"Chief Justice Surendra Kumar Sinha and the three-other judges of the bench have signed the judgment dismissing his (Nizami's) review plea... We have released the full text of the judgment" required for its execution, a Supreme Court spokesman told reporters here.
He said the copies of the final judgment were being sent to Bangladesh's International Crimes Tribunal (ICT-BD), which originally handed down the death penalty. The trial court would send the documents to Dhaka's district magistrate and the prison department for "subsequent actions".
Meanwhile, elite anti-crime Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) forces overnight joined the police in riot gears to enforce a tight vigil around the Central Jail, where the officials said the noose was ready for him to be hanged.
"I can't tell you when his (Nizami's) death sentence will be executed but I want to say that the verdict will be carried out after exhausting all legal procedures," Home Minister Asaduzzaman Kamal told PTI.
Nizami's final appeal against his death sentence for war crimes committed during the 1971 Liberation War against Pakistan was rejected by the Supreme Court on May 5.
He said prison authorities were ready to execute the apex court verdict soon after the copy of the court judgment reached them but the procedure required them to ask the death row convict if he wanted to seek presidential clemency.
Jamaat on Saturday, however, said: "question doesn't arise at all to seek mercy to anybody else except Allah".
Nizami's his eldest son and lawyer Najib Momen supplemented the party statement, saying "he (Nizami) will not seek clemency to the President".
President Abdul Hamid has earlier rejected two such prayers by 1971 war crimes convicts, including Nizami's top aide then, who were subsequently executed late last year.
A former minister in ex-premier Khaleda Zia's BNP-led four-party coalition government, Nizami has been in jail since 2010, when he was arrested to be tried 1971 war crimes.
He was given capital punishment in October 2014 by the tribunal after being convicted of "superior responsibility" as the chief of the infamous Al-Badr militia forces in 1971.
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