Golam Azam (literally means "Great Servant or Slave", aptly named considering his lifelong service to his masters, the Pakistanis) is the chief planner of many murders and rapes in 1971 war. During the war he termed the numerous rapes of Bangali married and unmarried women by the Pakistanis and their supporters as "Muta Marriages" (temporary marriages which are banned in traditional Islam) through self-styled religious edict (fatwa). He is not only very unrepentant of his and his party's war crime roles, but also very proud of it. Not many years ago he arrogantly made a remark "Ekattore bhul kori nai" (Did not make any mistake in 71). His party, the banned Jamaat-e-Islami (a political party based on Pakistani scholar Moududi’s twisted religious teachings), and other 'anti-liberation' entities which took part in the 1971 genocide were given license to operate in 1978, thanks to Dictator General Ziaur Rahman, the founder of Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP).
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