Charges for Bangladesh mutineers


Bangladesh border guards report to barracks following the mutiny in Dhaka
Border guards were told to report to their posts or face disciplinary action
Bangladesh police say they are charging more than 1,000 border guardsmen in connection with a mutiny which left more than 140 people dead.
The charges include conspiracy to kill officers and civilians, using weapons and explosives, creating panic, looting and trying to hide bodies.
The remains of more than 70 officers have still not yet been found days after the violence in Dhaka.
The mutiny by the Bangladesh Rifles apparently began as an row over pay.
It ended as the massacre of 137 army officers and, it is feared, about 20 civilians including officers' wives, in the guards' headquarters in the capital.
Police have named six of the men they accuse of carrying out the mutiny. The six were involved in negotiating the mutineers' surrender with Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina.
The mutiny ended when the government threatened to quell it by force.
The police say they still do not have the names of more than 1,000 others, who they believe were also involved.
The army has said that those found guilty of murder will be executed.
Soldiers remove a body from a grave at the headquarters of the border guards

Several hundred guardsmen are now in detention, but many others were able to escape.
Hundreds of guards began returning to their posts on Sunday after the mutiny ended on Thursday.
They had been given a 24-hour ultimatum to do so or face disciplinary action.
After searches of the vast compound, bodies were found either buried in shallow mass graves or dumped into the fast-flowing sewers below ground.
Some charred human bones have been found in the remains of a fire.
The army has postponed the funerals of those who died until all the bodies have been found.