Round-up of regional news
BANGLADESH
Death squad
In mid-August, a report by the rights watchdog Amnesty International strongly criticised Bangladesh's elite police force, the Rapid Action Battalion (RAB), accusing it of human-rights violations and extrajudicial executions. The RAB has tended to explain away the purported extrajudicial deaths as a result of gunfights with criminal elements or as unfortunate deaths resulting from crossfire. Amnesty's report alleges that about 700 people have been killed since the RAB was set up in March 2004. One of the Amnesty researchers stated that the frequency of killings by the RAB is one a week if not more. It operates under the Ministry of Home Affairs and its personnel are recruited from the navy, army, air force as well as the police.
Founded by Khaleda Zia's Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), the RAB was the government's solution to rampant crime. Particularly in the country's west and centre, armed gangs were increasingly colluding with local politicians to run smuggling rings and engage in extortion. The RAB was accused of politically motivated killings during the BNP regime, particularly targeting members of the currently ruling Awami League. The Bangladeshi police says that the force, which is currently most active in Dhaka and neighbouring districts, plays a crucial role in countering terrorism and maintaining law and order.