"We saw the then Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi visiting important countries during our 1971 Liberation War. Only then the global initiative (to stop the Pakistani genocide) began," Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) secretary general Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir said.
He said BNP had long been advocating that the premier should play a special role to resolve the Rohingya crisis to convince countries which still support Buddhist-majority Myanmar, allowing it to carry on alleged atrocities against ethnic minority Rohingya Muslims.
India crucially supported Bangladesh's 1971 Liberation War against Pakistan and offered refuge to nearly 10 million Bengalis who fled their homes in the face of genocide.
Alamgir's comments came as BNP chief and ex-prime minister Khaleda Zia departs for Cox's Bazar to witness the Rohingyas' plight as over 600,000 forcibly displaced people have taken refuge in southeastern Bangladesh after fleeing their homes in Myanmar's Rakhine state.
Bangladesh had previously sheltered 400,000 Rohingyas for the past few decades while the latest influx began on August 25 with a Myanmar army crackdown in response to alleged insurgent attacks on their security outposts in Rakhine.
"I worry that this continued context of fear and violence is spinning out of control and will only lead to displacement of more people," International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) chairman Peter Maurer said this week.
UN investigators said during the latest crackdown, Myanmar's security forces fired indiscriminately on unarmed civilians, including children, and committed widespread sexual violence.
Despite initial reluctance to allow the Rohingya influx, Dhaka decided to provide them refuge on "humanitarian grounds".
Hasina last month visited the Rohingya camps in Cox's Bazar and then attended the UN General Assembly in New York where she highlighted the plight of the Rohingyas and the impact of the crisis on Bangladesh.
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