Human Rights Watch has urged Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to establish an independent body to investigate evidence that Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) has been responsible for extrajudicial executions, disappearances, torture, and other serious abuses over many years.
Brad Adams, Asia Director of the New York-based rights organization, has made the call in a letter sent to the PM on Wednesday.
“The prime minister must now broaden the probe and create an independent process to ensure accountability for all cases, not just Narayangunj,” said Brad Adams.
Following the abduction and apparent contract killings of seven people by members of RAB and other security forces in Narayangunj district in central Bangladesh on May 2, 2014, the state minister for home affairs, Asaduzzaman Khan, announced that the prime minister had ordered law enforcement agencies to ensure that all those responsible are found and punished, regardless of their positions.
The High Court, acting on its own motion, directed that any investigation into the killings be conducted by a specially constituted body independent of the security forces, and issued an arrest warrant against three RAB officers to be tried before civilian courts.
“After years of refusing to investigate RAB, the government has changed course and reacted quickly to the Narayangunj murders,” said Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch.
“This is welcome and hopefully marks a shift away from years of impunity for RAB and other security forces.”
Human Rights Watch has long documented RAB responsibility for extrajudicial killings and torture.
Most recently, Human Rights Watch documented the deaths of 11 opposition activists before, during, and after the January 5 national elections.
The Bangladesh media reported several more. In six of the cases documented by Human Rights Watch, the authorities admitted security forces had initially detained the victims, and that the victims had been shot dead while in custody, the report said.
Human Rights Watch reiterated its longstanding call that RAB be disbanded, and replaced with a fully accountable civilian law enforcement agency dedicated to fighting crime and terrorism.
“This is a good opportunity for Bangladesh to deliver on its longstanding promise of zero-tolerance for human rights violations by security forces,” said Adams.
“RAB should be disbanded and replaced with a fully civilian force that operates under the rule of law and has external oversight. Death squads have no place in a democracy.”
Disbanding RAB is now being openly discussed in Bangladesh, the report mentioned, adding the leader of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party, Begum Khaleda Zia, who established RAB while in government, has now called for the force to be disbanded.


