"The chamber judge of the Supreme Court has stayed the hanging until 10.30am tomorrow (Wednesday)," Abdul Quader Molla's defence lawyer Shishir Munir told AFP.
Earlier, Bangladesh ordered to hang Jamaat-e-Islami’s senior leader Abdul Quader Molla after midnight on Tuesday having already been convicted of mass murder and rape during the country's 1971 war, officials said.
Bangladesh's secular government is going ahead with the execution despite a global outcry with two UN experts and a rights group saying the 65-year-old leader of the Jamaat-e-Islami party should have been allowed to appeal to the country's highest court.
Security has been tightened outside the jail in Old Dhaka where Molla is set to become the first person executed for war crimes dating back to Bangladesh's bloody birth, amid worries the hanging could trigger massive protests in the unrest-plagued country already reeling from political violence.
At least 224 people have died in battles between opposition protesters, police and government supporters since January this year.
"He will be executed after 12.01pm (1801 GMT) tonight as all legal process has been exhausted," Bangladesh's deputy law minister Quamrul Islam told AFP.
"In the presence of two magistrates he was asked whether he would seek pardon from the president, he said no."
Prisons chief Main Uddin Khandaker confirmed that all preparations have been made to carry out the execution and Molla's family has been asked to meet Jamaat's leader one last time.
Twenty-three members of his extended family entered the jail to meet him, an AFP correspondent at the scene said.
On Sunday, a tribunal signed an execution order for Molla, and sent it to the main jail in the capital Dhaka, raising speculation that the former journalist could be hanged any moment.
New York-based activist group Human Rights Watch and two UN Special Rapporteurs have warned that by executing Molla without giving him the opportunity to appeal for a review, the country could be breaking international law.
"What logic do they have to stop the execution?" minister Islam told AFP when asked about the criticism from rights experts.
"Did they stop the execution of Saddam Hussein?" he said referring to the former Iraqi dictator who was hanged in December 2006.
Molla was convicted of rape, murder and mass murder including the killing of over 350 unarmed Bengali civilians. Prosecutors described him as the "Butcher of Mirpur", a Dhaka suburb where he committed most of the atrocities.
A domestic war crime court had originally sentenced him to life imprisonment in February, but the sentence prompted protests by tens of thousands of secular demonstrators who viewed it as too lenient.
Under pressure, the government amended the war crime law retroactively to allow it to appeal the sentence and seek the death penalty, which the Supreme Court then handed down in September.
UN expert Gabriela Knaul argued that any death sentence had to be "reviewed by a higher tribunal, as laid down in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights to which Bangladesh is a party."
Defence lawyers and Knaul said the Supreme Court should have reviewed its own verdict, as enshrined in the country's constitution, which the government rejects.
Bangladeshi laws allow review of any death sentences in the Supreme Court, but prosecutors said there is no such provision in the special war crime laws, which were enacted to prosecute suspected war criminals.
New York-based Human Rights Watch said the execution order was "particularly reprehensible" because the laws to hang Molla "were retroactively passed" in order to enable the death penalty, and where the right to appeal is not allowed.
Bangladesh regularly carries out the death sentence but it would be the most high profile execution since January 2010 when five ex-army officers were put to death over the assassination of the country's founding leader Sheikh Mujibur Rahman.
COMMENTS (27)
Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.
For more information, please see our Comments FAQ
@Jag Nathan: Possibly, if you apply it to Kashmiri freedom fighters of Indian Kashmir and Tamil tigers and Asaam and few other seperatists fighter groups there.
@Crusader: Can we agree that the same principle you just espoused " Someone’s war crime is another’s fight for freedom." be applied to Baluchistan?
Desperate nationalists...trying to make a point at the wrong time and too late. Unfortunate that it come down to this. Unfortunate that this will seal the poor nation's place and fate for next hundred years atleast.
exectution!!! Proof reading anyone???
Pakistan always salute these people.@Zulfiqar Baig:
Pakistan & Pakistani people will never forget these heroes for their sacrifices against indian aggression .
cut down the cancered part you will be save!!! Pakistan should learned something from Bangladesh.
It's a wrong step towards wrong direction...
This may give rise to TTB ( Tehrik e Taliban Bangladesh).
Judging from the comments, any surprise Pakistan is a mess?
Pakistan should immediately cancel all yarn raw material supply to Bangladesh .
Until Jamat e Islami is shown justice for its crime and its leaders in Pakistan and Bangladesh sentenced to life imprisonment if not death the fire that decay of Muslims throughout Indo-Pak subcontinent will not cease.
Bangladesh must not give into UN or Amnesty International as they are clearly not around when these monsters unleash their barbarism and blood flows through streets.
"Truth and reconciliation policy" is the way forward, not hangings. The choice is yours to move on or to keep mired in time capsule.
His last words: Pakistan Zindabad!
Very sad.Pakistan must [rotest on this issue.
Not a JI fan but after 42 years? Whats the point. Time to move on for both Bangladesh & Pakistan.
@expaki: People of Bangladesh???? This decision is taken by politically influenced court. Majority of Bangladeshis are completely against this.
@Surjit: Grapes are truly sour in the hinduland
Dangerous repercussions can happen. Hanging an old 70 year man is against human rights. Someone's war crime is another's fight for freedom.
Yes, it can be sad day for us because he was a pakistani once, Bangla used to be our part. But what is wrong with India and indians here?
WELL doing People of Bangladesh. An hour EARLIER will prevent those who ever dare killing anyone.
Bangladesh government is shooting itself in the foot just to prove that it is hard on islamists & above all please India. Bangladesh is heading into big turmoil...
Sad day for Pakistanis indeed! And sad day for Human Rights!
@Surjit: typical indian mentality.their day starts with name of pakistan and ends with it as well. no matter what the news,they love to drag pakistan into it.why are they so much scared of the pakis.it shows their inferiority deep inside when they face a pakistani.
"An unjust law is no law at all" - St. Augustine