26-HOUR CHRONICLE
OF THE DACCA DRAMA
U.P.I. report, Hongkong, March 29, 1971
The following is
a diary through the eyes of Robert Kaylor of UPI of
what happened in
Dacca when the Pakistani Army took control.
11 p. m. Thursday March 25 : I go downstairs to the hotel lobby
with a cable I have just written about a statement by Sheikh Mujibur Rahman
warning of " grave consequences "
if action against the population by the
army continues. I am planning to take
a taxi to the cable office to file it but I find a crowd miling around in the lobby. There are soldiers in battle dress ; helmets and carrying weapons outside. The hotel staff is placing a blackboard with the notice, " Please do not
go outside, " chalked on it in front of the door,
Someone has left a
copy of a statement by the Sheikh calling for a general strike on Saturday pasted to the blackboard. Other correspondents say they have been
ordered back inside the building by the soldiers when they tried to leave. The captain in charge of the guards says that
anyone who goes outside will be shot.
11.15
p.m. : Everyone is trying to figure out what is happening. One theory is that the guards
are there to protect West Pakistani political figure Zhulfikar
Ali Bhutto,
who is hated in Bangla Desh and is staying on the top floor of the hotel • Another
theory is that a military coup is under way because President Yahya Khan has
not taken a hard enough line to suit some generals. As time passes, it begins to look more
like coup. Convoy's of troops are seen passing the hotel twice during
the evening.
I have tried to call the personal number of a key aide to the
President to check on rumours that he has left
Dacca and someone has picked up the
receiver on the other end and hung it up again without speaking. I call a loal news agency and ask if they have any idea what has
happened. They don't and cannot leave their office.
Bangla Desh Flag Burnt
Midnight : Some British
diplomats arrive. They say they were on their
way home from a party and were stopped
by soldiers and then brought to the hotel. They have seen army road blocks at various places around the
city. A Bengali who lives downtown telephones and says that hundreds of civilians are
pouring into the area, some of them armed with wooden staves, iron rods and
other makeshift weapons. I reach Asrar Ahmad, a Pakistani correspondent for UPI. He
is also trapped in his hotel and cannot get
to the cable office. Soldiers outside
the hotel pull down the Bangla Desh
flag and burn it.
12.50 a.m. : After several tries, a phone call gets through to Sheikh Mujib's home and political headquarters. The
unidentified person who answers the phone says the Sheikh is at the house and that the Awami League
has road blocks on approaches to it. He
says they have heard that two Awami League volunteers have been killed by
soldiers at one road block. Calls to
western diplomats show that they have been unable to find out what is happening either.
1
a.m. : The Bengali who called earlier calls back and says that he hears the sounds
of
machineguns in the downtown area. He has shut himself in his house. A short time
later the telephones go dead. Sounds of automatic weapons fire begin to be heard clearly
punctuated by heavier explosions. Later, I see some recoilless rifles
mounted on army jeeps.
3
a.m. : Soldiers carrying torches are seen going toward the offices of " The People "
newspaper near the hotel. There is some shouting and firing and the office
is set on fire. " The People "
is an English language newspaper which has
been highly critical of the Government. Later, there are more sounds of firing near the hotel and what sounds like shouts and cheers but I cannot see what
is going on from where I am. Heavy firing continues in all directions.
Columns of Smoke
Sunrise : The
firing has quietened down and the streets are
deserted. A huge column of smoke rises from the direction of the
university. If troops have attacked
there with heavy weapons, the
carnage will be tremendous. The students at the university live in
dormitories that hold about 400 each.
7 a.m.: Several of us go up
to the 11th floor where Bhutto is staying. There are two of his
bodyguards carrying assault rifles standing in the hallway. A member of Bhutto's party comes into the hall and says
they have no idea what has happened. He
says Bhutto is asleep and instructions are to wake him at 7-30.
8 a.m. : A
radio broadcast carries a report from Karachi that President
Yahya has returned to West Pakistan and will broadcast to the nation at 8 p.m. tonight The coup theory appears to be debunked. The telephones are still out.
8-30 a.m.: Word passes that Bhutto is leaving as a car and a
camouflaged military bus appear outside
the lobby. Soldiers pour
into the lobby, Bhutto appears, wearing gray Suit and blue tie, but won't
say anything. He keeps repeating " I have no comment to make " as he strides out his car. His bodyguards get in on either side of him and stick the muzzbs of their rifles out the window. The way
they constantly keep their fingers on the trigger makes everybody nervous.
An aide to Bhutto says that when his advisers returned from a meeting at
the Presidential residence at 5 p.m., the
day before, they knew that chances for a political settlement were dead. It isn't clear whether this is because Bhutto
doesn't agree with the agreement that Yahya and the Sheikh reached or whether
Yahya has been getting pressure from
the army. Bhutto's people probably
want it thought that it was because
their boss didn't agree.
We trail out
onto the sidewalk as Bhutto departs and soldiers order us inside. A lieutenant colonel says we cannot leave the
hotel. The captain in charge tells a
staff member of the hotel in Urdu
that he doesn't care whether we are foreigners or not. He will
shoot us if we don't go inside. We go
back inside. The captain tells the assistant
manager of the hotel, a Pakistani, that he will be shot if a Pakistan flag is not raised within 15 minutes.
Then he leaves. Hotel employees produce a Pakistan flag and try to raise it, but are forbidden to go outside by soldiers. Apparently all armies are alike.
9 a.m. : A
radio broadcast says that a 24-hours curfew is in effect and that anyone
on the street will be shot on sight. It says
a special announcement will be made at
10 a.m. The hotel manages
to produce a cook from somewhere who makes coffee and breakfast
for those who want it.
10 a.m.: The flag is raised on the hotel roof. The hotel manager, a German, grins and
says, " We keep all kinds of flags handy. " The special announcement turns out to be a
series of martial law orders, but the curfew is not mentioned.
Firing at Random
Noon: From upstairs windows you can see patrols of jeeps and
tanks moving through the deserted streets. They appear to be firing at random. As
they go there are two more big smoke columns, one of them looking as though it is coming
from the part of downtown where the Awami
League office is. It is frustrating
to see all this and not be able to communicate it to the outside world.
Shortwave radio news broadcasts show that no
word of the army's move has yet reached the outside world.
12.30 p.m.: The lieutenant
colonel who talked to us earlier comes back and decides that we can use the swimming pool to while away
the time. He issues orders that
foreigners only can use the pool and
that Pakistanis must stay inside. He won't answer questions about what is
happening in the city or at the university and says "
relax, have a swim, enjoy
yourselves. " The afternoon
passes quietly with occasional sounds of gunfire. A new column of
smoke appears on the southern edge of the city. You can see flames billowing upward in this one as the sun goes down.
8.15
p.m.: I go down to the lobby after listening to Yahya's
radio speech calling Sheikh Mujib's non-co-operation
movement an "act of treason" and banning his Awami League and find the lobby deserted.
Correspondents have been ordered to leave and bundled into army trucks for the airport as the speech was starting.
Somehow I was missed. Troops at the
hotel call for a patrol to take me to the airport. The patrol is -a jeep driven by a mustachioed young lieutenant
in a flat, world war I style helmet followed by a
weapons carrier filled with troops. They put my suitcase into the weapons
carrier. The lieutenant asks his radio operator to go to the back seat of the jeep and I climb in next to him.
Houses Shuttered
I ask how long he thinks the
situation will continue and he says that he just follows orders. Then, he adds
suddenly, that "Everything will work out all right here ". He turns to me and
grins, "We will fix these people," he says.
1 p.m.: I get my customs check and the inspector tells me he is
under "special orders" when I tell him that we were already
checked in Dacca. He confiscates
my notebooks, carbon copies of cables I have filed from Dacca, newspaper
clippings and any scraps of paper he can find in my suitcase, including letters
from my wife. He then seizes 14 rolls of unexposed film I have in my camera bag and puts everything
in brown manila envelopes. When I ask about
it, he says it will be sent to me by mail. I ask when, and he shrugs his shoulders. " Later ", he says. He
declines to issue a receipt.
1-45 p.m.: I catch my flight to Bombay and consider
myself lucky that although I have lost my notebooks, I still have a story which
I wrote before leaving Dacca in my hip pocket. One
other correspondent on the plane was subjected to a personal search and lost the copy he had hidden.
(U.P.I. REPORT, Hongkong-March 29, 1971.)
Source:
Bangladesh Documents, vol – I, page no – 382 - 385