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Resistance by Shanti Bahini
Important
Note: The information in this page is from
http://www.angelfire.com/ab/jumma/
The Shanti Bahini fighters started
armed struggle with the abandoned weapons from the retreating Pakistani
Military in 1971. Later Shanti Bahini added captured weapons from the
Bangladeshi Military to their arsenal
Jana Samhati Samiti
The Jana Samhati Samiti (hereafter JSS) was the only political
platform of the Jumma people in the Chittagong Hill Tracts (hereafter
CHT) until a treaty was signed in December, 1997. It was founded on
February 15, 1972, under the leadership of Mr. Manabendra Narayan
Larma. The party was formed to deal with the ever increasing
Bangladeshi invasion of the CHT. The political activities of the JSS
were aimed at establishing an alternative administration, suited to the
changed CHT reality. The main aims and objectives were-
- To restore the political, economic and cultural rights of the
Jumma people.
- To preserve the CHT as the traditional homeland of 13
nationalities, who constitute the Jumma nation.
- To remove the invaders from the CHT.
- To establish the CHT as an autonomous state.
Soon after independence of Bangladesh in 1971, the Bangladesh
Government pursued the policy of hegemony over the Jumma people of the
CHT. It began to exterminate the indigenous people systematically on
the one hand and to settle tens of thousands of Bangladeshi settlers in
their place on the other. The Bangladesh armed forces and the
Bangladeshi settlers massacred the Jumma villagers, stole their stocks
and properties, tortured them inhumanely, imprisoned them without
charge or trial, raped their women, desecrated and destroyed Buddhist
temples, tortured and murdered Buddhist monks, and converted some
Jummas to Islam by force. Deeply hurt by such vicious attacks on their
lives, on their lands, on their women, and on their religion, the Jumma
people tried to resolve these problems by constitutional means. They
made representation repeatedly to the local authorities and the
Bangladeshi leaders, and raised the issues in the parliament and
demanded autonomy for the CHT. Nothing was done to redress their
grievances. In response the government intensified its violence and
repressive measures. The Bangladesh leader, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman
rejected their demands and advised them to become Bengalis. So the JSS
had no other alternative but to organize its armed wing, the Shanti
Bahini, to resist the government atrocities and the Bangladeshi
colonization.
Shanti Bahini
Soon after the formation of JSS in 1972 an armed wing Shanti
Bahini was launched. It was originally formed to defend the
villages against the Bangladeshi terror, rapings, torture and
exploitation. Most of the members of the Shanti Bahini come from
Chakma, Tripura and Marma, the three largest ethnic groups in the CHT.
These groups have been affected most by the Bangladeshi invasion of the
CHT. The Shanti Bahini had extensive organizational networks in
Rangamati, Khagrachari and Bandarban districts. During the war of
independence of Bangladesh, country was flooded with arms and at the
capitulation of the Pakistan army, modern arms fell into the hands of
the Shanti Bahini. Other arms had been captured from the Bangladeshi
forces. Here are some of the many cases of Shanti Bahini's encounter
with the the Bangladeshi security forces.
12 May 1979, location Durchari Bazar, Kasalong area. The
government decided to establish a new army post (sub cantonment) at
Durchari Bazar. Two sizable motor launches with full loads embarked
from Brigade Head Quarter, Rangamati for the purpose. The Shanti Bahini
had previous information and a Special Company was engaged to lay in
wait. The two army ships gallantly sailed across the Karnafuli Lake and
entered the Kasalong river channel and continued through the Kasalong
river. Ten minutes before anchoring at the destination the guerilla
Special Company commanded them to halt. There was little room in
floating vessels to take fighting positions. To disobey the guerillas
was a sure way of dying for the government forces. Two shiploads of
military personnel surrendered with their war material.
15 May 1979, location a hill site from which the Kamalchari
rivulet flows. A Shanti Bahini patrol of 14 personnel were scheduled to
be there in transit that day. The Bangladesh army was informed of the
Shanti Bahini, an army contingent of 45 personnel head from Khagrachari
to the spot. The Shanti Bahini patrol party surrounded them and
showered bullets on them from all sides. 31 Bangladeshi soldiers
killed, 13 surrendered. The Shanti Bahini was able to collect most of
the arms.
21 June, 1979, location Adarakchara. A Bangladesh Army
contingent of 39 soldiers under the command of a captain was out in
search of Shanti Bahini hideouts with a few forced Chakma guides. At 6
p.m. they came within the range of the guerillas. 33 were killed along
with their officer in command, 3 escaped and 3 were captured. A large
quantity of sophisticated modern arms and equipment was annexed to the
Shanti Bahini armory.
Apart from ambushing army patrols, the Shanti Bahini attacked
Bangladeshi settlers and Bangladesh security forces camps and stations.
On 5 June 1984, British newspaper 'The Guardian' reported at the end of
May and in early June 1984, the guerillas attacked two Bangladeshi
settlements in the hills, killed 80 settlers, wounded 800 and set many
houses on fire. The JSS has always been in favour of a political
solution to the essentially political crisis in the CHT. The JSS signed
a Treaty on 2 December 1997 with the Sheikh Hasina government. The
Shanti Bahini surrendered its weapons. The Bangladesh Government has
yet to implement the treaty. The Jumma refugees returned from India,
majority of them have not got the their land taken by the Bangladeshi
Settlers. However, most of the Jumma people do not believe the treaty
will guarantee their survival even if it's implemented.
More:
- Military Presence in the CHT
- Armed
Clashes
between Shanti Bahini and Bangladesh Military
Sources:
- Life is not ours: the Chittagong Hill Tracts Commission
- The Charge of Genocide: Organizing Committee of the CHT Campaign,
1986