On March 25, the Pakistan Army launched a
terror campaign calculated to intimidate the Bengalis into
submission. Within hours a wholesale slaughter had commenced
in Dhaka, with the heaviest attacks concentrated on the
University of Dhaka and the Hindu area of the old town.
Bangladeshis remember the date as a day of infamy and
liberation. The Pakistan Army came with hit lists and
systematically killed several hundred Bengalis. Mujib was
captured and flown to West Pakistan for incarceration.
To conceal what they were doing, the
Pakistan Army corralled the corps of foreign journalists at
the International Hotel in Dhaka, seized their notes, and
expelled them the next day. One reporter who escaped the
censor net estimated that three battalions of troops--one
armored, one artillery, and one infantry--had attacked the
virtually defenseless city. Various informants, including
missionaries and foreign journalists who clandestinely
returned to East Pakistan during the war, estimated that by
March 28 the loss of life reached 15,000. By the end of summer
as many as 300,000 people were thought to have lost their
lives. Anthony Mascarenhas in Bangladesh: A Legacy of
Blood estimates that during the entire nine-month
liberation struggle more than 1 million Bengalis may have died
at the hands of the Pakistan Army.
The West Pakistani press waged a vigorous
but ultimately futile campaign to counteract newspaper and
radio accounts of wholesale atrocities. One paper, the
Morning News, even editorialized that the armed forces
were saving East Pakistanis from eventual Hindu enslavement.
The civil war was played down by the government-controlled
press as a minor insurrection quickly being brought under
control.
After the tragic events of March, India
became vocal in its condemnation of Pakistan. An immense flood
of East Pakistani refugees, between 8 and 10 million according
to various estimates, fled across the border into the Indian
state of West Bengal. In April an Indian parliamentary
resolution demanded that Prime Minister Indira Gandhi supply
aid to the rebels in East Pakistan. She complied but declined
to recognize the provisional government of independent
Bangladesh.
A propaganda war between Pakistan and India
ensued in which Yahya threatened war against India if that
country made an attempt to seize any part of Pakistan. Yahya
also asserted that Pakistan could count on its American and
Chinese friends. At the same time, Pakistan tried to ease the
situation in the East Wing. Belatedly, it replaced Tikka,
whose military tactics had caused such havoc and human loss of
life, with the more restrained Lieutenant General A.A.K. Niazi.
A moderate Bengali, Abdul Malik, was installed as the civilian
governor of East Pakistan. These belated gestures of
appeasement did not yield results or change world opinion.
On December 4, 1971, the Indian Army, far
superior in numbers and equipment to that of Pakistan,
executed a 3-pronged pincer movement on Dhaka launched from
the Indian states of West Bengal, Assam, and Tripura, taking
only 12 days to defeat the 90,000 Pakistani defenders. The
Pakistan Army was weakened by having to operate so far away
from its source of supply. The Indian Army, on the other hand,
was aided by East Pakistan's Mukti Bahini (Liberation Force),
the freedom fighters who managed to keep the Pakistan Army at
bay in many areas.
On December 16, 1971, General Niazi-the commander of Pakistan Army
Surrendered to General Aurora- the commander of the joint
force consisting of the Indian Army and Mukti Bahini.