Bangladesh police have charged 13 men with murder over the brutal
lynching of a 13-year-old boy that provoked national outrage after video
footage of the attack went viral, a detective said on Monday.Police
submitted a charge sheet to a court in the northern city of Sylhet on
Sunday over the killing last month of Samiul Alam Rajon, who was beaten
to death by a mob after being falsely accused of stealing a bicycle.
"After
we filed the charge sheet including the statements of some witnesses,
the court last evening accepted it," detective Suronjit Talukder,
investigating the case, told AFP.
Samiul, accused of theft, was
tied to a pole and then subjected to a brutal assault in which he
pleaded for his life. An autopsy found 64 separate injuries had been
inflicted on the teenager.
A
28-minute video of Samiul, which was widely circulated after being
posted on social media, has prompted deep soul-searching among
Bangladeshis as well as a series of mass protests.
In the video,
the terrified youngster can be heard screaming in pain and repeating:
"Please don't beat me like this, I will die."
At one stage he is
told to walk away. But as he tries to get to his feet, one of the
attackers shouts: "His bones are okay. Beat him some more."
Ten men have been arrested since the July 8 killing and have confessed their involvement, Talukder said.
Another
three, who fled the city, have also been charged in absentia with
murder including Kamrul Islam, who was arrested in Saudi Arabia after
officials received a tip from members of the country's large Bangladeshi
expatriate community.
A foreign ministry official said he hoped the charge sheet would now prompt Saudi Arabia to speed up his repatriation.
Thousands
of people demonstrated in Samiul's home city and in a dozen other
cities and towns in the days after the murder as outrage grew.
Samiul's father Sheikh Azizur Rahman told reporters on Monday he would not rest "until the culprits get proper punishment".
His
family says the boy is innocent of the accusation he stole the bicycle
and police say their investigation found no evidence of theft.
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