The Commission of Inquiry on Enforced Disappearances on Sunday submitted its final report to Chief Adviser Prof Muhammad Yunus, claiming that former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina herself had issued direct orders in many cases of enforced disappearances.
Members of the Commission said the disappearances were largely politically motivated, adding that the evidence and data they gathered clearly indicated that these were crimes driven by political considerations.
The report was submitted to Chief Adviser Prof Muhammad Yunus at the State Guest House Jamuna.
Commission Chairman Justice Mainul Islam Chowdhury, along with members Justice Md Farid Ahmed Shibli, Nur Khan Liton, Nabila Idris, and Sajjad Hossain, were present at the event.
Industries Adviser Adilur Rahman Khan and Principal Secretary to the Chief Adviser Siraz Uddin Miah were also present.
According to the Commission, a total of 1,913 complaints were submitted to the Disappearance Investigation Commission.
Of these, 1,569 complaints were verified and classified as enforced disappearances based on the official definition.
Among them, 287 cases fell into the “missing and dead” category.
The report said 75 percent of the victims of enforced disappearances who later returned alive were leaders and activists of Jamaat-Shibir, while 22 percent were leaders and activists of the BNP and its affiliated organisations.
Among those who remain missing, 68 percent were leaders and activists of the BNP and its affiliated bodies, and 22 percent were associated with Jamaat-Shibir.
Evidence has been found indicating the direct involvement of then Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, her Defence Adviser Major General (retd) Tariq Ahmed Siddique, and former Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan in several high-profile disappearance cases, according to the Chief Adviser’s Press Wing.