The seizure list of the Chittagong Metropolitan Police (CMP) states that the arms and ammunition recovered include 690 7.62 mm T-56-I Sub-Machine Guns (SMGs); 600 7.62 mm T-56-2 SMGs; 150 40mm T-69 Rocket launchers; 840 40mm rockets; 400 9mm semi-automatic spot rifles; 100 'Tommy Guns'; 150 rocket launchers; 2000 launching grenades; 25,020 hand grenades; 6,392 magazines of SMG and other arms; 700,000 rounds of SMG bullets; and 739,680 rounds of 7.62 mm calibre; and 400,000 bullets of other weapons. Most of the arms and ammunition were reportedly of Korean, Italian, Chinese and American make.
While this is the largest, it is by no means the only significant arms seizure in the country, and the last year alone has seen several. Substantial caches of arms have been recovered from Chittagong and its three hill districts; Bogra in northwestern Bangladesh (this was the largest earlier seizure); and even from the capital, Dhaka. But the latest seizure in Chittagong is the biggest in the history of Bangladesh and marks the emergence of the country as a major transit point for arms smuggling in South Asia.
Crucially, reports indicate that, in this latest seizure, the smugglers were unloading the weapons with help from local police. An eyewitness, Kazi Abu Tayeeb, Ansar (paramilitary force) Commander at the Chittagong Urea Fertiliser Limited jetty where the arms were seized, has alleged that weapons were being offloaded in front of local police officials and the managing director, Mohsinuddin Talukder, of the state-owned urea factory. The cargo handling reportedly stopped only when a huge contingent of police, led by a senior local police officer, reached the spot. But the two arms traffickers along with the workers melted away in front of police reinforcements.
The origin of this consignment of arms and its end-users still remain a mystery, though unconfirmed and conflicting reports are trickling in. However, if the previous record of the government is anything to go by, the truth may again never be known. The government has already started taking steps to weaken the probe. The police officer who was reported to have been overseeing the unloading of the consignment at the CUFL jetty, hence one of the main accused in the case, has been tasked by the government to 'probe' the incident.