The Bangladeshi parliament has amended the country's war crimes law, allowing the prosecution of the largest Islamic party - Jamaat-e-Islami.
News of the move was greeted by loud cheers from thousands of protesters in central Dhaka who have been demanding a ban on Jamaat, whose leaders are on trial for war crimes allegedly committed in the 1971 war of independence from Pakistan.
Law minister Shafique Ahmed told AFP that under the new law “any organisation including Jamaat can be prosecuted” by a special court for war crimes and if found guilty “it can be banned” from politics.
Previously only individuals could be prosecuted for war crimes.
“It’s one step towards banning Jamaat,” deputy law minister Qamrul Islam told AFP.
The move comes after Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina on Saturday indicated that she would back a ban on Jamaat, whose members are suspected in the murder of an anti-Islamist blogger, as it had “no right to be in politics in free Bangladesh”.
The decision could see a ban on the party. Some of the party's leaders are on trial for war crimes allegedly committed in the 1971 war of independence from Pakistan.
Tens of thousands of protestors on the streets of central Dhaka, demanding the ban, have welcomed the news. Meanwhile clashes between police and Jamaat-e-Islami supporters, have left at least one man dead.
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