National inquiry commission formed to probe violences over quota reform

A commission has been formed by to investigate allegations of gross violations of laws and human rights in the recent violence, including the loss of lives and mass arrests, centring the quota reform protests.

The formation of the "National Inquiry Commission" was announced from a human chain in the Supreme Court premises on Monday afternoon.

The nine-member body will be headed by Justice Md Abdul Matin and Sultana Kamal.

The commission has been formed with eminent personalities of Bangladesh on behalf of the country's teachers, lawyers, cultural activists, and general guardians.

It urged country’s mass people to send it information which would help it to unearth the truth behind the violent incidents.

The commission members are former justice of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court Md Abdul Matin, lawyer Sultana Kamal, senior lawyer ZI Khan Panna, senior journalist Abu Sayeed Khan, Prof Gitiara Nasrin, senior journalist Ashraf Kaiser, lawyer Aneek R Haque, Prof Tanzimuddin Khan, and writer and researcher Maha Mirza.

Besdies, Lawyer Tobarak Hossain, lawyer Sara Hossain, lawyer and teacher Shahdeen Malik, writer and educationist Prof Salimullah Khan, teacher Kazi Mahfuzul Haque Supan, lawyer Rashna Imam, lawyer Jyotirmoy Barua, and teacher Saimum Reza Talukder will serve as advisors to the commission.

Any kind of information, including audio, video, photographs, and text can be sent, said the press release signed by Prof Tanzimuddin Khan and Maha Mirza, member secretaries of the commission.

According to the press release, the violence started on July 16 when students of the Dhaka University area were attacked and assaulted to suppress their anti-discrimination protests.

Abu Sayeed was shot directly in the chest in Rangpur as students and common people across the country took to the streets to protest the violence. Moreover, in cases filed by police, general students and public have been made responsible for the violence. This has raised questions in ordinary citizens about the entire investigation process. There is a demand to unveil the truth behind these incidents. Though newspapers reported at least 209 deaths in the violence, the official count is 147, said the release.

Therefore, uncovering the causes of these incidents, fair investigation and trial have become a necessity, it added.

Aneek R Haque, in an update on his Facebook profile Monday night,  said the commission in its work would "maintain the confidentiality of those who will give evidence," which can be important in encouraging more people to come forward with whatever they have. 

He also added the Terms of Reference of the Commission and a Call for Evidence will be published soon, "in a day or two."