Shanti Bahini


The Shanti Bahini was the armed wing of Parbatya Chattagram Jana Samhati Samiti in Bangladesh. It is considered as a insurgent group in Bangladesh. Most of its members were ethnically Chakma.

History

After Bangladesh's independence in 1971, Manabendra Narayan Larma founded PCJSS on 15 February 1972, aiming to represent natives of the Chittagong Hill Tracts. Larma was elected to the Jatiya Sangsad. After peaceful efforts to gain recognition failed, the PCJSS organized the Shanti Bahini in 1972 to wage armed warfare against the Bangladeshi government.
They began attacking Bangladesh Army convoys in 1977. Larma went into hiding and was assassinated on 10 November 1983.
On 23 June 1981, Shanti Bahini militants attacked a Bangladesh Rifles camp, and killed 13 people and later executed 24 more.

Attacks

In the 1980s, to resettle landless Bengalis, the government granted land in the Hill Tracts, displacing many tribal people. On 31 May 1984, Shanti Bahini members killed 400 Bengalis at Bhushanchhara.
On 29 April 1986, they massacred 19 Bengalis. On 26 June 1989, they burned villages whose inhabitants participated in elections.
In 1996, they abducted and killed 30 Bengalis, and they massacred Bengali lumberjacks.

Peace Accord

On 2 December 1997, the Chittagong Hill Tracts Peace Accord was signed and the Shanti Bahini agreed to disarm. They surrendered weapons in Khagrachhari, leading to removal of a curfew and 50,000 refugees gradually attempted to return. However, dissidents formed groups like the United People’s Democratic Front. The Bangladesh Nationalist Party criticised the accord, which remains partially unimplemented.
In August 2014, Border Security Force troops arrested five Chakmas with arms in Mizoram.
Before this, following the assassination of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman in 1975, India reportedly sheltered and supported Shanti Bahini, and trained them in Chakrata, India.