1971-12-02
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Villagers Near Dacca Also Report Burning of Houses by Army-Led Forces
JINJARA, Pakistan, Nov. 30 —Soldiers and militiamen under army orders have stepped up a campaign of shooting villagers and burning their houses in retaliation for increased guerrilla activity in the region around Dacca.
Residents of this East Pakistani village, just across the Burhi Ganga River from Dacca, say that anywhere from 22 to 87 persons were killed, most of them young men but some women and children, in a sweep by regular soldiers, police and militiamen that began Friday at dusk.
Young men suspected of being guerrillas were routed from their houses, lined up and shot, according to the villagers here. Sixty to 150 houses were burned, they said. A Dacca newspaper reported that 32 persons from the area — called Keraniganj—had been admitted, to Mitford Hospital in Dacca with gunshot wounds.
Several exchanges of gunfire with guerrillas were reported as the troops, engaged in what they called a “pacification drive,” moved from village to village on the south bank of the river.
Shooting and burning were reported in two villages, Kagai and Kalamura, yesterday. They are about seven miles northwest of Dacca, the provincial capital.
Commanders Justified their troops' actions on the ground that villagers were harboring guerrillas. The guerrillas' resistance was seen by some observers as a sign of their growing confidence in the area.
There are rumors in Dacca that the guerrillas are building up in the area for an uprising there.
A military operation officer acknowledged last week that the guerrillas had stepped up their activity in the area. Then hinting of the pacification campaign he added: “Wait a few days.”
While a reporter was ordered away from a section of burned out houses by a local policeman, top‐ranking commanders have not been as sensitive as in the past about reports of the activities of their men. One top commander gave a television news team permission to film the burned areas and interview residents, saying that reports of both good and bad actions would add credibility to reports from the Pakistani side.
Several villages in an area about 10 miles north of Dacca have been set ablaze and residents shot down in the last four days, according to reports by church and relief workers. An American Catholic priest, identified as the Rev. Charles R. Houser, was reported critically wounded and several Bengali nuns were reported killed in an attack on a missionary outpost at the Rangamatia mission.
Workers in Dacca have for two days failed to reach the scene because of heavy sniping and shooting by guerrillas and militiamen. A priest set out by auto this morning in another attempt to reach Father Houser's mission.
Some regular Pakistani Army soldiers are involved in the “pacification campaign,” but most of the regulars are deployed in border units against Indian troops.