The hanging of the aged JI Chief Maulana Muti ur Rahman Nizami in Bangladesh can easily be described as the most barbaric state act in modern history. The distinction of presiding over this unenviable achievement goes to the insanely hate-charged prime minister of Bangladesh Haseena Wajid, and her equally murderous accomplices in the Bangladeshi judiciary. This woman is daughter of Sheikh Mujeeb ur Rahman the first President of Bangladesh who had been toppled and executed by the Bangladeshi military soon after his long-planned success in sowing the seeds of hate and division in the masses of what was once East Pakistan. It is time, history should be corrected. He was not a Bangladeshi nationalist who was driven to separatist tendencies by the Punjabi-Pakhtoon-dominated military and bureaucracy of West Pakistan as some so-called liberal-secular intellectuals love to paint him to be. He was an Indian agent who had been on New Dehli’s payroll right from his student-leadership days and the period when he was picked up by Hussain Shaheed Suharwardy and Atta ur Rehman to lead Awami League’s youth wing.
His daughter has proved to be her worthier heir. She has carried out the Indian “Hate Islam” and ‘Hate Pakistan” agenda with greater zeal.
The irony is that the execution of Maulana Muti ur Rahman for the crime of having been a patriotic Pakistani in 1971 when Indian-backed Mukti Bahini was on rampage has drawn only a harmless ‘condemnation statement’ from our foreign ministry, while our brother country Turkey’s President Erdogan has expressed his outrage by delivering a memorable speech on an important platform, and calling back his ambassador from Dacca.
“The man executed is a martyr of Islam, and our hearts are heavy with sorrow at this barbaric act on the part of Bangladeshi government”.
And he has not stopped at this. He has blasted Europe’s silence on this inhuman act of bestial revenge.
How can we explain our barrel-chested and well-fed Prime Minister’s shameful and shameless silence on this vicious attack of Haseena Wajid on the word Pakistan?
By now the outrage of Islamabad over New Dehli-backed Dacca’s criminal act should have been echoing in London and Bristol and Paris and Berlin and Washington and New York and in every capital of the world.

