'Superman' Daily Planet actor Jackie Cooper dies

AFP, LOS ANGELES, May 5: Jackie Cooper, who was nominated for an Oscar at the age of nine and played the editor of the Daily Planet in the "Superman" films, has died aged 88, officials said.

Flowers were placed on his star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame following his death after a sudden illness, said the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce, which manages the stars on the storied stretch of sidewalk.

Born in LA in 1922, Cooper was only nine when he played the lead in 1931 movie "Skippy," and became the youngest ever actor nominated for a leading role Oscar.

He also played young Jim Hawkins in the 1934 version of "Treasure Island," and went on to a successful film and TV career -- including behind the camera, winning an Emmy Award in 1974 for directing an episode of "M*A*S*H."

Cooper played Daily Planet editor Perry White in the "Superman" films of 1978s and during the 1980s, starring opposite Christopher Reeve and Margot Kidder.

Source: Gibson's ex drops violence claims in court

AP, LOS ANGELES, May 5: A source says Mel Gibson's former girlfriend has told a judge hearing the couple's child custody dispute that she is dropping allegations that the Oscar-winner struck her during a fight last year.

The source who is familiar with the case says Oksana Grigorieva (gree-GOR'-yeh-vuh) told a family law judge Wednesday that she was withdrawing all domestic violence allegations against Gibson from the case. Most of the case is sealed and the source spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the dispute.

The move doesn't affect a misdemeanor battery case in which the actor-director pleaded no contest in March. His plea didn't include an admission of guilt and cannot be used against him in a civil lawsuit. He remains on probation and is undergoing domestic violence counseling.

Jackie Cooper, former child star, dies at 88

AP, LOS ANGELES, May 5: With his boyish looks and his thick head of blond hair, Jackie Cooper seemed to be eternally young. He was "Skippy," taking the popular comic strip character to the big screen in a turn that would garner a best actor Oscar nod at age 9.

Cooper remained the youngest player to be nominated for that category, an accolade that he likely didn't care much about at the time: The handsome kid with the winning smile fell asleep during the ceremony in the lap of another nominee, Marie Dressler.

It was that honesty that kept Cooper grounded about life in the spotlight and the realities of being a working actor, whether he was starring in films or TV shows, or behind the scenes as a director or studio honcho.

"He was a fascinating guy who really did everything, from all different aspects of the business," said his son, Russell Cooper. "You can't really say that about many people."

Jackie Cooper, 88, died Tuesday at a nursing facility in Santa Monica, Calif., said his other son, John.

Cooper reigned with Shirley Temple as one of the most popular child stars of the 1930s. Starting in comedy shorts, he rose to top ranks with "Skippy," a sentimental adaptation of a popular comic strip. He followed with such hits as "The Champ," "The Bowery," "Treasure Island" and "O'Shaughnessy's Boy," all co-starring Wallace Beery.

With his career fading after World War II, Cooper left Hollywood for the New York theater. He returned to Hollywood and starred in two successful situation comedies, "The People's Choice" (1955-58) and "Hennessey" (1959-62). He appeared as a Navy doctor in "Hennessey," which he also produced and directed.

"I think it's tough to direct and star in a feature," he commented in a 1971 interview. "Either the direction or the performance will suffer. But an actor can direct himself in television. I found it essential to relieve the crushing boredom of starring in a series."

He directed more than 250 half-hour and hour-long series episodes, 16 two-hour movies and numerous pilots and commercials. At one point, he vowed he would never act again. But he returned for an occasional role, most notably as gruff Daily Planet editor Perry White in Christopher Reeves' four "Superman" movies.

"He managed to change with the business," said his son John. "Early in his life, he experienced the kind of success that many people do not have, if they have that kind of success at all, until much later."

Jackie had a memorable bit in the 1929 musical "Sunny Side Up" and appeared in eight of the popular "Our Gang" comedies, including "Pups Is Pups" and "Teacher's Pet." Those credits led to a test that won him the title role of "Skippy."

The director of the 1931 film was his uncle, Norman Taurog. A crucial scene called for Jackie to cry. The tears wouldn't come, and Taurog became angry. He called the boy's beloved dog a nuisance and said he would send it to the pound. Jackie threw a tantrum, infuriating the director.

"If you don't do what I say, I'll have the policeman shoot the dog," Taurog threatened, pointing to the armed security guard.

The tears flowed, and the scene was filmed, and Taurog went on to win the Oscar for best director. Fifty years later, Cooper titled his autobiography, "Please Don't Shoot My Dog."

He was born John Cooper Jr. on Sept. 15, 1922, in Los Angeles. His Jewish father, who ran a music store, had married an Italian musician, Mabel Leonard, but deserted her when their son was 2. Destitute, his mother found work at Fox studio as a secretary. Through her brother-in-law, Taurog, she was able to arrange extra work in movies for young Jackie.

MGM signed Cooper to a contract after "Skippy," and he attended the studio school with Mickey Rooney, Judy Garland and Freddie Bartholomew. Cooper proved an ideal combination with Beery, the rough, tough character whose heart is melted by the winsome kid.

Unlike some child actors, Cooper was able to sustain his stardom through adolescence. Among Cooper's other 1930s films: "Sooky" (a sequel to "Skippy"), "Broadway to Hollywood," "Lone Cowboy," "Dinky," "The Devil Is a Sissy" (with Rooney and Bartholomew), "Peck's Bad Boy," "White Banners," "Gangster's Boy," "That Certain Age" (opposite Deanna Durbin), "What a Life" (as Henry Aldrich), "Seventeen" and "The Return of Frank James."

After four years in the Navy, he returned to find his career had slumped.

"I managed to find work, but it was in low-budget pictures," he recalled in 1971. "I couldn't see myself continuing like that.

"About that time, I had become acquainted with some New York actors, like Keenan Wynn and John Garfield. Garfield kept telling me to 'get back to New York where you can learn your craft.'"

Cooper followed the advice and appeared as Ensign Pulver in Broadway and road companies of "Mister Roberts." He starred in two hit comedies: "Remains to Be Seen" and "King of Hearts."

During the early 1950s, the television industry was exploding in New York, and he acted in many live dramas. It led to his return to Hollywood and success with "The People's Choice" and "Hennessey."

Tiring of the weekly series grind, Cooper in 1964 accepted a five-year contract as production head of Screen Gems, the TV arm of Columbia Pictures.

"Like so many of those jobs, the honeymoon was over after the first two years," he remarked. "Then you find yourself spending all your time trying to sell your bosses on what you want to do. My last selling job was 'The Flying Nun.' They kept telling me that people wouldn't watch a show about Catholics." He persisted, and the series starring Sally Field became a hit.

After almost 50 years in the business, Cooper thought of retiring in the early 1970s. Then producer Mike Frankovich offered him a role in "The Love Machine," and a film to direct, "Stand Up and Be Counted." He continued with occasional acting roles and a heavy schedule of directing for television.

Cooper married three times: to June Horne (with whom he had a son, John) and Hildy Parks, then to Barbara Kraus (with whom he had a son, Russell, and two daughters, Julie and Christina).

"There's not a child actor in the lot," he once remarked happily. 

'Idol' finalists attempt current and classic tunes

AP, LOS ANGELES, May 5: Lauren Alaina was anything but flat on "American Idol."

The soaring 16-year-old songstress of Rossville, Ga., impressed the Fox talent competition's judges with both her performances on Wednesday's serving of current and classic songs. An energized Alaina first strutted to Carrie Underwood's "Flat on the Floor" before delivering a surprisingly elegant take on The Righteous Brothers' "Unchained Melody."

"This girl can sing like a bird," proclaimed Randy Jackson.

James Durbin, the wailing 22-year-old rocker of Santa Cruz., Calif., who was proclaimed the contest's front-runner last week, again wowed the panel with his choices. He blasted off at the beginning of the show with 30 Seconds to Mars' "Closer to the Edge" and later landed an emotional rendition of Harry Nilsson's "Without You," which brought him to tears.

"Every single week, I leave everything on this stage," pleaded Durbin. "Everything."

Scotty McCreery, the deep-voiced 17-year-old country crooner of Garner, N.C., also escaped receiving criticism from the panel after his gritty take on Montgomery Gentry's Southern rock track "Gone" and subtle rendition of Elvis Presley's "Always on My Mind." The judges were wowed with his frenetic energy on "Gone," which included a tiny lunge off the stage.

"I saw you dance with the devil tonight, and that's a good thing for you," said Steven Tyler.

The judges weren't jumping for joy over Jacob Lusk's daring attempt to tackle both parts of "No Air," the pop duet of former "Idol" champion Jordin Sparks and Chris Brown. However, the booming 23-year-old vocalist from Compton, Calif., bounced back from that disaster with a tender take on "Love Hurts," the classic made famous by Nazareth and Roy Orbison.

"That might've been the highest note ever sung on this stage," said Jackson.

Haley Reinhart, the growling 20-year-old college student of Wheeling, Ill., also took a misstep. She confused the judges with her contemporary selection, Lady Gaga's unreleased "You and I," but impressed them with her well-known oldie, The Animals' version of "The House of the Rising Sun," which received a standing ovation from the panel and audience.

"That song has never been sung like that before," Jennifer Lopez teased after her sultry performance.

One of the five finalists will be eliminated Thursday with the 10th season "Idol" scheduled to be selected on the May 26 finale.

CUNY blocks playwright Kushner's honorary degree

AP, NEW YORK, MAy 5: The trustees of the City University of New York have voted to block a planned honorary degree to playwright Tony Kushner.

The vote Monday night came after one trustee said the "Angels in America" playwright had made disparaging comments about Israel in the past.

In an interview with The New York Times, the Pulitzer Prize-winning writer says he is a strong supporter of Israel's right to exist. He says he believes the board has slandered him and owes him an apology.

Kushner says he wouldn't accept the degree now even if the board changed its mind.

The degree was to have been awarded by CUNY's John Jay College.

The story was first reported in The Jewish Week on Tuesday.

Paula Fox looks back on a wayward life

AP, NEW YORK, May 5: At age 88, author Paula Fox is the settled survivor of a disrupted life.

She was abandoned as an infant, frequently moved through much of her childhood, a teen mother who gave up her daughter for adoption, a witness to the devastation of post-World War II Europe, and the public and private breakdowns of New York in the 1960s and 1970s. She was an out-of-print novelist rediscovered by Jonathan Franzen, Jonathan Lethem and other authors young enough to be her children.

"I've always known a lot of very bad people, destructive, brutes of a certain kind. Then I've seen these lovely impulses and what not, and they've stayed with me and comforted me," she says during a recent interview in the living room of her Brooklyn town house, a cobblestone garden in back.

Known for the memoir "Borrowed Finery" and for such novels as "Desperate Characters" and the award-winning "The Slave Dancer," Fox has a poised and graceful presence, with a strong chin, a proud smile and gently parted gray-white hair. She has been a Brooklyn resident for decades and lives with her husband, the editor, critic and translator Martin Greenberg, and two middle-age cats, one of whom, Lucy, checks in periodically like a nervous publicist.

Fox is a recent inductee into the New York State Writers Hall of Fame. She also has a new book, "News From the World," short pieces written over the past 45 years, from remembrances of family and neighbors to such fiction as the title story, in which an oil slick ruins a seaside village's peaceful isolation, a theme of violation and endangerment that appears in much of her work. The new book is dedicated to two writers she befriended as a young adult, Mary King and Pat O'Donnell. Their "goodness" and "sobriety" and "seriousness" were qualities she encountered too rarely as a girl.

Childhood taught her harsh lessons about the character of writers, and of parents. Her father, Paul Fox, was a screenwriter, and a drunk, given to "interminable, stumbling descriptions of the ways in which he and fellow writers tried to elude domesticity," she observes in her new book. Her mother, Elsie, was a "sociopath," the author says, who banished Paula from the house. The hero of her youth was an early caretaker, the Rev. Elwood Amos Corning, "Uncle Elwood," whom Fox can summon in perfect detail.

"I have a painter's memory," Fox says during the interview. "I can remember things from my childhood which were so powerfully imprinted on me, the whole scene comes back. I remember Mr. Corning, for example, Uncle Elwood, as I called him, imitating a horse he had in the living room of the house, and I remember him bursting with laughter as he galloped past me into the dining room."

Her father did make at least one important contribution: books, a box of them he delivered to Corning's house when Paula was 5. She read fairy tales and the funny papers, Mark Twain and "Treasure Island." She memorized Rudyard Kipling's "If" and could recite the American presidents in chronological order.

Fox's experiences have no apparent connection except that she was there for them. Her homes included a sugar plantation in Cuba; a small apartment on Manhattan's Upper West Side; an Italian-style villa in Peterborough, N.H.; a finishing school in Montreal. She traveled across the country to California with a family acquaintance often too drunk to drive.

"My life was incoherent to me," Fox wrote in "Borrowed Finery," released in 2001 and a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle award. "I felt it quivering, spitting out broken teeth."

She lived in Hollywood in the late 1930s and early 1940s, in apartments and rooming houses. She did see stars, some burned out, others beginning to shine. She delivered a book to a "young and thin" Orson Welles. She danced with John Wayne, a virtual unknown at the time. While visiting a friend at her apartment, she spotted a familiar face entering a room down the hall. It was Harpo Marx, seeing his mistress. She met John Barrymore, "yellowing with age like the ivory keys of a very old piano."

She married at 17, had a child (Linda Carroll, who became Courtney Love's mother) and gave her up for adoption. She divorced, worked for years as a teacher and as a tutor for troubled children, married Greenberg and had two more kids. Only in her 40s did she begin her first novel, "Poor George," about a cynical school teacher who finds purpose — and ruin — in mentoring a vagrant teenager.

Her earliest published work was short fiction, and two stories — "Lord Randall" and "The Living" — are included in her new book. They are unusual efforts for a white writer, narrated in colloquial style by black characters and published in Negro Digest, which accepted the stories without meeting the author.

In her memoir "The Coldest Winter," Fox writes that living abroad liberated her mind, "showing me something other than myself." She thought out the life of a Latina housekeeper in the novel "A Servant's Tale." In "The Slave Dancer," winner in 1974 of the Newbery Medal for best children's book, a young boy is captured and forced on to a slave ship.

"I've never been a slave. I've never been black. I was never on a ship. But I have a certain narrow understanding of certain kinds of characters, and of evil and kindness and goodness and tenderness," Fox says.

As an adult writer, Fox received acclaim for her subtle prose and her deep insights into the collapse of white collar security in the `60s and `70s. A nasty bite from a cat in "Desperate Characters" mirrors a plague of violence and decay that has spread through New York City. "The Widow's Children" finds a family at war as a husband and wife prepare for a trip to Africa.

"Everything is always on the edge of crisis and sometimes whole countries, like Libya, tumble into them," Fox says. "There's a certain amount of tyranny in all of us to some extent, and in some people it's much more developed than in others. It's a different balance which makes us all different. But we all have the same qualities and essence. There's a certain tendency toward bigotry, cruelty, absolutism, stupidity. It doesn't take over in a lot of us. ... We know it's there. People don't want to know that."

But by the 1990s her work was forgotten by all but her most determined admirers. One of them, fortunately, was Franzen. The future author of "Freedom" and "The Corrections" came upon "Desperate Characters" while at the Yaddo writers colony in Saratoga Springs, N.Y., in 1991. A few years later, he wrote an essay for Harper's magazine that worried about the state of American fiction and called "Desperate Characters" an overlooked masterpiece that provided him "company and consolation and hope in an object pulled almost at random from a bookshelf."

Author Tom Bissell, then a paperback editor at W.W. Norton, read the essay and wondered why he hadn't heard of the novel. He looked in stores and had no luck, not even among the epic stacks at the Strand in Manhattan's Union Square, a veritable lost and found for literature. He finally got in touch with Fox, who sent him one of her copies; Norton reissued all of Fox's adult novels, with introductory essays by Franzen, Lethem and other writers.

"I think Paula obliterates the distinction we make between `minimalist' and `maximalist' writers," Bissell says. "Paula, whose prose is quite spare but never feels `minimal' or skeletal at all, shows us that all so-called minimalism is good old-fashioned carefulness in narration."

Cruelty inspired some of her best work, but also robbed her gift for invention. In the mid-'90s, she was visiting Jerusalem when she was attacked by a mugger, thrown to the ground and hospitalized. Fox says she can still write, but only nonfiction. She has published no novels since being injured, instead writing "Borrowed Finery" and "The Coldest Winter."

"Another quarter of an inch and I would have been dead," she says of her head injury. "It took me a long time to write a few pages of `Borrowed Finery,' then as I went on it took less and less time and by the time I came to `The Coldest Winter,' I didn't have so much trouble.

"There are moments one is so grateful for certain things. For instance, I thought the other day of the water that comes out of our faucet, for a second I felt an immense social gratitude toward the water itself. You see the difference between your situation and the world's, in one form or another. I wasn't congratulating myself. I didn't feel complacent about it at all, not consciously

Zsa Zsa Gabor hospitalized with pneumonia

Reuters, LOS ANGELES, May 5: Ailing Hollywood actress Zsa Zsa Gabor was back in the hospital on Wednesday with pneumonia, her spokesman told Reuters.

Gabor, 94, was taken by ambulance to a Los Angeles hospital after having problems with her breathing at home, publicist John Blanchette said.

He said her condition was serious. "They are trying to drain her lungs to save her life," he said.

Gabor has been in and out of the hospital for almost a year after breaking her hip in a fall at her Bel Air home in July. Her leg was partially amputated in January because of a gangrene infection. She was also treated for pneumonia in February.

The Hungarian-born actress and gossip-page fixture starred in 1950s movies "Moulin Rouge" and "Lili."

Hollywood actor Jackie Cooper dead at 88

Reuters, LOS ANGELES, May 5: Actor Jackie Cooper, who survived a tumultuous childhood as an Oscar-nominated star to enjoy a varied career as a TV executive, director and "Superman" sidekick, died near Los Angeles, his attorney said on Wednesday. He was 88.

Cooper succumbed to complications of old age at a convalescent home in the coastal city of Santa Monica on Tuesday, attorney Roger Licht told Reuters.

He starred in more than 100 movies and TV shows before retiring from Hollywood more than 20 years ago. He retreated to a high-rise condominium with his third wife, Barbara, whom he credited for keeping him on the straight and narrow.

Cooper's life outside Hollywood was just as interesting. He served in the U.S. Navy during World War Two, and retired with the rank of captain from the reserves in the early 1980s. He also raced cars and owned racehorses.

He never really shed the pug nose and firm chin that endeared him to millions of Americans during the Great Depression, when he starred as a prominent cast member of Hal Roach's "Our Gang" short comedy films. At the twilight of his career, Cooper played grizzled Daily Planet editor Perry White in the 1978 "Superman" movie and its three sequels.

Born John Cooper, Jr. in Los Angeles, he was the illegitimate child of a sickly Italian mother who died when he was a teenager and a Jewish father who quickly abandoned the family. He got his start in Hollywood when his much-loathed grandmother dragged him around studio lots for day work as an extra.

His "Our Gang" work -- he appeared in such comedy shorts as "Teacher's Pet" and "Love Business" -- led to his starring role in the 1931 film "Skippy," an adaptation of the comic strip about a lively youngster.

In order to force him to cry for a scene, his grandmother dragged his dog off set and had it shot by a security guard. The boy duly cried, but remained hysterical even after it was revealed that the dog was not actually dead. Cooper titled his 1981 memoir "Please Don't Shoot My Dog."

Aged 9, he made Oscar history by becoming the youngest male performer to be nominated for a lead role. (He lost to Lionel Barrymore.)

Later in 1931, he co-starred in "The Champ" as the innocent son of a washed-up boxer played by Wallace Beery. The film was remade in 1979 with Rick Schroder as the tow-headed little boy. Cooper reunited with Beery in such films as "The Bowery" (1933) and "Treasure Island" (1934).

Off-screen, he fully enjoyed the fruits of stardom. By 18 he had become the lover of Joan Crawford, who was almost twice his age. But he was an old hand by then. He later recounted that when he was 13 he was having sex two or three times before 9 a.m. with a 20-year-old girl across the street.

His career inevitably dried up as he got older, and he had been divorced twice by the time he was in his early 30s.

Cooper won an Emmy for his title role as a Navy doctor in the sitcom "Hennesey" before becoming a vice president at Screen Gems during the 1960s, working on such shows as "Bewitched" and "Gidget." He turned to TV directing in the 1970s, winning Emmys for episodes of "M*A*S*H" and "The White Shadow."

His third wife, the former Barbara Kraus, died in 2009 after more than 50 years of marriage. He is survived by one of their three children, and by a namesake son from his first marriage.

Simon Cowell tops Jagger, Sting in UK music rich list

Reuters, LONDON, May 5: "The X Factor" and former "American Idol" judge Simon Cowell jumped to number 6 in the British music rich list in 2011 after his fortune hit 200 million pounds ($330 million), Britain's Sunday Times newspaper said on Thursday.

That was a 35 million pound rise on 2010, when he was 11th in the annual rankings published by the newspaper, and took him above Elton John and Mick Jagger whose fortunes were estimated at 195 million and 190 million pounds respectively.

Cowell, also a music producer with an entertainment company called Syco, has signed a new deal with Britain's ITV channel and is preparing to launch "The X Factor" in the United States. But he was still some way behind his arch-rival Simon Fuller, creator of the talent TV "Idol" franchise, who ranked 5th in 2011 with personal wealth of 375 million pounds.

British-based record executive Clive Calder, who sold Zomba Records in 2002, took over at the top of the music rich list with 1.3 billion pounds, unchanged on the amount in 2010.

He regained his position at number one after Warner Music boss Edgar Bronfman moved back to New York from his temporary home in London.

Musical composer and theater owner Andrew Lloyd Webber was second with a fortune of 680 million pounds, musical producer Cameron Mackintosh was third (675 million) and ex-Beatle Paul McCartney fourth (495 million).

In the Irish music rich list, U2 boosted their wealth to 455 million pounds from 429 million in 2010 to remain comfortably on top, followed by dancer Michael Flatley with 214 million pounds.

Following is a list of the top 10 British music millionaires. (all figures in pounds)

1. Clive Calder (1.3 billion)

2. Andrew Lloyd Webber (680 million)

3. Cameron Mackintosh (675 million)

4. Paul McCartney (495 million)

5. Simon Fuller (375 million)

6. Simon Cowell (200 million)

7. Elton John (195 million)

8. Mick Jagger (190 million)

9. Sting (180 million)

10. Keith Richards (175 million) 

Hollywood honors "timeless, beautiful" Sophia Loren

Reuters, LOS ANGELES, May 5: John Travolta called her the "most delicious" thing to come out of Italy, Roberto Benigni serenaded her with the Neapolitan song "O Sole Mio" and Billy Crystal said she was his "first great love."

Hollywood came out on Wednesday to honor Sophia Loren, 50 years after she become the first person to win an acting Oscar for a foreign-language role with the Italian movie "Two Women."

Loren, now 76 and with her famous hour-glass figure intact, did not attend that 1961 Academy Award ceremony. She told an audience of some 800 actors, directors, friends and family on Wednesday she never dreamed an Italian in an Italian-language film would earn the movie industry's highest honor.

"The Academy Award changed my life completely," she said at the tribute organized by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. "It helped me to believe in myself and encouraged me to push my own artistic boundaries."

"There are no words to describe my emotions right now. It is hard to imagine that 50 years have passed since I welcomed my Oscar to my home," she added.

Regarded as the most famous living Italian actress with more than 80 movies, Loren received a lifetime achievement Oscar in 1991 and was declared "one of world cinema's greatest treasures."

On Wednesday, she was feted with tributes and clips of the most famous roles from her 1950s to 1970s heyday, including "Marriage Italian Style," "A Special Day," "Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow" and Hollywood films "El Cid" and "Man of La Mancha."

With most of her co-stars and directors long dead -- Marcello Mastroianni, Gregory Peck, Frank Sinatra, Charlton Heston, Cary Grant, Marlon Brando and her producer husband Carlo Ponti -- the speeches were left to a younger generation.

Rob Marshall, who directed Loren in her most recent feature film "Nine" in 2009, said working with her was "the most magic I will ever have."

Tom Hanks called her "timeless, beautiful and authentically real." Christian De Sica described the frequent pairing of Loren with his father, Italian director Vittorio De Sica, as "like a cappuccino -- no-one could tell the milk from the coffee."

Exuberant Italian actor and director Benigni, himself an Oscar winner for the 1997 movie "Life is Beautiful," sang to Loren in a video message and her son Edoardo Ponti fought back tears as he told her: "We are here because we love you and you deserve every single thing."

Asked by host and U.S. comedian Crystal whether she was happy with her career, Loren dabbed tears from her eyes.

"You are never content," she replied. "You always want to do more and find the right thing at the right time. I like my career, my life, so much. I was born for this. I am sick when I don't work for a year or two."

Arnold Schwarzenegger picks drama for comeback

Reuters, LOS ANGELES, May 5: Arnold Schwarzenegger has zeroed in on the film that will mark his return to the big screen: "Cry Macho," a drama about a down-on-his-luck horse trainer who is hired to kidnap a 9-year-old boy.

Filming is set to begin in September. Brad Furman ("The Lincoln Lawyer") will direct. Producer Al Ruddy, an Oscar winner for both "The Godfather" and "Million Dollar Baby," has been nurturing the project for years.

"I guarantee that you'll get another look at Arnold Schwarzenegger in this movie," Ruddy said. "Arnold always plays these big muscular guys, but there's a sweetness to Arnold in real life, and we want to bring that sweetness to the screen. Now that Brad's met with Arnold, he's convinced there's an accessibility and vulnerability there that he wants to bring out."

The project's financier, QED International, will begin offering it to international buyers at the Cannes Film Festival next week.

Schwarzenegger's deal calls for the actor to receive $12.5 million plus 25% of gross ticket sales from the first dollar. Ruddy and Schwarzenegger also will end up co-owning the negative on the film.

While the former governor also is attached to a "Terminator" package that is being offered to studios, with "Macho," he is opting for a movie that is more a character study than a full-blown action piece -- although some action elements have been added to accommodate the star.

The film is based on the 1975 novel, "Cry Macho," by N. Richard Nash, who also wrote the play The Rainmaker. Nash, who died in 2000, wrote the screenplay, which Ruddy has re-optioned over the years.

"I just would never let go of this one," Ruddy, 81, said. Actors ranging from Burt Lancaster to Pierce Brosnan expressed interest in the lead role. And at one point, it looked as if Clint Eastwood might star in and direct.

Because he didn't want to lose control of the property, Ruddy said, he never took it to a studio but continued to look for ways to package it independently.

Schwarzenegger, 63, will play Mike, a horse trainer whose wife and son have died. His former boss makes him an over he can't refuse: $400,000 to kidnap the boss' trust-fund son, who is living with the man's ex-wife in Mexico. But when Mike locates the boy, a real troublemaker, the ex-wife doesn't want the kid. But as Mike and the boy head back to the states, with the Federales on their trail, they develop a father-son bond.

"If it works, and I think it will," Ruddy said, "this could be a classic. There's an emotional line to the story that really works. At the end of the movie, I'm hoping audiences will be laughing and crying at the same time."

Govt moves to prop limping railway

The government has formed a separate division under the communications ministry to cope with development programmes for the expansion and improvement of the ailing railway communications.


The communications ministry has now been divided into three divisions — Roads Division, Railway Division and Bridges Division — to give more importance to railway communications now undergoing reforms with financial support of development partners that include World Bank, Asian Development Bank and Japan International Cooperation Agency, officials said.
'The government has made a separate division under the communications ministry to give more importance to train services which will be expanded to all districts in phases,' the roads and railway division secretary, Mozammel Haque, told New Age on Wednesday.
He said that projects were already under way to lay out 500 kilometres of railway connecting, among other districts such as Madaripur, Munshiganj, Barisal and Chittagong which would help to reduce pressure on roads as train service is safe and cheap.
The World Bank, the ADB and JICA had agreed with the government to provide $600 million in loan assistance for reforms of the railway on the conditions that the organisation must turn into a profitable organisation and deliver improved services to passengers, officials said.
Mozammel said that fares and charges for goods transport would be increased, once the service would improve, to stop the railway from incurring losses.
'Forty-three projects are being implemented for the expansion and improvement of the railway,' the secretary said.
The projects include procurement of 46 locomotives to ensure smooth services to passengers, he added.
A secretary would be posted to the Railway Division soon to take over responsibility of the new division as the authorities had already approved a 46-strength organogram which includes one post for the secretary, two joint secretaries, three deputy secretaries and six senior assistant secretaries, the officials concerned said.
The Cabinet Division on April 28 issued a gazette notification on the separation of the railway as a new division.
The communications ministry in late March requested the housing and public works secretary to allocate offices for officials and employees of the Railway Division.
After assumption of office in 2009, the government led by the Awami League has so far approved 25 projects for the modernisation and expansion of railway at a cost of Tk 12751 crore that include new railway constructions between Dohazari to Gundam in Myanmar via Ramu and Cox's Bazar, between Khulna and Mongla and restoration of the Panchuria–Faridpur railway link, modernisation of the Saidpur railway workshop and rehabilitation the Mymensingh–Jamalpur–Dewanganj Bazar section.
The Bangladesh Railway has a railway network of 2,835.04 kilometres connecting 44 districts with 440 stations and 286 locomotives.
Source: New Age

Most editors in favour of involving opposition

Editors of national dailies, but for one or two, on Wednesday called for involving the opposition to amend the Constitution of the Republic through consensus to avoid controversies in the future.

Invited to a consultation meet, they told parliamentary special committee on Constitution amendment that consensus was necessary to avoid unnecessary controversy on the national issue.

The editors suggested for amending Article 70 to allow the lawmakers to express their views in parliament freely, even if goes against the party line, without the fear of losing membership of parliament.

Safeguarding the citizens' fundamental rights and increasing the number of parliamentary constituencies also came up for discussion, meeting sources said.

Responding to the editors suggestion for involving the opposition with the amendment process, the committee chairperson Syeda Ssajeda Chowdhury said, 'We have invited them but they did not turn up. You can also play a role to bring them to the dialogue. We will welcome the move.'

The editor of Bangla daily Samakal Golam Sarwar told reporters after the meeting, 'I suggested for ensuring the involvement of the main opposition party with the process of constitution amendment process. Otherwise, the people would consider it as a unilateral affair.'     

He said that he also suggested for bringing the amendment to the Constitution through consensus between the ruling party and the opposition parties on the question of selecting the head of the election time caretaker government other than a retired chief justice to keep the judiciary beyond controversy.

The News Today editor, Reazuddin Ahmed said that the government should do everything to involve the opposition with the process of amendment to the Constitution.

He said the opposition should come to the committee to make their contribution in the amendment process.

Reazuddin told New Age, 'It would not be possible to fully restore the Constitution as it was on adoption in 1972, as the prime minister had said.

That's why, he said, he suggested for appointing a constitution commission to recommend the amendment to the Constitution of the Republic after examining every aspect and perspective involved.

The Kaler Kantha editor, Abed Khan said that involvement of the opposition was essential for amending the Constitution.

He said he suggested that the committee should take the initiative to involve the opposition with the amendment process.

He said that he suggested for incorporating a provision to make 'illegal take over of state power as an act of treason.'

He also suggested for incorporating a provision for trying and punishing the person illegally taking over state power under sedition charge.

He suggested for limiting the tenure of the election time caretaker government to a maximum of 90 days.

The Prothom Alo editor Matiur Rahman said that he told the JS panel that questions would crop up regarding the amendment, if the opposition was not involved with the process.

He also told the committee that the Constitution should be amended unanimously.

The daily Sun editor, Syed Anwar Husain said that there should be unanimity between the ruling and the opposition parties on the question of the Constitution amendment.

He said he also suggested for finding out an alternative to the election time caretaker government.

He suggested that strengthening the election commission could be an alternative to the undemocratic system of election time caretaker government.

Syed Anwar said that the caretaker system was introduced under special circumstances to save democracy.

He also suggested for change the name of the republic from People's Republic of Bangladesh to Republic of Bangladesh.

The Daily Star editor, Mahfuz Anam suggested for keeping retired chief justices away from caretaker administrations.

He also suggested for increase the number of parliamentary constituencies to 600, and 300 for women.

He called for strengthening parliamentary standing committees.

The Manabjamin editor, Motiur Rahman Chowdhury suggested that the government should continue, till the last, with its initiative to involve the opposition with process of amending the Constitution as it was very important to involve it with the process.

He said that he also suggested for the incorporation of a provision in the Constitution stipulating punishment for illegal take over of state power.

The Janakantha editor, Mohammad Atiqullah Khan Masud suggested for doing away with the election time system of caretaker government and for strengthening the election commission instead for holding free, fair and credible elections.

He told New Age after the meeting that he also suggested for the incorporation of a provision in the Constitution to punish autocrat rulers for illegal takeover of state power.

The Inqilab editor, AMM Bahauddin suggested for retaining in the Constitution, Islam as state religion and Bismillah-ar-Rahman-Rahim in its Preamable.

The Amar Desh editor, Mahmudur Rahman suggested for electing a constituent assembly for amending the Constitution.

He said that the amendment could be brought only by a constituent assembly.

He told reporters after the meeting that he suggested for ensuring participation of the opposition with the Constitution amendment process.

He suggested that bringing the amendment could be delayed, if necessary, to ensure the involvement of the opposition.

The New Age editor, Nurul Kabir suggested for making the citizens' right to food, clothing, shelter, education and health services as their fundamental rights with a legal provision to ensure the rights.

He suggested for dropping Article 70 that debars lawmakers from voting against the party line.

 He also suggested to the committee to repeal the stipulation in the constitution that allows suspension of the citizens' fundamental rights during emergency rule.

He said that there could be state religion.

Kabir suggested for immediate separation of the legislature and the executive. He said  this could be done by making it necessary to elect two persons as the prime minister and the leader of the house.

He also said that bringing any fundamental change to the Constitution required the people's endorsement through referendum.

The prime minister on July 21, 2010 constituted a 15-member special parliamentary committee, headed by the deputy leader of the house, Syeda Sajeda Chowdhury, to recommend proposals to amend the Constitution following a High Court verdict that declared illegal its Fifth Amendment.

After the second and final review by the committee, a bill for amending the Constitution  is expected to be placed in parliament towards the close of May.

Source: New Age

Minimum wages of millions below MDG poverty line

The legally set minimum wage levels for tens of millions of workers in Bangladesh's industrial sectors keep workers below the internationally drawn poverty line.

The United Nation's Millennium Development Goals require that countries should achieve at least $2 daily [$60 monthly] income for all citizens.

But an analysis by New Age has found that 33 of the 42 established wage levels set by the Minimum Wage Board mean that it is not possible for workers to move above the poverty line.

The levels include the salary of $42 a month in the export-orientated apparel sector, $37 a month in the shrimp processing sector, and $50 a month in the pharmaceutical sector.

The level set by the board for workers in automobile workshops is only $27 a month, for jute mill workers it is $31 a month, in hotel and restaurants, the level is $24 a month and in the iron and foundry sector, it is $59 a month.

Labour leaders and rights activists said that although the industrial sectors had advanced significantly in recent years, neither employers nor the government properly thought through the crucial human perspective of proper living standards for the workers.

'We hear politicians and government officials often making speeches on the Millennium Development Goals but it is astonishing that minimum wage even in the largest industrial sector is much below the poverty line requirement of $2 a day,' Nazma Akter, a leader of apparel workers, said.

'Really, neither the employers nor the government here is sincere in uplifting the standards of living of the workers,' said Nazma, who represented workers in 2006's tripartite negotiation for revising minimum wage for apparel workers.

The wages set for workers in the more risky and hazardous sectors tend to be a little higher. The minimum wage of a worker in ship-breaking yards, where deaths and injuries of workers are common, is $64 a month, with workers in re-rolling mill drawing a similar amount monthly.

The Minimum Wage Board recently recommended that considering the risks relating to work in tanneries, the workers should receive $122 a month. The minimum wage in tanneries was last revised more than 17 years ago.

Abul Kalam Azad, general secretary of the Bangladesh Tannery Workers' Union, told New Age that some employers were opposing the introduction of this agreed amount and hindering the finalisation of this upward revision on minimum wages.'

Industry insiders admitted that tannery workers even in many Asian countries draw monthly between $300 and $500.

Syed Sultan Uddin Ahmed, director of the Bangladesh Institute of Labour Studies, thinks that the mission of the government and others to try and uplift the economic wealth of the country is praiseworthy but this will be worthless if millions of workers continue to live below the poverty line.

'The most important priority of the MDG strategies of Bangladesh should be eliminating working poverty,' he said.

Iktedar Ahmed, the immediate-past chairman of the Minimum Wage Board, pointed out that social awareness in Bangladesh regarding fair minimum wages of workers is very weak and that make scopes for employers to exploit workers.

Echoing BILS's Sultan, Iktedar said that the government and social stakeholders here should sensitize employers to the issue of 'working poverty' and oblige them to arrange wages to ensure good living standards of the workers.

'It should be on the national agenda to ensure that workers are paid adequately. This mission will have to be achieved before achieving the Millennium Development Goals.'

Source: New Age

Saline crisis intensifies sufferings of diarrhoea patients

Inadequate supply of oral saline in the retail market is intensifying the sufferings of the diarrhoea patients across the country as their number has been rising with the increase of seasonal heat and water crisis.

Medicine shop owners in different city areas said that they were selling oral saline of a particular brand at a higher price as the supply was insufficient against demand.

The wholesale medicine sellers and retailers alleged that the pharmaceutical company had created an artificial crisis. They also complained that the company sold the saline to them subject to conditions that they have to buy their other products, which further intensified the crisis.

Mozammel Haque, owner of Fahmida Medical Hall in city's Karwan Bazar area, said that supply of ORS was not sufficient to meet the current demand. 'We have been facing the shortage of saline for last two months. We have to buy saline form the whole sellers at higher cost.'  

'On the other hand, if we buy saline directly from the Social Marketing Company distributors, the main producer of ORS, we have to buy other slow items worth about Tk 1,500 from the company,' he said adding that the company also do not supply saline according to their requirements.

The factory rate of one packet of saline is Tk 3 while the maximum retail price of one packet of saline is fixed at Tk 3.44.

Unscrupulous dealers, taking the advantage of the high demand, have raised the price of saline from Tk 1.5 to Tk 2.5 per packet after creating a shortage in supply at the retail market, said the traders and the people concerned.

Delwar, owner of Promi Medicne Shop in city's Khilgaon area, said that they sold 20 packets of saline at Tk 100.

The government, however, has suggested people to drink home-made oral saline instead of buying packets of saline from the market.

Monir Hossain, deputy secretary of Bangladesh Chemist and Druggist Society, said that Social Marketing Company was the main supplier of oral saline which was more popular than any other brand. 'But it cannot meet the suddenly increased demand for saline. The price has been hiked as the demand is rising rapidly,' he added.

He pointed out that shortage of oral saline is a regular occurrence this time of the year when most people want to buy saline produced by SMC. 'SMC authorities know this, but we fail to understand why they don't increase their supply,' he questioned.

Mahbubur Rahman, head of marketing of SMC said that a section of unscrupulous traders stocked the products to create an artificial shortage of oral saline to make windfall profits during the current outbreak of diarrhoeal diseases.

He said that the SMC currently produces around 300 million packets of oral saline every year.

'We produce 200 million packets in our own factory which is our maximum capacity. We also manufacture about 100 packets of saline on contract with three other companies including the state-owned Essential Drugs Company Limited and Renata Limited,' Rahman added.

He denied the allegation of their imposing condition of selling saline. 'The company has no policy like that. But there might have been some isolated incidents.'

Rahman said the retailers and whole sellers did not send such complain to them directly. 'They can directly complain to us so that we can take action in this regard.'

Director general of directorate general of health services Khandaker M Shefayetullah said the government would take initiative to increase the production of ORS.

He also advised people to take home-made saline instead of buying saline from the medicine shops.

Source: New Age

Phulbari people protest at open pit mining

At least two members of Phulbari unit of the national committee to protect oil, gas, mineral resources, power, and ports were injured on Wednesday in a clash with Barapukuria coal mine workers when the committee was holding a highway and railway blockade at Phulbari in Dinajpur district.  The national committee also claimed the police picked up its leader and Phulbari Upazila Parishad chairman Aminul Islam Bablu and another activist, Nuruzzaman, although the police denied the allegation.

There had been no road or railway communication in Phulbari since 10:00am Wednesday till filing of this report at 9:00pm. 

Dinajpur district unit of the national committee, which had been running a protest programme since Monday to realise its three-point charter of demands, issued an ultimatum to the coal mining company on Tuesday to fulfil the demands by 10:00am Wednesday, saying otherwise it would launch a highway and railway blockade programme.

The demands include paying compensations to the people affected by the mining activities for the damage to the last Aman crop, putting an end to filing cases against and harassing the people involved in the movement to protect their rights, and stopping for good all conspiracies to start open-pit coal mining in Barapukuria.

Locals and witnesses said the clash between the committee activists and coal mine workers erupted when the first side asked the second group as they were living the mine after work to abstain from working from today [Thursday].

National committee leaders alleged that plainclothesmen, posing as coal mine workers, swooped on the committee activists and it was when they took away Aminul Islam and Nuruzzaman.   

The news of arrest of the two committee leaders prompted locals along with the committee activists to bring out protest processions, spreading a wave of panic in the area.

Later, the committee leaders said they would continue with the road and railway blockade until Aminul Islam and Nuruzzaman were released.

Phulbari police station officer-in-charge Shawkat Ali, however, denied the committee's claim that Aminul and Nuruzzaman had been picked up by police in civil dress.

Source: New Age

Khaleda likely to announce programmes at Paltan rally on May 9

The Bangladesh Nationalist Party chairperson, Khaleda Zia, is likely to address the party's rally scheduled for May 9 in Dhaka where she might announce 'tough programmes' to push for its demand for the resignation of the government and the holding of mid-term polls.

Although the main opposition has planned to hold the rally in Paltan Maidan in the capital, it has yet to get approval from authorities concerned.

The party, however, warned the government against putting hindrance on holding rally in Paltan Maidan and issued a threat of holding the rally in front of Bangabhaban, the office of the president of the republic.      

The party's ranking leaders said that Khaleda was scheduled to announce at the rally on May 9 the party's next anti-government programmes, which might include a series of long marches.

The BNP has, meanwhile, made all-out preparations to make the rally successful. The party leaders said that more than a lakh of people would join the rally.

'[Khaleda] is likely to address the rally on May 9 and we have been instructed to ensure the presence of more than a lakh of people at the rally,' a senior joint secretary general of the party told New Age.

'Party activists from five districts around Dhaka have been asked to attend the rally along with the supporters and well-wishers,' he said.

As the Dhaka Metropolitan Police has declined permission for the party to use Paltan ground, the BNP at a press conference at its central office at Naya Paltan on Wednesday protested at the decision of the authorities on not allowing the party to hold a rally in Paltan Maidan and on imposing a ban on rallies in Muktangan as well for an indefinite period.

The BNP after a standing committee meeting announced five-day agitation programmes to press home its demands for uninterrupted power and gas supply, arrest of price spiral, trial of people behind the share market scam and the holding of mid-term polls.

The five-day programmes include submission of memorandum to the deputy commissioners across the country and holding a central rally in Muktangan, scheduled for today, protesting at share market scam and holding a rally in Paltan Maidan on May 9 to demand mid-term polls.

The Dhaka Metropolitan Police has, meanwhile, imposed a ban for an indefinite period on rallies and processions in Muktangan, after some of the religion-based political parties had announced to hold rallies in the place in protest against the women development policy.

'We have written to authorities concerned seeking permission to hold the rally in Paltan Maidan but they have declined to allow us to use the ground,' Mirza Fakhrul said at the media briefing on Wednesday. 'The authorities concerned have, meanwhile, imposed a ban on rallies and processions in Muktangan where we are scheduled to hold a rally on Thursday.'

'We have for long been claiming that this fascist government is out to stop all democratic practices in the country by snatching people's democratic rights,' Fakhrul said.

Referring to the DMP decision on not allowing the party to hold the rally in Paltan Maidan and ban on rallies in Muktangan, the BNP's acting secretary general said, 'It is a brazen interference in people's fundamental rights.'

He, however, vowed to hold the programmes by any means. 'We will hold our programmes by any means.'

'If we are not allowed to hold the rally in Paltan Maidan,' he said, 'we will hold it in Muktangan. If we are not allowed to hold the rally there as well, we will hold the rally in front of the party office and if we are also not allowed there, we will hold the rally on Manik Mia Avenue.'

Fakhrul said, 'Even if the government does not allow us to hold the rally on Manik Mia Avenue, we will hold the rally in front of Bangabhaban.'

The party's joint secretary general Amanullah Aman, who was sitting next to Mirza Fakhrul, however, requested journalists not to quote the statement of Mirza Fakhrul regarding holding the rally in front of Bangabhaban.

Source: New Age

Court to deliver judgement today

The chief justice said on Wednesday that the Appellate Division would rule today (Thursday) on the various applications filed before it concerning the legality of Bangladesh Bank's attempt to remove Muhammad Yunus from his position of managing director of Grameen Bank.

On 9 March the High Court ruled that that neither  Yunus nor the nine elected shareholder directors of the Grameen Bank had a legal right to challenge the Bangladesh Bank's letter sent on 2 March to the chairman of GB, informing him that Yunus should have retired from his position at the age of 60.

Yunus and the nine directors then separately sought leave from the Appellate Division to appeal against the High Court order. On 5 April the seven-member court dismissed Yunus's application but later, on the same day, agreed to hear an application by his lawyers to recall the unsigned order on the grounds that they had not been given the opportunity to present all their arguments to the court.

The court on Wednesday continued to hear arguments by Sara Hossain, acting for nine Grameen Bank directors, on why it should give them leave to appeal against the High Court order.

Sara argued that the High Court was wrong to argue that her clients — all women borrowers elected by other members of the Grameen Bank — had no legal right to seek a remedy from the court.

'They have a proprietary right as shareholders, they have also been elected as directors by shareholders and as directors they have control of the bank's management,' she said.

She argued that her clients' power as directors to appoint and to remove the managing director had been subject to 'arbitrary, petty, perverse interference by state authority, highly belatedly.'

'The Bangladesh Bank is trying to usurp [the directors'] authority, against [their] wishes and remove the managing director without [their] consent. It is trespassing on [their] rights as directors of Grameen Bank,' she argued.

She also argued that it was not correct for the High Court to rule that no one should interfere with a public body as the Grameen Bank was a 'private body set up by statute', not a public body.

'That the bank was set up by statute does not make it a public body, nor makes its employees public servants,' she said.

She pointed to various sections of the Grameen Bank Ordinance 1983 that indicated the non-governmental nature of the bank.

'Only 25 per cent of the paid-up share capital of the bank is given by the government, 75 per cent is given by borrowers,' she said. 'The employees are paid from Grameen Bank's money. No money comes from the public exchequer.'

She said that if the High Court order remained intact, it would mean that the directors had no right to enforce their interests, that the managing directorship would have been 'arbitrarily usurped', that the confidence of the Grameen Bank's members would be shaken and the stability of the organisation would be under threat.

Sara called on the court to 'resist the arbitrary action' by the Bangladesh Bank and to 'step in and do what is necessary'.

Attorney-general Mahbubey Alam, however, told the court that the nine directors had no right to make any decision which 'goes against the law'.

He was referring to his previous argument that the law did not allow Mohammad Yunus to remain in office beyond the retirement age of 60.

He argued that the women directors had no right to come to court. 'The directors cannot come individually and say they are personally affected. The board can only come in its totality.'

'The petitioners say that they are aggrieved, but how are they aggrieved?' he asked.

Tawfique Nawaz, the lawyer for Bangladesh Bank, agreed with the attorney-general's argument that the directors 'have come before the court without holding a board meeting, without a board resolution and not in an official capacity'.

He emphasised that the will of the majority of the board must be reflected in a resolution.

He said that a collection of individuals cannot 'have standing before the court'.

He also argued that the Grameen Bank was a public body, so Yunus's attempt to stay on as managing director is an attempt to 'exercise the power of the state without entitlement'.'

Source: New Age

Have patience, war criminals will be tried: Hasina

The prime minister, Sheikh Hasina, on Wednesday reiterated her government's firm commitment for holding trial of war criminals who committed crimes against humanity during the country's War of Liberation in 1971 and urged the countrymen to have patience in this regard.

'The trial should not be held hurriedly. You have to keep in mind that we have started the process of the trial after 40 years of the country's independence. So, we have to proceed cautiously in this regard as any mistakes can hamper the trail process,' she said.

The prime minister said this while laying the foundation stone of the much- expected permanent complex of Liberation War Museum in the city's Agargaon area.

Describing the trial of war criminals as a continuous process, Sheikh Hasina said the trial had already been started and it would continue in future. She requested the next generation to keep continue the trail of the war criminals.

Regarding the Liberation War Museum, that started its journey on March 22, 1996 in a rented house in the city's Segunbagicha area, she said construction of the permanent complex would facilitate the new generation to know the true history of the war.

'The museum will help facilitate to uphold the undistorted history of liberation war to the new generation,' she added.

She said the post-1975 unconstitutional governments had distorted the country's history by using state power and misguided the people through false propaganda.

But, the prime minister said spirit of patriotism can never arise among the new generation without proper knowledge about the country's emergence, and sacrifice of their predecessors.

The Prime Minister said it is a matter of satisfaction that the new generation has awaken up with the spirit of War of Liberation and they want to know the greatest achievement of the Bangalees in thousands of years in establishing an independent and sovereign home land.

She expressed the hope that the Liberation War Museum will lead the whole nation to the light of truth from the distortion of history and it will also inspire the people to take part in nation building effort with honesty, sincerity and devotion.

The prime minister said her government will continue to assist the freedom fighters and their families so that they can enjoy a much better life. 'I don't want to see that a freedom fighter is suffering for want of food and health services.'

In this context, she referred various programmes undertaken by her government to preserve the memories of Liberation War as well as ensuring welfare of the freedom fighters' families.

The prime minister said the freedom fighter allowances was raised up to Tk 15,00 from Tk 900 in her previous term and it has been further raised in the current fiscal to Tk 2000.

Mentioning her government's endeavours to build a happy and prosperous Bangladesh with the spirit of the country's War of Liberation, she called upon all concerned to work united to this end.

Trustees of Liberation War Museum Dr Sarwar Ali, Mofidul Haq, Ziauddin Tariq Ali, Akku Chowdhury, Ali Zaker, Sara Zaker and Robiul Hossain also spoke at the function conducted by Asaduzaman Noor.

A munajat was offered seeking peace, progress and prosperity of the country after laying the foundation stone.

Source: New Age

Limon admitted to SBMCH

Limon Hossain, whose left leg had to be amputated after being shot at by the Rapid Action Battalion on March 23, was admitted to prison cell at Sher-e-Bangla Medical College Hospital in Barisal about 3:00am on Wednesday after being sent from the Jhalakati jail.

The National Human Rights Commission chairman, Mizanur Rahman, meanwhile on the day, questioned the legality of the court order for police remand of Limon.

He also questioned the late-night discharge of Limon from the National Institute of Traumatology and Orthopaedic Rehabilitation hospital in Dhaka and handing him over to police.

Limon's mother Henoara Begum, father Tofazzal Hossain and uncle Iliyas Hossain alleged that the police had taken Limon from Jhalakati to Barisal without informing them.

They said that had visited the hospital after coming to know of the matter from other sources but the police had not allowed them to meet Limon and give him any food. Limon was not given breakfast and was given lunch after 1:30pm, they said.

He had not fully recovered and he cannot be produced in court or cannot travel frequently, the family said.

Babul Kumar Saha, in-charge of the orthopaedics causality department at the hospital, said he had visited Limon after 11:00am and found his condition to be stable.

Limon was duly given breakfast but he did not take it fearing that he might need to go to toilet, the physician said. He later had lunch at 1:30 pm after assured being assured of assistance in going to toilet, Babul added.

As his condition was stable, the nurses and the patient were asked to follow the prescription advised by NITOR, the attending physician said.

On March 23, immediately after the shooting incident, the battalion filed two cases against him and seven others and the police on April 24 filed the charge sheet in the case filed under the arms act.

Limon was granted bail on Monday in the other case and the prayer for Limon's bail in arms case filed by the battalion has been deferred for hearing till May 9 by the Jhalakati district judge's court.

Limon was discharged from NITOR Hospital in Dhaka about 10:00am Tuesday and was taken to Jhalakathi in the evening by the police for his production in court in the case in which the charge sheet has been submitted.

On Tuesday night Jhalakathi  senior judicial magistrate Nusrat Jahan sent Limon to jail and asked the prison authorities to inform the court by Wednesday morning of steps to be taken for Limon's treatment.

The Rajapur police earlier on April 26 recorded the case filed against six battalion personnel by Limon's mother on a court order, 16 days after the issuance of the first directive by the court and 33 days after the shooting.

Subinspector Ariful Islam, investigation officer of all the three cases lodged against and in favour of Limon, submitted the charge sheet in the arms act against Limon and seven others.

On April 29, the investigation officer of the case filed by Lilmon's family against the battalion personnel was and subinspector Abdul Halim, second officer of the Rajapur police station, was ordered to investigate this case.

The National Human Rights Commission chair questioned the legality of the court order for police remand of Limon and the late-night discharge from NITOR Hospital and handing him over to police as he addressed a programme on the launch of a web portal in the CIRDAP auditorium.

The Population Services and Training Centre launched a new web portal named Nagorik Kantha.

Mizanur said, 'The chief justice and the judiciary should explain whether Limon, who is an adolescent boy, can be sent to jail and whether such order of the court violates the Children Act 1974.'

Jhalakati senior judicial magistrate Nusrat Jahan on Tuesday sent Limon to jail and asked the prison authorities to inform the court by Wednesday morning of the steps taken for his treatment.

The National Institute of Traumatology and Orthopaedic Rehabilitation released Limon on Tuesday and handed him over to the police.

Criticising the National Institute of Traumatology and Orthopaedic Rehabilitation director for discharging Limon, he questioned how a crippled boy could be discharged from the hospital without completion of his treatment.

The NHRC chairman also criticised the National Institute of Traumatology and Orthopaedic Rehabilitation director, Khandaker Abdul Awal Rizvi, for permitting the issuance of discharge certificate for Limon.

'The hospital authorities claimed that Limon was discharged as his condition was "somewhat well",' Mizanur said, questioning, 'what the expression "somewhat well" means.'

Raising the questions, Miaznur said not only the Human Rights Commission, but also the nation wanted to know the answers from the chief justice, the judiciary and doctors.

Deputy editor of Prothom Alo Anisul Haque and National Committee on Health Rights Movement president Rashid E Mahbub, among others, also spoke at the function.

Source: New Age

Politicised teacher recruitment a bane for public universities

SUCCESSIVE governments and authorities of the four major public universities—Dhaka University, Chittagong University, Rajshahi University and Jahangirnagar University—have violated the 1973 University Act in the appointment of vice-chancellor, claims the outgoing chairman of the University Grants Commission, Professor Nazrul Islam.

'Sadly, it is now a reality that if you do not belong to the pro-government group, your chance to become the vice-chancellor is very slim,' he said in an exclusive interview with New Age on Tuesday.

'…teacher recruitment has become politicised,' said Professor Islam, whose tenure at the helm of the commission expires tomorrow. 'As a result, party-neutral people become victims.'

He believes the quality of higher education in general has gone down because of poor teaching environment.

Professor Islam, a teacher of geography and environment at Dhaka University, insisted that low-quality private universities should be closed down if they fail to comply with the requirements.

He stressed the need for partnership between universities and businesses.

Professor Islam, whose tenure at the statutory body for supervision, maintenance, promotion and coordination of university education ran through both elected and unelected governments, believes a democratically elected government is better than a military-backed regime for the higher education system.

Source: New Age

Nizami and Mojaheed to be grilled in safe house

The detained amir of the Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami, Motiur Rahman Nizami, will be interrogated in the safe house on Road 27 at Dhanmondi on Thursday in connection with charges of war crimes.

The investigation agency will also interrogate Jamaat's detained secretary-general, Ali Ahsan Mohammad Mojaheed, in the safe house on May 8.

The period of interrogation of both of them will be from 10:00am and 5:00pm.

Investigator Md Abdur Razzak Khan sent a letter to Nizami and Mojaheed's counsel Tajul Islam on Tuesday, informing him that his clients will be questioned.

Tajul said that he had received the letter on Wednesday.

The International Crimes Tribunal on April 21 ordered the investigation agency to notify Tajul 48 hours before the interrogation of his clients.

On April 13 the tribunal, better known as the war crimes tribunal set up to try those responsible for crimes against humanity committed during the War of Independence in 1971, allowed the investigation officer to interrogate Nizami and Mojaheed in the safe house in the presence of one of their lawyers and a physician from Dhaka Central Jail.

According to the tribunal's order, the defence counsel and physician will be allowed to sit in an adjacent room so that they cannot hear but can see the interrogation of the Jamaat leaders.

The doctor will examine the health of the Jamaat leaders after the interrogation, the tribunal ordered.

On April 21 Tajul moved a petition seeking modification of the order issued on April 13.

While moving the petition Tajul argued that Nizami and Mojaheed should not be subjected to interrogation in the safe house as they might be subjected to torture, coercion and duress to extract information from them that will be used against them in the trial.

He also argued that a defence counsel should be allowed to be present within earshot during the interrogation.

The tribunal, however, told Tajul that the investigation agency, in its petition to be allowed to interrogate Nizami and Mojaheed, had said that they needed to be questioned to enable investigators to examine the various evidence including video-audio records, newspapers, magazines and other documents gathered against the two.

There will be no scope for torture, coercion and duress of the two Jamaat leaders during interrogation as a defence counsel will be allowed to stay in the adjacent room, said the court, adding that there is no national or international law that makes it mandatory to allow the presence of defence counsel within hearing distance during the interrogation of any accused person.

Source: New Age

Nizami shown arrested in Ctg arms case

Matiur Rahman Nizami, former Minister for Industries in the last BNP regime, was shown arrested on Wednesday in two cases filed in connection with the seizure of 10 truck-loads of arms and ammunition in Chittagong on 2 April, 2004.

Metropolitan magistrate HM Fazlul Bari directed the Criminal Investigation Department of the police to show Nizami, chief of the Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami who has been imprisoned for committing war crimes in 1971, arrested in the cases and granted the concerned investigator the permission to interrogate him in the jail's gatehouse.

The court passed the order after hearing a petition filed by the investigation officer in the cases, Mohammed Muniruzzaman, an assistant superintendent of police at the CID, in the afternoon.

Nazrul Islam Shentu, an assistant public prosecutor, said during the hearing that though Nizami was industries minister during the incident he had had taken no steps to probe the biggest haul of arms in the country's history.

'The Chittagong Urea Fertilizer Ltd, where the arms and ammunition were unloaded, is a state-owned factory under the industries ministry. The person who was the minister at that time cannot duck his responsibility in this regard,' he added.

The police seized a total of 4,930 different types of sophisticated firearms, 27,020 grenades, 840 rocket-launchers, 300 rockets, 2,000 grenade-launching tubes, 6,392 magazines and 11,40,520 bullets while they were being loaded on to 10 trucks from two motorized boats at the jetty of the Chittagong Urea Fertilizer Ltd on 2 April, 2004.

The NSI's former directors-general Major General (Retd) Rezzakul Haider

and Brigadier General (Retd) Abdur Rahim, former directors Wing Commander (Retd) Shahabuddin Ahmed and Major (Retd) Liakat Hossain, field officer Akbar Hossain, former managing director of CUFL Mohsin Talukdar and former general manager AKM Enamul Haque are in jail in connection with the case.

A Chittagong court has also shown former State Minister for Home Affairs, Lutfuzzaman Babar, arrested in the sensational case following a petition filed by investigation officer Mohammed Moniruzzaman on 3 October last year.

Source: New Age

Police prevent Amini from joining Islamic Morcha confce

The police on Wednesday prevented Islami Oikkya Jote chairman Fazlul Haq Amini from joining a conference of Islamic Morcha at the National Press Club.

IOJ publicity secretary Ahalullah Wasel told New Age that the police, which cordoned off Amini's residence at Lalbagh, prevented him from leaving the house.

He said that the police asked the Amini not to leave the house.

He said that the police told Amini that they were doing everything on orders from high ups.

Wasel said, when Amini wanted to know why they were preventing him from leaving his house, the police told him they were acting on orders from high ups.

Amini was scheduled to join the representatives' conference of Islamic Morcha at press club at 10 AM.

The police later allowed him to go to the IOJ office at Lalbagh, he said.

Lalbagh police station officer-in-charge Azizul Haque said that the police did not allow Amini to join the Islamic Morcha conference for his own security.

'We did not allow him to join the programme on security grounds as he had filed a general diary with the police station requesting for ensuring security of his family members,' he said.

Witnesses said that a large police contingent, deployed at Amini's residence at 9 AM, asked him not to leave the house.

IOJ is a component of Islamic Law Implementation Committee which announced countrywide demonstrations for May 6, 7, 11, 12, 16, and 22 in divisional cities and on May 27 in the capital to oppose the government's policies on women's development and education.

Source: New Age

Maritime ports to hoist sign 3

A deep depression is taking place over North Bay. Squally weather may affect North Bay and the adjoining coastal area of the country, met office said.

Maritime ports of Chittagong, Cox's Bazar and Mongla have been advised to hoist local signal number three.

All fishing boats and trawlers over North Bay have been advised to come close to the coast and proceed with caution till further notice.

Source: New Age