On 25 March 1971, in the night, the
Pakistan Army launched "
Operation Searchlight" in order to suppress a Bengali nationalist movement in what was then
East Pakistan. The operation triggered a
genocide and the
Bangladesh Liberation War. Most of the targets of Operation Searchlight were young
Hindu men, intellectuals, students and academics. Operation Searchlight focused on prominent Hindu sites including the
Jagannath Hall (a hostel for Hindu students on the
Dhaka University campus) and the Ramna Kali Mandir. On 27 March 1971, the Pakistan Army entered the Ramna Kali Mandir complex and, within one hour,
killed more than 100 people. Several Muslims who had sought refuge in the temple complex were also killed. Until 2000, accounts of the demolition of the temple relied largely on the oral testimony of survivors of and witnesses. In 2000, the
Awami League, the governing political party, opened a public enquiry. In September 2000, the chairman Justice
KM Sobhan, presented a preliminary report. Only around 50 victims of the massacre have been identified; relatives of the other victims are either deceased or have left Bangladesh. A worldwide appeal has been made for any surviving relatives of the Ramna Kali Mandir massacre victims to contribute names of their deceased family members to be listed on a future memorial. ==Rebuilding==