History Daily - Bangladesh Declares Independence
Episode Date: March 26, 2026March 26, 1971. Under the leadership of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, East Pakistan declares its independence to begin the Bangladesh Liberation War.This episode originally aired in 2024. Support the show! J...oin Into History for ad-free listening and more. History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.
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It's late evening on November 12, 1970, on Manpura Island in East Pakistan.
Outside his family home, 18-year-old Mohamed Abdul-Hai struggles to hold up a plank of wood
as a strong gust of wind threatens to rip it from his hands.
Struggling, Muhammad finally manages to press the wood into place over a window.
He pulls out a hammer and nails the plank into place.
Cyclones are our regular occurrence in this part of the world,
and most people in East Pakistan are well used to preparing for the storms.
On hearing news on the radio of an approaching cyclone,
Muhammad's extended family immediately left their wooden cabins
and gathered at Muhammad's farmhouse,
which is one of the few brick buildings on the island.
Muhammad's mother cooked a large meal to feed all 20 people sheltering there,
and the mood was initially convivial.
But as evening fell, the winds began blowing even more strongly than usual,
until Muhammad decided he had to go outside to secure the windows.
Now, when Muhammad is satisfied, the windows won't blow in.
He dashes through the mud to check on his family's livestock.
He's not gone far when a sudden gust of wind blows him off his feet and lands on his back in the wet earth.
Cursing, Muhammad decides the animals will have to take their chances in the storm.
He rushes back toward the house.
He can see his mother in the doorway, imploring him to hurry.
But as he reaches the building, he hears the roar of water.
Muhammad and his mother look around in confusion.
The house is a half mile from shore.
But then Muhammad realizes with horror that a vast wave is rolling towards them.
The sea has been whipped into such a frenzy that a mighty storm surge is about to sweep away the forest,
the fields, the livestock, and his home.
This huge storm will come to be known as the Bola cyclone.
It causes the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people in East Pakistan,
including 19 members of Mohammed's family.
But the cyclone's death toll will be inflated by the inadequate response of the Pakistani government,
led by General Yaya Khan.
In the aftermath of this disaster, General Khan will come under fire for not doing more to help his people,
and within a month, those people will make their feelings known at the ballot box,
kickstarting a movement that will lead to East Pakistan declaring independence
as the new nation of Bangladesh on March 26, 1971.
From Noisor in Airship, I'm Lindsay Graham, and this is History Daily.
History is made every day.
On this podcast, every day, we tell the true stories of the people and events that shaped our world.
Today is March 26, 1971.
Bangladesh declares independence.
In the early hours of December 8, 1970, in Dhaka, East Pakistan, one month after
the Bola Cyclone struck.
Fifty-year-old politician Sheikh Mujib, popularly known to voters as Mujib, sits in a comfortable
armchair.
Well-wishers pat his shoulder and shake his hand, but Mujib keeps an eye on the television
in the corner of the room.
It's tuned into the results of Pakistan's general election.
Since Pakistan gained its independence from the United Kingdom in 1947, the nation has
suffered chronic political instability.
Marshall Law was eventually declared in 1958.
and for more than a decade, Pakistan has been controlled by its army.
Yesterday, though, saw the ruling generals loosen their grip
by allowing democratic elections to Pakistan's parliament, the National Assembly.
But the army didn't want to give up all of its influence or power.
So before the election, the generals gave their backing to the Pakistan's People Party, or PPP,
and most people assumed they would win.
But the PPP isn't popular across the whole of the country.
Pakistan is split into two separate regions on either side of India, the Urdu speaking west and
the Bengali speaking east.
The Pakistani army and PPP has a strong power base in the West, but they are less
popular in the east, especially in the aftermath of the devastating Bola Cyclone.
The West Pakistan-based government responded poorly to this disaster.
And in recent weeks, the politician Mujib has tapped into the anger of East Pakistanis
and rallied support for his pro-Bengali party, the Awami League.
Despite the tiring election campaign, Mujib is still awake.
And as Mujib watches the results come in on television, he stares at the figures in disbelief.
Against all predictions, Mujib's party has won.
The Awami League has gained more than double the votes of the PPP,
and will now have enough seats in the National Assembly to outvote all other opposition parties.
Mujib is now in line to be the country's next next.
Prime Minister. He excitedly begins planning how they'll level the playing field between West and
East Pakistan, but soon it becomes clear that Mujib's political opponents have no intention of
allowing him to take office. A new crisis is about to grip Pakistan, one that will split the country
in two. It's the early hours of March 26, 1971, more than three months after the Pakistani
general election. At the Awami League headquarters in Dhaka, the biggest city in East Pakistan,
the politician Mujib dictates a telegram to his aides.
The plan is to distribute Mujib's message to supporters across the country.
But they must hurry.
They can already hear gunfire in the streets outside.
They don't have much time.
In the aftermath of Mujib's victory in the general election,
the Pakistani army went back on its promises to give up power.
Instead of allowing Mujib to take office,
Pakistan's president, General Kahn,
indefinitely postponed the National Assembly's first sitting,
asking the existing army-run government to stay on.
With a political establishment trying to overturn the election result, unrest soon stirred in East Pakistan.
Mujib encouraged his followers to protest peacefully, but riots broke out in some cities
and dozens of protesters were shot and killed by the Pakistani security forces.
In the face of this violent crackdown, many East Pakistanis began to call for independence,
but Mujib resisted that for fear of escalating the dispute into a civil war.
A few hours ago, though, that war broke out anyway.
The Pakistani army has launched a full-scale military crackdown in East Pakistan.
So at his offices, Mujiv is briefed on the newest developments by his aides.
The information they have is sketchy, but the news is bad.
Transport links into Dhaka have been sealed off.
Soldiers are occupying every major public building,
and many leaders of the Awami League have already been arrested.
And it's not long before Pakistani soldiers burst.
in and placed Mujib under arrest as well, but they arrive too late to prevent the transmission
of his telegram.
Mujib's message calls upon the people of East Pakistan to resist the military occupation
and declares the independence of a new nation that Mujib calls Bangladesh.
And within just hours, Mujib's message is read out on East Pakistani radio.
But with Mujib and his allies under arrest, the Pakistani armed forces will seize
total control of East Pakistan. Mujib's declaration of independence will remain nothing more than a
last act of defiance unless the Bangladeshi people can find a way to fight back. It's late on
August 15, 1971, in Chittagong Bangladesh, five months after the Bangladeshi declaration of
independence. Abdul Wahad Chowdhury, a commando in Bangladesh's newly formed special forces,
eases himself into the dark waters of Chittagong Harbor. Abdul looks around and notes other
commanders in the unit have slipped into the sea beside him all without making a sound.
Their silence is crucial, because Abdul and his men are about to carry out the most daring
attack yet in a conflict that's become known as the Bangladesh Liberation War.
Five months ago, when Sheikh Mujah-Ramon declared Bangladesh's independence, Abdul was serving
aboard a Pakistani Navy submarine based in Toulon, France.
But Abdul is from East Pakistan, and he he heated Mujib's call to resist.
Abdul defected to the new nation of Bangladesh with nine crewmates.
And that's because Bangladesh needed him and every other fighting man it could find.
After the Pakistani Army launched its operation to seize control of the country, it began a brutal crackdown.
Pakistani soldiers carried out mass murders, rapes, and genocidal killings in Bangladesh.
But resistance has been greater than the Pakistani Army predicted, and despite their heavy-handed tactics,
the occupation has not broken the will of the Bangladesh independence movement.
A few weeks ago, Abdul was given command of a platoon of elite soldiers
and tasked with leading an attack on the Pakistani Navy at Chittagong,
an important port and the second largest city in Bangladesh.
So tonight, Abdul's commandos are ready to put the most dangerous part of the plan into action.
In the waters of the harbor, Abdul swam silently towards his target, a Pakistani naval vessel.
After five minutes, he reaches the ship.
He listens for any sign of activity on the deck above, hardly daring to breathe.
Confident that he's not been spotted, Abdul carefully scrapes the metal hull clean with a knife
before fixing a limpid mine to it.
He then checks his watch, and at one minute to midnight, arms the mine by removing its pin.
Then he pushes off and swims back to the point where he entered the water.
When he reaches shore, Abdul does a quick headcount.
Every commando is safely back on dry land, and each man says he successfully fixed a mine on his target ship.
The group then hurries away to make their escape.
Two hours later, the mines in Chittagong Harbor explode.
Eleven ships are damaged in the attack and three sink, taking 19,000 tons of weapons and ammunition to the seabed.
And Abdul's is not the only successful raid that night.
At the same time, other Bangladeshi commandos sink Pakistani naval vessels,
docked in three other ports.
The simultaneous attacks are a major boost for Bangladeshi morale
and prompt celebrations across the fledgling nation.
Inspired by the commando attacks, the Bangladeshi war effort steps up.
Guerrilla raids by partisans increase in the countryside
where Pakistani soldiers are isolated and lack backup.
Newly trained regular soldiers in the Bangladeshi army
attack military bases and other targets.
90 out of 370 border outposts fall to Bangladeshi
forces, and after two landing strips are captured, the nascent Bangladesh Air Force begins to bomb
Pakistani forces. As this fighting intensifies, Pakistan's president, General Yaya Khan,
comes under international pressure to agree to a ceasefire, but he ignores any diplomatic efforts,
choosing instead to escalate the conflict further. Khan expects Pakistan's neighbor, India,
to intervene in the war to support Bangladesh. India has large and powerful armed forces, but
Khan thinks that if he can hit them first, he can strike a decisive blow.
So he orders preemptive bombing raids to destroy Indian Air Force bases along the border.
But the strikes are a strategic blunder.
The Pakistani bombs fail to put the air bases out of action,
and the sneak attacks outrage India, which immediately pledges to enter the war.
Within days, a quarter of a million Indian troops cross into Bangladesh
to support the new country in its battle for independence.
This intervention turns the tide of the war.
The Indian Air Force quickly gains air supremacy in the skies over Bangladesh,
and the Indian Navy blockades the remaining ships of the Pakistani fleet and port.
With Pakistan's troops on their back foot, Indian forces will rapidly advance on Dhaka.
And just 13 days after the ill-advised airstrikes which brought India into the war,
Pakistan's generals will surrender.
Bangladesh will be free, but the author of its Declaration of Independence won't be.
Sheet Mujibar Rahman will languish in a peace.
Pakistani jail until the time comes for a triumphant homecoming. It's January 10th, 1972,
and the skies over Dhaka, one month after the end of the Bangladesh Liberation War.
Sheikh Mujabar Raman stares out of a plane's window as the pilot circles the city. It's Mujib's
first glimpse of the new Bangladeshi capital, and below, countless people have taken to the
streets to greet the man they're calling the founding father of the nation. Although Mujib penned
Bangladesh's Declaration of Independence, he played no part in the Liberation War. He was a prisoner
of the Pakistani Army throughout the conflict. But thanks to diplomatic pressure and international
condemnation of his incarceration, Mujib was finally released two days ago. Now he's returning home.
After his plane touches down, Mujib is welcomed onto Bangladeshi soil by an honor guard of the new
country's armed forces and ministers of the provisional government. He's then driven in an open truck
through streets lined with cheering Bangladeshis
to the vast open space of a race course.
There, Mujib addresses more than a million people
and congratulates them all on defeating their oppressors.
Mujib talks positively of Bangladeshi's future
and declares that he is ready to lead the newly independent nation
because there's no doubt that the people of Bangladesh
want Mujib to be the head of their government.
Mujib will establish a parliamentary republic
with himself as prime minister,
and over the next three years, he will begin rebuilding
his war-torn country, but Mujib will not live to see Bangladesh reach maturity.
This new nation will slip back into political instability, and Mujib will be killed in a military
coup in 1975.
Mujib's legacy as the father of Bangladesh lives on, though, thanks to the declaration of
independence he made on March 26, 1971.
Next, on History Daily, March 27, 1912, Japan gives the United States 3,000 cherry trees.
in a gesture of friendship between two nations once at odds.
From Noisor and Airship, this is History Daily.
Hosted, edited, and executive produced by me, Lindsay Graham.
Audio editing by Mohamed Shazim, sound design by Matthew Phyller.
Music by Thrum.
This episode is written and researched by Scott Reeves.
Edited by William Simpson.
Managing producer Emily Burke.
Executive producers are William Simpson for Airship and Pascal Hughes for Noiser.
