ICT only judicial forum for trying crimes like enforced disappearances: Inquiry commission

Currently, the criminal law in Bangladesh lacks specific provisions to specifically address the crime of enforced disappearances.

Despite having no specific provision for enforced disappearances, the Penal Code, 1860, addresses offences related to wrongful restraint (Sections 339, 341) and wrongful confinement (Sections 340, 342-348), as well as kidnapping, abduction, slavery, and forced labour (Sections 359-374).

However, on 29 August 2024, Bangladesh acceded to the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance. As a State Party to this instrument, Bangladesh is now obligated to prevent enforced disappearances, combat impunity for such crimes, and incorporate provisions to criminalise enforced disappearances into its domestic laws, as required by Article 4 of the Convention, reads the commission’s report.

Further obligations include ensuring proper investigation, safeguarding victims’ rights to justice (Article 3), and providing victims and their families with reparation and prompt, fair, and adequate compensation (Article 24).

By acceding to the Convention, Bangladesh has undertaken a legal and moral obligation to uphold these principles, ensuring justice for the victims and their families while taking concrete steps to prevent future recurrence of enforced disappearances.

Now in order to uphold this obligation Bangladesh will need to try the alleged perpetrators in courts where: enforced disappearance, of which abduction is an essential ingredient, is a recognised crime; command/superior responsibility is a recognised legal doctrine; and continuing crime is an accepted concept.

It is a matter of relief that the concept of a continuing offence is established in Bangladesh’s legal framework.

Enforced disappearance is recognised as a continuing crime until the whereabouts or fate of the victims are determined, their remains are recovered, or justice is served. This highlights the critical importance of actively searching for victims and upholding the families’ right to know the truth about the circumstances of the disappearance, states the report.

Meanwhile, a potential tactic that high-ranking officials with may use to escape accountability is fleeing Bangladesh and retiring to other countries, believing that they will enjoy impunity due to the complexities of prosecuting them In foreign jurisdictions. This has already been the case with several perpetrators whom the commission considers prima facie responsible for acts of enforced disappearance, including Sheikh Hasina herself.

However, the commission cites the case of a former Syrian official in the United States as a potential way forward to ensure that justice is still served.

On 8 August 2024, a former Syrian pprisonchief was charged with immigration fraud for concealing his involvement in crimes against humanity. He had falsely claimed to have no criminal history when applying for US citizenship, a clear violation of immigration laws that require full disclosure of such information. Authorities used this misrepresentation as a legal basis to strip him of his citizenship and initiate deportation proceedings.