The Colonel Who Would Not Repent

Author:

Salil Tripathi

Publisher:

ALEPH BOOK COMPANY

Rs527 Rs799 34% OFF

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Publisher

ALEPH BOOK COMPANY

Publication Year 2014
ISBN-13

9789382277187

ISBN-10 9789382277187
Binding

Hardcover

Number of Pages 400 Pages
Language (English)
Dimensions (Cms) 15.24 x 2.69 x 22.86
Weight (grms) 744

Salil Tripathi brings together the narrative skill of a novelist and the analytical tools of a political journalist to give us the story of a nation that is absorbing, haunting and illuminating.' Kamila Shamsie, author of A God in Every Stone. Between March and December 1971, the Pakistani army committed atrocities on an unprecedented scale in the country's eastern wing. Pakistani troops and their collaborators were responsible for countless deaths and cases of rape. Clearly, religion alone wasn't enough to keep Pakistan's two halves united. From that brutal violence, Bangladesh emerged as an independent nation, but the wounds have continued to fester. The gruesome assassination of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the country's charismatic first prime minister and most of his family, the coups and counter-coups which followed, accompanied by long years of military rule were individually and collectively responsible for the country's inability to come to grips with the legacy of the Liberation War Four decades later, as Bangladesh tries to bring some accountability and closure to its blood-soaked past through controversial tribunals prosecuting war crimes, Salil Tripathi travels the length and breadth of the country probing the country's trauma through interviews with hundreds of Bangladeshis. His book offers the reader an unforgettable portrait of a nation whose political history since Independence has been marked more by tragedy than triumph

Salil Tripathi

Salil Tripathi was born in Bombay, where he studied at New Era School and Sydenham College, and obtained his MBA at the Tuck School at Dartmouth College in United States. He was a foreign correspondent in Singapore in the 1990s and now lives in London. He writes for Mint, Caravan, and many other publications around the world. His journalism has won several awards including the Red Ink Award for Human Rights Journalism from the Mumbai Press Club in 2015; one of the Bastiat Awards in New York in 2011; and one of the Citibank Awards for Economic Journalism in 1994. Salil was on the board of English PEN, 2009-2013.
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