RSS FACTS

Bangladesh Liberation, 1971: Historical Atrocities and the RSS Response

Lt Gen A.A.K. Niazi signs Pakistan’s Instrument of Surrender before Lt Gen Jagjit Singh Aurora in Dhaka, Bangladesh on 16 December 1971. Image source: Wikimedia Commons

Bangladesh Liberation Day marks the military defeat of Pakistan in 1971 and a decisive turning point in a long political, humanitarian, and civilizational crisis in the subcontinent. The events that unfolded before and during the war including targeted atrocities against Bengali Hindus have shaped the region for decades. While the political confrontation between Pakistan’s military regime and the Awami League formed the immediate trigger, the conflict created conditions in which some of the worst mass crimes of South Asia took place.

Since 1971, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) has consistently highlighted through formal resolutions the genocide, ethnic cleansing, displacement, and long-term marginalisation faced by Hindus in Bangladesh (formerly East Pakistan). Over the years, these concerns have been reiterated repeatedly as violence and displacement continued.

These resolutions are official policy statements passed by the highest decision-making bodies of the RSS, the Akhil Bharatiya Karyakari Mandal (ABKM- RSS Central Executive Council) and the Akhil Bharatiya Pratinidhi Sabha (ABPS) Taken together, these resolutions over five decades provide a continuous, documented record of how the RSS has viewed the genocide, ethnic cleansing, displacement, and long-term marginalisation of Hindus in Bangladesh (formerly East Pakistan). They also form an important historical framework for understanding today’s crisis and the unfinished legacy of 1971.

Historical Context: Political Crisis and the Descent into Mass Atrocities

The roots of the 1971 conflict go back to 1947, when Pakistan was created as two separate regions West Pakistan (present-day Pakistan) and East Pakistan (present-day Bangladesh) located nearly 1,600 km apart and connected only by religion. In practice, political power remained concentrated in West Pakistan’s Punjabi-dominated military and political elite, marginalising East Pakistan’s Bengali-speaking majority. ( Jahan Rounaq, Pakistan: Failure in National Integration, 1972)

Despite generating nearly 60% of Pakistan’s export earnings East Pakistan received only about a quarter of the country’s industrial investment and roughly 30% of its imports. The region’s Bengali-speaking majority was routinely dismissed by the West Pakistani establishment, which attempted to impose Urdu as the sole national language, even though less than 10% of East Pakistanis spoke it. Resentment deepened further in 1970 when the devastating Bhola Cyclone killed an estimated 300,000 people, and the central government in West Pakistan responded with marked delay and indifference. French journalist Paul Dreyfus, observing this persistent inequality, remarked that West Pakistan behaved like a guest who “consumed the best and left only scraps for East Pakistan.”

These imbalances became impossible to ignore after Pakistan’s first general election in 1970. Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, leader of the Awami League and the most popular Bengali political figure, won an overwhelming victory in East Pakistan 160 out of 162 seats giving him a democratic mandate to lead the entire country. Yet President General Yahya Khan and Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, leader of the Pakistan People’s Party in the West, refused to hand over power. Their refusal marked the final breakdown of any constitutional solution, pushing the crisis toward military repression and, eventually, the 1971 Liberation War.

On 25 March 1971, the Pakistan Army launched Operation Searchlight, a pre-planned military assault targeting Dhaka University, Hindu neighbourhoods, political workers, students, and civil society. Large parts of Dhaka were blacked out, and within hours, thousands of civilians were killed. Eyewitness accounts, including the testimony of Dhaka University faculty such as Meherunnesa Chowdhury, describe systematic killing of students, execution of teachers, and abduction of women.

The Hamoodur Rahman Commission Report, Pakistan’s own post-war inquiry, later recorded explicit instructions to kill Hindus. Lt. Col. Mansoorul Haq (Witness No. 260) testified that “there were verbal orders to eliminate Hindus,” while Lt. Col. Aziz Ahmed Khan stated that General A.A.K. Niazi personally asked field officers “how many Hindus have been killed.”
At the same time, Pakistani journalist Anthony Mascarenhas, who witnessed the atrocities firsthand, wrote in The Rape of Bangla Desh that entire Hindu localities such as Shankhari Patti were wiped out, and Hindu students at Jagannath Hall were executed in trenches.

These atrocities, combined with the unprecedented refugee influx into Bharat and the complete collapse of political resolution, led to direct military intervention. Bangladesh was liberated on 16 December 1971, when the Pakistan Eastern Command surrendered to the joint command of the Indian Armed Forces and the Mukti Bahini in Dhaka. Following India’s military intervention in early December, the war concluded within thirteen days, leading to the creation of Bangladesh as an independent nation. The surrender at Dhaka’s Race Course marked one of the largest capitulations since the Second World War.

By the end of the war:

The Hindu population of Bangladesh has never recovered from the demographic blow of 1971, a long-term trend that continues today.

The RSS took an early and consistent position on the Bangladesh crisis, emphasising humanitarian responsibility, protection of Hindus, and national security concerns.

  1. 1971 – “Bharat’s Duty vis-à-vis Bangla Desh Crisis”

The resolution issued by the Akhil Bharatiya Karyakari Mandal (ABKM) in 1971 stressed:

  1. 1972 – “Birth of Bangla Desh” (A.B.P.S.)

Soon after liberation, the Akhil Bharatiya Pratinidhi Sabha (ABPS) noted that:

Post-1971 Realities: Hindu Persecution Continues

Bangladesh’s Hindu minority has continued to face intermittent violence since 1971, including recurring waves of targeted violence in 1974, 1989, 1992, 2001, 2002, 2013, 2021, 2024 and 2025. Political instability has repeatedly created opportunities for extremist groups most notably Jamaat-e-Islami Bangladesh, which participated in 1971 war crimes as Razakars, Al-Badrs and Al-Shams to target Hindus. These realities form the backdrop to subsequent RSS resolutions.

RSS Resolutions Over Five Decades: A Consistent Stand

1978 – Bangla Desh Atrocities on Hindus

1988– Bangladesh

 

1989 –“Neighbour Nations”

 1993 & 1994 – Anti Hindu, Anti-Chakma Atrocities In Bangladesh

1994 – “Bangla Desh’s All-out Onslaught on its Hindu and Other Minorities”

2002 – Atrocities on Bangladeshi Hindus

The ABPS noted that UN representatives who visited affected areas were shocked by the scale of atrocities. It criticised the failure to treat displaced Hindus as refugees in Bharat and condemned the lack of adequate relief measures.

Measures urged by ABPS:

2013 – Addressing the Persecution of Hindus in Bangladesh and Pakistan

2021 –Condemnation of Radical Islamist Attacks on Hindus in Bangladesh

2025 – ABPS Resolution After the Fall of Sheikh Hasina

The 2025 resolution issued after more than 2,000 attacks on Hindus in August 2024 alone called for:

This long record shows that the RSS has consistently treated the issue as a question of human rights and civilizational responsibility, not periodic political crisis.

 Liberation Day and the Continuing Legacy

December 16 is remembered for the surrender at Dhaka’s Race Course as one of the most decisive military capitulations in modern history. But the legacy of the 1971 war is incomplete without acknowledging the genocide itself, especially the targeted violence against Hindus documented by Pakistan’s own inquiry commission and international journalists.

More than five decades later, the demographic collapse of the Hindu population, persistent violence, and political instability in Bangladesh show that the core concerns raised by early RSS resolutions remain relevant.

Conclusion

The Bangladesh Liberation War was not only a political conflict but also one of the major human tragedies of the 20th century. Contemporary evidence confirms the systematic targeting of Hindus.

For over fifty years, the RSS has consistently addressed, warned against, and responded to this crisis through humanitarian efforts and detailed resolutions. On this Bangladesh Liberation Day, the historical record, the wartime atrocities, and the continuing challenges faced by Hindus in Bangladesh must be acknowledged accurately and honestly. The legacy of the 1971 Liberation War remains unresolved so long as the rights, security, and dignity of Bangladesh’s Hindu minority continue to be violated.

(The resolutions cited in this article are concise summaries of original resolutions adopted by the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh and published in its official archives at rss.org. The summaries retain the substance, intent, and key positions of the original texts while presenting them in condensed form for contextual clarity.)

(The writer is an author and columnist)

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