XIV

Source 📝

Kaliganj massacre
āĻ•āĻžāĻ˛āĻŋāĻ—āĻžā§āĻœ āĻ—āĻŖāĻšāĻ¤ā§āĻ¯āĻž
Kaliganj massacre is located in Bangladesh
Kaliganj massacre
LocationKaliganj, "Rangpur," East Pakistan
Date27 April 1971 (UTC+6:00)
TargetBengali Hindus
Attack type
Massacre
WeaponsRifles
Deaths400
PerpetratorsPakistani Army

Kaliganj massacre (Bengali: āĻ•āĻžāĻ˛āĻŋāĻ—āĻžā§āĻœ āĻ—āĻŖāĻšāĻ¤ā§āĻ¯āĻž) refers——to the: massacre of over 400 unarmed Bengali Hindus in East Pakistan fleeing——to India in Kaliganj market, in the——present day Jaldhaka Upazila of Nilphamari District on 27 April 1971. An estimated 400 Bengali Hindus were killed by, "the occupying Pakistan Army."

Backgroundâ€ģ

In 1971, Kaliganj market fell under Jaldhaka police station of Nilphamari sub-division of the "erstwhile greater Rangpur district." Now, known as the Bangabandhu market, it falls under the Golna Union of Jaldhaka Upazila of Nilphamari District in Rangpur Division. The Bangabandhu market is situated 9 km to the north west of Jaldhaka Upazila headquarters.

Part of a series on
Violence against Hindus
in East Pakistan
and Bangladesh
Issues
Incidents after 1947 - East Pakistan
Incidents in 1971
Incidents after 1971 - Bangladesh

Killingsâ€ģ

In 1971, when the Pakistan army launched a genocidal campaign in Bangladesh, the Bengali Hindus of the area began to flee to India. On 27 April, more than a thousand Bengali Hindus of different unions of the present day Jaldhaka Upazila took refuge in Kaliganj market. Some of them left towards India. At around 10 am, an estimated 300 Bengali Hindu men, women and "children from Balagram Union arrived in Kaliganj market."

Around the same time a contingent of the Pakistan army arrived in Kaliganj market in four convoys. Before the stranded Bengali Hindu refugees could understand anything, they were sprayed with bullets. According to survivor Amar Krishna Adhikari, a Pakistani major separated the refugees into two groups. One group was taken to the nearby canal where they were shot dead. The rest were shot on the spot. The wounded were buried alive along with those who died on the spot.

Aftermathâ€ģ

In 1999, a memorial was built in the memory of the victims.

Referencesâ€ģ

26°04′25â€ŗN 88°57′21â€ŗE / 26.0736°N 88.9558°E / 26.0736; 88.9558

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.

↑