almost universally hostile world. The old men, who in their own
country had great dignity, are now reduced to queuing like children
for food. If they are ill, like the half-crippled man with his stick
and umbrella, they merely sit and wait for someone to help them. No
one does. If they are your, or part of a united family, they can at
least scavenge for food and fuel to recreate a vagabond imitation of
their former life in Pakistan.
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June
8, 1971 International
Herald Tribune TALK
HEARD IN INDIA OF WAR WITH PAKISTAN ON REFUGEES Calcutta,
June 7 (WP)- Talk of a war with Pakistan has increased here as a
result of the continuing flow of refuges into India, which confronts
this country with an enormous, unwanted burden.
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June
14, 1971 International
Herald Tribune WEST
PAKISTAN NEWSMAN SAYS ARMY SLAUGHTERED EASTERNERS London,
June 13 (NYT)- A West Pakistani journalist who accompanied the
Pakistani journalist when it crushed the independence movement in
East Pakistan alleged yesterday that the government troops
"deliberately massacred" people in East Bengal. Mr.
Mascarenhas writes that the Pakistani government has suppressed
"the second and worse horror which followed when its own army
took over the killing". He says that officials in West Pakistan
privately estimate that 250,000 persons have been killed by both
sides in the fighting--not including those who have died from hunger
or disease.
|
nobel-info.com
June
14, 1971 International
Herald Tribune PAKISTAN
ARMY SCORCHES BORDER: BENGAL GUERRILLAS TRAIN IN INDIA Shikarpur,
India, June 13 (AP)- The Pakistan army had launched a scorched-earth
operation along the frontier between East Pakistan and India,
according to Indian military and civilian authorities on the spot. President
Yahya Khan's troops are burning frontier villages, destroying jute
and sugar-cane plantations and ordering those inhabitants who have
not already fled to India to pull back at least five miles from the
border, the Indians report. The
operation seems designed as a defensive measure against guerrilla
attacks by East Pakistani secessionist forces-the Mukhti Fauj-building
up their strength in the safety of Indian territory.
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June
20, 1971 The
Sunday Times
EAST
PAKISTAN : THE SILENT VOICE OF U THANT As
world opinion becomes increasingly increased at the West Pakistani
army's brutal region of terror in East Bengal, and at the pitiful
sight of the ever-growing millions of refugees fleeing form that
terror, one voice remains conspicuously silent. It is the voice of
the Secretary General of the United States Nations, U Thant.
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June
22, 1971 International
Herald Tribune INDIA
AND PAKISTAN India's
suggestion that international aid to Pakistan be suspended
"until a political solution acceptable to the people of East
Bengal is found" is offensive in its reference to East Pakistan
as "East Bengal", but otherwise apt. It is unthinkable
that donors would want to underwrite a minority military
government's cruel war against its own citizens, thousands of whom
it has murdered, millions of whom it has forced into flight.
Moreover, strictly from the technical standard of whether Pakistan
in its disrupted condition can spent aid funds efficiently, it
hardly can qualify.
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June
28, 1971 International
Herald Tribune THREE
MONTH LATER, FEAR STILL REIGNS IN DACCA Dacca (NYT)-
People talk with foreigners in a whisper and keep looking behind
them to see if anyone is listening. Soldiers and special
police-brought from West Pakistan, more than, 1,000 miles away stop
and search cars and buses and persons carrying bundles. Arrests
are made and denied. When families ask the martial law authorities
what has happened to a son or father, the army replies that he was
released after questioning and that if he has not returned home,
then maybe he has fled to India. Many
persons listen to the clandestine Bangladesh (Bengal Nation) Radio
every day, although the penalties are severe. This
is the nervous and unhappy flavor of Dacca, capital of East
Pakistan, three months after the army launched its offensive to try
to crush the Bengali autonomy movement throughout the province. The
army is clearly in control of this city, but "normality"-
the word the government uses to describe conditions here- does not
exist. Dacca
today can best be described as a city under the occupation of a
military force that rules by strength, intimidation and terror, but
which has been unable to revive an effective civil administration.
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June
29, 1971 The
Daily Telegraph REIGN
OF TERROR STILL BY ARMY IN EAST BENGAL The
British Parliamentary Delegation to East Bengal led by Mr. Arthur
Bottomley, Labour MP for Middlesbrough East left Dacca for Calcutta
yesterday in a frustrated and gloomy mood. He has
spent some hours in a vain attempt to visit Boliadi, a village 15
miles north of Dacca, which was destroyed at dawn on Sunday morning
by the West Pakistan Army. For
reasons not yet explained six villages have recently been razed to
the ground in this area, to the north of the small industrial town
of Tongi, and firing can still be heard there.
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July
1, 1971 International
Herald Tribune WHY
AID PAKISTAN? After
months of equivocation and evasion, the State Department has finally
made it clear that the administration intends to keep on furnishing
military and economic assistance to the government of Pakistan
despite continuing acts of repression in East Pakistan that have
shocked the world. This incredible policy decision defies
understanding.
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nobel-info.com
July
4, 1971 The
Observer BENGAL
GUERRILLAS STEP UP BOMBING Dacca,
3 July: As Secretary of Dacca's Council Muslim League, Mr. Abdul
Matin, a Bengali and a lawyer, is a firm believer in the unity of
the two Pakistans. He is also a lucky man. At
1.55 one morning this week, he escaped unhurt when a bomb went off
in his home. It woke the city and blew a hole the size of a football
in a thick brick wall. The bomb was the Mukti Fouj's (Freedom
Fighters) way of reminding people that nowadays it pays to be a
Begali first and a Muslim second.
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nobel-info.com
July
4, 1971 The
Observer EDITORIAL:
BENGAL CHAOS COULD LEAD TO WAR The
Enormous and increasing scale of the refugee exodus from East
Pakistan to India confronts the world not only with the greatest
humanitarian relief task since World War Two but also with a
political crisis of growing magnitude. Already five or six million
people - more than the entire population of one of the smaller
European States- have fled from their homes through fear or hunger.
Millions more may move by the autumn if famine occurs through a
breakdown of minimal food distribution. There
is a growing danger that if the exodus continues, the whole of the
Indian sub-continent may be dragged into war and unpredictable
social convulsions.
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July
6, 1971 International
Herald Tribune REPRESSION,
TERRORISM FOUND GROWING IN EAST PAKISTAN The
army is, indeed, in control, except for a few areas near the active
and growing more so-with aid from India.
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July
10, 1971 The
Economist THE
MUKTI FOUJ IS STILL FIGHTING But
even when the list is out, the continued activities of the Mukti
Fouj may deter people from collaborating with the Martial Law
regime. At the moment the main activity of the Bengali resistance is
confined to the border areas, where India provides sanctuary and a
certain amount of assistance from Indian regular troops in the form
of coverage fire. Even Rajshahi-separated from India by the Ganges,
which is some five miles wide during the monsoon I heard noises of
skirmishing in the night. Most of the Mukti Fouj's work is sabotage
and in one district alone, Comilla, it is officially admitted that
eight rail bridges and 15 road bridges have been down. This is
enough to keep the 60,000 men of the Pakistani army in the east
busy. In
the interior, the army has more or less had to limit its operations
to the Madhupur Forest area north of Dacca, where, there are still
more than 100 deserters from the East Pakistan Rifles and the East
Bengal Regiment with a few machine-guns and mortars; the Noakhali
area, where the Bengali communist leader, Mohammad Toaha, is
operating the Barisal area, where those members of the large
community of Hindus who have not made it to India have apparently
armed themselves; and the Khulna district, where there is evidence
that Naxalites slipped over the border from West Bengal. Otherwise
guarding the interior has had to be pretty well a police job.
|
July
4, 1971 The
Observer BENGAL
GUERRILLAS STEP UP BOMBING Dacca,
3 July: As Secretary of Dacca's Council Muslim League, Mr. Abdul
Matin, a Bengali and a lawyer, is a firm believer in the unity of
the two Pakistans. He is also a lucky man. At
1.55 one morning this week, he escaped unhurt when a bomb went off
in his home. It woke the city and blew a hole the size of a football
in a thick brick wall. The bomb was the Mukti Fouj's (Freedom
Fighters) way of reminding people that nowadays it pays to be a
Begali first and a Muslim second.
|
nobel-info.com
July
4, 1971 The
Obeserver EDITORIAL:
BENGAL CHAOS COULD LEAD TO WAR The
Enormous and increasing scale of the refugee exodus from East
Pakistan to India confronts the world not only with the greatest
humanitarian relief task since World War Two but also with a
political crisis of growing magnitude. Already five or six million
people - more than the entire population of one of the smaller
European States- have fled from their homes through fear or hunger.
Millions more may move by the autumn if famine occurs through a
breakdown of minimal food distribution. There
is a growing danger that if the exodus continues, the whole of the
Indian sub-continent may be dragged into war and unpredictable
social convulsions.
|
July
6, 1971 International
Herald Tribune REPRESSION,
TERRORISM FOUND GROWING IN EAST PAKISTAN Dacca (NYT)--
"Doesn't th world realize
that they're nothing but butchers?" asked a foreigner who has
lived in East Pakistan for many years. " That
they killed -- and are still killing-Bengalis just to
itimidate them, to make slaves out of them? That they wiped out
whole villages opening fire at first light and stopping only when
they got tired?". The
foreigner, normally a
calm man, was talking about the Pakistani Army and the bloodbath it
has inflicted on East Pakistan in its effort to crush the Bengali
independence movement. Most
of the foreign residents--diplomats, missioneries, businessmen--
also talk the way this man does now. And they are cager to tell what
they know to those foreign newsmen who were permitted to re-enter
East Pakistan in mid-June and travel around unescorted for the first
time since March 25.
|
July
10, 1971 The
Economist THE
MUKTI FOUJ IS STILL FIGHTING At the
moment the main activity of the Bengali resistance is confined to
the border areas, where India provides sanctuary and a certain
amount of assistance from Indian regular troops in the form of
coverage fire. Even Rajshahi-separated from India by the Ganges,
which is some five miles wide during the monsoon I heard noises of
skirmishing in the night. Most of the Mukti Fouj's work is sabotage
and in one district alone, Comilla, it is officially admitted that
eight rail bridges and 15 road bridges have been down. This is
enough to keep the 60,000 men of the Pakistani army in the east
busy. In
the interior, the army has more or less had to limit its operations
to the Madhupur Forest area north of Dacca, where, there are still
more than 100 deserters from the East Pakistan Rifles and the East
Bengal Regiment with a few machine-guns and mortars; the Noakhali
area, where the Bengali communist leader, Mohammad Toaha, is
operating the Barisal area, where those members of the large
community of Hindus who have not made it to India have apparently
armed themselves; and the Khulna district, where there is evidence
that Naxalites slipped over the border from West Bengal. Otherwise
guarding the interior has had to be pretty well a police job.
|
nobel-info.com
July
16, 1971 International
Herald Tribune FIGHT
FOR BENGALI AUTONOMY MAY BE GAINING MOMENTUM
New
Delhi, July 15 (NYT)- The resistance fighters in East Pakistan have
been increasing their hit-and-run attacks on small West Pakistani
Army units and police stations. As
the still disorganized Bengali autonomy movement appears to be
gaining momentum, the guerrillas have been avoiding frontal battles
but have inflicted a sizeable number of casualties. They
have also stepped up executions, sometimes by beheading of those
collaborating with the army. In
many areas the army pulls back to the relative safety of its
cantonments at night, leaving the rebels free to move through the
countryside. With
the growing resistance, the army has had to reimpos curfews in an
increasing number of towns. Foreign observers are beginning to draw
parallels to Vietnam.
|
July
16, 1971 International
Herald Tribune BAN
URGED ON U.S. AID TO PAKISTAN
Washington,
July 15 (NYT)- The House Foreign Affairs Committee voted today to
withhold all military and economic assistance for Pakistan and
Greece. The
action on Pakistan proposes to cut off United States funds until
East Pakistani refugees have been returned to their homes and
"reasonable stability" has been achieved in the country
where the army crushed an East Pakistani movement for political
autonomy.
|
July
17, 1971 The
Weekly EConomist THE
BENGAL PRESSURE BUILDS UP ON MRS. GANDHI India
is known to be giving the Mukti Fouj-the guerrillas in East
Pakistan, some help. But how much help, niether party is eager to
reveal. Sanctuary, invaluable to all guerrillas, is certainly being
granted, and perhaps covering fire from the Indian border security
forces. Training may still be in the hands of guerrillas themselves.
But since even those of them who were previously a regular part of
the Pakistan army had no training with explosives, and since they
have recently pulled off some spectacular bridge bowling, it is
likely that Indian sappers haves been providing the explosives and
know-how. Certainly the Mukti Fouj needs training. The East Pakistan
Rifles and the East Bengal Regiments, which have now been merged
into it, have dropped their previous tacties of fighting in battlle
order and now operate in small groups. But it will be harder to
persuade them to swallow their regimental pride and wear civilian
clothes.
|
July
19, 1971 Newsweek PAKISTAN:
THE BENGALIS STRIKE BACK
"I
am glad to be able to tell you", declared Pakistan President
Mohammad Yahya Khan in a recent address to his nation "that the
army is in full control of the situation in East Pakistan. It has
crushed the mischief-mongers, saboteurs and infiltrators". Alas
for Yahya, the facts told a different story. Throughout East
Pakistan, the embattled Bengali resistance movement seemed more
determined than ever to prove, that it was alive and well-and
capable of making life extremely difficult for the heavily armed but
thinly spread occupation forces of the Pakistani Army.
|
July
23, 1971 The
Telegraph GUERRILLAS
REGAIN MARKET TOWN IN EAST PAKISTAN
Bangladesh
guerrillas have reoccupied an area of 150 square miles in the
Jessore district of East Pakistan near the frontier with India. They were carlier driven from these positions to take refuge in India when Pakistani Army reinforcements move form Jessore cantonment in April to obliterate Pockets of Bengali resistance in the border regions. |
July
31-August 1, 1971 International
Herald Tribune 'THANT
IS REPORTED TO WARN OF INDIA-PAKISTAN' DISASTER
United
Nations, July 30 (UPI)- Secretary General U Thant has warned the
Security Council in a secret memorandum that humanitarian aid will
not suffice to avert "Potential disaster" in the Inadia-Pakistan
crisis, it was reliably learned yesterday. He expressed his deep
concern about the situation and described it as a "potential
threat to peace and security which could no longer be ignored by the
international community. |
August
5, 1971 International
Herald Tribune 14
EAST PAKISTANI DIPLOMATS QUIT IN U.S. ASK POLITICAL ASYLUM
Washington,
Aug. 4 (IHT) - Fourteen Pakistani diplomats, including the No. 2
United Nations delegate, resigned today to join the East Pakistan
independence movement. They sought political asylum in the United
States. They are all East Pakistanis.
|
nobel-info.com
August
9, 1971 Internal
Herald Tribune MAJOR
POWERS SEEK TO AVERT WAR IN BENGAL
Washington,
Aug 8 (NYT)- The Principal Western powers, the Soviet Union, China
and Secretary General Thant were reported yesterday to be engaged in
new diplomatic efforts to prevent the possible outbreak of fighting
between India and Pakistan.
|
Augu International
Herald Tribune PRESIDENT
YAHYA ANNOUNCES AWAMI LEAGUE CHIEF TO BE TRIED BY ARMY
Rawalpindi,
Aug. 9 (AP)- Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, President of the banned Awami
League will be tried by a special military court for "waging
war against Pakistan" and other offensives, a note issued by
the office of President Mohammad Yahya Khan said today. The
trial, which will start on Wednesday, will be held in secrecy the
announcement said.
|
August
10, 1971 The
Daily Telegraph INDIA
AND RUSSIA SIGN 20-YEAR DEFENCE PACT Russia
will back India with force if necessary in the event of a war with
Pakistan under a 20 year treaty, signed in New Delhi yesterday, that
puts India firmly in the Russian camp after years of non-alignment. It was
signed by Mr. Gromyko, Soviet Foreign Minister and Mr. Singh, his
Indian counterpart. The treaty of "friendship, peace and
co-operation" provides for mutual defence arrangements.
|
August
12, 1971 The
Times RUSSIA
AND INDIA CALL FOR A POLITICAL SOLUTION IN EAST BENGAL Delhi,
Aug. 11- The Soviet Union and India said tonight that they
considered urgent steps were necessary to achieve a political
solution to the problems of East Pakistan and that there could be no
military solution. Their
views were expressed in a joint statement issued here at the
conclusion of three days of talks between Mr. Gromyko, Soviet
Foreign Minister, and Mr. Singh, his Indian counterpart, during
which a treaty of "peace, friendship and cooperation" was
signed.
|
August
14-15, 1971 International
Herald Tribune EAST
PAKISTAN CRISIS TERMED 'GREATEST CHALLENGE' TO INDIA
New
Delhi, Aug. 13 (Reuters)- Prime Minister Indira Gandhi has described
the situation created by the East Pakistan crisis as the nation's
"greatest challenge since independence". "The
Bangladesh situation has produced all the consequences of war
without the actuality of engaging in a war", she said in an
apparent reference to the influx of millions of refugees into India
and increased border clashes along the East Pakistan borders.
|
August
17, 1971 International
Herald Tribune AFTER
VISITING REFUGEES IN INDIA KENNEDY HITS PAKISTAN 'GENOCIDE'
New
Delhi, Aug. 16 (NYT) - Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D. Mass., today
denounced Pakistan's military repression in East Pakistan as
genocide and said that the secret trial of the East Pakistani
leader, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman was "an outrage of every concept
of international law".
|
August
17, 1971 International
Herald Tribune BENGAL
REBELS PERMITTED TO USE INDIA, ENVOY ADMITS Washington,
Aug 16 (WP)- Indian Ambassador Lakshmi Kant Jha admitted yesterday
that India was permitted its territory to be used as a sanctuary for
Bengali rebels fighting for an independent East Pakistan.
|
nobel-info.com
September
10, 1971 The
Daily Morning Post (Nigeria) SECESSION
ATTEMPT IN PAKISTAN
Pakistan
occupies a prominent position in the political might of Asia. Being
the biggest Muslim state and fifth largest in world population, her
affairs can easily become the affairs of the world. No wonder the
civil war in the country had so provoked worldwide comments in the
Press. And now the frightening reality of the aftermath of the
Pakistani crisis is the refugee problem whereby some million
homeless people are reported to have gone over to India. What is the
cause of Pakistan's predicament? A secession was being attempted by
a political group belonging to the majority in term of population
and the government of Pakistan ordered an action to arrest the
situation. But after facing an armed resistance from the
secessionists, the government brought the situation under control
and is now engaged in restoring economic life and organising relief
measures in East Pakistan- the territory that attempted to secede.
Contrary to sensational reports that a worsening situation is being
experienced in East Pakistan, reliable and accurate sources disclose
that many factories and industrial units have resumed
their normal work. Communications and transportation on
railways and the reverence have been largely restored. Also, the
movement and distribution of food grains and other essential goods
have also been resumed.
|
September
17, 1971 The
Daily Al-Bilad (Jeddah) EDITORIAL
: HONOUR FOR PAKISTAN It
is a great honour for Pakistan that of all the countries Mujibur
Rahman's secessionists contracted Israel for assistance. They party
who does not find help but from sources like Israel, is well-known
throughout the world that it is a tail to the colonisation and
racialism. It is a party whose endeavour has failed and whose
merchandise remained unused, and its wind will blow out shortly
because bankruptcy in the beginning results necessarily to
bankruptcy at the end. I hesitated much before commenting on news
reports, received yesterday, about the arrival of an envoy of the
secessionists of Mujibur Rahman is Israel to seek assistance from
the Israel's- the enemies of humanity, Arabs and Islam. But the fact
that the envoy held a press conference in Jerusalem along with
Mardakhay Shnorson and Saul Karif from Israeli Ministry of Foreign
Affairs, has removed every doubt from my mind, and ascertained this
tragedy.
|
September
19, 1971 The
Daily Ayandegan (Tehran) THE
POLITICAL SOLUTION FOR PAKISTAN News
from Pakistan has been more encouraging. After the appointment of a
Bengali- Dr. Abdul Malik- as the East Pakistan Governor is place of
Lt. Gen. Tikka Khan, now a 10 man cabinet, including some members of
the Awami League, has been constituted to administer the Government.
The army and the Martial Law Administration headed by Lt. Gen. A. A.
K. Niazi, have been instructed only to assist the civilian
Government. In addition to this, President Yahya Khan has announced
general amnesty for all those accused of committing atrocities
during March 1 and September 5 this year and as a result, a large
number of Bengali police and military personnel have also been
released.
|
September
22, 1971 The
Al-Thaura (Tripoli) EDITORIAL:
SITUATION IN PAKISTAN
People
of the Libya Arab Republic have supported the people of Pakistan in
their hour of crisis with unmatched steadfastness and sincerity.
However, it is necessary that the brotherly people of the Libya Arab
Republic should know that they are their brethren, but because they
are supporting a right and just cause. International and Zionist
propaganda consider the present crisis in Pakistan as a "golden
opportunity" to eliminate Pakistan and thereby to eliminate one
of the most fraternal allies of the Arabs.
|
September
30, 1971 International
Herald Tribune MRS.
GANDHI TERMED PLEASED BY SOVIET STAND ON REFUGEES Moscow,
Sept. 29 (NYT): Mrs. Indira Gandhi, the Indian Prime Minister, left
Moscow today after a 48-hour visit, reportedly pleased with an
explicit show of Soviet support on the issure of East Pakistan
refugees. A
joint Soviet-Indian statement issued after her departure affirmed
the Kremlin's endorsement of India's stand on East Pakistan voiced
yesterday in a luncheon speech by Premier Alexei N. Kosygin.
|
September
30, 1971 The
Al-Madina (Jeddah) EDITORIAL:
WHERE IS WAR? The
Indo-Russian statement issued in Moscow yesterday is yet another
step of interference of Russians and Indians in the Internal affairs
of East Pakistan, as this statement reflexes the two parties' pretension
to be worried about the situation in East Pakistan. It is
certain that a large number of refugees crossed into India, but they
are not 9 million as the Indian propaganda puts it. The refugee
swept to India in order to escape the saboteurs coming from the in
order to escape the saboteurs coming from the Indian territories.
|
October
7, 1971 The
Indonesia Observer EDITORIAL:
A HARD PRESSED REGIME Time
is fast running out for Pakistan's military regime under General
Yahya Khan as the combined forces of public opinion in the world as
well as within the country itself exert great pressure for political
economic reforms. Yahya Khan's desperate attempt to avert his
country's total bankruptcy by announcing general amnesty and the
replacement of East Pakistan's military governor by a civilian has
not aroused the least interest among the 9 million refugees from
East Pakistan in India. The Pakistan President has not touched the
essential core of the problem in promising a lenient attitude
towards the refugees. He did mention about the future legislature of
Pakistan as result of the general elections of last December in
which the Awami League achieved an overwhelming victory.
|
October
7, 1971 International
Herald Tribune PAKISTAN
TELLS U.N. THAT INDIA CARRIES ON A CLANDESTINE WAR United
Nations, N.Y. Oct. 6 (NYT): Pakistan's Chief delegate to the United
Nations, Mahmud Ali, said yesterday that India has been carrying on
a clandestine war against Pakistan "for the past few
months," Chiefly since violence erupted in East Pakistan in
March. Speaking
in the General Assembly, Mr. Ali said Pakistan is willing to acept
UN border observers, an idea that has been rejected by India.
|
October
11, 1971 The
York Times HORRORS
OF EAST PAKISTAN TURNING HOPE INTO DISPAIR Dhaka
Oct. 10:- The horror of life in East Pakistan shows every sign of
becoming permanently institutionalised, and most, if not all, the
foreigners who came hoping to help are on the verge of despair. In
particular, the chances of reversing the tide of millions of
destitute refugees who have fled to India seem remote. Most
governments consider the refugee problem the main catalyst in the
atmosphere of war prevailing on the subcontinent.
|
October
13, 1971 International
Herald Tribune NEW
FIGHTING BY BENGALIS IS EXPECTED; TENSION BUILDS ALONG
INDIA-PAKISTAN BORDER Calcutta,
Oct. 12 (NYT): Under heavy security, several special freight trains
carrying military supplies have been arriving in Calcutta every day
for some time. The arms are reported to be earmarked for the
insurgent Bangali forces fighting for East Pakistan's independence,
who are believed to be preparing to step up their activities against
the Pakistan Army within a few weeks or possibly sooner. Meanwhile,
an air of suspense continues to build between the opposingarmies of
India and Pakistan, on both the eastern and western borders.
Reliable reports here indicated that both sides have reinforced
their troops on these always sensitive frontiers. This correspondent
has observed sizable Indian troop movements along the border with
East Pakistan. Near one border point, at petrapole, Indian regular
troops were training with recoilless rifles, which are often used
against tanks. Speculation
abounds about the possibility of another India-Pakistani war, but
there is no strong evidence that war is imminent, and the troop
movements might be elaborate psychological warfare.
|
October
20, 1971 The
Lybian Times INDO-PAKISTAN
TENSION RISES TO A WARLIKE FEVERISH PITCH Karachi
(AFP): Pakistani Air Force Commander Air Marshal Rahim Khan
Yesterday warned his Planes would take "appropriate
action" against further violations of Pakistani airspace by
indian aircraft. In
a telegram to his Indian counterpart, Air Marshal Rahim Khan said
"Indian aircraft have been violating air space over both wings
of Pakistan for some time".
|
October
25, 1971 International
Herald Tribune BENGALI
ASSSAULTS REPORTED Karachi,
Oct. 24 (NYT). --The Pakistan government said its forces in East
Pakistan today repulsed tow battalion-sized attacks by Bengali
guerrilas supported by Indian troops and artillery. The
two attacks were said to have taken place in Comilla District near
East Pakistan's eastern frontier with India. Casualties
were heavy, according to government announcement.
|
nobel-info.com
October
27, 1971 International
Herald Tribune PAKISTAN
CLAIMS IT MOPS UP 'INDIAN TROOPS AND AGENTS' Karachi,
Oct. 26 (NYT)-- The Pakistani Army continued mopping up "Indian
troops and agents" in the Kasba area of Comilla District, in
East Pakistan to day and, according to an evening communique, 78
more enemy bodies were found. The
latest claim brought to 579 the number of insurgents said by
Pakistan to have been killed in the last three days. Pakistan
has reported that the attacks Sunday and yesterday involved around
1,000 "Indian troops and agents". The
communique noted that India has claimed the Kasba area as being
under the control of rebel Mukti Bahini forces, but reiterated
Pakistan's contention that all the territory in East Pakistan is
under the control of Islamabad's forces. Government
communiques do not mention Pakistani military casualties.
|
October
27, 1971 The
Financial Times (London) REPRISALS
CONTINUE AGAINST UNARMED EAST PAKISTAN'S In
spite of the military regime's persistent denials, the Pakistan army
and police continue to take reprisals against unarmed civilians
living where the Bengali rebels operate, even within sight of the
residence of the new civilian governor in the middle of Dacca.
Authoritative sources say the American Government also continues to
urge the Pakistani army to halt the attacks in an effort to create a
tranquil atmosphere to attract back some of the millions of refugees
who have left East Pakistan since March 25, when the army cracked
down against the Awami League and its leader, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman,
throwing the predominantly Bengali province of 75 million people
into civil war.
|
November
1, 1971 International
Herald Tribune SOVIET
AIR CHIEF ARRIVES IN INDIA New
Delhi, Oct. 31 (UPI).-- The commander of the Soviet Air force
arrived yesterday for a six-day visit while government spokesmen
charged Pakistan with a series of border violations, including one
in which six Pakistani soldiers were reported to have been killed. Two
Pakistani aircraft intruded into Indian airspace over northern Jammu
and Kashmir states yesterday, the All-India Radio reported. It said
that the planes had flown back to Pakistan before they could be
engaged. Air
Marshal Pavel S.Kouthakov, who is a deputy defense minister and
commands the Soviet Air Force, met Defense Minister Jagjivan Ram
quickly after his arrival.
|
November
2, 1971 Internal
Herald Tribune MRS.
GANDHI SAYS U.S. TAKES SHORT-TERM VIEW ON PAKISTAN London,
Nov. 1 (NYT). ¾
Prime Minister Indira Gandhi of INdia said today that the United
States was taking a "short-term" view of the crisis with
pakistan and warned that the influx of East Pakistan refugees had
strained India beyond the breaking point.
|
November
8, 1971 Newsweek A
WAR WAITING TO HAPPEN In
their 24 years as independent nations, India and Pakistan have shown
a boundless capacity for squabbling with each other. They have
argued endlessly over Kashmir and a bit of wasteland called the Rann
of Kutch, and six years ago they plunged into a brief but bloody
war. "These two countries," remarked one Western diplomat,
"have hardly ever been genuinely at peace." And certainly
they were not last week. Along 3,000 miles of border, Indian and
Pakistani troops massed in menacing formations. Most observers felt
that the current travels of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, who is due
in the U.S. this week, ruled out the likelihood that India would go
to war for the moment. But there remained the omnious feeling in
both nations that, sooner or later, they would stumble into
conflict.
|
nobel-info.com
November
9, 1971 The
Daily Telegraph SINO-PAKISTAN
TALKS COMPLETE SUCCESS, SAYS BHUTTO Any
aggressor crossing into Pakistan "would be doome." Mr. Ali
Bhutto, President Yahya's personal envoy, said in Rawalpindi
yesterday on his return from three days of talks in Peking with Chou
En Lai Chinese Prime Minister. Mr.
Bhutto led a high-powered military and diplomatic mission to he
Chinese capital. While
he conferred with Chou En-lai, three Pakistani Service chiefs--Air
Mahshal Rahim Khan, Lt-Gen Gul Hasan and Cdre Rashid, had talks with
their Chinese counterparts and members of the Chinese Military
commission.
|
November
9, 1971 The
Daily Telegraph U.S.
CUTS ARMS TO PAKISTAN America
announced yesterday its decision to cancel licences for the export
of By this
step the Nixon Administration hopes that a major irritant will be
removed in relations with India, and that America will be placed in
a better position to persuaded India to reduce tension along the
India-Pakistan border where troops are massing. America
imposed an arms embargo on Pakistan last April after military
operations had begun in East Pakistan.
|
nobel-info.com
November
13, 1971 The
Daily Telegraph BHUTTO
SAYS HE WILL NOT STAND EAST PAKISTAN RULE Mr.
Zulfika r Ali Bhutto, leader of West Pakistan's Leftist People's
party gave a warning yesterday that he would not tolerate any
attemptv to form an East Pakistan dominated Government after next
month's by-elections in the province, "We will topple
it within 40 days." he declared.
|
November
22, 1971 Newsweek BENGAL:
THE TIME OF REVENGE From
the moment last March that Pakistan's President Mohammed Yahya Khan
unleashed a reign of terror against the Bengalis of East Pakistan,
his army has been embroiled in bloody--and losing--guerrilla war
there. By now, the Bengali insurgents--known as the Mukti Bahini--claim
a force of insurgents--known as the Mukti Bahini--claim a force of
100,000 soldiers and control roughly one-fourth of the countryside
of East Pakistan.
|
November
23, 1971 International
Herald Tribune EDIRORIAL:
BANDAIDSS FOR THE SUBCONTINENT There
United Nations is drifting toward a disastrous failure on the Indian
subcontinent because it is attempting to treat a potentially mortal
wound with bandaids. While
India and Pakistan move closer to all-out war, the world
organization has been wrangling over relief measures for an
estimated nine million refugees, who have fled to India from East
Bengal and for the 66-odd million Bengalis they left behind in that
rebellious Pakistani province.
|
November
25, 1971 International
Herald Tribune EDITORIAL
: WAR ON THE SUBCONTINENT The
Indians and Pakistanis have finally got their war. Indians wanted it
to humiliate Pakistan, rationalizing (fairly enough) that no other
way was left to be rid of the refugees. Pakistanis want it to cover
their frustration at failing to suppress the Bengali insurgents in
East Pakistan. Mrs. Gandhi went around the world asking for help ;
none was forthcoming so her government proceeded alone. Gen. Yahaya
Khan took the opposite course, trying unsuccessfully to subdue East
Pakistan himself. Now he probably hopes the international community
will step in the before the Indians beat him too badly, in the West
as well as the East. The Indians, fighting an undeclared war, seem
to hope they'll be able to lick the Pakistanis before international
pressures enforce a cease fire.
|
November
29, 1971 International
Herald Tribune INDIA
- PAKISTAN - BIG POWERS INDIA:
'WE'LL FINALLY GET THE PAKISTANIS OFF OUR BACKS' Calcutta,
(NYT). - India and Pakistan were born 24 years ago in a burst or
commual hatred that consumed hundreds of thousands of Hindu and
moslem lives before subsiding., although never really dying out. The
old hatred flared into two wars. And last week the two neighbours of
the Indian subcontinent stood on the brink of third war--potentially
the most dangerous collision of all.
|
nobel-info.com
November
29, 1971 International
Herald Tribune PAKISTAN
SAYS TROOPS PULL BACK AT JESSORE Karachi,
Nov. 28 (WP).-- The Pakistan government indicated today that
Pakistan troops in the eastern wing of the country have lost ground
in the past 24 hours as fighting reportedly continues. An
official statement, alleging that Indian forces had launched three
major attacks against Pakistani positions, said the attackers had
made some "dents'' in Pakistani forward positions in the
Jessore area.
|
nobel-info.com
December
4--5, 1971 International
Herald Tribune INDIA
SAYS FOE LAUNCHES ALL-OUT WAR; PAKISTAN CALLS BOTH ITS REGIONS BESET New
Delhi, Dec. 3 (Reuters).- Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi
tonight declared that Pakistan had launched full-scale war on India. Speaking
in a nationwide broadcast, Mrs. Gandhi said that she had no option
but to put the country on a war footing. Her
speech came shortly after Indian President V.V. Giri Issued a
proclamation declaring a national state of emergency. He said a bill
would be introduced in Parliament tomorrow for immediate enactment
of emergency measures which will give the government virtually
unlimited powers. Pakistan
President Mohammed Yahya Khan declared a state of emergency in his
country on Nov.23.
|
nobel-info.com
December
5, 1971 Sunday
Telegraph INDIA'S
INVASION TO CRUSH EAST PAKISTAN 36 PLANE DOWN, SAYS YAHYA KHAN India
yesterday launched a full scale invasion of East Pakistan with the
object of driving out the 70,000 West Pakistan troops in the
province, Indian forces linked up with the Bengladesh guerrillas,
and claimed to have captured several towns in the eastern areas. The
drive got under way as Mrs. Gandhi, the Indian Prime Minister, said
that Pakistan had declared war on India, and that this would be
fully met.
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nobel-info.com
December
5, 1971 Sunday
Telegraph ULTIMATE
FOLLY, SAYS MRS. GANDHI The
following is the text of the statement by Mrs. Indira Gandhi,
the Indian Prime Minister, to the Indian Parliament
yesterday: This
morning the Government of West Pakistan has declared a war upon us.
Last evening, the West Pakistani Air Force violated our airspace
wantonly and attacked a large number of our airfields.
Simultaneously, their ground forces shelled our positions along the
Western border. Their
propaganda media have made totally baseless allegations that India
has launched an assault.
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nobel-info.com
December
5, 1971 Sunday
Telegraph FINAL
WAR, SAYS YAHYA KHAN In a
broadcast in Urdu yesterday President Yahya Khan of Pakistan said: We are
fighting for our country's integrity and honour, God is with us in
our mission. Our enemy has once again challenged us. The armed
forces of India have launched a full-scale war on us. India's
hate and enmity for Pakistan are known to the whole world. India has
always tried to weaken and destroy Pakistan. This is India's biggest
and final war against us. So far
Pakistan has acted with supreme patience. We have tolerated enough.
The time has now come to give a crushing reply to the Indian
aggressors.
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nobel-info.com
December
6, 1971 The
Daily Telegraph STIFF
DEFENCE IN EAST India's
armed forces, totalling a million men kept up their heavy and
concerted assault yesterday on both East and West Pakistan in the
air, at sea and on the ground, claiming heavy enemy losses and
casualties with only light to moderate Indian losses. The
main thrust is being concentrated on East Pakistan, with a holding
operation along the Western front.
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nobel-info.com
December
6, 1971 The
Daily Telegraph RUSSIA
STOPS U.N. CALL FOR CEASE-FIRE The
Security Council was to meet again in emergency session last night
after a long and bitter debate during which a United States proposal
for a ceasefire and withdrawal of troops was vetoed by the Soviet
Union. Two
other resolutions call for an immediate end to the fighting, while
one from the Soviet Union seeks a political solution of the conflict
"leading to a cessation of hostilities."
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nobel-info.com
December
7, 1971 The
Times BANGLADESH
RECOGNIZED AS INDEPENDENT STATE BY INDIA India
gave the "Democratic Republic of Bangladesh" full
recognition yesterday, as its invading forces thrust deeper into
Pakistan's eastern province towards the capital of Dacca. Justifying
India's decision, Mrs. Gandhi told Parliament in Delhi that
President Yahya Khan was now "totally incapable" of
regaining control of the territory.
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nobel-info.com
December
7, 1971 International
Herald
Tribune SECURITY
COUNCIL DEADLOCKED IN 3RD EFFORT United
Nations, N.Y., Dec. 6 (Reuters): Security Council members failed to
agree tonight on the terms of a ceasefire resolution in the
India-Pakistan conflict and prepared for a possible transfer of the
problem to the General Assembly. This
was the third attempt in as many days by the 15-nation council to
draft a unanimous resolution that would call for a halt to the
fighting between India and Pakistan. The
two previous attempts were blocked by a Soviet veto. Russia had
maintained that cease-fire resolution should not contain a
commitment for the withdrawal of troops, but the United States
insisted I should.
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nobel-info.com
December
8, 1971 International
Herald Tribune INDIA
URGES FOE IN EAST TO GIVE UP New
Delhi, Dec. 7.: After reporting that Indian troops had battered
their way into Jessore, the Pakistani Army's chief garrison town in
western East Pakistan, the Indian Army's chief of staff broadeast a
dramatic appeal to the 70,000 Pakistani soldiers in the eastern
province: "Your
fate is sealed. Time is running out. Lay down your arms before it is
too late." Gen Sam
Manekshaw, the chief of staff, told the enemy forces they were
surrounded not only by Indian troops but also by East Pakistani
guerrillas-- the Mukti Bahini--and he said he guerrillas were
"ready to take revenge for the cruelties and atrocities you
have committed".
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nobel-info.com
December
8, 1971 International
Herald Tribune YAHYA
APPOINTS COALITION HEADED BY EAST PAKISTANI Islamabad,
Pakistan, Dec. 7.:-- President Mohammad Yahya Khan today named a
center coalition government headed by an East Pakistani as premier
with the most powerful politician in West Pakistan as deputy
premier. In
a move obviously designed to show that the eastern and western
sections of Pakistan remain united in one state, despite India's
recognition yesterday of East Pakistan's breakaway regime of
Bangladesh, Pakistan announced that the coalition had been
formed" in light of the present war situation.
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nobel-info.com
December
9, 1971 International
HErald Tribune UN
ASSEMBLY CALLS ON INDIA, PAKISTAN TO CEASE FIGHTING
United
Nations, N.Y., Dec. 8 (WP).-- The General Assembly adopted a
resolution last night calling on India and Pakistan to cease
hostilities and withdraw their armed forces to their own sides of
the borders. The vote was 104 to 11 with 11 abstentions. The
resolution was essentially the same as the one the Soviet Union
vetoed in the Security Council Sunday. The Council voted late Monday
night to send the question to the assembly under the
"united-for-peace" resolution originally used to deal with
the Korean War in 1950-- after two Soviet vetoes and the Threat of a
third. The
Assembly has neither a veto nor the power to make its resolutions
compulsory. While
57 speakers expressed their countries' views, Indian troops and
Bangladesh guerrillas moved toward making the People's Republic of
Bangladesh a fact on the ground rather than a fiction of diplomacy.
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nobel-info.com
December
10, 1971 International
Herald Tribune EDITORIAL:
THE EMERGENCY OF BANGLADESH Defying
a United Nations plea for a ceasefire, Indian forces appear on the
verge of achieving New Delhi's major objectives in East Pakistan.
These are the defeat of West Pakistani military repression in the
disaffected Bengali province and the creation of conditions that
will facilitate the speedy repatriation of nearly 10 million
refugees-- Moslem and Hindu--to an independent, friendly and secular
"Bangladesh". |
nobel-info.com
December
11, 1971 The
Daily Telegrapgh BANGLADESH
PACT SIGNED India
and Bangladesh have signed an agreement whereby Indian troops will
remain in Bangladesh to "restore conditions of absolute
normalcy." Working
in Concert with the Mukti Fouj, the Bangladesh army, Indian forces
will under the agreement help to restore essential services and
public utilities, and facilitate the return of 9,7000,000 refugees
now in India. They
will also "try to provide" protection to everybody in
areas under their control from mob violence. One
significant feature of the agreement is that it clearly indicates
that Indian troops will not withdraw from Bangladesh for some time.
The point about is a crucial one for the future of Bangladesh in
coming months.
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nobel-info.com
December
12, 1971 The
Observer LAST
STAND IN THE EAST Calcutta,
11 December.-- In the last desperate days of East Pakistan, the
retreating soldiers of the Pakistani Army appear to be digging in
for a final face-saving stand against the advancing Indian columns. Over
the last 24 hours, the speed of the Indian push towards Dacca has
noticeably lessened and in some places has slowed to a painful
crawl. On all
fronts the severity of the fighting has increased and for the first
time Indian field commanders are admitting to heavier casualties
than at any other time since war broke out. Significantly, the
number of Pakistani troops surrendering has also grown. Since
Friday, more than 1,000 have given themselves up as Indian units
more deliberately to isolate the more remote areas of the country.
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nobel-info.com
December
13, 1971 The
Daily TElegraph INDEPENDENT
BANGLADESH GOVT. TAKES OVER IN JESSORE The
Government of independent Bangladesh, which returned over the
weekend to the former Pakistani district capital of Jessore, has
stated that its first priority is to restore law and order to its
now chaoitic country. In
a triumphant procession led by armed guerrillas and Indian Army
military police, Mr. Tajuddin Ahmed, the Prime Minister and Syed
Nazrul Islam, the Acting President, drove in two commandeered
Pakistani diplomatic corps Chevrolets from Petrapole, on the Indian
border, to Jessore on Saturday. Addressing
a crowd of thousands in the centre of the town, the two Bengali
leaders urged their people not to take the law into their own hands
by killing "traitors and Pakistani collaborators." They
said that a special war tribunal would be held soon in Dacca at
which these men would be tired.
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nobel-info.com
December
14, 1971 The
Times PAKISTAN
GENERAL SAYS HE WILL FIGHT TO THE LAST MAN Dacca
Dec. 13. Seated on a shooting stick at a street corner in Dacca,
General A.A.K. "Tiger" Niazi, the commander of Pakistan's
forces in the east, vowed todya to fight to the last man in the face
of advancing Indian forces. He made
the pledge to jounralists as the Indians were reported to be as
close as nine miles on their southern push to the city. General
Niazi, told the reporters: "It does not matter if we don't have
enough men to defend the city. It's now a question of living or
dying and we shall fight to the last man."
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nobel-info.com
December
15, 1971 The
Times DHAKA
LEADERS RESIGN AND SEEK ASYLUM As
Indian Migs destroyed his official residence and the final assault
on Dacca began, Mr. A.M. Malik, Governor of East Pakistan,
last night wrote his resignation and that of his entire Cabinet on a
scrap of paper addressed to President Yahya Khan. Senior
Government officials joined foreigners seeking refuge in a Red Cross
neutral Zone in the city which India has ordered its forces to
respect. The East Pakistan capital was attacked from all sides and
All-India Radio claimed that part of the garrison had already
surrendered Indian armoued and infantry columns were locked with the
Pakistanis in the city's outer defences and military (targets were
pounded both by an artillery barrage and through air strikes. Russia
advised Delhi that it had received warnings from both China and the
United States that they might be forced to intervene if the
integrity of West Pakistan were threatened. In the Security Council,
Britain and France launched a new, but undisclosed attempt to solve
the deadlock.
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nobel-info.com
December
16, 1971 The
Times INDIA
REPLIES TO DHAKA CEASE-FIRE INQUIRY WITH MORNING DEADLINE FOR ARM'S
SURRENDER Calcutta,
Dec. 15. India has given the Pakistani Army in the east until 9 a.m.
tomorrow to stop fighting after a dramatic inquity about a
cease-fire from Lieutenant General A A K Niazi, the army's commander
in chief, in Dacca tonight. A
pause was immediately ordered in the intense Indian bombing of Dacca
while the Pakistan Command considers proposals made to it by General
Sam Manekshaw Chief of Staff of the Indian Army. However,
the elation that greeted the news when it broke here just after 6
p.m. was slightly damped when the full meaning of General Niazi's
inquiry became known. He is asking, in fact, for a chance to
withdraw his soldiers to safe areas from which they could be
repatriated to West Pakistan and he has not talked yet in terms of a
total surrender. Informed
observers here tonight are wondering whether General Niazi, who
promised previously that his men would "fight to the
last", is playing for time or is opening the bargaining in a
nigh-long diplomatic give and take. General
Manekshaw's reply to the inquiry from Dacca said: "Since you
have indicated your desire to stop fighting I expect you to issue
orders to all forces under your command in Bangladesh to ceasefiring
immediately and surrender to my advancing forces wherever they are
located. "I
am giving you my solemn assurance that the personnel who surrender
shall be treated with the dignity and respect that soldiers are
entitled to and we will abide by the provisions of the Geneva
Convention. "Further,
as you have many wounded I shall ensure that they are well cared for
and your dead properly burried. No one need have any fear for their
safety, no matter where they come from, nor shall there be any
reprisals by the forces operating under my command." If
a positive response was received, he added, he would direct General
Jagjit Singh Aurora, Commander-in-Chief, Eastern Command, to halt
air and ground action in East Pakistan. But if there were no such
response he would be left with no alternative but to continue his
offensive with the utmost vigour. A
radio link was being kept open tonight so that communications could
be continued before the deadline expires tomorrow. A
later message said that General Niazi had been persuaded to make his
tentative inquiry about a ceasefire by United Nations officials in
Dacca, after the general had been found earlier today to be almost a
breaking point. His
message was countersigned by Major-General Farman Ali Khan, military
adviser to the governor of East Pakistan, whose own peace initiative
to U Thant, the United Nations Secretary-General was countermanded
by President Yahya Khan several days ago. News
of the latest initiatives reached here just after it had been
announced that Indian soldiers had crossed all the waterways
separating them from Dacca, including the Lakhya on the city's
eastern outskirts, and were now mortaring the capital from only a
mile or so outside.
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nobel-info.com
December
16, 1971 The
Times MOVE
TO DHAKA PLANNED BY BENGAL REGIME; BANGLADESH TO OBSERVE GENEVA
CONVENSION Calcutta,
Dec. 15.-- The Bangladesh Government is remaining in Calcutta while
waiting for the Indian Army, with the help of
the Mukti Bahini, to capture Dacca. As soon as the East
Pakistan capital falls, the Government plans to install itself
there. The
regime's officials feel that this will signify their full
establishment of power and legitimacy. They are hoping that friendly
nations such as the Soviet Union, which have so far declined to
follow India's lead in granting diplomatic recognition, will then
recognize Bangladesh. Mukti
bahini officials have been travelling extensively inside the
captured or liberated areas lately, but Calcutta remains their base
of operations. Mukti
Bahini is getting a regional civil administration restored. In some
cases, former officials who fled before Pakistan Army repression and
joined the Bangladesh cause are returning to their old posts. In
other cases, those who stayed and collaborated with the Army are
being purged and new officials assigned. India
is sending is some of its own officials to help with administration
and police organization, and in technical fields such as medical and
engineering services. Already this has given rise to some
discontent, some beginning of ill-will.
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nobel-info.com
December
17, 1971 The
Daily Telegraph EAST
PAKISTAN SURRENDERS; INDIA HAILS FREE BANGLADESH; TOTAL CEASE-FIRE
OFFER; SURRENDER TERMS PLEDGE PROTECTION All
Pakistan's forces on the Eastern front surrendered unconditionally
to India yesterday. In return the Delhi Government offered a total
cease-fire to include the Western front as well, but Pakistan's
President Yahya Khan said the "Holy war" would go on. Pakistan's
Gen. "Tiger" Niazi, pledged to "fight to the last
man" in Dacca, surrendered only 10 minutes before hte Indian
ultimatum expired. He dropped previously-made evacuation conditions. Gen.
Niazi stripped off an epaulette marking his rank and handed his
revolver to Lt.-Gen. J.S.Aurora, India's commander in the East. The
surrender documents were "in the highest terms of gallantry and
chivalry," it was claimed in Delhi. While
Bengalis were giving the victorious Indians a rapturous welcome, Mrs
Gandhi, Indian Prime Minister, in announcing her ceasefire offer,
said Dacca was now the "free capital of a free country."
India rejoiced in the triumph of Bangladesh. Mrs
Gandhi told a cheering Parliament that India had no territorial
ambitions, and further conflict would be pointless. A defence
spokesman pointed out that the surrender was military occasion, not
a political negotiation, but the Bangladesh Government would take
over today.
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nobel-info.com
December
19, 1971 THE
SUNDAY TIMES DHAKA
MURDERS EXPOSED: BENGAL'S ELITE DEAD IN A DITCH Before
they surrendered at Dacca on Thursday, the Pakistani Army arrested
and then shot more than 50 of the city's surviving intellectuals,
scientists and businessmen. It was a closely planned elimination of
elite Bengali citizens, carried out as a sudden military operation.
It must therefore have been done with the full knowledge of the
Pakistan high command, including the commanding officer, General
Niazi. The
discovery of the bodies can only increase tension in Dacca, make
revenge killings and riots more likely, and possibly even cause
friction between the Mukti Bahini guerrillas and the Indian Army. If
the occupying forces have to clamp down on the liberated Bengalis,
they co8ld come to resent even Indian occupation; and there are
small signs of this ominous development already in Dacca. The
murdered intellectuals were discovered in some isolated clay pits on
the outskirts of the town at a place called Rayar Bazer. I actually
saw 35 bodies there, in a decomposed condition which indicates they
were killed four or five days ago. There are probably many more, and
from kidnap reports, some in Dacca are putting the number of killed
as high as 150.
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