11 killed in mass beating, gunfight in Bangladesh

Cox's Bazar, April 26: Ten suspected robbers were killed in a fierce gunfight with police and mass beating while a villager was shot dead by the bandits after a series of heists in two villages in the hilly Ramu upazila of Cox's Bazar district early Monday.

Police superintendent Nibas Chandra Mazi said the robbers had also stabbed five people, including a woman, after barging into a house.

Ramu and Ukhia police arrested five alleged robbers and seized five guns and six rounds of bullet after the shootout.

Police and villagers said a horde of armed bandits swooped on four houses at Sadreekata village in Ukhia at dead of night and looted valuables, including about 50 tolas of gold ornaments and Tk five lakh in cash, from the houses of Nurul Alam, Syed Alam and Ola Mia.

After committing the robberies, the bandits left the village and hid in the hills in the dark of night. While fleeing through Nayapara village of Ramu, they were spotted by the locals who started shouting and chasing the robbers.

In a bid to scare away the villagers, the bandits opened fire which left Jasim Uddin, 30, dead on the spot. Jasim Uddin, who worked in Saudi Arabia had come home recently on holiday, said relatives.

Hundreds of villagers along with the Ukhia police ringed the hill in which the robbers hid.

In a desperate attempt to escape, the robbers once again opened fire prompting the police to retaliate and in the resultant shootout, two of the robbers were killed.

More than 40 villagers and six police personnel also sustained bullet wounds during the gunfight.

Some of the robbers managed to vanish in the forest, but while they came out of their hideout after daybreak in the hilly Gorayardip village in Himchari, they were surrounded and captured by the villagers. Eight of the alleged bandits to were beaten to death on the spot by

the angry mob. Villagers stabbed by the robbers included Hasna Hena, 28, Fazlul Karim, 35, Sahidul Islam, 20, Jashim Uddin, 25, and Rafique Uddin, 18.

The police personnel who sustained bullet wounds included sub-inspector Gobinda Solka Das, constables Mosaraf, 35, Russell, 45, and Tutul, 30. The villagers injured in the firing were Abdus Salam, 30, Shafiullha, 25, Kalim Ullah, 15, Sayedullah, 28, Faridul Alam, 40, and Ershad Ullah, 25. All were admitted to Cox's Bazar sadar hospital.

Police sent the bodies to the sadar hospital morgue for post-mortem examinations.

Ramu and Ukhia police backed by the Rapid Action Battalion were trying to hunt down the rest of the robbers, officials said.

Source: New Age

BNP skips JS panel meet, terms move ‘motivated’

Dhaka, April 26: The main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party did not attend the meeting of the parliamentary special committee on constitutional amendment on Tuesday terming 'ill-motivated' the committee's initiative.

The party chairperson, Khaleda Zia, also the leader of the opposition, sent a letter to the committee chief, Syeda Sajeda Chowdhury, on Monday giving four specific reasons for skipping the meeting, committee sources said.

The special committee criticised the BNP for not attending the meeting and accused the opposition leader of trying to push the country into chaos.

'The language of Khaleda Zia's letter was beyond parliamentary norms,' the committee co-chair Suranjit Sengupta told a briefing at the parliament media centre.

The special committee on April 20 invited the BNP chairperson to Monday's meeting to have her party's opinions on constitution amendment.

Instead of joining the meeting, Khaleda sent a reply to the committee's invitation on Sunday night.

In her reply, Khaleda said it was 'meaningless' for her to attend the meeting, as it was an 'ill-motivated' move to realise the government's political objectives.

'No working paper or

specific proposals for constitution amendment or a copy of the printed constitution, gazetted on February 10, was attached to the invitation letter,' Khaleda stated in the reply.

It said, 'After publishing the full constitution in gazette notification on February 10, the law minister said that the printed constitution was in force, although it was printed bypassing the parliament in violation of Article 142.'

'When the people of the country rejected the reprinted constitution, the parliamentary special committee co-chairman said that the constitution printed on February 10 was a draft constitution on the basis of which the committee made various decisions at times till date,' Khaleda said in the reply.

The reply also said, 'The contradictory statements made and steps taken by the government have confused the nation resolution of which is essential. The people do not know the exact stand of the government on constitution amendment.'

In his reaction to Khaleda's reply, Suranjit said that the BNP was not discharging its constitutional and democratic duties as the opposition in parliament.

'Instead of attending the meetings, they [BNP] are trying to push the country towards undemocratic system,' said the committee spokesman.

He said that although there was an opportunity for a national consensus on

constitution amendment, the opposition was not cooperating with the committee.

Committee member Rashed Khan Menon said told the briefing that the BNP always relied on unconstitutional means for power and its refusal to attend the special committee meeting was a part of its attempt to lead the country towards unconstitutionality.

Committee member Tofail Ahmed thanked the BNP for recognising the committee through its letter, although it earlier branded the parliamentary panel unconstitutional.

'In her letter, Khaleda Zia has not branded the committee illegal, which is a shift from her previous position. I thank the BNP for this,' Tofail said.

Suranjit, however, said that the opposition still had the chance to give their opinions on constitution amendment when they would go to the house and the parliamentary standing committee on law.

He also said that the committee would not write further to the BNP over the matter and hoped that the opposition would return to the parliamentary bodies.

Rejecting the committee's allegation that the language of Khaleda's letter was 'discourteous' and 'ill-mannered', BNP at a press conference said the language of the letter was 'decent enough'.

Terming 'unacceptable' and 'ill-motivated' the process of holding the dialogues on constitution review, BNP standing committee member Moudud Ahmed said, 'The government has shown utter irresponsibility in the way it has moved to change the constitution.'

When asked what steps the government should take in this regard to enable the opposition to take part in the process, Moudud said, 'We will be able to understand the government's position and come to know what changes the government wants to make in the constitution only when the constitution amendment bill will be placed in parliament after its approval by the cabinet.'

'And then we will take our decision,' he added.

Source: New Age

Stranded Bangladeshi families in Libya anxious for safe exit

Dhaka, April 26: Stranded Bangladeshi families are anxious to return home from war-torn Libya, foreign ministry officials said Monday.

A consular team from the foreign ministry stationed at Ras-Jdir, on the Tunisian side of its border with Libya, has been receiving frequent calls from several Bangladeshi families living in different cities and townships of Libya, seeking advice on how to return to Bangladesh, the ministry said in a release. 

Bangladesh ambassador to Libya ABM Nuruzzaman told New Age over phone on Monday that he was aware that the Bangladeshi families were seeking the advice on phone.

He said though he had no clear picture about the exact number of Bangladeshi families who were stranded in Libya now, it was estimated that 20,000 families awaited repatriation from the civil war torn country.

According to available statistics, 35,433 Bangladeshis were brought back home from Libya until Tuesday afternoon.

Officials said that the consular team from the ministry at Ras-Jdir was, however, advising Bangladeshis intending to return home to take a safe route to Ras-jdir.

Officials of the foreign ministry in Dhaka, however, said that the consular teams at both Ras-jdir in Tunisia and Al-Salum in Egypt would coordinate their return home depending on the availability of flights.

They said that 23 Bangladeshis at Ras Jdir border point of Tunisia await repatriation home.

On Monday, they said, only one Bangladeshi crossed over to Tunisia from Libya.

They said that 698 Bangladeshis, who had crossed over into Egypt from

Libya until Monday, were now at Al Salloum border point awaiting repatriation.

The International Organization for Migration informed the Bangladesh consular team that it was evacuating from Misrata many people, about 1,000 among them could be Bangladeshis.

IOM said that these people would ultimately arrive at Al Salum through the Libyan city of Benghazi.

According to the foreign ministry consular team there was enough food and drinking water, inadequacy of tents and poor sanitation.

 As a result, most of the Bangladeshis there are passing their days under open sky, said the report.

The otherwise mild weather is punctuated by frequent desert storms. Thousands of African nationals out of Libya have taken refuge in what could be called proper camps, the report said.

IOM representatives at the border point informed the consular team that IOM was not in a position to arrange the repatriation flights immediately due to shortage of funds.

Officials in the foreign ministry said that they were persistently pressing Biman as well as IOM to arrange the flights to repatriate the stranded Bangladeshis as quickly as possible.

They said that the consular team would issue 'One Way Travel Permits' to all the stranded Bangladeshis   needing the document for the journey back home.

They have squatting out in the open or in containers at the port area, without proper access to food, clean water or medical care, said the report.

Traumatised by weeks of civil war in Misrata, many of them have been left weakened, it said.

According to it, some 1,500 people of different nationalities around the Misrata harbour in Libya await repatriation.

Reports from there indicate that more and more people were moving from the suburbs of the city in western Libya towards the port out of the expectation of safe evacuation, said an IOM release.

'We expect that many migrants who were hiding in sections of the city formally under the control of Gaddafi's forces will make the most of a temporary lull in the fighting to reach the harbour area in the hope of being evacuated,' said IOM's Representative for the Middle East, Pasquale Lupoli.

Source: New Age

Probe finds no ‘irregularities’ by Grameen in Norad fund transactions

Dhaka, April 26: The committee formed by the government to review the activities of Grameen Bank did not find 'any irregularities' in the transactions between Grameen Bank and Grameen Kalyan involving Norwegian aid money 15 years ago, finance minister AMA Muhith told journalists at a short press briefing on Monday.

'The transaction was done through mutual understanding between the two states so the committee did not raise any objections to this issue,' he said.

'The interest rates of Grameen Bank are low compared to other micro-credit agencies operating in Bangladesh,' said Muhith

He was speaking to journalists after the committee's chairman, A K Monaw-war Uddin Ahmad, the former dean of social sciences of Dhaka University, gave him

the report in the morning.

Grameen Bank said in a statement, signed by its general manager Janaat-e-Quanine, that all the employees, members, borrowers and well-wishers were 'relieved that these truths are revealed in the report'.

The committee was formed on January 12 following the broadcast six weeks earlier of a documentary by Norwegian Television, 'Caught in Microdebt', that had raised questions about whether certain transactions made by Grameen Bank in 1996 breached agreements and involved the misuse of money.

The review committee's terms of reference not only included the examination of the Norad transactions and the level of the Grameen Bank's interest rates, but also the relationship between Grameen Bank and its sister organisations and finally the management and transparency of the Grameen Bank itself.

Both Muhith and Monaw-war, however, refused to be drawn into revealing further information about the contents of the report at the press briefing.

'We will say nothing about it,' Monaw-war said. 'The government will speak if it thinks it is necessary.'

'The government is not bound to agree with the report. It will review the report and decide how much of the report it will take into account,' he added.

When asked whether any legal reform was required in the running of Grameen Bank, Monaw-war said, 'This matter requires further in-depth consideration.'

Monaw-war told New Age, 'The committee's broad conclusion is that a national policy is needed to improve the coordination of micro-credit and social business within Grameen. It is terribly important that these two wings of Grameen Bank, micro-credit and social business, should be better coordinated and put under one umbrella.'

'When the ordinance was put into effect, Grameen had only one function, but there has been an enormous expansion of other business and economic activities under the title of Grameen, so it is important that the government takes into account that reality,' he added.

When asked by New Age whether the report had found any wrongdoing by Grameen Bank, he replied, 'We have come across some evidence of irregularities.'

He however immediately added, 'Irregularities are quite common in any administration, since when one runs a business one cannot always operate by keeping the law book on the table.'

He refused to specify what those irregularities were. 'It is up to the government to release the information,' he said.

'The fundamental legal question is what activities are allowed by the 1983 ordinance. It is questionable whether the expansion of business is lawful. Then there is the question of whether or not the law can be reformed to take this into account. In my view law is only a tool or aid to help solve problems,' Monaw-war told New Age.

The other members of the Grameen Bank review committee were Bangladesh Bank's deputy governor Nazrul Huda, former deputy comptroller and auditor-general Syeda Rokeya Din, former chief of the Bangladesh Institute of Bank Management Professor RM Debnath and Supreme Court lawyer Mohsin Rashid.

Mohammad Yunus, founder of the Grameen Bank and a winner of the Nobel peace prize, is currently under threat of being sacked from his post as managing director of Grameen.

On 2 March the Bangladesh Bank wrote a letter to the chairman of the Grameen Bank, informing him that Yunus should have retired at the age of 60 years.

Following legal action by lawyers acting for Yunus and nine directors of Grameen Bank, the High Court on 9 March upheld the Bangladesh Bank's interpretation of the law.

Their lawyer appealed and the matter is now before a seven-judge bench of the Appellate Division which will sit on 2 May to continue its deliberations.

Earlier the Appellate Division had dismissed the appeal, but it has now received an application to recall the order.

Source: New Age

Jatiya Party defends Bismillah, WP, JSD, GP for secularism

Dhaka, April 26: The Jatiya Party, major ally of the Awami League, on Monday advised the special committee to retain 'Bismillah' and 'Islam as state religion' while the left-leaning allies of the government suggested insertion of 'secularism' in the constitution.

The political parties at a consultation with the special committee on constitution amendment at Jatiya Sangsad Bhaban expressed their respective opinions.

The JP leaders also opposed any law contradictory to the Quran and Sunnah and any move to ban religion-based political parties and demanded decentralisation of administration through introduction of provincial governments and setting up High Court benches in the divisional headquarters, meeting sources said.

'Bismillah' and 'state religion Islam' should exist in the constitution, JP chairman HM Ershad told the committee in his written statement, adding that the religion-based political parties should not be banned.

The former military dictator also said that a provision for setting up High Court benches in all divisional headquarters should be introduced and during the interim period circuit benches should be established at least for one month in every division.

'We proposed amendments to the caretaker government system cancelling the provision for appointing former chief justices as its chief and fixing up its tenure for maximum 90 days,' Ershad told reporters after the meeting.

Leaders of Jatiya Samajtantrik Dal at the meeting proposed that 'Bismillah' and 'state religion Islam' should be dropped from the constitution.

'We proposed restoration of the constitution [as it was adopted in] 1972 and for that "Bismillah" and "state religion Islam" should be dropped from the constitution,' JSD general secretary Sharif Nurul Ambia said in the party's written statement placed in the committee.

The JSD leaders also proposed bringing about changes to the process of election of the president of the republic by expanding the electorates. They said inclusion of the elected local government representatives could be considered to this effect.

They also said that caretaker government system should be retained specifying its tenure for maximum 90 days. They proposed bringing partial changes to the Article 70 by giving more freedom to the lawmakers and formation of an upper house in parliament to make parliamentary system more participatory with the representatives of professional groups.

The Workers Party leaders also opposed retention of the name of any religion in the constitution and proposed a provision for increasing the number of reserved seats for women lawmakers.

'State religion Islam and secularism could never exist together as it is contradictory to Article 2 and Article 12,' the Workers Party general secretary Anisur Rahman Mallik said in his statement, 'Why should there be a state religion,' he asked.

The party leaders also proposed changes in the Article 70 to ensure freedom of the lawmakers, inserting a provision for formation of a 'constitutional commission' or approval by the parliament of the appointment to the constitutional posts.

They also proposed that any extra-constitutional takeover of the state power should be considered as treason and persons involved in such usurpation of power should be put on trial.

The Ganatontri Party leaders at the meeting proposed that the political parties which had opposed the liberation war in the 1971 should be banned. They also called for repeal of the Eighth Amendment to the constitution and constitutional recognition of the ethnic minority communities, the party president Afzal Hossain said.

The committee's scheduled talks with the Awami League today has been shifted to Wednesday as the prime minister and AL president Sheikh Hasina would not be available in Dhaka today.

Source: New Age

Husband Reza remanded in custody

Dhaka, April 26: Police on Monday took Shafiqur Rahman alias Reza Sikder, who allegedly killed his wife Quamrunnahar Nadia on Sunday night and was arrested at Shahbagh while trying to dump the body, for two days remand for interrogation.

Sub-inspector Adam Ali

of Hazaribagh police station told New Age that a Dhaka court upon prayer for seven days remand allowed two days remand for interrogating Reza for killing Nadia.

He said that they were interrogating Reza to unearth the mystery behind the killing.

Hazaribagh police officer-in-charge Rafiqul Islam said that the victim's brother, Shafi Ahamed Shariar Sujon, had filed a case against Reza, his mother Jannatul Khatun, and his younger brother Jewel, for killing Nadia on Monday morning.

Dhaka Medical College Hospital morgue sources said that the body of Nadia bore marks of injuries in her neck and chest.

Sujon alleged that Reza had killed his sister with the help of his brother and mother at their Hazaribagh residence after she had gone there on Sunday.

Reza, who admitted that he had tortured Nadia to death, had allegedly killed his own father, Habul Sikder by stabbing at their village home in 2004, Sujon said.

He further said that Reza had contested for the post of vice-chairman of Gournadi Upzaila of Barisal in last Upzaila elections on a Awami League ticket.

Driver Rabiul, who was made the approver in the murder case, said that Reza tried to dump the body after he had refused to carry the body to his village home in Barisal.

Police arrested Shafiqur Rahman, also known as Reza Sikder, at about 8:00pm on Sunday when he was looking for a place driving a car to dump the body of his wife Kamarunnahar Sadia.

Shafiqur's driver Md Rabiul, who was also arrested by police, said that Shafiqur had asked him to carry the body to Barisal and bury it there.

He also said that he had dragged the body down from Shafiqur's house at Hazaribagh residence in the capital.

Shafiqur had married Sadia, a student of law at Dhaka International University, six months ago after two years of affairs.

In Barisal, local people in Gournadi Upazila said Shafikur Rahman Sikdar is locally known as Rezaul Sikdar and defamed for

 his notorious activities in the area like extortion, toll collection, torture on women and other types of criminal and terrorist activities.

Rezaul was a JCD leader and former vice president of Gournadi Government College Students Union and during the last BNP regime he was expelled from the organization. He later joined Awami League.

A lot of BNP activists and leaders were assaulted by him after that and a lot of cases and general dairies were registered with Gournadi police station against him by different sections of people including local businessmen and rival political leaders.

Nurul Islam, officer-in-charge of Gournadi police station said there were four cases against Rezaul with his police station.

On April 22, 2003, Rezaul was accused in a case for murdering his father Habul Sikdar, a former UP chairman of Barthi union of the Upazila.

Out of other 3  cases, one was lodged on August 15, 2008 for cheating and misappropriating money, one on August 18, 2008 for  extortion, death threats and toll collection, and another one on January 29, 2009 under explosives act and attempt to murder by torture.

About the present status of the cases against Rezaul Sikdar, Sub-Inspector Monir, duty officer of Gournadi police station, said Rezaul was acquitted from all cases through final report except the cases of cheating and the general diaries against him were still under investigation.

Sadia's brother Sujon said that Shafiqur alias Rezaul had earlier married two times and had a daughter from a wife. He divorced those wives and married Sadia six months ago.

Sujon said, 'Shafiqur had tortured my sister for six months.' He added that Sadia had no communications with them for a week.

Source: New Age

Bangladesh food inflation hits 13.87pc in March

Dhaka, April 26: Monthly food inflation in the country hit a record 13.87 percent on point-to-point basis in March as consumers grappled with high prices of rice, edible oil and other food items.

The situation in rural areas is particularly grave as food inflation there reached 14.84 percent in March from 13.40 percent in February while food inflation in urban areas rose to 11.66 percent in March from 11.12 percent in February, according to a

report of the Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics released on Monday.

The country's general inflation that included food and non-food inflation, on the other hand, picked up to 10.49 percent on point to point in March from 9.79 percent in the previous month, said the report.

The rate of general inflation was 8.78 percent in March, 2010. 

According to the report, the rate of food inflation was so severe, the decrease in non-food inflation could not pull down the general inflation in March.

The non-food inflation came down to 4.32 percent in March from 4.36 percent in February. The rate was 5.60 percent in March 2010.

The report showed that although the rate of food inflation was 10.80 percent in March 2010, it soared to 13.87 percent in March this year as prices of major food items increased sharply.

An official of the BBS told New Age that price hike of rice, edible oil, sugar and other food items contributed to the rising inflation in last one year.

Center for Policy Dialogue (CPD) executive director Mustafizur Rahman termed the situation a critical concern for the macro-economic stability.

He told New Age that rising inflation, especially food inflation, is a major problem for the economy.

He said, 'High inflation rate will be reflected in wages, bank deposit and lending rate and it will undermine the macro-economic stability.'

Global inflation has also contributed to the country's inflation, he added.

He is hopeful that the Boro rice production would help to reduce the inflationary pressure in the next two months.

Bangladesh Institute of Development Studies research director Zaid Bakht told New Age that the country is now passing through a crucial time for the high inflationary pressure.

'Rising import cost and high prices of oil and other commodities in the international market are pushing the inflation rate up.'

He said, 'Boro production may ease the pressure for a short time but the rate of inflation may rise further.'

'Inflationary pressure may continue in the coming months due to balance of payments pressure and budget deficit and the government's borrowing from banks,' he warned. 

According to the BBS report, general inflation in the nine months of the current 2010-11 fiscal year, on the other hand, hit 8.27 percent on the back of soaring food costs, above the government's target of 7 percent for this fiscal year.

The average inflation in 2009-2010 was 7.31 percent, in 2008-09 it was 6.66 percent and in 2007-2008 it was 9.93 percent.

Bangladesh Bank statistics show that in the last 10 years average inflation was 6.31 percent. The average inflation from 2000-01 to 2009-10 fiscal year was 6.31 percent while food inflation was 7 percent and non-food inflation was 5.28 percent.

According to the latest Asian Development Bank outlook 2011, food share in consumer price index is the highest in Bangladesh—at 58.8 percent.

Source: New Age

Establishment ministry renamed as public admin ministry

Dhaka, April 26: The government has renamed the establishment ministry as the public administration ministry 'to make the ministry's activities evident in the title.'

The cabinet on Monday approved a proposal for renaming the establishment ministry at its weekly meeting presided over by the prime minister, Sheikh Hasina, at the secretariat.

The establishment ministry placed the proposal for changing its name on the ground that the existing name did not clearly reflect the jurisdiction and activities of the administrative ministry.

'The cabinet has approved the proposal for renaming the establishment ministry as the ministry of public administration so that people in general can easily understand the responsibility of the ministry,' the prime minister's press secretary, Abul Kalam Azad, told reporters after the meeting.

He said that common people do not understand what the term 'establishment' was meant for and even the foreigners sometimes do not understand about the jurisdiction of the ministry from its name.

As per the Rules of Business, the establishment ministry is responsible for formulation of policy on regulation of services and determination of terms and conditions of public servants.

Its jurisdiction, among others, included simplification of systems, career development of government servants including training and administrative research and reforms.

The ministry also deals with cases of dismissal, removal, compulsory retirement and fixing the rank of officers of whom President is the appointing authority.

The 110th meeting of the cabinet also reviewed the government's performance till March 2011 as a quarterly report on implementation of the cabinet's decisions was placed there.

'The cabinet took a total of 690 decisions, of which 618 were implemented till March. That is around 90 percent decisions were implanted,' Abul Kalam said.

The cabinet had approved 150 drafts of laws of which 136 were enacted by the parliament during the time. The government has so far taken 23 policy decisions, the press secretary added.

Monday's cabinet meeting also approved the draft of the Dhaka Transport Coordination Authority (DTCA) Bill-2011 for removing traffic congestions and ensuring smooth movement of vehicles in Dhaka and to and from its surrounding districts—Narayanganj, Munshiganj, Gazipur, Narshingdhi and Mymensingh.

'The proposed authority will coordinate the transport system in Dhaka and its surrounding districts to remove traffic congestions and ensure smooth vehicular movements surrounding the capital,' Abul Kalam said. 

The establishment ministry in 2009 initiated the move for changing its name under a project with the support of the United Nations Development Programme.

The ministry earlier sought opinions from the top officials in civil bureaucracy proposing new names for the administrative ministry on the ground that the existing name does not correspond to its activities and also held seminars on the issue.

Source: New Age

France wants govt and Yunus to work together

Dhaka, April 26: France has expressed the hope that the Bangladesh government and Noble Laureate Mohammad Yunus will come together to showcase their achievements in alleviating poverty to international observers before the G20 (Group of Twenty) meeting scheduled to be held in Paris in November.

'We hope that the Bangladesh government and Mohammad Yunus will

work together to show their achievements in alleviating poverty in various events leading to the G-20 summit,' said the French president's special envoy, Martin Hirsch, at a press conference in Dhaka on Monday.

The G20 was formed in 1999, in the wake of the 1997 Asian financial crisis, to bring together the advanced and emerging economies to enable them to cooperate in stabilizing the global financial market. This year the G20 summit will be held in France in November.

Hirsch said he had handed over a letter of French President Nicholas Sarkozy to Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina on Sunday.

When he was asked about the contents of the letter, he said he had come to Dhaka to brief the Bangladesh authorities on the French government's plan to ask the Bangladesh government to play a role to highlight social issues including food security, which is on the G-20

summit's agenda, as well as to ascertain the nature of the relationship between the political authorities here and Mohammad Yunus.

He said that Mohammad Yunus, despite difficulties here with Bangladesh authorities, is familiar to the people and companies of France for his initiatives to alleviate poverty as well as his new concept of social business that has attracted many leading French companies.

When he was asked why France wants to bring the Bangladesh government and Mohammad Yunus together, he said that the government and the Grameen Bank have a lot of things in common including fighting for poverty alleviation and women's empowerment.

'We want them to cooperate as they have so many things to offer to the outside world. Their initiatives could be used in the framework of the G-20,' said the envoy.

Hirsch, who visited Dhaka 18 months ago, said that France was surprised at the recent changes in the relationship between the Bangladesh government and Grameen Bank.

'When I came 18 months ago, I saw the government and organizations like Grameen Bank and BRAC working together to fight poverty,' he said. 'It is difficult to understand what has happened in the meantime.'

The envoy said clearly that his country does not want to 'interfere, even by one millimetre, into the internal affairs of Bangladesh and its legal and judicial process'.

When he was asked about the invitation to Sheikh Hasina to visit France, he said 'There are various possibilities.'

It can be a 'bilateral' visit too, said the envoy, adding, 'It will be linked to the evolution of the situation here.'

When reporters asked him if France has any intention to invest in Bangladesh, he said some major French companies want to make investments.

Hirsch left Dhaka on Monday evening after a 3-day visit. He said he would apprise the French president of the outcome of his visit.

Referring to finance minister AMA Muhith's visit to France last month, the French ambassador, Charley Causeret, said he was the first Bangladeshi finance minister to visit France in the last 40 years.

The visit by Sheikh Hasina could be the next step to improve relations between the two countries, he said.

'We do not like to jeopardize any opportunities,' he added.

Source: New Age

RAB seizes 1,264 sacks of OMS rice from Bogra mill

Bogra, April 26: Members of the Rapid Action Battalion seized 1,264 sacks of rice, meant for the government's open market sale, from a rice mill in Telkupi area under Gabtoli Upazila in Bogra district early on Thursday.

During a raid that started in late Sunday night and continued till Monday morning, RAB also arrested the mill owner's son, Abu Al-Imran Nahid, 28, for his alleged involvement in hording the OMS rice to sell them illegally in black market.

With the latest recovery in Bogra, lawenforcers have so far recovered a huge amount of OMS rice from Dhaka, Faridpur, Chittagong, Natore, Kishoreganj, Rangpur, Gopalganj, Barisal, Lakshmipur, Bagerhat, Gazipur, Joypurhat, Bogra and Sirajganj districts in the last 18 days.

Acting on a tip-off, a RAB contingent raided Soma Rice Mill in Telkupi area under Gabtoli Upazila while the mill was locked from outside and OMS rice was being transferred from sacks marked with the government seal into common sacks.

They said they arrested Nahid and seized 1,040 sacks, each weighing 50 kilograms, 224 sacks, each weighing 85 kilograms, of OMS rice and a good quantity of loose rice from inside the mill.

Bogra RAB camp commander Abdul Jalil told newsmen that they had seized a total of 71 tonnes of OMS rice worth around Tk 15.5 lakh.

The Gabtoli thana police officer in charge Abdur Rashid told New Age that the RAB members handed Nahid over to the thana and a mobile court led by the Upazila Nirbahi Officer Mirza Mohammad Ali Reza sentenced Nahid to suffer one year imprisonment for his involvement in illegally possessing the OMS rice.

The Mill was sealed in presence of the UNO on Monday morning and preparations were afoot to lodge a case with police in this connection, he added.

The government revived OMS of rice in the capital on December 26 last year in the wake of a continued rice price hike and later expanded the programme to all the cities, districts and Upazila towns down to the union level.

Source: New Age

Three amici curiae against banning fatwa

Dhaka, April 26: Senior Supreme Court lawyer Rafique-ul Huq told the Appellate Division on Monday that nobody could be punished as a result of fatwa (religious decree) as it is an opinion which has no legal basis.

However TH Khan, most senior of the Supreme Court lawyers, suggested that the Supreme Court should not impose a wholesale ban on fatwa as anyone who has been a victim of injustice through a wrong fatwa can go to the court and seek legal remedy.

They expressed the above opinions before the six-member bench of the Appellate Division, chaired by Chief Justice ABM Khairul Haque, as amici curiae (friends of court) during the hearing of a petition filed in 2001 seeking permission to appeal against a High Court verdict that had declared fatwa illegal.

The court adjourned the hearing till today.

Rafique criticized the High Court's verdict, delivered, on 1 January, 2000, declaring all kinds of fatwa illegal.

'The verdict that nobody can pronounce fatwa is not legal as fatwa is a kind of opinion which everybody has the constitutional right to express,' he added.

Rafique said that whether or not the fatwa will be obeyed depends on the knowledge and integrity of the person who has delivered it.

If anybody instigates others to give the wrong fatwa, the aggrieved person can file a case, he added.

Senior lawyer M Zahir, who was also called as amicus curiae, expressed views similar to the ones given by Rafique.

TH Khan told the court that it should concern itself with this case in particular, and should not venture to pronounce any general opinion on fatwa which is delivered all through the Muslim world, not only in Bangladesh.

'This court should not go beyond the judgement of this particular case of fatwa,' he said emphatically. 'If fatwa is declared illegal there will be dire consequences and chaos in our society.'

The High Court bench of Justice Mohammad Golam Rabbani and Justice Nazmun Ara Sultana on 1 January, 2001 declared fatwa illegal.

The court came up with the verdict after hearing a rule issued suo moto on 2 December, 2000 by another bench following a newspaper report of hilla marriage in Natore district. (Hilla is a rule which forces the divorced wife to marry another man and get divorced before she can remarry her former husband).

Mufti Md Toyeeb and Maulana Abul Kalam later filed the petition with the Appellate Division, seeking permission to appeal against the verdict.

The Appellate Division, after hearing the petition, stayed the High Court's verdict against the backdrop of the death of seven persons in violent clashes between the police and demonstrators when they took to the streets after the verdict against fatwa.

On 14 February, 2011, the Appellate Division deferred the hearing for two weeks and appointed senior lawyers TH Khan, Rafique-ul Huq, M Zahir, ABM Nurul Islam, Mahmudul Islam, Rokanuddin Mahmud, Rabia Bhuiyan, MI Farooqui and AF Hassan Ariff as amici curiae to elicit their opinions.

On 1 March, 2011, the Appellate Division started hearing the petitions.

Kamal Hossain and Sara Hossain pleaded for rights body Ain o Salish Kendra while Nazrul Islam defended the appellants.

Source: New Age

Top Harkat leader, aide arrested

Dhaka, April 26: The Rapid Action Battalion arrested one of the top leaders of Harkatul Jihad al Islami along with his aide in Keraniganj on the outskirts of the capital early Monday.

The arrested were nayeb-e-amir of Huji Md Abdul Hannan, alias Sabbir, 51, and his close associate Ainul Haque, 28.

Briefing reporters at RAB headquarters Monday, director (legal and media wing) commander Sohail said Sabbir and Ainul were residing at a rented house near Pachgona Government Primary School in Ati Bazar area for the last one month. They were allegedly recruiting new members for the banned Islamist outfit in the guise as RMG workers.

Being tipped off, three teams of RAB-10 including a disposal unit jointly carried out a raid at the house at 2:00am and captured the two militants at about 2:40am.

The RAB also seized organisational books, compact disk, instruction books of the militant outfit and a bomb-making manual.

Sabbir and Ainul were accused in six cases filed in connection with sensational bomb and grenade attacks, including bomb attack on Udichi rally in Jessore on March 6, 1999, planting of a 76-kg bomb at the rally of then prime minister Sheikh Hasina in Kotalipara of Gopalganj on July 19, 2000, bomb attack on CPB rally at Paltan Maidan on January 20, 2001 and bomb attack on a Pahela Baishakh celebrations at Ramna Batamul on April 14, 2001.

Source: New Age

DMHC doctor held for harassing colleague

Dhaka, April 26: A middle-age physician of Dhaka Medical College Hospital was arrested on Monday for allegedly harassing his female colleague at the hospital, the hospital sources and the police said.

The arrested, Dr Jahangir Adel, was several times cautioned about his behaviour with his female colleagues but as he crossed his limit, the police arrested him, the DMCH director, Shahidul Haq Mallik, told New Age. 

Jahangir Adel, however, claimed that he had a love affair with his female colleague at the DMCH, said the Shahbagh police operation officer, Sheikh Md Mohsin Alam. 

The police said they had arrested Dr Jahangir Adel on charge of harassing female colleagues and he would be sent to court on Tuesday morning.

Source: New Age

Indian rights bodies call for booking BSF men for killing Alamgir

Dhaka, April 26: Two Indian human rights organisations have lodged complaint with the National Human Rights Commission of India, demanding that the criminal offence perpetrated by the BSF soldiers, who killed Alamgir Sheikh, should be booked.

Alamgir, son of Beraj Sheikh, an agriculture worker of village Char Basgara of Raninagar of Murshidabad, was allegedly killed by the BSF men on April 11 in between the BSF outpost no 5 and 6 under Harudanga BSF company headquarters near Kuthibari BSF mini camp in Raninagar of the Murshidabad district of West Bengal.

Banglar Manabadhikar Suraksha Mancha of West Bengal and Programme against Custodial Torture and Impunity of India sent a letter to the chairman of the National Human Rights Commission of India on April 22.

The organisations also demanded that the whole matter must be enquired into by a neutral investigating agency and respective authorities must be directed to immediate steps in order to bring back the body of the victim from Bangladesh and hand over to his family members.

The victim's family must be provided with adequate compensation, they said in the letter.

Source: New Age

Special drives in May ahead of UP polls

Dhaka, April 26: Law enforcement agencies will launch a special drive next month to arrest crime suspects and recover illegal arms across the country in order to ensure a peaceful atmosphere during the forthcoming union parishad elections.

The decision was taken at a meeting at the police headquarters on law and order ahead of the second phase of the staggered UP polls scheduled for May, to make the elections credible and neutral.

Addressing a post-meeting briefing, home minister Sahara Kahtun told reporters that she had ordered the law enforcement agencies to launch the anti-crime drives for holding the UP polls peacefully.

'In line with the instructions of the Election Commission, law enforcers would take steps so that nobody can influence the elections,' she said.

She said that all the elections held so far under the Awami League-led alliance government were free and fair.

'We have successfully held the union parishad elections in some parts of the country last month. Police played a creditable role during the elections,' the home minister said adding that everyone should stay alert against any conspiracy by any quarters to disrupt law and order in the coming days.

Inspector general of police Hasan Mahmud Khandaker said lawmen would conduct special drives next month by updating the existing lists of crime suspects.

He said that he had instructed police officials across the country to ensure that law and order was maintained.

On April 19, the Election Commission announced a 36-day timeline for holding polls to 3,813 union parishads in 414 upazilas across the country starting from May 31.

The number of union parishads is 4,550. Polls to 553 were held in the first phase in between March 29 and April 3 this year amid stray incidents of violence.

High officials of police were present in the meeting.

Source: New Age

City lawmakers asked to hold meets with imams, madrassah teachers

Dhaka, April 26: The home minister, Sahara Khatun, on Monday asked lawmakers of the Dhaka city to hold open discussions with imams of mosques and madrasshah teachers for creating mass awareness about the National Women Development Policy 2011.

The minister made the directives at a meeting with the Members of Parliament from the constituencies of the Dhaka city at the secretariat against the backdrop of the ongoing movement, led by Islami Oikya Jote chairman Fazlul Haq Amini, demanding cancellation of the National Women Development Policy on the ground that it was anti-Islamic.

Amini is leading the movement under the banner of Islami Ain Bastabayan Committee. 

Talking to New Age, a number of lawmakers said the main agenda of the meeting was how to find out the ways for countering the ongoing 'propaganda' against the women development policy spread by a section of Islamic clerics.

The prime minister's adviser on establishment ministry and administrative affairs HT Imam also held a meeting with some Islamic intellectuals loyal to Awami League and discussed how to counter the movement against the policy.

Source: New Age

Hasina, Cherie Blair talk women dev

Dhaka, April 26: Chancellor of Asian University for Women and former First Lady of the United Kingdom Cherie Blair called on the prime minister Sheikh Hasina at Ganabhaban Monday night.

During the meeting, they discussed different aspects of

women development including establishing Asian University for Women.

Hasina said women of Bangladesh were marching forward in different fields. They will get opportunities of higher education in this university, she added.

The prime minister stressed the need for expanding the

academic perimeter of the university further.

Source: New Age

Some 500 arrested in Syria crackdown: rights group

Reuters, AMMAN, April 26: Security forces have arrested some 500 pro-democracy sympathizers across Syria after the government sent in tanks to try to crush protests in the city of Deraa, the Syrian rights organization Sawasiah said on Tuesday.

The independent organization said it had received reports that at least 20 people had been killed in Deraa since tanks moved in on Monday, but communications with the southern town where the protests against President Bashar al-Assad began on March 18 had been cut making it hard to confirm the information.

"Witnesses managed to tell us that at least 20 civilians have been killed in Deraa, but we do not have their names and we cannot verify," said a Sawasiah official, adding that two civilians were confirmed dead in the Damascus suburb of Douma, which forces entered earlier in the day.

At least 500 were arrested elsewhere in Syria, it said.

Amnesty international, citing sources in Deraa, said at least 23 people were killed when tanks shelled Deraa in what it called "a brutal reaction to people's demands."

"By resorting to the use of artillery against its own people today, the Syrian government has shown its determination to crush the peaceful protests at virtually any cost, whatever the price in Syrians' lives," said Malcolm Smart, Amnesty International's Middle East and North Africa Director.

Government forces also stormed the Damascus suburbs of Douma and Mouadhamiya on Monday, shooting and making arrests, a day after they swept into the coastal town of Jabla, where at least 13 civilians were killed, rights campaigners said.

Diplomats said the figures for civilians killed could be as high as 50 in Deraa and 12 in Mouadhamiya, which lies on the road to the occupied Golan Heights southwest of Damascus.

"The regime has chosen to use excessive violence. It worked in 1982, but there is no guarantee it will work again in the age of the internet and phone cameras," said a senior diplomat referring to the 1982 crushing of a revolt in the city of Hama which killed up to 30,000 people.

Footage posted on the internet by demonstrators in recent days appears to show troops firing on unarmed crowds. In the Damascus suburb of Barzeh residents described security forces firing at unarmed protesters from a heavy machinegun mounted on a truck.

The White House, deploring "brutal violence used by the government of Syria against its people," said President Barack Obama's administration was considering targeted sanctions to make clear that "this behavior is unacceptable."

Syria has been under U.S. sanctions since 2004 for its support of militant groups. Several Syrian officials, among them Assad's cousin Rami Makhlouf, a tycoon, are under specific U.S. sanctions for "public corruption."

Leading human rights campaigner Suhair al-Atassi said Assad has launched a savage war designed to annihilate Syria's democrats by attacking Deraa, Jabla and Damascus suburbs.

"President Assad's intentions have been clear since he came out publicly saying he is 'prepared for war'," Atassi said, referring to a March 30 speech to parliament.

Security forces and the gunmen loyal to Assad have killed more than 350 civilians across Syria since pro-democracy protests broke out in Deraa, rights groups say. A third of the victims were shot in the past four days as the scale and breadth of a popular revolt against Assad grew.

Heavy fighting in Misrata and Libyan mountains

Reuters, TRIPOLI, April 26: Libya's rebel-held city of Misrata won no respite from two months of bitter siege as Muammar Gaddafi's forces bombarded the city and battled rebel fighters, despite pulling out of the city center.

Gaddafi's forces were also pounding Berber towns in Libya's Western Mountains with artillery, rebels and refugees said, in a remote region far from the view of international media.

Italy said its warplanes would join the British and French bombing of Libyan targets for the first time and NATO flattened a building inside Gaddafi's Tripoli compound, in what his officials said was a failed attempt on the Libyan leader's life.

Late on Monday, the "crusader aggressors" bombed civilian and military sites in Bir al Ghanam, 100 km (60 miles) south of Tripoli, and the Ayn Zara area of the capital, causing casualties, Libyan television said, without giving details. A Reuters correspondent heard explosions in Tripoli.

The report said foreign ships had also attacked and severed the al-Alyaf cable off Libya's coast, cutting communications to the towns of Sirte, Ras Lanuf and Brega.

But more than a month of air strikes did not appear to be tipping the balance decisively in a conflict increasingly described as a stalemate.

People in Misrata emerged from homes after daybreak on Monday to scenes of devastation after Gaddafi's forces pulled back from the city under cover of blistering rocket and tank fire, said witnesses contacted by phone.

Nearly 60 people had been killed in clashes in the city in the last three days, residents told Reuters by phone.

"BODIES EVERYWHERE"

Although rebels' celebrations of "victory" on Saturday turned out to be very premature, it was clear they had inflicted significant losses on government forces in Misrata.

"Bodies of Gaddafi's troops are everywhere in the streets and in the buildings. We can't tell how many. Some have been there for days," said rebel Ibrahim.

Rebel spokesman Abdelsalam, speaking late on Monday, said Gaddafi's forces were trying to re-enter the Nakl Thaqeel Road, which leads to Misrata's port, its lifeline to the outside.

"Battles continue there. We can hear explosions," he said by phone. He said Gaddafi's forces positioned on the western outskirts of the city had also shelled the road from there.

Another rebel spokesman, Sami, said the humanitarian situation was worsening rapidly.

"It is indescribable. The hospital is very small. It is full of wounded people, most of them are in critical condition," he told Reuters by phone.

U.S. officials said relief groups were rotating doctors into Misrata and evacuating migrant workers.

Mark Bartolini, director of foreign disaster assistance at the U.S. Agency for International Development, said aid organizations were aiming to create stocks of food in the region in case Libyan supply chains began breaking down.

Among the places in particular need of food aid were isolated towns in the Western Mountains, from where tens of thousands of people have fled to Tunisia from the fighting.

REFUGEES FLEE MOUNTAINS

"Our town is under constant bombardment by Gaddafi's troops. They are using all means. Everyone is fleeing," said one refugee, Imad, bringing his family out of the mountains.

NATO said its attack on the building in the Gaddafi compound was on a communications headquarters used to coordinate attacks on civilians. A Libyan spokesman said Gaddafi was unharmed and state television showed pictures of him meeting people in a tent, which it said had been taken on Monday.

Gaddafi's son Saif al-Islam said the Libyan government would not be cowed.

"The bombing which targeted Muammar Gaddafi's office today ... will only scare children. It's impossible that it will make us afraid or give up or raise the white flag," he was quoted as saying by the state news agency, Jana.

Italy said its warplanes would join British and French aircraft in carrying out bombing of Libya. Geographically the closest major NATO member state to Libya, Italy had until Monday provided bases and reconnaissance and monitoring aircraft only.

The surprise decision immediately opened a fissure in Italy's coalition government.

The African Union held separate talks on Monday with Libyan Foreign Minister Abdelati Obeidi and rebel representatives in Addis Ababa to discuss a ceasefire plan.

The rebels had earlier rebuffed an AU plan because it did not entail Gaddafi's departure, while the United States, Britain and France say there can be no political solution until the Libyan leader leaves power.

U.S. charges Pakistanis in 2008 Mumbai attack plot

Reuters, CHICAGO, April 26: Four Pakistanis have been charged as co-conspirators in the 2008 Mumbai attack that killed 166 people, including six Americans, U.S. prosecutors said on Monday.

The four were previously mentioned, but not named, in indictments charging American David Headley and Pakistani-born Chicago businessman Tahawwur Rana with helping to identify targets in Mumbai.

Headley and Rana have also been charged in a plot to attack a Danish newspaper that was never carried out.

Headley pleaded guilty in March 2010 and is cooperating with U.S. investigators about taking several trips to India -- and later to Denmark -- to scout targets for the coordinated and lethal assault.

Rana has been held since his arrest in 2009 as a conspirator with Headley, and his U.S. trial is scheduled to begin May 16. His attorney was not immediately available for comment.

All of the four newly-indicted figures are linked to the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba, one of the largest and best-funded Islamic militant groups in the region. The group is blamed for the November 2008 attacks on Mumbai, which killed 166 people in India's commercial capital.

Those newly indicted were Sajid Mir, Abu Qahafa, Mazhar Iqbal, and a fourth defendant known only by the alias "Major Iqbal." None are in U.S. custody. All four are believed to be in Pakistan.

They were charged with six counts of aiding and abetting the murder of U.S. citizens and other charges related to the Mumbai attack and providing support to Lashkar, identified as a terrorist organization by the United States.

Mir was also charged in the plot against Denmark's Jyllands-Posten newspaper aiming to revenge the publication of cartoons of the prophet Mohammad that enraged many Muslims and prompted protests.

U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald in Chicago had requested the superseding indictment handed up by a grand jury on April 21 charging the four to be sealed to give the government time to alert U.S. agencies and consult with foreign authorities.

The Mumbai attack strained already difficult India-Pakistan relations.

India has said it is not satisfied with the pace of Pakistan's investigation, and has demanded more people be put on trial for the attack, including the founder of the Lashkar-e-Taiba, Hafiz Mohammad Saeed.

Amigo! Archie Comics plans Spanish digital copies

AP, PHILADELPHIA, April 26: Seizing upon Archie's popularity on the printed page, Archie Comics will now offer some of the titles in Spanish for download through its digital storefront.

After 70 years, Archie Comics is the first major publisher to expand its language offerings.

Jon Goldwater, co-chief executive of Archie Comics told The Associated Press the titles — Archie, Veronica & Betty and Jughead, among others — were made available online Monday as part of its digital offerings.

"We have an incredible number of fans, not just domestically, who speak Spanish," he told AP, adding that the traditional print versions of the comic, in English and Spanish, have been strong sellers in central and south America, as well as in Spain, too.

Archie Comics has typically offered up its print editions in a host of different languages, but never before digitally.

But with more and more publishers, Archie included, embracing digital downloads, Goldwater said it made sense to expand its offerings to more than just its comics in English.

"The great thing about our company is that we're not just domestic, we're a global company," he said. "We have made incredible inroads, so we have tremendous fans all throughout that part of the world."

The comics will be available through its digital comics subscriptions at www.archiedigital.com, though iTunes and the iVerse app, the Sony PSP and, in the next few weeks, Android-powered smartphones.

Goldwater said the comics are just the same as they are in English — "The gags seem to translate well," Goldwater said — and that means the adventures of those characters can be told while preserving the sense of story. While Spanish is the first language being offered, plans are in the works to offer editions in French and Hindi, too.

"People really do get the humor behind it," Goldwater said, adding that readers outside of the U.S. can experience a traditional American art form.

"It really is, in a certain sense, the American Dream. I know it sounds corny, but it's the typical small-town America where the kids all get along and everything is working well and there's plenty of food and everyone is sheltered," he said. "It translates very, very well."

Eminem to release EP with rapper Royce da 5'9"

AP, DETROIT, April 26: Eminem and Royce da 5'9" are back recording together more than a decade after the Detroit rappers first joined forces.

The pair, who met at a concert in their home city in 1997 and worked together under the name Bad Meets Evil, announced Monday that they're coming out with an EP of new material in June.

One of the songs they recorded in the late 1990s, called "Bad Meets Evil," appeared on Eminem's major label debut, "The Slim Shady LP."

According to a news release distributed Monday by Interscope Records, the rappers pursued solo careers after their initial work together and became embroiled in a feud.

In the years since, Eminem's career has reached superstar levels with tens of millions of records sold and Grammy and Academy Award wins. Royce da 5'9" also has seen success, but on a much smaller scale, with three of his albums charting in the R&B/hip-hop category.

The two mended fences, however, following the shooting death of their mutual friend and fellow rapper Proof in 2006.

"Royce and I started hanging out again and inevitably that led us back into the studio," Eminem said in a statement. "At first we were just seeing where it went without any real goal in mind, but the songs started to come together crazy, so here we are."

Royce da 5'9" said he was "excited to see this project come to fruition considering the long lapse in time between when we worked before and now."

The new material will be released June 14 on Shady/Interscope Records. Mr. Porter, who is a member of Eminem's rap group D12, was a producer on the EP.

Interscope said its title will be unveiled "soon."

And, for the record, Royce da 5'9" is the Bad half of the duo, and Eminem is the Evil.

Musicians clamor for answers from Philly Orchestra

AP, PHILADELPHIA, April 26: The musicians known as the Fabulous Philadelphians are feeling more drab than fab about their management these days.

The Philadelphia Orchestra, counted among the world's most renowned symphonies for most of its 111 years, is plotting steps toward financial harmony after filing for bankruptcy protection, even though it has no outstanding debt and an endowment of $140 million.

As a judge in U.S. Bankruptcy Court plans hearings in coming months on the petition, orchestra leaders argue that it's perilously low on cash. They're getting little sympathy from the musicians, who say their bosses simply haven't reached out to the right donors and have put them in the line of fire.

"There's a real fear because of the uncertainty about the future," said cellist John Koen. "There are people who have been invited to audition in other places, or have won auditions in other places, or have been offered teaching positions, but are holding off to see what's going to happen here."

While orchestras, museums and performing arts centers nationwide have been feeling the pinch amid the recession, the Philadelphia Orchestra also suffered from a gap in leadership for the past several years while it sought candidates for vacant positions — now filled — for a permanent board chairman, chief executive and music director.

Long ago dubbed the Fabulous Philadelphians, the orchestra was the first to appear on national television in 1948, the first American orchestra to tour communist China in 1973, and the first to stream a concert over the Internet in 1997. Its hundreds of recordings include the soundtrack to Walt Disney's 1940 film "Fantasia," which helped popularize symphonic music in the U.S.

It gained international renown under conductors Leopold Stokowski and Eugene Ormandy and is generally counted among the "Big Five" American orchestras, along with New York, Boston, Chicago and Cleveland. But struggling with dwindling attendance and donations, shrinking endowment income, pension costs and rent prices at the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts, it became on April 16 the first major U.S. orchestra to seek Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.

In court documents, Chairman Richard Worley also blamed the economic recession and an aging audience not being replenished by younger patrons amid an "increasingly crowded entertainment market."

Management said it was facing a $14.5 million shortfall on a $46 million budget and would run out of cash by June. A hearing before U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Eric L. Frank last week allowed the orchestra time to reorganize its finances and its short- and long-term future without canceling the concert season.

It has no outstanding debt and an endowment of $140 million — $120 million from the orchestra and $20 million from its beloved former home, The Academy of Music concert hall, which it owns. The endowment funds are restricted by various donors for specific uses, or to be held solely for interest income, and are off limits for general operating expenses, chief financial officer Mario Mestichelli said.

The musicians largely object to the Chapter 11 filing, which also seeks a new collective bargaining agreement with the musicians' union and relief from millions of dollars in contributions to their pension fund. The players question the assertion that the endowment is untouchable and argue management failed to explore all avenues before resorting to extremes.

"The board has been focused on their inner circle, the wealthiest people who are inside their comfort zone," said Koen, chairman of the orchestra board's musicians committee. "There's a big middle ground of people who could easily give $5,000 or $10,000 on an annual basis and they're not even being asked."

Chief executive officer Allison Vulgamore acknowledged that fundraising outreach has been difficult because of earlier cuts to the development staff and said the orchestra plans to hire more people soon to find new people willing to donate.

"The heavyheartedness comes from the treasure we know we hold," she said. "No one would like to attach this process to the orchestra, but this is a means to a greater end."

Koen said many of his colleagues worry that the bankruptcy will tarnish the orchestra's reputation and hurt its ability to attract and keep its "star roster" of players.

Yannick Nezet-Seguin, slated to become the Philadelphia Orchestra's eighth music director in fall 2012, said in a statement that he has faith in the orchestra's future and will do "whatever it takes to get through this difficult time."

Possibilities include a residency in China, a series of dates at The Academy of Music, performances at historic Longwood Gardens in the Philadelphia suburbs, concert operas, a broader repertoire to attract new audiences, and program guides for audiences to follow in real time by text or tweet. Marketing materials are getting more user-friendly and outreach will intensify online and elsewhere.

The Pew Charitable Trusts, one of the area's most generous and consistent benefactors of the arts, "has determined that they will not entertain a request for support of the Philadelphia Orchestra at this time," a spokeswoman said in a statement. Pew, which generally does not provide operating funds to organizations without balanced budgets, has given the orchestra about $8 million over the past decade.

Mestichelli said the organization hopes to emerge from bankruptcy by the end of the year.

Named as debtors in the filing are the orchestra, the Academy of Music, which the orchestra still owns; and its affiliate Encore Series Inc., which presents the Peter Nero and the Philly Pops concert series.

The organization has endured hardship before and survived, and Vulgamore said she is confident that the reorganization is the first step on the path to a reinvigorated orchestra.

"The orchestra has survived a 'save the symphony' campaign in the early 1900s, it has survived a couple of world wars and a depression," Vulgamore said. "This is a path that we believe gets us to a new future that has sustainable funding underneath it." 

Injured Broadway 'Spider-Man' actor rejoins show

AP, NEW YORK, April 26: An actor seriously injured at the Broadway musical "Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark" returned to work Monday, only four months after he plummeted 35 feet from an onstage platform.

"I feel amazing," said Christopher Tierney before reporting for rehearsals at the Foxwoods Theatre. He said the accident in December didn't give him second-thoughts about rejoining the stunt heavy show: "I'm ready to put on the harness right now and fly around."

Tierney, 31, suffered a fractured skull, a fractured shoulder blade, four broken ribs and three broken vertebrae on Dec. 20 when he tumbled in front of a shocked preview audience. Taken away from the theater in a stretcher, the actor had to wear a back brace and had eight screws put in his back.

The pins were removed three months early and Tierney said he had been itching to return but had to get doctors to sign off first. He said he was 85 percent to 90 percent fully fit.

"My back healed really well, thank God," he said to a gaggle of reporters outside the stage entrance to the theater.

Asked if he was nuts to return after being hurt so badly, Tierney responded with a laugh. "Yeah, slightly," he said. Wearing jeans, sneakers, a hat and a gray jacket, the actor added, "I come back because I love it. I love being on stage. I love my cast."

Tierney returns to a different show than the one he left in December. While the actor healed, the $65 million musical — the most expensive in Broadway history — parted ways with director and co-book writer Julie Taymor, and choreographer Daniel Ezralow, among others. U2's Bono and The Edge remain as songwriters, though the show's music is also being changed.

Tierney, of Portsmouth, N.H., said he had recently spoken to Taymor and called her a "loyal friend." He said she had reached out to him after hearing he was returning to the show and wanted to make sure he was feeling up to it.

The show is currently on hiatus until previews begin again on May 12.

The new creative team — including director Philip William McKinley and playwright Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa, musical consultant Paul Bogaev and sound designer Peter Hylenski — has announced a new opening day of June 14. Taymor is still billed as director and remains a part of the production.

Tierney's accident — which was blamed on an unconnected safety tether — was one of five accidents to cast members that marred the production. A lead actress, Natalie Mendoza, suffered a concussion during the first preview performance and left the show.

"Spider-Man" represents Tierney's Broadway debut. Besides executing the main Spider-Man aerial stunts, he also plays a super villain, a bully who torments Peter Parker and a dancer.

He had previously worked with the Houston Ballet, Ballet New England and Hubbard Street Dance Chicago, danced in the national tour of Twyla Tharp's "Movin' Out" and appeared in the North American premiere of "Dirty Dancing" in Toronto.

Cast of 'Glee' gets New York welcome from mayor

AP, NEW YORK, April 26: Talk about a cool class trip.

The cast of "Glee" is in New York City this week to film its season two finale episode, and Mayor Michael Bloomberg welcomed the stars of the Fox show with a news conference outside the Gershwin Theater, one of its filming locations.

"Mayors don't get a lot of time to watch television, so I don't know much about this season's plot but actually it would be great to see what happens with Finn and Rachel," joked Bloomberg, referring to two of the characters on the show who are in an on-again, off-again romantic relationship.

In the final episode of the season, the students will go to New York for a national glee club competition. The show is to film all week long in the city, at landmarks such as Central Park and Lincoln Center.

"We've been filming 'Glee' in Los Angeles for two years. We've never met the mayor there," said one of the show's executive producers, Dante Di Loreto.

Dozens of fans lined up outside the theater to get a glimpse of actors from the show. Cory Monteith and Mark Salling were among those who appeared at the news conference.

Prince's 17 remaining L.A. shows cloaked in mystery

Reuters, NASHVILLE, April 26: Even though Prince is in the early stages of a 21-show stand in Los Angeles -- four down, 17 to go -- it's not at all clear where future shows will be held or where his tour will wrap up.

Prince's current leg began on April 14 at the Forum; his most recent show was at the storied arena on Saturday.

"Everything comes from Prince," says Mark Campana, co-president of North America concerts for Live Nation.

And, as Prince is prone to making quick decisions, the remainder of the tour after L.A., or even when the L.A. run will wrap, is still in the air.

"He has not discussed anything beyond L.A., and L.A. was decided literally as the trucks were leaving the Carolinas (at the end of March)," Campana says. "The drivers needed to know what direction to go and Prince said, 'head west.' By the time they were halfway across the country, they were told to go to Los Angeles and we were announcing the shows and putting them on sale for the Forum. So spontaneity is in play on all levels. We're all waiting with bated breath as to where's he going after Los Angeles."

Campana expected the rest of the L.A. shows to be played at the Forum, but then again ... "We are taking direction, not giving direction," he said.

How rock music is saving books

Reuters, LOS ANGELES, April 26: From Keith Richards' assertion that he really did snort his father's ashes to Sammy Hagar's revelation that he's been abducted by aliens, out-there autobiographies by aging rock stars are helping to fuel the ailing book-publishing business.

"There's clearly a demand," says Mauro DiPreta, vp of It Books, which published Hagar's current New York Times best-seller "Red: My Uncensored Life in Rock." The former Van Halen frontman was paid about $3 million (Richards pocketed a reported $7 million for his memoir, "Life").

"What you have with a book is a memento," DiPreta adds. "You can buy a CD, but you've probably heard the songs many times already. You can bid on a used Eric Clapton guitar. But for $25, you get to hear all the stories, not only behind the songs but how these guys lived."

Says literary agent Sarah Lazin, who specializes in music-themed titles: "Publishers are looking for an automatic fan base so they can just plug into it. Right now, I have four deals with a major agency where they have the star and I have the writer. That's unprecedented."

The boom is good news for imprints like HarperCollins' It, which also published autobiographies by fired Guns N' Roses drummer and Celebrity Rehab graduate Steven Adler, Megadeth frontman Dave Mustaine and Runaways singer Cherie Currie. Ghost writers are in high demand and can get $25,000-$200,000 for their services; most deals average $75,000-$100,000.

Rock memoirs are a ray of light for booksellers struggling with the twin challenges of a recession and the transition to e-books. Although overall sales were up 3.6 percent in 2010, publishers struggled to find nonfiction hits. Nonfiction titles with sales of 100,000 or more were down nearly 20 percent from a 2008 high of 132. The 2010 list is top-heavy with politicians and political commentators (George W. Bush, Glenn Beck) and comedians (Jon Stewart, Chelsea Handler). The exception is Richards' "Life," which ranked No. 4.

But some publishing observers are concerned about overkill. "When you have the drummer who played on two Guns N' Roses albums putting out a book that didn't do that badly, that's saying maybe this glut will burn up the market," says Neil Strauss, co-author of the gold standard in rock autobiographies, 2001's Motley Crue tome "The Dirt," and head of HarperCollins' Igniter imprint. His latest book, "Everyone Loves You When You're Dead," a compilation from a career of musician interviews, was published in March.

But DiPreta disagrees. "I don't think it's a case of, 'I read Keith Richards' Life, so I'm not going to read Steven Tyler's book when it comes out in a couple months.' These stories are unique; they feed people's passion because you're talking about their memories, the fabric of your teenage years and coming of age. That's what we're trying to capture."

Some music artists simply don't buy into memoir lore, though. Billy Joel said March 31 that he was returning his $3 million advance to HarperCollins. "It took working on writing a book to make me realize that I'm not all that interested in talking about the past," he said. A source said that Joel's manuscript, scheduled for publication in June, was through the editing process and well into production.

Lazin says an option is rarely canceled. Instead, publishers hope their star will change his or her mind. "I've heard that Patti Smith was under contract for 10 years until she did 'Just Kids,'" she says. It became a best-seller, moving 158,000 copies.

So who is buying these tomes? "Boomers are still big book buyers, and they're a large part of the audience," Lazin says.

From attending book signings by the likes of Mustaine and Hagar, DiPreta notes that the crowds are composed of mostly men and people for whom "the bookstore is a destination," but he also marvels at the "multigenerational appeal." "You'll find parents with their high school- or college-age kids, just like when you go to a concert. They kind of want to share that experience." (It's interesting to note, though, that the "S--- My Dad Says book -- based on a Twitter feed -- has sold about as many units as Richards' tome but seven times the number of e-books.)

Likewise, these authors' motivations are rarely frivolous or vain, DiPreta says. "There's something really seductive and powerful about putting something between two covers and saying: 'This is my version of events. You can refer to this as the bible of how I lived my life.'"

Cowell wants Paula Abdul, Cheryl Cole for 'X Factor'

Reuters, LOS ANGELES, April 26: Simon Cowell wants his former "American Idol" sparring partner Paula Abdul and British singer Cheryl Cole join him on the U.S. version of his TV contest "The X Factor."

But the music impresario told entertainment industry website Deadline Hollywood that no deals had yet been signed to complete the line-up for the show, which is due to start airing on Fox television in September.

So far only the acid-tongued Briton himself and record executive Antonio "L.A." Reid have been confirmed as judges on "X Factor," which is offering a $5 million prize for the winner and a recording contract.

"I've always wanted Paula," Cowell told Deadline Hollywood in an interview released on Sunday.

"I've never found anyone better than her. I think there's a good chance it will be her. We've agreed we would meet with as many people as possible, and now (that) we're reaching the deadline we've got to make the decision soon. But I think she's got a really good shot," he said.

Cowell added that he would like Cole to join him, although the former Girls Aloud singer and a judge on the U.K. version of "X Factor" is virtually unknown in the United States.

"If people take to her (Cole) like the British public did, I think she's going to do really well in America. And Fox was desperate to hire her," he said.

Cowell also quashed rumors surrounding some of the many other celebrities whose names have been mentioned in the media as potential "X Factor" judges.

They include Sean "Diddy" Combs ("We didn't even approach him"); rapper Snoop Dogg ("I've never once spoken to him about doing the show"); soul singer Cee Lo Green ("We never offered him the show, and he didn't meet our producers"); and Mariah Carey (Cowell said he'd love to have her but she is focusing on the imminent birth of her twins).

Cowell said earlier this month that "X Factor" producers had "25 different opinions" about who should make up the remainder of the judging panel, and host the show.

Lindsay Lohan to appear on "Tonight Show"

Reuters, LOS ANGELES, April 26: Lindsay Lohan, fresh from her latest stint in jail, will appear on "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno" on Tuesday, NBC said.

In a last-minute addition to the lineup, the "Mean Girls" actress taped her appearance on Monday, but officials at the network declined to reveal what the two discussed.

Lohan was sentenced to four months behind bars on Friday for violating her probation, and jailed for about five hours before her legal team scrambled to post $75,000 bail.

Her latest legal woes stem from the alleged theft of a $2,500 gold necklace while she was on probation for a 2007 drunk driving and cocaine possession incident.

Lohan was ordered to stand trial on June 3 but the jewelry charge was reduced to a misdemeanor from a more serious felony, and will cut to one year her maximum time behind bars if eventually convicted.

In the meantime, Los Angeles judge Stephanie Sautner ruled that Lohan had violated her probation, and sentenced her to 120 days in jail and 480 hours' community service. Lohan's lawyer filed an immediate appeal as the actress was led away. Hollywood gossip show Access Hollywood reported that the lawyer's husband is a singer in Leno's band.

According to NBC's revised schedule for Tuesday, Emmy-winning actress Kristin Chenoweth has been bumped to make way for Lohan.

U.S. surpasses UK in online coverage of Will and Kate

Reuters, LOS ANGELES, April 26: America's romance with royalty is blooming, just four days away from Prince William's marriage to Kate Middleton.

The Web sites of traditional media outlets in the United States have taken a front-row seat for Britain's royal wedding, outpacing the online coverage of their U.K. counterparts, Nielsen Co said on Monday.

The royal wedding accounts for 0.20 percent of all news stories on the online versions of U.S. newspapers and magazines, compared to 0.08 percent for U.K. outlets, the research firm said.

U.S. media have devoted more coverage to the couple than media in the U.K. ever since their engagement was announced in November, when the number of online stories about their romance peaked for all news outlets.

Back then, news stories about the nuptials accounted for 0.31 percent of all online news content, compared to 0.19 percent for their U.K. counterparts, Nielsen said.

But that does not tell the whole story, because there are indications the British public remains more interested in the royal wedding than most Americans.

When Nielsen researchers looked at social media buzz, including blog posts and online message boards, the royal wedding at its peak accounted for 0.47 percent of all posts, compared to only 0.17 percent in the United States.

For media outlets and fans of British royalty, the waiting game is about to come to an end. William and Kate's wedding will happen on Friday at Westminster Abbey in London.