Awami League denounces ICT-BD warrant against Sajeeb Wazed Joy

The Bangladesh Awami League has issued a scathing statement condemning the Jamaat-controlled International Crimes Tribunal (ICT-BD) for issuing an arrest warrant against Sajeeb Wazed Joy, the son of deposed Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and her former honorary adviser on Information and Communication Technology.

In a strongly worded press release late Wednesday, the Awami League described the warrant as “baseless, absurd, and politically motivated,” accusing the tribunal of being turned into a “kangaroo court” under the interim government led by Chief Adviser Professor Muhammad Yunus.

The ICT-BD, which is probing alleged crimes against humanity committed during the student-led uprising that toppled the Awami League government in August 2024, has charged Sajeeb Wazed—widely known as Joy—with offenses including the country-wide internet shutdown and complicity in what the tribunal calls “genocide” between July and August last year.

The Awami League statement rejected the charges outright, pointing out that Joy was abroad during the entire period of the violence and has remained outside Bangladesh ever since. “He has no realistic opportunity to appear before a court controlled by militants and terrorists,” the party said, calling the warrant “a complete violation of human rights.”

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The party further accused Professor Yunus of weaponising the 1973 tribunal—originally established to try collaborators of Pakistani forces during the 1971 Liberation War—to settle political scores and “take revenge for the defeat of 1971.” It claimed the interim administration represents “illegal usurpers, killers, fascists, and anti-liberation forces” seeking to destroy the legacy of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and the idea of an independent Bangladesh.

Describing Sajeeb Wazed as the “architect of Digital Bangladesh,” the statement praised his unpaid advisory role in transforming the country into a technology-driven nation and called him “an iconic leader to the new generation.”

The Awami League vowed to continue its struggle “together with the people” against what it labelled a “calculated conspiracy” to render both Bangladesh and the party leaderless.

Earlier, Sheikh Hasina described the revived ICT-BD as politically motivated and procedurally illegal. “The court he has set up—the ‘International’ Crimes Tribunal—where is the ‘international’ part?” she asked. “They appoint a 72- or 73-year-old judge when High Court judges retire at 67. There are no rules.

“This law was enacted in 1973 to try war criminals,” she continued. “But now, without parliament, they amend the law again and again through executive orders—even during the trial. That is not justice; that is a mockery.”

She said that she was unaware of the exact charges.

Written Statement

“I am speaking to you today not knowing exactly what human rights violations I have already been sentenced to death for,” she said. “My question is—how did I violate human rights? Whom did I kill? That is my question. How will they prove it?”

“Let Yunus pronounce my death sentence as many times as he wants. He whom Allah keeps alive, who can kill? I am here for the people of Bangladesh, and I will remain here,” she declared.

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