1977 Bogra mutiny explained

Conflict:1977 Bogra mutiny
Date:30 September 1977
Place:Bogra
Status:Defeat of the mutineers[1]
Combatant1: Bangladesh Army
Combatant2:Mutineers from the 22nd Bengal Regiment

The 1977 Bogra mutiny was a mutiny in Bogra Cantonment, a military station near the city of Bogra in Bangladesh on 30 September 1977.[2]

Background

Ziaur Rahman was the chief of Army Staff, he served as the Chief Martial Law Administrator after the Assassination of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman. On 21 April 1977 President Abu Sadat Mohammad Sayem resigned and Zia became president of Bangladesh.[3] [4]

In July 1977, two months before the September uprising, the Bogra Cantonment had seen a mutiny which had led to the mutinous unit being disbanded. The cause behind that mutiny was resentment over an insufficient pay increase.

Events

The mutiny took place in Bogra cantonment under the leadership of Lieutenant Colonel Zaman. The government of Bangladesh was preoccupied with Japan Airlines Flight 472 which was hijacked and had landed in Dhaka.[5] Enlisted men had killed their officers and there were reports of gunfire in Bogra town. The 22nd Regiment had mutinied. After the mutiny had failed, hundreds of soldiers were executed and buried in mass graves in Rajshahi.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Chakrabarti . S. K. . 1978 . The Evolution of Politics in Bangladesh, 1947-1978 . Associated . 251 . en.
  2. Book: Rahman . Syedur . 2010 . Historical Dictionary of Bangladesh . Scarecrow Press . 55 . 9780810874534 . en.
  3. Web site: Ahamed . Emajuddin . Rahman, Shahid Ziaur . Banglapedia . 13 December 2016.
  4. Web site: Ziaur Rahman president of Bangladesh . Encyclopædia Britannica . 13 December 2016.
  5. Book: Roy . Asish Kumar . 2002 . Praetorian politics in Bangladesh, 1975-1981 . Progressive Publishers . 78, 207 . 491399557 . en.
  6. News: Clandestine killings in the Bangladesh Army . Daily Observer . 13 December 2016.