Newspapers snatched: Critical reports on reckless driving infuriate transport workers loyal to shipping minister

Transport workers in Bogra and Madaripur looted a huge number of newspapers yesterday protesting reports criticising the shipping minister's role in granting licences and violation of traffic rules by drivers.

Quoting newspaper hawkers, our Bogra correspondent reports: transport workers stopped several newspaper-laden vehicles near the central bus terminal and Matidali intersection of the city around 8:30am and snatched bundles of newspapers including The Daily Star, Prothom Alo, Ittefaq, Kaler Kontho, Shomokal, Naya Diganta, Inqilab, Daily Sun and Dinkal.

Abdul Latif Mondol, president of Rajshahi Divisional Workers Union and Bogra Motor Workers Union' told The Daily Star that some transport workers, loyal to Shipping Minister Shajahan Khan, looted the newspapers in line of the central committee's decision.

Shajahan is the executive president of Bangladesh Road Transport Workers Federation.

The looters believe the media unfairly branded transport workers 'killers' in the light of Sunday's arrest of drivers at Gabtoli in the capital and irregularities in the transport sector, said Shahidul Islam Bakul, president of Bogra Jatiyatabadi Newspaper Hawkers Union.

Police arrested Ripon, 20, while he attempted to sell the stolen newspapers at a market.

Later, police raided Shailenpara and Mandolpara areas in the city, said Atiur Rahman, officer-in-charge (investigation) of Bogra Sadar Police Station.

About 8,500 newspapers, including 125 copies of The Daily Star, were recovered during the raid and handed over to the hawkers for distribution, he added.

A case was filed against 10 to 11 persons, including Ripon, Saiful Islam and Eman with Bogra Sadar Police Station in this connection.

In Madaripur, transport workers looted and set fire to newspapers at Mustafapur bus stand, reports our Madaripur correspondent.

They also asked hawkers not to sell daily Prothom Alo and threatened them of dire consequences if unheeded.

Zakir Hossain, a hawker, told The Daily Star that a group of transport workers stopped the bus carrying newspaper at Mostofapur bus terminal in the early morning and snatched the newspapers.

Omar Ali Sikder, a newspaper trader, said transport workers snatched newspapers because they disagreed with critical reports and caricature of shipping minister published in the dailies.

Source : The Daily Star 

Special trains from Aug 28

Special trains, arranged to facilitate the journey of homebound people on the occasion of Eid-ul-Fitr, will start plying from Aug 28 alongside the scheduled ones.

The sale of advance tickets for the special trains begins today.

Station manager of Kamlapur Railway Station Sitangshu Chakrawarty said they would operate 39 trains on different routes and three special ones on the Dhaka-Khulna, Dhaka-Dewanganj and Dhaka-Parbatipur routes every day from August 28 until a day before Eid.

He said two special trains will run on Chittagong-Chandpur and Chittagong-Comilla routes during the period.

Another two trains on Bhairb Bazar-Kishoreganj and Mymensigh-Kishoregang routes will ply on the Eid day so that devotees can join the Eid congregation at Sholakia, where the country's largest Eid jamaat is held.

About the capacity of Bangladesh Railway (BR), Sitangshu said they have been trying their best to provide better services so that people can go home safely to celebrate the Eid with their family members.

He said BR coaches are currently carrying around 15,730 passengers a day.

Source : The Daily Star 

8 cops sued, arrested for extortion

An assistant commissioner (AC) of Rajshahi Metropolitan Police (RMP) and seven other police personnel were arrested at the Police Lines here yesterday morning, hours after an extortion case was filed against them.

They arrestees were sent to jail after police produced them in a metropolitan magistrate's court seeking a seven-day remand for them. The court will hear the remand prayer today.

The eight cops are AC Towfiqul Islam, Masud Rana and Matiar Rahman, sub-inspectors of Rajpara Police Station, and constables Atiqur Rahman, Golam Mortuza, Sujan and Islam Ali, and driver Akter Hossain.

Rajpara police recorded the extortion case following a probe into a complaint lodged with the RMP commissioner five days back, the officer-in-charge (OC) of the police station said yesterday.

A three-member probe body interrogated the eight accused, complainant Dr Rafiq Basunia and his family members, and submitted its report on Saturday.

Earlier on August 18, a primary probe report by RMP Special Branch said the police personnel were found involved in an extortion.

In his complaint, Basunia said the AC along with the other policemen went to his house at Laxmipur in the city in the evening of August 17 and told him they would search his house as he illegally stored Indian garlic.

Then they realised Tk 1 lakh from him, promising they would not harass him anymore.

Basunia first informed the matter to the assistant superintendent of police, who reported it to RMP Commissioner M Obaidullah.

Following the primary probe report, Towfiqul was closed at the RMP headquarters and the seven others were suspended.

The commissioner had earlier said since the AC is a class one officer, the local administration cannot take any action against him. So, the probe reports and other relevant papers were sent to Dhaka headquarters for necessary action.

Source : The Daliy Star 

40 graft-confessors in roads targeted: Says anti-corruption body

The Anti-Corruption Commission will soon revive all corruption cases against the Roads and Highways Department officials, who had been exempted from prosecution by the then Truth and Accountability Commission (Tac) during the last caretaker government's tenure.

Corruption cases against 270 people, mostly government officials, were stalled midway after the accused made confessions to the Tac and surrendered their ill-gotten wealth. The last caretaker government formed the Tac, which is now defunct, as part of its anti-graft crackdown.

The Supreme Court in May announced the Tac illegal, paving the way for the ACC to revive the cases against them.

Nearly 40 RHD officials, mostly accused in corruption cases filed by the ACC, voluntarily disclosed their ill-gotten wealth before the Tac and got exempted from prosecution on surrender of the wealth.

"The RHD staff will surely be the first target of the commission, as we prepare to resume all graft cases stuck midway after the formation of the Tac," said ACC Chairman Ghulam Rahman.

The ACC chief said the latest move is made against the backdrop of rampant corruption in the sector that has left the country's communication system in a shambles.

The ACC now waits for the release of the full text of the SC judgement to proceed with the matter.

Some senior ACC officials said the sorry state of country's road network calls for immediate action against the RHD officials.

Shahab Uddin, who stepped down recently as the RHD chief engineer, is one of them.

He was given clemency by the Tac on confession of amassing ill-gotten wealth and surrender of Tk 3 lakh.

His wife also sought immunity from the Tac depositing a small amount to the state exchequer.

Shahab Uddin resigned on August 18 amid allegations of plundering funds. The condition of countrywide road networks of about 21,000 kilometres continued to worsen since he took office in December 2009.

He came under fire after filmmaker Tareque Masud, chief executive officer of ATN News Ashfaque Munier and three others died in a road crash in Manikganj on August 13.

There have been widespread corruption allegations against another RHD officer, Arifur Rahman Zinnah, former director of Dhaka-Chittagong four-lane highway project. Arifur, who retired about two months ago, had been exempted by Tac from prosecution on confession of graft and surrender of ill-gotten wealth.

The four-lane highway project that has been in discussions for the last one and a half years is yet to start.

Preferring anonymity, a top ACC official said the government is responsible for the sorry state of the country's road network as it reinstated and promoted the self-confessed corrupt RHD officials.

Shahab Uddin retired as additional chief engineer on November 18, 2009. But the present government extended his service by two years under the freedom fighter quota and promoted him to RHD chief engineer ignoring strong opposition from within the RHD.

Rampant corruption in the RHD was exposed during the tenure of the last caretaker government.

RHD officials often misappropriated money by falsely showing that hundreds of day labourers were engaged in maintenance and repair of roads, the ACC found in its probe into institutional corruption.

An enquiry is underway into the approval of 261 Priority Maintenance Projects to prioritise maintenance of roads considering the financial constraint, without floating any tender and advertisement.

A three-member ACC team led by its Deputy Director Benajir Ahmed has been conducting the investigation since July.

The contractors took 20 percent more money than the estimated budget by illegal means after completing the projects during the tenure of the previous BNP-led government.

Graft prosecutors, however, are not that hopeful about bringing the corrupt RHD officials to book, as hardly any case filed against them during the last caretaker government's tenure could bring punishment on them.

The graft suspects rather obtained bail in such cases and some even got promoted immediately after the AL-led government assumed power.

Source : The Daliy Star 

ECB overnight deposits rise as banks remain wary of lending

The amount of cash deposited by commercial banks overnight with the European Central Bank spiked last week, ECB data showed Monday, a sign that they may be increasingly reluctant to lend.

ECB data showed commercial banks parked 107.2 billion euros ($154.4 billion) in the central bank's deposit facility on Friday, up from 90.5 billion euros on Thursday.

While the amount remained well below the year-high of 145.2 billion euros in early August, it is nonetheless a substantial amount for banks to deposit at a rate of 0.75 per cent, which means they forego earnings rather than lend it to other banks at the current going rate of around 0.89 per cent.

According to Lena Kormileva, a strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman quoted by Dow Jones Newswires, the figure shows that 'the ECB's intermediation (in the money markets) remains broken.

Source : New Age

OECD economic growth slows again

Growth in leading world economies slowed for the fourth consecutive quarter, gaining just 0.2 per cent in the three months to June, an OECD indicator showed on Monday.

In the April-June period, output of the 33 countries in the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development grew 0.2 per cent after 0.3 per cent in the first quarter.

'This is the fourth consecutive quarter of slower growth,' the OECD said, noting a widespread slowdown in developed economies.

Compared with a year earlier, OECD economies grew 1.6 per cent in the second quarter, down sharply from 2.4 per cent in the first, the organisation said.

'The slowdown was particularly marked in the euro area and the European Union, where growth slowed to 0.2 per cent compared to 0.8 per cent in the (first) quarter,' the OECD said.

According to the OECDE, eurozone powerhouse Germany slowed to 0.3 per cent in the second quarter from 1.3 per cent in the first and France stalled at zero growth after 0.9 per cent.

Britain slowed to 0.2 per cent from 0.5 per cent.

However, the United States picked up to 0.3 per cent from 0.1 per cent in the first previous quarter while Japan contracted 0.3 per cent in the second quarter after a contraction of 0.9 per cent in the three months to March, the OECD said.

Source : New Age

Oil down on anticipation of new Libya oil output

Crude prices tumbled in Asian trade Monday on prospects of Libyan oil production getting fully back on stream, after a rebel advance deep into Tripoli left Moamer Kadhafi's fate in the balance.

Brent North Sea crude for October delivery plunged $2.74 to $105.88 a barrel from Friday's close.

New York's main contract, light sweet crude for September delivery, slid 78 cents to $81.48 a barrel. It had risen to more than $83 in early morning trade, but was driven down partly by concerns about the US economy.

'This is really the main news event,' Victor Shum, an analyst with energy consultancy Purvin and Gertz in Singapore, said as veteran strongman Kadhafi's four-decade rule in Libya appeared to unravel.

'Rebels have entered Tripoli... there have also been reports Kadhafi will get out of the country,' Shum told the AFP.

Libya, a key crude-exporting nation that was producing some 1.49 million barrels per day before the rebellion broke out in mid-February, has seen its output slashed significantly since the revolt began.

About 85 per cent of Libyan oil output was exported to Europe until the revolt disrupted the country's production.

Brent crude from the North Sea would be particularly affected by the likelihood of Libya gradually resuming supplies to the European market, analysts said.

'The impact of that on the oil market should be bearish because going forward, Libyan oil production will come back on stream and that should put downward pressure on oil,' said Shum.

'It's really the geopolitical issue in Libya on top of all the other macroeconomic factors.'

Apart from the situation in Libya, New York crude erased earlier gains as traders worried that US demand will be hit after recent data indicated the world's biggest economy is stalling, analysts said.

Source : New Age

Free games boost gaming industry revenue

An increase in the number of people playing free games is providing the gaming industry with an additional source of revenue as gamers shell out millions for virtual goods and add-ons.

Free games, once the bane of the gaming industry, are now proving lucrative for game developers who entice people to pay for virtual costumes or tools which enhance game experience.

According to a survey published by German tech industry association Bitkom earlier this month, 45 per cent of German gamers opt for free-to-play versions only.

Matthias Hellmund, head of mobile development at German game developer Exozet said the target group for $70 console games was gradually shrinking as gamers get used to games on Apple's iPad which are free or cost 99 cents.

'But people don't necessarily spend less, because fans might be willing to invest even hundreds of pounds for a game experience they really like — so some spend more money than they would on a premium-priced game,' he told Reuters at Gamescom, Europe's largest video games trade fair.

Bitkom found that 43 per cent of German gamers splash out on games which require them to pay before they play, spending an average of 15 euros a month.

But some gamers who use free-to-play games spend much more than that on a single micro transaction — up to 1,500 euros ($2,113) for a rare sword or special armour in some cases — Christian Funk, a virus analyst at Russian computer security company Kapersky Lab, told Reuters.

Funk monitored Ebay — one of the most important sales channels for virtual goods — in June found more than 3,641 virtual items for use in Activision Blizzard's 'World of Warcraft' game were sold at an average price of 132.33 euros ($186.4) during a 14-day period.

Based on these figures, Funk estimates that gamers spend around 11.5 million euros on virtual goods for that one game per year, giving a glimpse of what kind of sums the micro transaction industry was handling, he said.

'The value is in the rarity - gamers are prepared to pay real money for virtual goods,' he said, adding some virtual items were status symbols for players.

'Just as in the real world people are willing to spend lots of money on nice glasses, watches or sports cars, this is just a hobby,' he said.

Source : New Age

Australian manufacturing ‘crisis’ as BlueScope axes jobs

Australia's BlueScope Steel said Monday it would close a blast furnace, abandon its export business and axe 1,000 jobs, as unions warned the manufacturing sector was facing its worst crisis in decades.

The company, Australia's largest steelmaker by output, made the announcement as it reported a dire Aus$1.05 billion ($1.09 billion) net loss for the year to June 30, compared to a Aus$126 million profit previously.

Export sales, which have been hurt by fierce competition from China and elsewhere, delivered a Aus$487 million earnings loss in the period.

'We are experiencing significant economic challenges and structural change in the global steel industry,' chairman Graham Kraehe said, with the company's share price diving 5.7 per cent to close at Aus$5.70.

He pointed to a surging Australian dollar, low steel prices and high materials costs as squeezing margins. This, combined with low demand due to the global financial crisis, meant reform was needed, he added.

'I've been in manufacturing all my life and I've seen a lot, but nothing like what we've got at the moment,' added Kraehe.

The company will shut its number six blast furnace at Port Kembla, south of Sydney, with 800 jobs lost, and close its Western Port hot strip mill, east of Melbourne, at the cost of 200 positions.

Australian Workers' Union national secretary Paul Howes warned that the country's manufacturing industry was facing one of its worst periods ever due to the soaring, commodities-linked Australian dollar.

'Today's tragic job losses send the clear signal that Australian manufacturing is facing the worst crisis it has seen since the Great Depression,' he said.

The Aussie dollar breached parity with the greenback in October and Monday continued to trade near all-time highs at around $1.04.

The BlueScope announcement comes on the heels of another Australian steel giant, OneSteel, last week laying off 400 staff, citing weak demand, with unions expecting more redundancies in the weeks ahead.

The latest cuts illustrate that while Australia's mining sector is booming, driven by demand for its raw materials from Asia, other parts of the economy, such as manufacturing, tourism and education, are hurting.

The nation's unemployment rate unexpectedly rose in July to 5.1 per cent and coming on top of slumping consumer confidence and retail sales, analysts forecast it will rise further.

Howes pinpointed China's 'undervalued' currency as a major problem, with the yuan's weakness blamed for suppressing the cost of Chinese exports and causing rival foreign products, such as BlueScope's, to lose market share.

'Estimates suggest China is undervaluing the yuan by up to 40 per cent, which just drives export industries and jobs to China at the expense of Australian industry,' he said.

Source : New Age

DSE dissatisfied with IPO proposals of 3 companies

The Dhaka Stock Exchange Limited last week turned down the proposals of three companies to float initial public offering as its board of directors found the proposals either faulty or unfit for the current market situation.

The companies that approached the bourse for its opinion on floating IPOs are Unique Hotel and Resort Ltd, Energyprima Limited, and Shurwid Industries Ltd.

'Based on the listing committee's report, the DSE board decided that none of the IPO proposals were sound enough for getting a positive response,' said a DSE director. 

In its proposal submitted to the DSE, the sponsors of Unique Hotel and Resort Ltd, which had floated its IPO earlier under the currently suspended book-building system, said the company would bring down the indicative price of the issue to Tk 135 by refunding Tk 50 to the shareholders. The indicative price of the issue is now Tk 185 with a face value of Tk 10.

'It cited the example of MJL Bangladesh Ltd and said it would also like to go through the same procedure,' the DSE director said.

'The DSE board decided to sit with the Securities and Exchange Commission along with the representatives of the company to discuss the issue,' he added.

The DSE board in its meeting last week decided to reject for the time being a proposal of Energyprima Limited for making an IPO as the board found the proposed price of the issue too high and the proposal lacking sufficient data.

In the proposal, Energyprima, an electricity generating company, stated that it had raised a capital of Tk 103 crore in 2010 by issuing placement shares and Tk 11 crore in 2011. 'In that case, the earning per share of the company should be changed. But, the company did not provide that information,' the DSE director said.

In the latest audited report submitted by the company, as on December 31, 2010, its NAV is Tk 27.16 per share and the earning per share is Tk 6.37. Its authorised capital is Tk 500 crore and the pre-IPO paid-up capital is Tk 118.6 crore.

The Energyprima proposed that it would float 3.14 crore ordinary shares at an issue price of Tk 95, comprising a face value of Tk 10 and a premium of Tk 85.

Energyprima estimated that the aggregate proceeds from the IPO would be approximately Tk 298.30 crore. Of the amount, Tk 204 crore would be used for loan repayment, Tk 84.3 crore for production facility development, and Tk 10 crore would be added to its working capital.

'We asked for the updated financial statement from the company before giving any final decision. The board also found the issue over-priced and decided that the issue price should not be more than Tk 87,' the director said.

The DSE board also rejected another IPO proposal, made by Shurwid Industries Ltd, as it decided that it would be too early for the company to float shares. 

The company proposed to issue 1.40 crore ordinary shares at a face value of Tk 10 each. The authorised capital of the company is Tk 50 crore and the pre-IPO paid-up capital is Tk 28.50 crore.

According to the IPO prospectus of Shurwid Industries, the proceeds from the IPO would be used for repayment of an outstanding loan of Tk 10.69 crore and Tk 2.29 crore would be added to its working capital.

'The company said it would repay loans from the IPO proceeds but it had raised Tk 24 crore earlier through placement shares, yet it had not paid back the loans at that time,' the DSE director said.  

As per the audited report dated September 30, 2010, the NAV of the company is Tk 12.40 per share and the earning per share is Tk 0.27.

Source : New Age

Spice prices up before Eid

The prices of all spices have shot up in the capital, with clove posting the highest price hike of Tk 1,000 per kilogram over the past one month on both retail and wholesale markets ahead of the Eid-ul-Fitr.

Traders attributed the spice price spiral to a rise in their global prices as the country is almost completely dependent on import for meeting its demand for spices.

They also blamed the private clearing report finding companies for the price hike of spices as the CRF companies were citing the prices of imported spices at more than that on the international market.

On Monday, clove was being sold at Tk 2,000 per kg, compared to Tk 1,000 in July.

Mace was being sold on the day at Tk 3,400 per kg, marking a price hike of Tk 400 over the past month and of Tk 800 over the past three months.

On Monday, the price of nutmeg stood at Tk 1,100 per kg, up by around Tk 200 over the past month, that of cumin seed at Tk 480 per kg, marking a rise of Tk 100, and cinnamon at Tk 220 per kg, up by Tk 30.

The price of black pepper stood at Tk 800 per kg, up by Tk 200, and that of cardamom at Tk 2,500 per kg, posting a rise of Tk 300 over the past month.

According to traders, the demand for spices that remains at a nominal level round the year skyrockets in Ramadan, which is one of the reasons for the exorbitant price hike.

They claimed a global crisis of some spices caused by damage of crops by natural calamities in some countries was another key factor that pushed the prices so high.

Importers said they failed to procure the quantity of clove they had wanted to from Madagascar, the top source of clove for Bangladesh, as the clove plantations there were heavily damaged in the heavy rainfall in March-April this year.

They also claimed to have failed to source adequate quantity of clove from Indonesia, another major clove-exporting country, as the crop there had also been damaged by a pest attack.

They said there was a huge supply shortfall of the spice on the international market, forcing many of the importers to cancel the letters of credit opened for importing clove.

A wholesaler at Moulvibazar said the supply dearth of clove was created as many of the importers had suspended its procurement process finding the latest global price of the spice standing at $5,200 per tonne, registering an increase of $1,200 over the past few months.

According to the association of spice wholesalers, the supply of clove on the domestic market has decreased by around 50 per cent against the annual demand for the spice standing at around 1,000 tonnes.

The association's president, Mohammad Enayetullah, admitted that the price of clove had increased because of the global production shortfall.

Sagir Ahmed, an importer at Khatunganj in Chittagong, said the price of spices increased a lot on the global market as the production had decreased in the producing countries due to natural calamities including draught.

The retailers in the capital, however, were found selling spices at around Tk 100 to Tk 200 more than the wholesale prices on Monday.

Abul Kalam, a retailer at Moulvibazar, admitted that they were charging higher prices for spices to compensate for the losses incurred in retailing the spices at very small quantities.

A number of shoppers at Karwan Bazar alleged the traders could increase the spice prices without any reason in the absence of proper market monitoring by the government.

Source : New Age

Change in temperature unlikely

Light to moderate rain or thundershowers accompanied by temporary gusty wind is likely at a few places over all the seven divisions till 6:00pm today.

Moderately heavy falls are also likely at places, Met Office said.

Day temperature may remain nearly unchanged over the country.

The sun sets in the capital today at 6:25pm and rises tomorrow at 5:37am.

The country's highest temperature, 34.0 degrees Celsius, was recorded on Monday in Rajshahi and Jessore and the lowest, 24.6 degrees, in Sylhet.

Source : New Age

School with Canadian curriculum opens in Dhaka city

The Canadian Trillinium School will open a Canadian curriculum certified school in Bangladesh, officials of the school said it in a press briefing on Monday.

This will be the first school of its kind in Bangladesh and it will start its admission activities in October, Eric Smith, an educator and manager of the Asia Programme for Atlantic Education International, said at the press

briefing.

He said that the school in Bangladesh will be staffed by a Canadian trained and experienced principal and seven Canadian certified teaching staff.

Under this international programme, grade 11 students will spend one semester studying in a New Brunswick high school in Canada. Canadian Trillinium School students will study side by side with their counterparts.

He said that for this year only, the school will operate grades 6-10 with a maximum of 10 students at each class level to ensure a quality education.

In future, the school will expand to take more students at these levels and at additional grade levels K-12, he added.

Source : New Age

German academy offers PhD course to DU students

Goethe Graduation Academy of Germany will facilitate doctoral studies for Bangladeshi students in climate and environmental science, molecular biology and other pure science and social science subjects, said officials of the academy.

The academy will help Bangladeshi students enrol in Frankfurt's Goethe University for completing their studies, Dr Heike Zimmermann-Timm, managing director of the academy said after her meeting with the vice-chancellor of Dhaka University, AAMS Arefin Siddique, at the VC's office on Monday.

Source : New Age

Aug 21 case not political issue: Suranjit

The chairman of the parliamentary standing committee on law, justice and parliamentary affairs, Suarnjit Sengupta, MP, has said the BNP should not make any comment on a sub-judice matter like the charge sheet of August 21 grenade attack case.

'The August 21 case is not a political issue. It's now a matter with the court,' he said while addressing a discussion at Dhaka Reporters Unity in Dhaka on Monday

Bangabandhu Sangskritik Jote organised the discussion marking the death anniversary of Ivy Rahman, wife president Md Zillur Rahman. Organisation general secretary Tarana Halim presided over the discussion.

Among others, AL presidium member Mohiuddin Khan Alamgir, cultural personality Syed Hasan Imam, Nasima Akhter Labu and Abdul Hye Kanu spoke on the occasion.

'If you have anything to say on August 21 case, you better go to court,' Suranjit urged the main opposition.

Blasting the BNP-Jamaat government for its 'misrule', he said the then BNP government used grenades, that are used only in battlefield to face the opponent, to eliminate the AL leadership forever. 'Many people from the administration and military were involved in the attacks,' he said.

Suranjit, also a member of Awami League Advisory Council, alleged that the then home minister, political secretary to the prime minister, former PM's son Tarique Rahman, some members of intelligence agencies and police were involved in the heinous grenade attacks that claimed 24 lives and injured 300 others on Bangabandhu Avenue.


Source : New Age

10 Bangladeshis released from Indian jail

Ten Bangladeshi Monday returned to the country after their release from Andaman Jail in India.

The Border Security Force of India handed them over to immigration police through Benapole, after completion of all legal procedures, officer-in-charge Ali Azam of Benapole check post immigration police told the news agency.

Indian coastguards arrested them from Andaman Island three years ago when they were going to Bangkok in search of jobs, he said.

The released Bangladeshis are Ismail Hossain, Shafiq Alam, Hashem, Idris, Zobair, Nur Mostofa, Faysal, Rashid, Abdul Malek, and Jasim Uddin.

In his instant reaction after the release, Nur Mostofa said, 'I felt very happy after my release from Indian jail. I am eagerly waiting to meet my family.'

On May 19 this year, Indian authority also handed over 26 fishermen, who were arrested by the coastguards in October, 2010 on charges of trespassing.

Source : New Age

Motorbike hijacked

An armed gang hijacked a pulsar motorbike after stabbing its rider at Uttara in the capital on early Monday.

The victim was identified as Babu Miah, 30, son of Tajuddin Ahmed, a resident of Hazaribagh.

Babu, who was admitted to Dhaka Medical College Hospital, told New Age that a gang of four stopped him near Jasim Uddin crossing at about 4:30am while he was on his way home after having Sehri at a relative's house at Tongi.

'The carjackers stopped me, identifying themselves as members of the Detective Branch of police and started stabbing me as I refused to give up the bike and other valuables I had with me,' Babu said.

He said that the gang also mugged his cell phone set, Tk 18,000 in cash, and a gold chain.

His nephew Mohammad Sohel said they were yet to file any general diary or case in this connection

Source : New Age

Dayera Sharif holds urs, iftar mahfil

The 132nd anniversary of death of Hazrat Maulana Shah Sufi Syed Waliullah (R), the 4th descendant of the spiritual leaders of Azimpur Dayera Sharif, was observed at the Dayera Sharif complex in Dhaka on Sunday.

The daylong observance featured recitation from the Quran, prayer sessions and discussion on the life and works of Syed Waliullah.

A large number of followers from across the country joined the urs mobarak and iftar mahfil and the discussion on the historical role of sufi saints in promotion of Islam in the country.     

The incumbent spiritual leader of Dayera Sharif, Hazrat Moulana Shah Sufi Syed Ahmad Ullah Zubair, led the concluding prayers, seeking divine blessings for the peace, prosperity, progress of Bangladesh and greater unity among the Muslims.

Among others, Hazrat Syed Shah Waziullah Abujar, Syed Shah Aref Bellah, Syed Shah Asembillah, Syed Shah Ubayedullah, Syed Shah Rowsahanullah and Syed Shah Wahid Ullah also attended the programmes, said a press release.

Source : New Age

Construction worker dies

A construction worker died at Dhaka Medical College Hospital after he was critically injured falling from the rooftop of a four-storey building in the Bashundhara Residential Area in the capital on Monday.

Abdul Motaleb, 50, fell from the rooftop while he was working along with others at a site of Tenemen Housing at E-block in the area in the morning.

He was taken to the hospital but died at about 4:00pm, the hospital sources said.

Source : New Age

Muggers in police uniform loot Tk 23 lakh in Narayanganj

A gang of criminals disguised as policemen snatched twenty three lakh takas from a garment factory owner on Sunday night on the Dhaka-Sylhet highway at Bhulta under Rupganj thana in the district.

Siddiqur Rahman was going to Dhaka from Narsingdi by his private car along with 23 lakh takas. When his car reached Bhulta on the highway at 11:30pm, some 5/6 men, wearing police uniforms, stopped his car on the plea of searching it.

They entered the car, handcuffed Siddiqur and searched the car until they found the money.

Siddiqur mentioned in his case story that he could not read the number of car as it was too dark.

The officer-in-charge of Rupganj thana, Md Mujibur Rahman, said that Siddiqur, who lives in Dhaka, is the owner of a readymade garment factory named Nure Madina which is situated in Narsingdi district.

A case has been filed with the Rupganj thana in this connection. No one has been arrested till now.

Source : New Age

Call for saving southwest people from floods, water-logging

Different organizations in Dhaka on Monday called for saving people of south-western region from floods and water-logging that damaged their agriculture, households and roads.

The call was made at a press conference jointly organized by Media

Forum for Human Rights and Environmental Development and Citizens in Dhaka from Paikgachha Upazila at the National Press Club.

A similar call was made from a rally organized by Nagarik Sanghati and Campaign for Sustainable Rural Livelihood in front of the national Press Club on Monady.

Addressing the press conference, Paikgachha Upazila parishad chairman Md Rashiduzzaman said around 20 lakh people of Khulna, Bagerhat and Satkhira districts had been affected by flood and water-logging due to excessive rainfall and silting up of river Kabodak.

As a result, they have taken shelter in schools, colleges and on high lands, leaving their homes and they have been suffering from want of food, drinking water and healthcare services.

Though the government had started relief activities in the affected areas, the succour were too inadequate to meet the demand, he alleged.

He demanded for excavating the Kabodak river to end water-logging and taking measures for sending the affected people back to their homes.

He also called for restoring Khulna-Paikgachha and Khulna-Satkhira road links and compensation for the affected farmers.

MHRED chairman M Mahabub-ul-Islam, executive director Rafiqul Islam Sabuj, Bangladesh Freedom Foundation executive director Sajjadur Rahman Chowdhury and Kabodak Bachao Andolon member-secretary Nikhil Bhadra also addressed the press conference.

Speakers at the rally in front of the press club also demanded for declaring the area as an affected one and punishing the Water Development Board officials for failing to flash out water, exemption of agricultural loans in the affected area.

Chaired by the Nagarik Sanghati general secretary Sharifuzzaman Sharif, the rally was also addressed, among others, by advocate Abed Raja, engineer Enamul Haque and Communist Party of Bangladesh leader Sardar Ruhin Hossain Prince.

Source : New Age

Ferries will not carry trucks before and after Eid

Ferries will not carry trucks six days before and after Eid in Daulatdia-Paturia river route to facilitate home-bound Eid passengers who will use this route to go to and return from their home during Eid-ul-Fitr.

The decision came from a pre-Eid views meeting, held at the conference room of deputy commissioner of Manikganj on Monday.

BIWTA port officer Golam Mostafa informed that that all types of truck handling by ferry will remain closed three days before and three days after Eid.

'Ferries will stop carrying trucks three days before the Eid day and as many days after Eid in order to make journey by passengers of bus and other vehicles to and from their village homes smooth', he said.

He said the authority will build a diversion road from Uthali intersection to Paturia ferry ghat in order to avert traffic jam at the entrance of the ferry ghat road.

Close circuit cameras will be set up at booking counters and another one in Paturia Ferry Ghat control room to curb irregularity at booking counters and hassles to passengers.

BIWTC will run 10 Ro-Ro and one K-type ferry on Paturia-Daulatdia route to ensure uninterrupted ferry operation during Eid.

Besides, three ferries in Paturia and two others at Daulatdia ferry ghats will continue operation.

Adequate number of police and RAB will be in place in the ghat area and at the same time mobile court will be deployed at ferry ghats to ensure security of passengers.

Some 37 launches will also ply in Daulatdia-Paturia route to ferry Eid passengers.

Source : New Age

Ctg chamber suggests remedial steps

The Chittagong Chamber of Commerce and Industry on Monday placed a 3-point set of recommendations for ensuring ease of commuters by road during the Eid vacation to the authorities concerned.

CCCI senior vice president Mahabubul Alam in a press statement said, 'The Dhaka-Chittagong Highway has developed numerous potholes and puddles. The roads and streets in Chittagong city are no exceptions. The Bahadderhat-Karnaphuli Bridge, Chawkbazar-Muradpur Road, Agrabad-Airport Road, Kuaish-Oxygen Road, and roads

in Halishahar have

already become unfit for vehicular movement. In this context, the Chittagong Development Authority and the Chittagong City Corporation will have to repair the dilapidated roads jointly before August 26 to ease the sufferings of the commuters.'

The statement also reads, 'The initiatives taken by the Chittagong Metropolitan Police and the government on the occasion of the Eid are laudable but not sufficient. So, to ensure the security of commuters by roads and highways, waterways,

and railways, the government should deploy more highway and railway police along with Coast Guard members. Moreover, the law-enforcement agencies should beef up security at shopping malls. Security also has to be tightened in industries, commercial institutions, markets, and offices before and after the Eid.'

Source : New Age

DU observes black day to mark 2007 army oppression

Teachers, students and employees of Dhaka University will wear black badges and abstain from classes today to mark the fourth anniversary of the August 2007 campus protests against repression.

The university authorities decided to observe August 23 as a 'black day' to mark the wholesale arrest of students and teachers after the campus protests on August 20-23, 2007.

They will hold a discussion at the foot of Aparajeyo Bangla in front of the Arts Building at 10:30am, and classes from 11:00am to 1:00 will remain closed.

The campus protests in August were sparked off when some army personnel assaulted some students in the university playground during a football match between two departments on 20 August, 2007. Two university teachers were also assaulted by the army men housed in a temporary camp in the gymnasium.

The protests later flared up elsewhere, including major educational institutions in Dhaka and across the country.

The Dhaka University Teacher Association's general secretary Anwar Hossain and executive committee member Harun-ur-Rashid were arrested on 23 August, 2007 in connection with the protests.

The association's president Sadrul Amin and Neem Chandra Bhowmick and a number of students were also arrested later.

Dhaka University students on Saturday observed the fourth anniversary of their protests against military oppression of fellow students who were demanding punishment of the assailants and restoration of democratic rights.

Student organisations staged rallies and held roundtable discussions, took out processions and held an exhibition of photographs and newspaper clippings to commemorate the protests against the highhandedness of the uniformed personnel.

The Bangladesh Chhatra Moitree held a roundtable discussion in the conference room of Dhaka University Central Students' Union.

Students regretted that no action has been taken so far against the assailants, the top brass of the army who backed the two-year emergency caretaker administration or its chief adviser.

They demanded the timely holding of DUCSU elections for establishing the democratic rights of the students on the campus.

At the discussion students demanded punishment of the personnel of the army, DGFI, police, RAB, and other agencies who were involved in the oppression of students and teachers, and compensation for the tortured students.

The Progressive Students Alliance and Bangladesh Chhatra Union took out processions and staged rallies on the campus to show their respect for the participants of the 2007 campus protests.

The student leaders demanded restoration of the democratic rights of students and an end to harassment of common students by the activists of Awami League's student front.

The parliamentary standing committee on education ministry has been probing the oppression of students and teachers by the army in 2007.

But its summons have been ignored by the then chief adviser, Fakhruddin Ahmed, the then army chief, Moeen U Ahmed, and military intelligence officials Chowdhury Fazlul Bari and ATM Amin.

Source : New Age

Bangladeshis in Tripoli safe: envoy

Bangladeshis living in Tripoli are safe and staying in their homes as rebels were fighting their last battle against pro-Gaddafi forces to take over the Libyan capital, Bangladesh ambassador to Libya Nur Uz Zaman told the news agency Monday afternoon.

'Situation looks murky…we're hearing gunshots and bombings. It sounds like last minute resistance by pro-Gaddafi forces to protect the capital,' he said phone at 4:30pm (BST).

Asked about the evacuation of foreign diplomats in Tripoli, Zaman said the Libyan foreign ministry on Sunday asked them not to go outside but did not speak about any evacuation.

About the condition of remaining Bangladeshis in Tripoli, the ambassador said the embassy had been advising the Bangladeshi nationals over phone to stay in their homes. They are safe and secure,' he said.

Zaman said the road from Tripoli to Tunisia

for civilians' evacuation has been closed

since rebels are

entering Tripoli through that route.

Two embassy staffs are working round-the-clock at the embassy control room and giving necessary advices to the Bangladeshi nationals.

Source : New Age

Plot to kill Hasina on: Ashraf

The Awami League general secretary, Syed Ashraful Islam, on Monday accused a section of the media of trying to create a ground for the quarters who he said were still hatching conspiracies to kill the party president Sheikh Hasina, also the prime minister.

He said that the conspiracy to kill Hasina had not stopped and the plotters were looking for chances to destabilise the situation with that motive. 'Some newspapers are looking for an Anna Hazare in Bangladesh and some television channels are depicting exaggerated pictures of a few events and thereby helping the conspirators who are looking for a ground to destabilise the situation and kill her [Hasina],' said Ashraf, also the local government, rural development and cooperatives minister, at a discussion at the city's Bangabandhu International Conference Centre in the afternoon.

The prime minister, Sheikh Hasina, who was scheduled to address the programme marking the seventh anniversary of the August 21 grenade attack, did not attend it on health ground.

'All journalists are not true journalists, all news reports are not objective and all newspapers are not real newspapers,' he said, adding that the people who had invited the events of January 11, 2007 were now looking for an Anna Hazare in Bangladesh.

He asked why the media were looking for an Anna Hazare in Bangladesh. 'Has corruption gobbled up the whole country?'

'They wanted the country to be governed by unelected people and so-called intellectuals,' he said.

 'A new plot is under way to kill Sheikh Hasina and the quarters who attempted to kill her on August 21, 2004, are again out to destabilise the situation,' he said.

'They created an unstable situation before assassinating the father of the nation, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, in 1975, and now they are trying to create a similar situation,' said Ashraf, urging the party activists to be united to thwart such plots.

He said that attempts were made on Hasina's life to ensure that the trials of Mujib murder and jail killing cases did not take place and the new plot to kill her aimed at stopping the trial of war criminals, August 21 grenade attacks and 10-truck arms haul in Chittagong.

AL leaders Suranjit Sengupta, Sahara Khatun, Muhiuddin Khan Alamgir, MA Aziz and Mofazzal Hossain Chowdhury Maya addressed, among others, the discussion presided over by the party's presidium member Syeda Sajeda Chowdhury.

The speakers said that the trial of the grenade attack case would take place the ring leaders would be punished.

Three survivors of the grenade attacks, Nasima Ferdousi, Azizur Rahman Bachchu and Awlad Hossain, also addressed the discussion and requested the party to ensure better medical treatment for the wounded activists.

They also demanded death sentence for the perpetrators of the grenade attacks.

Source : New Age

Remove errant ministers as Eid gift

The National Human Rights Commission chairman, Mizanur Rahman, on Monday urged the prime minister, Sheikh Hasina, to remove inefficient ministers from the cabinet.

'It [removing the ministers] will be the most precious Eid gift of the prime minister to the people of the country,' Mizan told a roundtable at the Dhaka Reporters Unity.

Speaking at the discussion on 'Democracy and Rule of Law: Bangladesh Context' organised by the Bangabandhu Education and Research Council, he lambasted the shipping minister for his recent comments on issuing driving licences as sheer violation of the rule of law.  Mizan's call came in the backdrop of demands raised recently by different quarters, even by the ruling alliance lawmakers in parliament, for resignation of a number of ministers.

Ruling alliance lawmakers in last week demanded the resignation of communication minister Abul Hossain for his failure to ensure road safety and traffic-worthy roads and highways that caused stoppage of bus service on a number of routes.

The lawmakers, while speaking in parliament, also demanded the resignation of shipping minister Shahjahan Khan for his comment on driving licences. He said people who could recognise cows, goats, and traffic signals should be provided with driving licence without any test.

Different quarters have also been demanding the resignation of finance minister Abul Mal Abdul Muhith for the sorry state of the country's capital market.

Taking part in the roundtable, Mizan also demanded putting an immediate end to extrajudicial killings by law-enforcers in the name of crossfire or armed encounters.

Extrajudicial killing is a major obstacle to instituting the rule of law and furtherance of democracy, he said.

State minister for law Quamrul Islam, former Supreme Court judge Golam Rabbani, Dhaka University vice-chancellor AAMS Arefin Siddique, Dhaka University law faculty member Rahmatullah, Supreme Court lawyers Abdul Baset Majumder and Yusuf Hossain Humayun, and journalists Habibur Rahman Milon and Abul Kasem Majumdar, among others, took part in the roundtable.

Source : New Age

EPZ labour tribunal law consigned to oblivion

No labour tribunal has yet been set up in the Export Processing Zones, preventing workers from seeking redress of any injustice done to them as the law enacted six years ago requiring their establishment seems to have been consigned to oblivion by the labour ministry.

The EPZ Workers Association and Industrial Relations Act 2004 was enacted on July 18, 2004 making provisions for establishment of EPZ Labour Tribunals and an EPZ Labour Appellate Tribunal for the Export Processing Zones to dispose of industrial disputes and try offences under the act.

According to sections 56 and 59 of the EPZ Workers Association and Industrial Relations Act 2004, the government must establish a Labour Tribunal and an Appellate Tribunal in every Export Processing Zone for settlement of disputes arising between employers and workers.

The present government, however, repealed the act on August 1, 2010 through the enactment of the EPZ Workers' Welfare Association and Industrial Relations Act 2010.

Sections 48 and 51 of the new act also stipulate similar provisions for establishment of EPZ Labour Tribunals and an EPZ Labour Appellate Tribunal for Export Processing Zones.

Labour and employment minister Khandker Mosharraf Hossain told New Age that he was unaware of the legal obligation.

'No labour organisation or employer has informed me about the law,' he said.

The minister, however, said he would soon take an initiative to establish the tribunals after examining the law.

The general manager of Dhaka EPZ, Ashraful Kabir said, 'The matter of establishing tribunals and an appellate tribunal in the EPZs is under process.'

In the absence of the tribunals, disputes on labour rights are being settled by conciliators and arbitrators appointed by the government, he said.

National Garment Workers' Federation president Amirul Haque Amin said, 'Most of the decisions made by conciliators or arbitrators go in favour of the management.'

He also said that workers were being deprived of their rights to access to justice as there was no scope to appeal against a decision passed by a conciliator and arbitrator who were appointed by the government.

The government is also yet to reply to the rule issued by the High Court on August 25, 2008 asking it to explain why it should not be directed to form Labour Tribunals and a Labour Appellate Tribunal for the workers of the export processing zones.

The court issued the rule after hearing a public interest litigation writ petition filed by Bangladesh Legal Aid and Services Trust.

The rule is yet to be heard, as the government has not submitted its reply, BLAST lawyer M Toufiqul Islam said.

'I will soon file an application with the High Court bench concerned seeking further directives to the government to set up EPZ tribunals,' he added.

There are eight state-owned Export Processing Zones in Bangaldesh – Chittagong EPZ, Dhaka EPZ, Mangla EPZ, Iswardi EPZ, Comilla EPZ, Adamjee EPZ and Uttara EPZ – where a large number of garment, electronic, shoe and engineering factories operate.

According to the BLAST lawyer, despite their significant contribution to these sectors, workers continue to be deprived of their basic rights and are denied entitlements, such as minimum wages, appropriate working hours, leave, compensation and health care as guaranteed by the statutory laws.

Source : New Age

Rebels claim capture of Tripoli, Gaddafi’s sons

Muammar Gaddafi was a hunted man on Monday as loyal remnants of his forces made a last-ditch stand in the capital and world leaders embraced the fractious Libyan rebels as new masters of the oil-rich North African state.

Nearly 48 hours after a pincer thrust on Tripoli by the irregular rebel armies, launched in tandem with an uprising in the city, Gaddafi's tanks and sharpshooters appeared to hold only small areas, including his Bab al-Aziziya headquarters.

Meanwhile, Libyan rebels Monday declared the 'Gaddafi era' over after taking control of most of Tripoli, as jubilant fighters streamed into the capital to join battles near the strongman's compound.

'The Gaddafi era is over,' rebel chief Mustafa Abdel Jalil told a news conference in Benghazi, eastern Libya.

But Abdel Jalil also warned that he could quit as head of the rebel National Transitional Council if he loses control of the revolution, amid possible revenge acts by insurgents. Abdel Jalil said he hoped Gaddafi, who faces an arrest warrant issued by the International Criminal Court for alleged crimes against humanity, would be 'captured alive so that he will be given a fair trial.'

He congratulated the Libyan people 'for this historic victory' and thanked NATO for its military support, while cautioning that 'the real moment of victory is when Gaddafi is captured.'

He acknowledged the whole of Tripoli was not under rebel control and that Gaddafi's whereabouts remained a mystery.

Rebel military spokesman Mohammed Zawiwa told AFP the rebels seized control Monday of the state broadcaster in Tripoli.

'All the television stations controlled by the state have stopped transmitting (in Tripoli). Our fighters have gone in and taken control of the facilities,' Zawiwa said.

More Libyan embassies abroad hoisted the rebel flag.

Western powers who deployed air power in support of various rebel groups in different regions, urged the 'Brother Leader' to accept his 42 years of absolute power were over, and to end the bloodshed after six months of civil war that has ebbed and flowed erratically across the sparsely populated desert nation.

The French president, Nicolas Sarkozy, who took an early gamble on the Libyan rebels, called on Gaddafi loyalists 'to turn their back on the criminal and cynical blindness of their leader by immediately ceasing fire, giving up their arms and turning themselves in to the legitimate Libyan authorities'.

The president, Barack Obama, said: 'Muammar Gaddafi and his regime need to recognise that their rule has come to an end.'

In Washington, the Pentagon said it believed Gaddafi was still in Libya.

Egypt, whose Arab Spring revolt inspired its neighbours, abandoned its caution and recognised the rebel government. Other beleaguered Arab revolutionaries, notably in Syria, may take heart from a hard-fought triumph in the sands of Libya.

Laila Jawad, 36, who works at a Tripoli nursery, said after the rebels swept into the city: 'We are about to be delivered from the tyrant's rule. It's a new thing for me.

'I am very optimistic. Praise be to God.'

With international competition already heating up for Libyan oil, Russia and China, critics of the West's assault on Gaddafi, also indicated he should bow to the now inevitable.

But after a defiant audio address on Sunday, urging citizens to take up arms against rebel 'rats', no more was heard from a man who is one of the world's longest ruling leaders and who vowed do die fighting rather than surrender.

Various officials said they did not know where he was.

Two of Gaddafi's sons were detained, including Saif al-Islam who has been indicted with his father for crimes against humanity. Two other sons, Khamis and Mutassim, were reported by Arab media to be with those still fighting.

Colonel Gaddafi's heir-apparent Saif al-Islam could be handed over to The Hague within weeks to face charges of war crimes.

Officials from the International Criminal Court announced they had opened talks with the rebel National Transitional Council over a transfer to The Hague, where Saif and his father have been indicted for crimes against humanity. Abdul Jalil said Saif and his brother Al-Saadi had been captured and a third brother, Muhammad, had been arrested after handing himself in.

Gaddafi's prime minister, Al Baghdadi Ali al-Mahmoudi, arrived late on Sunday on the Tunisian island of Djerba — a favoured location for defectors and negotiators from Tripoli. Local sources could give no account of what he was doing there.

A rebel official in the eastern city of Benghazi, seat of the opposition National Transitional Council, said some of its representatives had slipped in to Tripoli in recent days to make contact with authorities hitherto loyal to Gaddafi with the aim of averting a breakdown of order in the capital.

There have been concerns that tribal, ethnic and other divisions among the diverse armed groups opposed to Gaddafi could lead to the kind of blood-letting seen in Iraq after the overthrow of Saddam Hussein. However, the presence of former Gaddafi aides in the rebel camp is cited by some as cause to hope the opposition can prove more inclusive than that in Iraq.

NTC head Mustafa Abdel Jalil, who was Gaddafi's justice minister until joining the revolt in February, told a news conference in Benghazi: 'I call on all Libyans to exercise self-restraint and to respect the property and lives of others and not to resort to taking the law into their own hands.'

Reuters correspondents saw rebel forces hunt sharpshooters from building to building. Sporadic gunfire and shelling kept civilians off the streets, waiting anxiously for the fighting to end after a brief outpouring of jubilation late on Sunday.

'Revolutionaries are positioned everywhere in Tripoli,' said a senior rebel in the city, who used the name Abdulrahman.

'But Gaddafi's forces have been trying to resist.

'There is gunfire everywhere,' he added, saying government tanks were in action near Tripoli's Mediterranean port and downtown near Gaddafi's Bab al-Aziziya compound. 'Snipers are the main problem,' he said. 'There is a big number of martyrs.'

A government official said 376 people on both sides were killed, and about 1,000 wounded, though it was unclear how the figures were arrived at. At the Rixos Nasr hotel, where the government had obliged foreign reporters to stay throughout the war, pro-Gaddafi guards prevented journalists from leaving.

South Africa, a leading power on the continent to which Gaddafi devoted much of Libya's wealth and influence, denied it had sent a plane for Gaddafi or was planning to shelter a leader who has been indicted for crimes against humanity by the International Criminal Court in The Hague.

Sweden's prime minister Fredrik Reinfeldt said: 'We are watching history.' But he cited the bloody epilogue to the overthrow of Saddam Hussein in Iraq and warned: 'There is a risk for actions of revenge, and uncontrollable violence.'

Civilians had flocked late on Sunday to Green Square, long the showpiece of the leader's personality cult, waving rebel flags. Some said they would rename it Martyrs' Square.

Young men burned the green flags of the government and raised the rebel tricolor last used by the post-colonial monarchy which Gaddafi overthrew in a military coup in 1969.

But on Monday, a Reuters correspondent with rebels moving in from the west watched commanders of the irregular force try to hold their men back from rushing ahead in the city, insisting they check buildings methodically for snipers.

It was slow work and there will little sign of coordination between rebel units. The all-green flags of the Gaddafi government were still hanging in many streets — an indication that rebels did not feel safe enough to rip them down.

'We just arrived and our priority is to secure the city,' said Hisham Bourajad, a commander of what he described as the Tripoli Revolutionary Brigade as his force probed forward.

Only five months ago, Gaddafi's forces were set to crush the rebel stronghold of Benghazi. He warned then that there would be 'no mercy, no pity' for his opponents.

His forces, he said, would hunt them down 'district to district, alley to alley, house to house, room to room'. It is a refrain some rebels have thrown back at him in recent days.

Source : New Age