Greens for no power plant near Sundarban

Environment activists on Saturday urged the government to reconsider its plan to establish a thermal power plant near Sundarban as it would endanger its environment and biodiversity.

The projected plant would also damage a vast tract of adjacent arable land, they told a citizen rally in front of the National Press Club in Dhaka, said a press release.

The speakers said government has a plan to set up a 1,320MW coal-fired power plant near in the savannah of Sunderban while it was already damaged by the encroachers and natural calamities.

The proposed plant's construction work would pollute the mangrove forest's air and soil which would eventually damage its biodiversity by polluting trees, animals, fisheries, and insects, they added.

They urged the government to shift or scrap the plan and take an initiative of forestation of the area and follow the rules related to the country's environment and biodiversity. 

Bangladesh Paribesh Andolan, Centre for Human Rights Movement, Krishi Jami Rakkha Committee and Save the Sundarban jointly organised the rally.

BAPA joint secretary Mohammad Shahjahan Mridha and member Abdul Hai Majumder, Centre for Human Rights Movement secretary general M Mujahidul Islam, Krishi Jami Rakkha Committee president Sushanta Kumar Das, Citizen Rights Movement secretary general Tushar Rehman and Sheba executive director Mohammad Nuruddin, among others, took part in the programme.

Source : New Age

Regent Airways to launch Dhaka-Sylhet flight

Regent Airways, a Chittagong-based aviation company, begins its operation on the Dhaka-Sylhet route on Wednesday.

'The maiden flight of Regent Airways on the Dhaka-Sylhet route will take off at Hazrat Shahjajal International Airport for Sylhet Osmani International Airport Wednesday noon,' the airways' chief executive officer Imran Atiq told a meeting of their local officials at a Sylhet city hotel Sunday afternoon.

Regent Airways started its journey on November 10, 2010 and gradually expanded its operation to Cox's Bazar and Jessore.

The company's sales and marketing director Akhtar U Ahmed, its Sylhet office's marketing executive Shafiqul Islam and traffic executive Khandaker Ali Abbas, among others, were present at the meeting.

Source : New Age

Bus, launch tickets for Barisal sold out

The advance tickets of private sector buses and vessels plying the Dhaka-Barisal route during Eid celebrations have already been sold or reserved, while the government services are yet to fix their schedules.

The private service providers have decided to carry on especial Eid services from August 26 to September 4, said the authorities concerned.

Barisal District Launch Owners' Association vice-president Syedur Rahman Rintu, also owner of triple-deck ferry Sundarban, confirmed the advance tickets sale.

He also said that eleven triple-deck ferries would make single, double or triple trips a day on the route during the 10-day especial Eid services.

He said that the authorities concerned expected that they would get the highest number of passengers on August 28 and 29 and September 3 and 4.

About 13,728 out of 17,160 cabin tickets of ferries had already been booked or sold and rest 3,520 tickets were kept for Very Important Persons, he added.

The state-owned Bangladesh Inland Water Transport Corporation and Bangladesh Road Transport Corporation authorities said that though they did not finalise schedule for the 10-day especial Eid services, they had started selling advance tickets for the five days before and after Eid.

BIWTC deputy director Gopal Krishna Majumder confirmed that they had completed sale of advance tickets of ferries scheduled for up to August 25.

He said that the higher authorities could not prepare schedule for Eid trips due to acute shortage of vessels.

He said that at present three ferries — Ostrich, Mahsud and Turn — are on service and three other ferries — Leptha, Sena and Sonargaon — are under repair.

If BIWTC could complete the repair of three ferries they could launch special services.

He added that the fare for special services would not be raised.

The official said that the passengers would have to pay Tk 565 for a first class cabin seat, Tk 355 for second class cabin seat and Tk 95 for a deck seat.

He, however, said that this year the private-run ferries were charging Tk 800 for a first class one cabin seat, Tk 400-450 for a seat in a sofa and Tk 180-200 for a deck seat during the especial Eid services which were earlier Tk 600, Tk 300-350 and Tk 150.

Launch owners' association leaders, however, denied fare increase and said that they were just charging the fare that was rearranged by the government earlier.

As an example, he said, the government fixed price for a deck seat was Tk 205, and round the year the ferries were taking only Tk 150 and now they were charging Tk 200 which was Tk 5 less than the fixed price.

On the other hand, bus fares have also been raised in private-run buses.

The present price for a single trip ticket became Tk 450, which was earlier Tk 350.

The BRTC bus tickets price, however, remained the same at Tk 300.

BRTC Barisal depot manager Abdur Rahim said that BRTC had not decided to arrange Eid services and was under pressure of the private bus service providers not to expand BRTC service.

Source : New Age

Fish fry netting rampant in Faridpur region

The indiscriminate netting of shrimp and lobster fry in the rivers and their estuaries in the greater Faridpur region is destroying fish stocks.

According to locals, about 10,000 people of Faridpur, Madaripur, Shariatpur, Gopalgonj and Rajbari are directly or indirectly involved in catching and marketing shrimp and lobster fry.

The fry catchers use illegal current nets and mosquito nets to catch shrimp and lobster spawn. In this process, a huge quantity of fish fry and small fishes are caught.

As a result, some small varieties of boal, bele, pabdah, kalibaus, ruhit shol, chital, gazar and khallah fish are not available in the markets.

Though the use of current nets was banned by the government, the fishermen and the people are violating the ban.

Takerhat Bandor is the main centre for the sale and purchase of shrimp and lobster fry under Rajoir upazila in Madaripur.

One hundred pieces of shrimp or lobster fry

are sold at Tk 250 to Tk

350 at the wholesale market at the beginning of the season.

The price is coming down gradually as the supply is increasing. The big fish traders invest lakhs of taka in this sector. They even provide cash advance to the fry catchers to be sure of adequate supply of fish fry.

As the shrimp and lobster spawn are profitable, the people especially children of poor families, embark on catching fry in the rivers.

A family of four members can earn Tk 700 to Tk 800 per day by catching and selling shrimp and lobster fry.

Source : New Age

Missing child found dead

A three and half-year-old boy, who was missing from Saturday evening, was found dead near a ditch of his residence at Biswas Betka Munshi Para in Tangail municipality on Sunday.

The deceased was Adnan Khan Shan, son of Asaduj Jaman Khan of the area.

Sheuly Akter Chaina, mother of the deceased, said that Shan was missing since Saturday evening. On Sunday morning, Shan's uncle found him dead near the ditch of their residence.

No case was filed in this connection.

A three and half-year-old boy, who was missing from Saturday evening, was found dead near a ditch of his residence at Biswas Betka Munshi Para in Tangail municipality on Sunday.

The deceased was Adnan Khan Shan, son of Asaduj Jaman Khan of the area.

Sheuly Akter Chaina, mother of the deceased, said that Shan was missing since Saturday evening. On Sunday morning, Shan's uncle found him dead near the ditch of their residence.

Source : New Age

1 arrested in Madaripur over murder charge

Madaripur police have arrested a former union parishad member in a case for his alleged role in an arbitration, which has provoked a teenage girl to kill herself.

Madaripur sadar police station officer-in-charge Mohammad Moniruzzaman said on Sunday they arrested Mohsin Bepari, who was thought to be the main person behind the illegal arbitration, on Saturday night.

The arrest was made after a murder case was filed by Hajera Khatun, the girl's mother. Six other people have been accused in the case for their role in the arbitration that forced the 15-year-old Shirin Akther to commit suicide.

Shirin, a Grade-X madrassah student from Aoz village of the upazila's Dudhkhali union, hanged herself from the ceiling fan at her house on Friday night after she was publicly humiliated at the arbitration.

Moniruzzaman said they were trying to arrest the rest of the accused including villagers Akkas Bepari, Akkas Choukidar and Rashid Akand.

Mortaza Sharif, a brother of the victim, on Saturday told reporters that Shirin committed suicide after returning from the arbitration.

She was caned by the organisers over an altercation with one of her neighbours Shah Alam on Thursday, he said.

The High Court on July 31 ordered that such 'arbitration business' must stop amid outcry by human rights groups and media.

Source : New Age

Boiler explosion kills mother, daughter

A rice mill boiler explosion killed two workers, 35-year old mother, Farida Yasmin, and her 12-year old daughter, Sharifa Yasmin, at Mondumala in Tanore upazila in Rajshahi Saturday night.

They lived in a nearby village Borobihanali in Bagmara upazila of the district.

Farida and Sharifa suffered severe injuries in the explosion while working at the rice mill.

They were first taken to Tanore Upazila Health Complex, and later shifted to Rajshahi Medical College Hospital in a critical state.

On Sunday afternoon, on-duty doctor at the RMCH said that they succumbed to their injuries.

Tanore police station officer-in-charge Ismail Hossain said that no case was filed with the police station following the two deaths.

But a case of unnatural deaths has been filed with Rajpara police station in Rajshahi city, said its officer-in-charge Mokarram Hossain.

Source : New Age

Sheershanews shut down

Online news agency sheershanews.com has temporarily closed down due to funds crisis.

Senior reporter Monir Hossain Mia told the staff and journalists of sheershanews.com about the closure around 8:00pm on Sunday.

He also said salaries of all the journalists and employees for the month of July had been paid and the dues would be cleared in a few days.

News editor Shaheen Chowdhury said, 'We've stopped uploading news from Sunday noon following an order from the editor.'

Shaheen also said they would discuss the issue with the editor who is in jail.

The officials said they did not upload any news since 12:45pm.

The news agency started its journey on August 17, 2009.

Businessman Giasuddin Talukdar on July 28 filed a complaint in a court, saying that the editor, Ekramul Haque, demanded Tk 20 lakh from him. Later, a case was filed with the police upon a court order.

Later, two more cases were filed against him.

Source : New Age

HC asks police to explain details

The High Court on Sunday asked the police to explain in four weeks why they should not be directed to disclose the details of the law enforcement personnel who had arrested Supreme Court lawyer MU Ahmed on August 11.

A bench of Justice Farid Ahmed and Justice Sheikh Hassan Arif also asked the police to explain in what circumstances Ahmed, now under treatment at Square Hospital, was admitted to the hospital after his arrest.

The court also directed the government to ensure Ahmed's better medical treatment at its cost at Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University Hospital or any other public hospital.

It also asked the government to explain why it should not be directed to send Ahmed abroad for better treatment.

Secretaries of the home and the health ministries, the principal secretary to the prime minister, the inspector general of police, Dhaka Metropolitan Police Commissioner, Detective Branch deputy Commissioner, Dhaka Medical College Hospital principal, managing director of Square Hospital and director of the National Institute of Cardiovascular Diseases were asked to answer the rule.

The court passed the order after hearing a writ petition filed by Ahmed's wife Selin Ahmed challenging police action against her husband.

She also sought a direction on the government to send him abroad for treatment.

Ahmed was admitted to the NICVD on August 11 following a massive cardiac attack he had suffered after the Detective Branch of Police arrested him earlier in the day on the charge of assaulting the police and obstructing them from performing their duty in the Supreme Court on August 2.

His family said he fell sick following severe torture in police custody after his arrest.

The police, however, said he was shifted to the hospital with cardiac complications.

Appearing for the petitioner, Supreme Court lawyer and Supreme Court Bar Association president Khandker Mahbub Hossain submitted that Ahmed was in good health at the time of his arrest.

He said Ahmed suffered the heart attack due to torture in custody following his arrest from his Segunbagicha residence.

Khandker Mahbub told the court that 10 to 15 plainclothes police had entered into Ahmed's residence at about 2 AM, ransacked the house and hurled abusive words at him before arresting him.

Ahmed, a former assistant attorney general was taken to the Detective Branch Office in the city and was kept there for more than four hours, said Mahbub.

According to him, Ahmed was first taken to the Dhaka Medical College Hospital in a critical condition.

But, he said, the DMCH refused to admit him and instead advised the police to take him to the National Institute of Cardiovascular Diseases.

Source : New Age

Cost of violence against women is 2 per cent of GDP, reveals survey

Violence against women costs about two per cent of the country's gross domestic products, a sample survey estimated.

The survey conducted by Care-Bangladesh in 2010 also revealed that the cost of such violence was almost equal to the total annual government expenditure for health and nutrition.

The report of the survey was made public at a dialogue on 'Cost of Violence Against Women and its Implications to Society' organised by Care-Bangladesh and South Asia Partnership-Bangladesh at CIRDAP auditorium on Sunday.

Care-Bangladesh conducted the study in Sunamganj, Tangail and Dinajpur from January to June 2010 interviewing 500 families of victims to calculate direct and indirect tangible costs of domestic violence against women within marital relationship.

While presenting the findings, World Bank consultant Kaniz Siddique said according to the study direct pocket cost of per victim's family was Tk 11,900 annually which included costs of displacement, treatment, transport and legal procedure.

The total cost of dealing with marital violence was 2.13 per cent of GDP in 2010 while the victims' families expended 2.08 per cent, five ministries—women and children affairs, social welfare, home, health and family welfare, and law and justice and parliamentary affairs—expended .02 per cent and different non-government organisations expended .03 per cent, she added. 

The findings said it was about 13 per cent of the government's budget for health and nutrition sectors which was about Tk 14,500 crore.

Kaniz Siddique said in 2008, Centre for Policy Dialogue also conducted a study to estimate costs of spousal violence through interviewing 200 victims from 12 different districts including Dhaka.

The study showed that cost of spousal violence was 2.85 per cent of GDP in 2008.

Abul Hossain, project director of Multi-Sectoral Programme on Violence against Women under the ministry of women and children affairs, said violence against women could not be measured by money always.  

He said the government enacted the domestic violence (protection and prevention) act 2010 which drew economic aspect of domestic violence for the first time and urged the researchers to calculate state cost including its mechanism cost for studies like these.

Rasheda K Chowdhury, former advisor of caretaker government and executive director of Campaign for Popular Education, said though the initiative tried to calculate violence against women in economic way, every organisation concerned should consider it from wider perspective as it affected every sector of the society.

Jamie Terzi, assistant country director of Care-BD, said violence against women also increased poverty rate in Bangladesh.

SAP-Bangladesh executive director Syed Nurul Alam, Care-Bangladesh team leader Julia Ahmed, media personality Mohammad Jahangir, CPD head of research Fahmida Khatun, BRAC Development Institute lead researcher Simeen Mahmud, Ain-O-Salish Kendra chairperson Hamida Hossain, ActionAid country director Farah Kabir, and Jaintia Shinnomul Sangstha executive director ATM Badrul Islam,among others, were present at the programme.

Source : New Age

Rangpur enclave people want implementation of Mujib-Indira treaty

The people of several Bangladesh enclaves inside India, now livings in different districts of Rangpur division, held a demonstration, followed by a rally in the divisional town on Sunday noon demanding their citizenship.

Later, they submitted a memorandum to the divisional commissioner for onward transmission to the prime minister to draw her attention to their plight.

Deprived of their civic and citizenship rights the people in the enclaves in adverse possession have been living sub-human life, they said.

They demanded implementation of the 1974 Mujib-Indira Treaty and said that they would never accept any new treaty without a complete solution.

Thousands of enclave people got together carrying banners of the Bangladesh chapter of India- Bangladesh Enclave Exchange Committee, and in a procession they marched down the main roads of the town demanding citizenship of Bangladesh.

Later, they laid a siege to the office of the divisional commissioner and submitted a memorandum containing their demands to the commissioner for sending it to the prime minister.

The enclave people said in the memorandum that they have been demanding citizenship of Bangladesh for long.

They reiterated the demand for the implementation of 1974 Mujib- Indira treaty.

They said that the repeated demand they made over the last 37 years for the implementation of the treaty fell on deaf ears.  

They said that they would expect the implementation of the 1974 treaty now as Bangladesh and India were enjoying good relations during the tenure of the AL led coalition government.  

They said that they would expect the outstanding crisis facing them due to non implementation of the treaty would be brought to an end during the visit of Indian prime minister Manmohan Singh next month.

In the memorandum, they described it as 'a record' that prime minister Sheikh Mujib had signed the treaty with his Indian counter part Indria Gandhi to exchange the enclaves in adverse possession to establish the rights of the enclave dwellers.

The said that they believed that prime minister Sheikh Hasina would be able to draw a complete map of Bangladesh by exchanging the enclaves as stipulated in the Mujib-Indira treaty.

Later, the enclave people held a rally in front of the divisional commissioner's office at Kacharibazaar.

Addressing the rally, different speakers said that the recent head count showed 17,134 Bangladeshis in its 51 enclaves, having 7,110 acres of land, inside India.

The president of the Bangladesh chapter of IBEEC, Shahadat Hossain chaired while the speakers included, Moinul Haque, Golam Mostafa and Altaf Hossain.

Source : New Age

BNP questions signing of border maps without settling disputes

The Bangladesh Nationalist Party on Sunday objected to the signing of the border demarcation maps between Bangladesh and India without the settling of long-standing disputes over border demarcation and exchange of enclaves.

Member of the party's standing committee, Khandker Mosharraf Hossain, at a discussion meeting also asked the government make the issue clear to the public.

'The government has begun signing the border demarcation map without settling border disputes and finalising the exchange of enclaves.

A 6.5-kilometre strip of the border between Bangladesh and India is yet to be settled.

Why are they signing the maps without resolving the disputes? We have doubts whether the country's interest is being protected by the signing of the

border maps,' said Mosharraf at a discussion of Bangladesh Rural and Human Rights Journalist Forum at the National Press Club.

Mosharraf also asked the government to explain why it the signing was being done so hurriedly.

'The Indian prime minister is coming to Dhaka

in the first week of September. For whose interest are the maps being signed without resolving border demarcation problems?' he asked.

Mosharraf asked the government to refrain from continuing its submissive foreign policy during Manmohan's visit next month, and said that people expected that all the deals to be signed during his visit would be based on equity.

'We are still in doubt whether the upcoming visit of the Indian prime minister will reap any benefit for Bangladesh because of the government's submissive attitude.

We want our due share of the waters of the Ganges and Teesta, and demand that the construction of Tipaimukh Dam be stopped.

But we are not sure whether the government will be able to take up

the issues with India,' he said.

At another programme, BNP's standing committee member Abdul Moin Khan said that the Awami

League has no mandate from people to sign border mapping. 'We have doubts whether our lands are truly protected in the map,' he said.

Bangladesh and India began signing the Border Strip Maps on Saturday, officially recognising the 4,156-kilometre international border after

some 54 years, two weeks ahead the visit of Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

Bangladesh's high commissioner in New Delhi, Tariq Ahmad Karim, and the Indian high commissioner in Dhaka, Rajeet Mitter, signed some of 1,149 maps for five sectors on Saturday.

Kamal Uddin Ahmed, chief of the border demarcation team and joint home secretary (political), said the representatives of the two countries would finalise the maps for the 6.5 kilometre-long portion of the border later.

Source : New Age

Minister’s absence irks JS panel

The parliamentary standing committee on post and telecommunications ministry on Sunday resented the minister's being absent from three consecutive meetings of the panel.

Terming the minister's attitude unfortunate, the committee said such indifference affected implementation of the committee's decision.

Lawmakers Khalid Mahmud Chowdhury and M Abdul Quddus raised question about the minister's absence and both of them said that if he continued to remain absent he should not be invited to the meeting any more, said the committee chief Hasanul Huq Inu.

Inu said when the performance of the telecommunications ministry was better than other ministries, the minister's continued absence was questioned by the committee members.

'The minister's presence is necessary to make the performance of the ministry more dynamic,' he added.

The 31st meeting of the committee discussed the production of laptop computers by Telephone Shilpa Shangstha and resented the delay in the launch of its 'Doyel' brand computers.

The members also said the ministry and TSS should explain what was causing the delay.

The meeting suggested that the Bangladesh Telecommunication Company Limited should realise all arrear telephone bills from different ministries and government organisations by December 2011.

'Various government agencies owe the BTCL about Tk 50 crore. It cannot be left unrealised. We suggested that the bills should be realised by December,' said Inu.

Inu said private users also owed the company Tk 400 crore and the committee had asked the ministry to submit a report on overall billing situation for private subscribers.

'We have asked for details, including for how long the bills of individuals or organisations remain unrealised and how many cases have been filed in this regard,' he said.

The committee also formed a sub-committee to probe fresh allegations that various companies were using voice-over internet protocol. Moazzem Hossain will head the committee. Other members are Nazrul Islam Babu and Golam Mostafa.

The meeting also discussed the proposed policy for setting up of transmission and receiver towers for mobile phone and internet.

The committee also laid stress on examining the level of radiation in telecom sector and asked the ministry to convene an inter-ministerial meeting with the environment ministry and experts concerned.

Whip ASM Feroz, Abdul Quddus, Khalid Mahmud Chowdhury, Moazzem Hossain and Golam Mostafa attended the meeting.

Source : New Age

Ctg court acquits Rasu Kha in killing case

A Chittagong court on Sunday acquitted much-talked-about 'serial killer' Rasu Kha of the charge of killing a young woman after raping her at Faridganj in Chandpur.

The judge of the divisional speedy trial tribunal, Robiul Hasan, acquitted Rasu of the charges in the case filed with the Faridganj police in connection with the killing of Poppy, 19, on February 9, 2009.

Public prosecutor Ayub Khan said that the court had acquitted Rasu of the charge as the allegations against him could not be proved. He added that they would move higher court against the verdict.

He said that he had moved a petition on August 9 seeking further investigation of the case as the investigation officer could not bring any specific allegations against Rasu apart from his failure to find out the identity of the victim. The court,  however, rejected the petition.

According to the case document, the police found the body of Poppy decomposed in Hansha Bill at Faridganj on February 9, 2009 and the police filed a case in connection with killing accusing unnamed people.

Rasu, who was first arrested on charge of theft, later during interrogation told the police that he had killed 11 women, including Poppy, as revenge after being rejected by a girl. He also said that he had plans to kill 101 young women.

A number of cases were filed against Rasu after he had made the statement. Sunday's verdict was the first in such cases.

Source : New Age

3 coal-fired power plants approved

Cabinet Purchase Committee meeting Sunday approved 3 coal-fired independent power plant projects and import of 940,000 tonnes of petroleum and 50,000 tonnes of wheat.

Presided by the finance minister, AMA Muhith, the meeting was attended by the senior ministers.

Source : New Age

Taslima unwanted in Nepal

Bangladesh born feminist writer Taslima Nasreen now lives in exile in India is unwanted in Nepal because of hurting the sentiment of the Nepalese by saying that he thought Nepal is part of India, reports Nepal News.

Taslima could not fly to Kathmandu Saturday because she did not carry her passport thinking 'Nepal was part of India'. She was stopped at the New Delhi airport.

She was invited as a special guest to the Nepal Literary Festival organised by Bookworm Trust. After she missed the flight Taslima wrote a message on Twitter, 'My Nepali friends, I missed my flight to go to Kathmandu Saturday. I forgot to bring my passport as I did not consider Nepal a foreign country', reports Nepal News.

Annoyed and displeased, organisers of the literary festival have decided not to call Taslima keeping in view the sharp reaction of the people on her Twitter comments Saturday.

Source : New Age

AL observes Aug 21 grenade attack anniv

The Awami League on Sunday observed the seventh anniversary of the August 21, 2004 grenade attacks on its rally on Bangabandhu Avenue in which 24 people, including the party's women's affairs secretary Ivy Rahman, were killed and more than 300 wounded.

Grenades were thrown this day in 2004 into the rally where almost all leaders of the party were present. The AL president, Sheikh Hasina, now the prime minister, escaped the attack but her ears were damaged on impact of the explosions.

The party and its front organisations and other political, socio-cultural and professional organisations marked the day with different programmes recalling the horror of the bloody grenade attacks.

The Awami League's programme began with the placing of flowers at the makeshift memorial plaque in front of the party's central office on Bangabandhu Avenue at 11:00am.

Sheikh Hasina paid homage to the party colleagues and activists killed in the grenade attacks by placing floral wreaths the makeshift monument.

Recalling her brush with death on the fateful day, Hasina once again held the Bangladesh Nationalist Party responsible for the grenade attacks.

'It is clear like daylight that such a brazen attack cannot take place without the government's backing. It was a planned attack – there is no doubt about it,' Hasina said.

Earlier, Sheikh Hasina placed wreaths at the makeshift memorial as the prime minister and party president and stood in solemn silence for a minute as a mark of respect to the memories of the martyrs.

After departure of the prime minister, different front organisations of Awami League paid their tributes by placing wreaths at the makeshift memorial.

Among others, leaders of Workers Party of Bangladesh, Jatiya Samajtantrik Dal, Samyabadi Dal and Communist Party of Bangladesh, also placed wreaths.   

In the evening, Sheikh Hasina took iftar at the Ganabhaban with the family members of the party activists killed in the August 21 grenade attacks. The people maimed by the attack also attended the programme.

The party will hold a discussion today at the Bangabandhu International Conference Centre marking the anniversary. Hasina will attend the discussion as chief guest.

Awami Swechchhasebak League brought out a procession on Sunday afternoon in a symbolic protest at all terrors attacks.

Bangabandhu Sangskritik Jote on Friday held a discussion at the Dhaka Reporters Unity in memory of the August 21 victims.

Source : New Age

Probe suggests Parimal’s punishment

The committee formed to investigate the violation of a student of Viqarunnisa Noon School and College and the following incidents, found the accused teacher, Parimal Jayadhar, guilty of raping the girl and suggested exemplary punishment for him.

The five-member probe body, headed by Dhaka Board's examination controller SM Wahiduzzaman, submitted the report along with recommendations to education minister Nurul Islam Nahid on Sunday.

It had submitted its report to the Dhaka Education Board's chairman on Thursday.

After getting the report, Nahid said that the allegation against Parimal has been proved beyond doubt. 'The report says Parimal committed a brutal crime despite being a teacher,' he said.

He also said that the probe report had said that many untoward incidents had taken place afterwards because of principal Husne Ara Begum's delay in taking action.

The 24-page report contained the testimonies of 18 students given in 22 days.

When asked whether the government would take action against the college principal, Husne Ara Begum, Dhaka Education Board chairman Fahima Khatun said that she is on leave now, and since the managing committee of any non-government institution is responsible for taking action against any teacher, the Board has nothing to do in this regard.

The government formed the five-member committee in response to vociferous protests by the students in mid-July against the rape, and demands for removal of principal Husne Ara Begum for allegedly trying to protect the rapist.

Parimal has been arrested and sent to jail.

Dhaka Chief Metropolitan Magistrate's Court on Sunday transferred the case filed against Parimal on rape charge to Dhaka Women and Children Repression Prevention Tribunal-4 for trial.

Earlier on August 14, the police submitted charge sheet in the case pressing charge against Parimal for raping the girl.

The probe committee was at first given 10 working days to submit the report but the deadline was extended by five more days after it sought time.

The probe accused principal Husne Ara Begum and the school's managing committee of failing to take prompt action against the teacher, said sources in the Board.

The Board has made a series of recommendations, including setting up of complaint cells in all schools and colleges, prohibition of private tuition by teachers to the students of the same institution and widening of the government's role in the management of non-government educational institutions.

The report also said that the number of branches of the Viqarunnisa Noon School and College had grown beyond the controlling and monitoring capacity of the principal and the managing committee.

It also recommended strong government supervision of the affairs in non-government schools and colleges.

The managing committee is the sole authority of any non-government school or college and the government has very little say, it pointed out.

It also recommended restriction on the setting up of branches by non-government schools and colleges.

The government on July 13 dissolved the managing committee of the Viqarunnisa Noon School and College after some committee members, in the absence of chairman Rashed Khan Menon, removed Husne Ara Begum as the principal and appointed senior teacher Ambia Khatun to the position.

The government on July 14 appointed Manju Ara Begum as the acting principal of Viqarunnisa Noon School and College after a weeklong protest by students demanding removal of Husne Ara Begum.

Source : New Age

No doubt about BNP links: Hasina

The prime minister, Sheikh Hasina, has once again held the Bangladesh Nationalist Party responsible for the gruesome grenade attacks on an Awami League rally seven years ago.

'It's clear like daylight that such an incident can't take place without the government's backing. It was a planned murder — there's no doubt about it,' she said on Sunday after paying homage to the people who died in the attack by placing wreaths at a makeshift monument on Bangabandhu Avenue.

On Sunday, Hasina said political rivals should be faced politically, not by killing them. 'That's why the attackers will be brought to justice, it's a must. And the verdict will be executed in this country, Inshallah,' she said.

On August 21, 2004, several grenades were thrown at the crowded rally during an address by then opposition leader Hasina in front of the party headquarters when the BNP chairperson, Khaleda Zia, was the prime minister from a four-party coalition with Jamaat-e-Islami as its key partner.

Hasina narrowly survived the attacks but 24 people, including incumbent president Zillur Rahman's wife Ivy Rahman, were killed while some 200 suffered injuries. Hasina had only suffered partial hearing loss as she was surrounded by senior party leaders on a makeshift dais. The assailants had also opened fire at the fleeing car carrying Hasina to safety.

The Awami League has accused Tarique Rahman, elder son of Khaleda, of masterminding the attack from Hawa Bhaban, Khaleda's political office in Gulshan, from where Tarique allegedly ran a parallel government during his mother's 2001-6 tenure.

Investigators have said radical Islamic group Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami had executed the attack, maintaining ties with the BNP.

HuJI leader Mufti Abdul Hannan and BNP leader and former deputy minister Abdus Salam Pintu are facing charges of the attacks. They are in jail now, pending trial. One of Pintu's brothers, a HuJI man, was allegedly involved in the whole process from collecting the grenades to backing the attackers at the scene.

In a commemoration message on Saturday, the prime minister termed August 21 'a day of shame'.

'The most barbaric grenade attack in broad daylight was carried out on the peaceful rally of the Bangladesh Awami League on this day in 2004 with the aim to kill me,' she said.

On July 3, supplementary charge-sheets in the cases were pressed against 30 new faces to raise the total number accused to 52.

Tarique, Khaleda's political adviser Haris Chowdhury, former state minister for home Lutfozzaman Babar and Jamaat secretary general Ali Ahsan Mohammad Mojaheed have been named in the new document.

The court may set date to indict them on August 25, the next day for hearing.

Citing the measures taken by her government to prevent such incident occur again, Hasina said, 'We've taken firm position after assuming office. Drives against militancy and terrorism will continue, no matter how strong the obstacles are.'

She also questioned the role of law enforcers following the attack. 'The police fired tear gas and charged batons while they were supposed to rescue the injured,' the prime minister said, adding that 'those were done to let the attackers flee the scene safely'.

Hasina said even there had been no doctors available at many hospitals that day.

Pointing at the BNP-Jamaat alliance government, she said, 'They did not preserve any evidence and even destroyed the unexploded grenades (recovered from the scene) to hide the truth.'

Before the speech, she laid wreaths on the monument — first as the head of government and then as the party chief flanked by colleagues, and observed a one-minute-silence in honour of those departed.

Senior leaders of the party, and ruling allies Hasanul Haque Inu and Rashed Khan Menon were also present at the function.

Retrieving memories of that day, Hasina said, 'I turned back after delivering speech. Then [SM] Gorki (Daily Jugantor photographer) asked me to stop for a snap as he could not take one earlier. I stopped and the attacks began.

'Hanif Bhai (late Dhaka mayor Mohammed Hanif) who was standing beside me took the splinters which were supposed to hit me. His blood was spilling on me. They [attackers] used the grenades generally used in wars.'

About Dhaka city Awami League advisory council member Rafiqul Islam, better known as Aada uncle, who died that day, Hasina said, 'He used to attend all the meetings and processions (of the party).'

Source : New Age

SEC sues five investors

A Dhaka court on Sunday asked five stock investors to appear before it on October 17 as the Securities and Exchange Commission sued them on charge of market manipulation that had helped bring about the January's capital market crash.

SEC director Mahbuber Rahman Chowdhury filed two cases on the day, accusing three of the investors of illegal trading in Peoples Leasing shares in one and the remaining two of unlawful trading in Eastern Housing shares in the other, violating the Securities and Exchange Ordinance, 1969.

After recording the cases, the first legal action taken by the stock market regulator since the share market collapse in January, the court of Dhaka metropolitan magistrate AGM Al Masud ordered the five defendants – Syed Sirajuddoula, his wife Rasheda Akhter Maya, Habibur Rahman, Abu Sadat Md Sayeem, and his brother Abdul Momin Molla – to appear before it on October 17.

The court asked Sirajuddoula, Rasheda, and Habibur to explain their position on the allegation of manipulative trading in Peoples Leasing shares and Abu Sadat and Abdul Momin on that in Eastern Housing Limited shares.

'Based on the probe report and the directive of the finance ministry, we have filed cases today, after completion of our investigation,' said a commission member.

In the cases, the five were accused of violating Section 17(e)(5) of the Securities and Exchange Ordinance, 1969.

The section defines market manipulation as activities that 'Directly or indirectly effect a series of transactions in any security creating the appearance of active trading therein or of raising of price for the purpose of inducing its purchase by others or depressing its price for the purpose of inducing its sale by others.'

In the first complaint, the capital market regulator accused Sirajuddoula, Rasheda and Habibur of making artificial active trading in Peoples Leasing shares, which caused the price of the scrip to shoot up abnormally.

According to the complaint, Sirajuddoula along with his partners had pushed the price of Peoples Leasing shares up by trading 2,22,700 shares of the company between themselves between June 30 and November 4, 2010. After each of the Peoples Leasing shares had been split into 10, reducing its face value from Tk 100 to Tk 10, the three accused investors sold their holdings and booked hefty profits.

In the second compliant, Abu Sadat and Momin were accused of their involvement in tampering with the share prices of Eastern Housing Limited through serial trading.

According to the complaint, the defendants, through their eight beneficiary owner's accounts including own and joint accounts, made 25 per cent of the total transaction of EHL shares in the market in July-August, 2010.

They bought 5.86 lakh EHL shares and sold 2.55 lakh shares of the issue through their BO accounts between July 27 and August 19, 2010, the complaint said, adding the volume of the trade was 24.5 per cent of the total transaction of EHL shares in the period.

Besides daily purchase and sales, the accused bought the highest number of 2.77 lakh EHL shares on a single day on August 1, 2010, which was 66.3 per cent of the total number of EHL shares traded on the day, the complaint said.

After the relentless fall in share prices in December to January last, the government formed a high-powered probe committee headed by Khondoker Ibrahim Khaled to investigate into the market crash.

The three-member committee, after conducting a three-month investigation, submitted the report to the government with a number of case studies of market manipulation. The committee also placed a 25-point set of recommendations including conducting further enquiries about the people suspected to be involved in market manipulation, reconstructing the SEC, and terminating some of its officials including the sitting chairman, Ziaul Haque Kahondker.

Finance minister AMA Muhith, while making the report public, said the government would take the recommendations into consideration and specified some term-by-term goals to bring back stability to the capital market.

Source : New Age

Workers take away 7 convicted drivers

Transport workers confined a mobile court and freed seven drivers held on charge of diving without licence, having forged licence, driving recklessly and talking on mobile while driving at the Gabtali bus terminal on Sunday.

Bus service had been suspended for about four hours as the workers rallied for the release of the arrested, causing sufferings to the passengers headed for destinations in the south-west and the north.

The Bangladesh Road Transport Authority launched the mobile court, led by executive magistrate SM Rezaul Karim. about 10:30am.

The court jailed seven drivers for having no and forged licences, driving recklessly and talking on mobile while driving for terms varying from 15 days to a month.

They were charged with violation of the Motor Vehicle Ordinance 1983, the court officials present said.

The workers started rallying at the news that the mobile court had convicted seven drivers. The police are said to have tied the hands of the drivers and beaten two of them in the presence of their fellows beside the terminal.

Drivers and transport workers at the terminal took to the streets about 11:30am and started rallying in protest at the assault and the running of mobile court. They also demanded release of the drivers who were convicted.

They blocked the road stretch by parking buses and trucks haphazardly and shouted slogans against BRTA officials accusing them of taking bribes for driving licences.

They also levelled allegations of corruption against policemen in collecting tolls on the roads and highways, witnesses said.

They also demanded immediate release of the driver arrested in connection with the road accident that killed five, including film maker Tareque Masud and ATN News chief executive officer Ashfaq Mishuk Munier, witnesses said.

As the magistrate went to the Hanif Paribahan counter about 12:15pm to check whether the people at the counter were charging people any extra amount, the workers rushed towards the counter.

The police later escorted the magistrate off to the nearby office of the Hanif Paribahan where leaders of the workers held a meeting with the magistrate and forced him to grant bail to the convicted drivers, Dhaka District Transport Workers' Union leaders said.

In the face of protests, the magistrate granted bail to the drivers and fined them Tk 500 each.

The magistrate later told newsmen that it was an 'obstacle' to the enforcement of law as 30 people die in traffic accidents across the country every day and he had sentenced the drivers to imprisonment so that such accidents could not take place.

Mirpur zone traffic inspector Md Ashraful Islam said that launch of mobile courts in the terminal area 'had never been successful' because of the obstruction the drivers and the workers created.

The Dhaka District Transport Workers' Union president, Abbas Uddin, claimed that drivers had rallied because of the assault on the drivers and demanded that there should be no mobile court till Eid-ul-Fitr, likely to be celebrated on either August 31 or September 1.

'If mobile court is run, vehicles will not move,' he said. Just after the meeting, he said that they had talked with the magistrate and added that they would request the workers to call off the blockade as the drivers arrested would be freed on bail for the payment of Tk 500 each in fine.

As the news spread about 1:30pm, some workers started rallying in protest at the financial penalty imposed on the drivers and and demanded that the magistrate should apologise for his sentencing the drivers to imprisonment, witnesses said.

Awami League lawmaker Kamal Ahmed Majumder, meanwhile, reached the place about 1:45pm and addressed the workers. He asked the magistrate apologise for what he had done and set free the people convicted.

More policemen later reached the spot and controlled the situation with the help of leaders of workers' union about 3:00pm and vehicles started plying the roads again.

Two workers were beaten up by their fellows as the two had talked in favour of the mobile court, witnesses said.

Inter-district bus service from Gabtali resumed about 3:00pm, the police and sources at the terminal said.

Source : New Age