"It (Pakistan reaction) is not acceptable," Hasina said, a day after Islamabad issued a statement expressing its deep anguish over the executions of two top opposition leaders for crimes against humanity.
The Daily Star quoted the prime minister as directing the foreign ministry to lodge a "strong protest" as "Pakistan has interfered in our domestic affairs in the past too".
The foreign office, meanwhile, said it summoned Pakistani envoy here to register its protest over Pakistan's unacceptable remarks over the executions.
"You have seen the Pakistani statement which is entirely unacceptable," Rahman said after the meeting.
Pakistan foreign ministry yesterday issued the statement, voicing "deep concern and anguish" over the execution of Jamaat-e-Islami Secretary-General Ali Ahsan Mohammad Mujahid, 67, and key-opposition BNP leader Salahuddin Quader Chowdhury, 66.
Several senior ministers of Hasina's government, politicians and 1971 veterans also expressed their anguish over Pakistan's comments.
"Pakistan showed audacity just as convicts like Salauddin Quader Chowdhury did until their deaths," said Civil Aviation Minister Rashed Khan Menon said in a statement.
This was the third occasion when Bangladesh summoned Pakistani envoy after it initiated a belted process in 2010 to expose to justice the 1971 war criminals.
Bangladesh, which won its independence from Pakistan after a nine-month long Liberation War 44 years ago, has in the past several decades repeatedly demanded an apology from Islamabad for the atrocities carried out by its troops in 1971.
(Reopens FGN 36)
Referring to Pakistani criticism that "there is a need for reconciliation in Bangladesh in accordance with the spirit of Pakistan, India, Bangladesh Agreement of 9th April 1974", the Bangladesh foreign ministry said that it is Pakistan which is not honouring the agreement.
The note further said: "Pakistan could not escape the historic obligation it owed to the people of Bangladesh as well as to the international community".
Bangladesh, India and Pakistan signed the 1974 agreement in New Delhi to normalise the situation in the subcontinent following Bangladesh's emergence as a sovereign country.
The note said "the essential spirit of the agreement was to create an environment of good neighbourliness and peaceful co-existence for ushering in long term stability and shared prosperity in the region".
Refuting Pakistan's labelling the judicial process as "flawed trials", the note reiterated that the verdicts against the convicted individuals had been handed down through an "independent, sound, fair, impartial and transparent judicial process, and without any political interference".
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