02513nam a22002417a 4500003000400000005001700004008004100021020001800062040001200080082001700092100003300109245005600142260002800198300001000226520170600236650003001942650005801972650004302030700003402073942001102107952013402118999001902252OSt20260402180410.0260402b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d a9789365473360 cAACR-II a954.9205 MAL aMalhotra, Iqbal Chand918771 aBangladesh: humiliation, carnage, liberation, chaos aNodiabBluOne Inkc2026 a354p. aThe roots of the conflict between East and West Pakistan go back to the traumatic partition of the subcontinent in 1947. Pakistan was united by religion but divided by language and culture—fault lines that soon metastasized into repeated humiliations and injustices. As protests erupted, the Pakistan Army unleashed a brutal campaign to silence dissent: three million people were killed, over 200,000 women were subjected to sexual violence, and ten million refugees fled to India, all for demanding autonomy. The silence of the international community was deafening. The US and China, openly tilting towards Pakistan, did nothing to halt the unfolding genocide. The subcontinent had become the epicentre of a superpower contest. India stood isolated. Impoverished and destabilized by left-wing insurgency yet morally steadfast, Indira Gandhi’s India—working in close coordination with Tajuddin Ahmad, Bangladesh’s first PM, and the resolute Mukti Bahini—waged a covert struggle for nine months. This culminated in a swift thirteen-day military campaign that broke the Pakistan Army, resulted in the capture of 93,000 prisoners of war, and delivered Bangladesh in one of history’s fastest and most decisive liberations. All arms of the Indian state and Bangladesh’s government-in-exile had worked in perfect unison to deliver a glorious victory, yet peace proved fragile. Chaos followed almost immediately after independence, and nearly all the central figures of the struggle were eventually assassinated in a spiral of senseless violence. Half a century later, as the same hatreds of language, identity, and faith erupt again, the ghosts of 1971 return—not as memory, but as warning. aBangladesh History918772 aLiberation and Subsequent Period in Bangladesh918773 aPolitical History of Bangladesh918774 aChattopadhyay, Subroto918775 2ddccB 00102ddc4070aLBSNAAbLBSNAAd2026-04-02g899.00l1o954.9205 MALp185878q2026-06-05r2026-04-06s2026-04-06w2026-04-02yBA c360718d360718