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Bangkok property boom rises above bubble fears

A 77-storey skyscraper is set to become the latest, and tallest, addition to Bangkok's ever-changing skyline, already transformed by a construction boom that has raised fears of a property bubble.

Variously described on Internet forums as looking 'like it has been eaten by giant termites' and reflecting 'the chaos of Bangkok', the MahaNakorn — Great Metropolis — will tower over the Thai capital when it is finished in 2014.

At 314 metres (1,036 feet) it will be the city's tallest building, but size was not what mattered, said Sorapoj Techakraisri, head of PACE Development, which began building the skyscraper in June.

'I just wanted something unique, something interesting,' he told the AFP.

MahaNakorn's unusual pixelated spiral design was created by German architect Ole Scheeren, who was behind Beijing's futuristic China Central Television headquarters.

The 19 billion baht ($640 million) tower will house apartments, a shopping centre and a Ritz-Carlton hotel.

'When the economy gets better, the buildings go higher,' Sorapoj said.

Thailand's economic health appears robust, growing 7.8 per cent in 2010 despite street protests by the opposition 'Red Shirts' that brought large areas of Bangkok to a standstill for two months.

An ever-increasing number of pristine new apartment blocks jostle for space in desirable areas, vying for custom as billboards written in idiosyncratic English promise swanky lifestyles.

It is a far cry from a decade ago, when the city was littered with the skeletal remains of abandoned tower blocks, casualties of the 1997 Asian financial crisis that devastated the region.

The Bank of Thailand has described 2010 as the 'golden year for real estate businesses', with strong demand for homes — driven by low interest rates and increased consumer confidence — causing a flurry of new building.

Source : New Age

Tokyo stocks seen to remain weak this week

Tokyo shares are to remain weak this week on the persistent strength of the yen amid uncertainty over deadlocked US talks for raising its debt limit before a Tuesday deadline, dealers said Friday.

Kenichi Hirano, operating officer at Tachibana Securities, said there was 'an 80 per cent chance' that the worst case scenario — a US debt default that would send shockwaves through world markets — would be avoided.

But stocks will move in a narrow range amid investor caution before any outcome, he said.

'The market is unlikely to fall sharply on domestic factors as Japanese corporate earnings released so far have been generally favourable,' Hirano said, pointing to the fact that many firms are still forecasting profits for the fiscal year.

'Although some companies that showed dismal results were hit with heavy selling,' he added.

In the week to July 29, the Nikkei index at the Tokyo Stock Exchange slumped 2.95 per cent, or 299.08 points, to 9,833.03. The Topix index of all first section shares lost 3.16 per cent, or 27.44 points, to 841.37.

The stalemate in US congressional leaders' negotiations for raising the nation's debt ceiling by an August 2 deadline in order to avert default has sent the dollar lower against the yen and put pressure on global stocks.

Source : New Age

ICB declares dividends on MFs

The Investment Corporation of Bangladesh has declared dividends on its mutual funds for the last fiscal year.

According to the Dhaka Stock Exchange web site, the 1st ICB Mutual Fund declared 500 per cent dividend, while the 2nd ICB Mutual Fund 250 per cent, the 3rd ICB Mutual Fund 185 per cent, the 4th ICB Mutual Fund 165 per cent, the 5th ICB Mutual Fund 135 per cent, the 6th ICB Mutual Fund 90 per cent, the 7th ICB Mutual Fund 95 per cent and the 8th ICB Mutual Fund declared 90 per cent dividends.

The ICB 1st NRB Mutual Fund declared 36 per cent dividend, while the ICB 2nd NRB Mutual Fund 12.5 per cent and the ICB 3rd NRB Mutual Fund declared 10 per cent dividends.

ICB Employees Provident Mutual Fund – 1 declared 12 per cent dividend, the ICB MMCL 1st Mutual Fund 55 per cent, the ICB MMCL 2nd Mutual Fund 14 per cent and ICB Islami Mutual Fund 36 per cent.

Source : New Age

market Disclosures

Dhaka Stock Exchange Ltd has decided to de-list (discontinue the trading of the shares) the company following its amalgamation with Bangladesh Export Import Company Ltd (Beximco) with effect from August 1 as per court order.

Apex Spinning & Knitting Mills
Trading of the shares of the company will be
allowed only in the spot market and block/
odd lot transactions will also be settled as per
spot settlement cycle with cum benefit from
August 1 to 3. Trading of the shares of the
company will remain suspended on record date on August 4.

Beximco
Normal trading of the shares of the company will resume today after record date for amalgamation purpose.

Bd Thai Aluminium
Kazi Aktar Hamid, one of the sponsors/directors of the company, has reported his intention to sell 1,476 shares out of his total holdings of 14,043 shares of the company at prevailing market price through the stock exchange within next 30 working days.

Al-Arafah Islami Bank
Bahauddin Mohammad Yousuf, one of the sponsors/directors of the bank, has reported his intention to acquire 21,08,351 shares of the bank from his
wife Maleka Akhter by way of gift outside the trading system of the exchange within next 30
working days from the date of issuance of approval letter by DSE.

Square Textile
The company has informed that the board of directors of the company has decided that Square Textiles Ltd will purchase capital machinery for power generation and production at a total cost of Tk 45 crore (cost price); and Square Textiles Ltd will purchase landed property for about Tk 25 crore for extending the existing projects and for future expansion.
    Source: DSE
Source : New Age

Ford wagers on Asia to drive global growth

Ford Motor Co was slow out of the starting gate in Asia but now the number two US automaker is betting big on the region to drive global growth, says its Asia-Pacific chief.

Ford has just announced plans to spend $1 billion to build a second car and engine complex in India

as it ramps up production to exploit the country's fast-growing vehicle market, bringing to seven the number of plants it is building in Asia.

'This is the only place in the world where we have new plants under construction,' Joe Hinrichs, head of Asia-Pacific and Africa for Ford, told the AFP in an interview on a visit to New Delhi.

Source : New Age

Slum women need menstrual hygiene support: speakers

Experts and NGO activists at a workshop on Sunday underlined the need for a national campaign to promote menstrual hygiene to enhance the quality of life of girls and women.

The speakers said loss of schooldays and workdays for girls and women could be avoided if they were provided with adequate sanitation facilities. 

WaterAid in Bangladesh and its partner Association for Realisation of Basic Needs jointly organised the programme on 'advancing menstrual  hygiene: working together in urban slums' in the capital to share findings of a baseline study on menstrual hygiene management situation in Dhaka slums and also to explore ideas for further improvement of the overall condition. 

Research associates of the Bangladesh Institute of Development Studies Nehraz Mahmud and ATM Shaifullah Mehedi conducted the study in three slums located in the city's Mirpur in April 2011 to assess their social and cultural constructs of menstrual health.

Under the study 70 per cent women interviewed regarded that menstruation was a kind of illness. It also found that women and girls aged between 11 and 30 were more informed about the fact that poor cleanliness during menstruation might cause diseases.

The study also found that only 10.86 per cent of the respondents, mostly belonging to younger group, use sanitary napkins while most others use cloth. 

Nehraz Mahmud presented the study findings at the workshop moderated by WaterAid in Bangladesh country representative Mohammad Khairul Islam. URBAN coordinator Muham-med Kamal Uddin, among others, spoke at the workshop.

Nehraz Mahmud said it was a serious concern that over 73 per cent women did not eat fish during menstruation and maintained secrecy about the matter out of social taboos.

Khairul Islam said the government should take measures to launch a national campaign across the country to bring about behavioural changes among the entire reproductive age group.

Experts and NGO activists at a workshop on Sunday underlined the need for a national campaign to promote menstrual hygiene to enhance the quality of life of girls and women.

The speakers said loss of schooldays and workdays for girls and women could be avoided if they were provided with adequate sanitation facilities. 

WaterAid in Bangladesh and its partner Association for Realisation of Basic Needs jointly organised the programme on 'advancing menstrual  hygiene: working together in urban slums' in the capital to share findings of a baseline study on menstrual hygiene management situation in Dhaka slums and also to explore ideas for further improvement of the overall condition. 

Research associates of the Bangladesh Institute of Development Studies Nehraz Mahmud and ATM Shaifullah Mehedi conducted the study in three slums located in the city's Mirpur in April 2011 to assess their social and cultural constructs of menstrual health.

Under the study 70 per cent women interviewed regarded that menstruation was a kind of illness. It also found that women and girls aged between 11 and 30 were more informed about the fact that poor cleanliness during menstruation might cause diseases.

The study also found that only 10.86 per cent of the respondents, mostly belonging to younger group, use sanitary napkins while most others use cloth. 

Nehraz Mahmud presented the study findings at the workshop moderated by WaterAid in Bangladesh country representative Mohammad Khairul Islam. URBAN coordinator Muham-med Kamal Uddin, among others, spoke at the workshop.

Nehraz Mahmud said it was a serious concern that over 73 per cent women did not eat fish during menstruation and maintained secrecy about the matter out of social taboos.

Khairul Islam said the government should take measures to launch a national campaign across the country to bring about behavioural changes among the entire reproductive age group.

Source : New Age

Dhaka Univ condemns Norway killings

Teachers and students of the University of Dhaka on Sunday condemned the recent Norway killing and demanded that the real culprits be brought to book immediately, said a news release.

They made their demand in a human chain at Aparajeya Bangla. Students of the Regional Master's Programme in Journalism, Media and Communication of the university organised the programme. 

They also urged all concerned to stop killings and every act of violence in any part of the world.

The students were carrying banner and posters in the human chain

with slogans against 'heinous' act of killing in Norway.

Coordinator of RMP in Mass Communication and Journalism Shaikh Abdus Salam, MCJ teachers Shameem Reza, Shafiul Alam Bhuyan, Mofizur Rhaman, Robayet Ferdous and Saiful Haq, among others, were present at the programme.

The July 22 twin attacks on a youth camp and the government headquarters in Norway killed 76 people.

Source : New Age

2 hurt in RU BCL factional clash

At least 2 activists of Banglsdesh Chhatra Legue, Rajshahi University unit, were injured in a factional clash on Saturday night over establishing supremacy on the campus.

Saddam Hossain Tipu, president of Ghatak Dalal Nirmul Committee, RU unit, filed a case with the Motihar police against 4 BCL activists in this connection.

The accused were Parvez, a master's student of Islamic history department, Raju and Palash, master's students of public administration and Emdad, an MBA student of management of the university.

On Saturday, BCL activists Parves, Palash, Raju and Emdad, residents of Shaheed Habibur Rahman Hall, called the plaintiff, resident of the same hall, to discuss politics centring the hall.

Parves and Tipu engaged in a scuffle at the meet. Then two factions, led by Parves and Tipu respectively, locked in a severe clash with lethal weapons that left both of them injured.

The police brought the situation under control.

The injured were admitted to Rajshahi Medical College Hospital.

When contacted, Parves alleged that Tipu had long been collecting toll from the hall students.

'I just called him to request not to harass the general students but he attacked me along with his associates and broke my right hand,' Parves added.

On the other hand, Saddam Hossain Tipu said, 'Parves along with his friends came to beat me and I resisted only.'

BCL RU unit president Ahmed Ali said the incident might have resulted from their personal enmity.

'If any allegation against them was proved, stern action would be taken against the miscreants,' he added.

RU proctor CM Zakaria told New Age that effective measures would be taken after investigation against them who tried to make the situation unstable.

A case was filed with the Motihar police.

The Motihar police officer-in-charge, Akbar Ali, confirmed the filing of case and said they would take action according to the decision of RU authorities.

Source : New Age

City buses flout fixed bus stops plan

Most city buses are not following the Dhaka Metropolitan Regional Transport Committee's official list of fixed bus stops, stopping haphazardly to pick up passengers, say the Dhaka Metropolitan Police officers.

The regional transport committee, comprising members of the DMP, the Bangladesh Road Transport Authority and different bus owners' associations, formulated the list of approved bus routes at a meeting in Dhaka on July 13, 2010.

The committee fixed a total of 161 routes in the capital and gave approval to 5,288 buses belonging to different companies to use these routes — though there was an opportunity for another 1,800 buses to get approval.

The locations of bus stops were also fixed by the committee.

But most of the buses have either increased the number of pick-up points where they stop or fail to stop at the official bus stops at all, the sources said.

Buses belonging to different companies, including Taranga Plus Transport Limited, Dibanishi Transport, Ena Transport (Private) Limited, Winner Transport, Ekushey Transport Limited, Megacity Service, Nisharga Transport, Midway Transport Limited, Belal Enterprise Limited, Bengal Motors, Anik Transport, Falgun, Pravati Banassree Transport, and Salsabil had set up their own bus stops or take on passengers at different points on their route ignoring the official list.

Buses run by companies, including Shikar Paribahan, Mirpur United Service Limited, United Service, Silk City Service, Pallabi Super Local Service, Safety Enterprise (Private) Limited, Bikalpa Transport, Bihanga Transport, Choice Transport (Private) Limited, ETC Transport Company Limited, and Balaka Services do not stop at any fixed but stops at all.

Sumon Shariar, a resident of Rampura said that the Taranga Plus Transport bus from Banasree to Mohammadpur, 'stops at four bus stops in Banasree and one at Rampura where many people get onto the bus.'

However, according to the RTC list, this bus is only allowed to stop at five official bus stops at Mouchak, Kakrail, Shahbagh, Science Lab, and Jhigatola.

Jihanul Islam, a resident of Mirpur, said some buses operating in the area did not have any official bus stops and just gave tickets inside the bus if any passenger asks

The Association of Bus Companies' senior vice-president Syed Rezaul Karim acknowledged that this was the situation explaining that neither the DMP nor the BRTA took any measure against these buses.

He said the drivers and passengers did not follow the system of fixed bus stops as there were no fixed structures where people could queue.

Rezaul Karim demanded a joint monitoring system for the buses where members from DMP, BRTA and different bus associations would be appointed.

Bangladesh Sarak Paribahan Samity secretary general and Dhaka Sarak Paribahan Samity general secretary Khandaker Enayet Ullah said that whilst sometimes different buses took passengers from places which were not fixed by the government, the law enforcement authority did take actions against these buses on regular basis.

DMP deputy commissioner of traffic (south) Najmul Hussain said the situation would not change till drivers and passengers were willing to follow the rules.

Whilst DMP joint commissioner of traffic Mahbubur Rahman told New Age that his men daily filed about 2,200 to 3,500 cases against these types of violations.

'We are trying to curb these problems but you know the city buses are just out of control,' he added.

The joint commissioner said that the drivers were driving recklessly on the city's roads and that the drivers should be punished and not just the owners who currently were the ones who were punished.

Source : New Age

Arsenic contaminates 14 upazilas

The office of the Comilla civil surgeon informed that it had recently detected more than 6,500 patients with arsenic contamination at 14 upazilas in Comilla.

According to them, the biggest chunk of patients came from three upazilas, namely Monoharganj, Laksam and Muradnagar. Over 4,500 patients were diagnosed with arsenic in these upazilas while fewer patients were found in the rest 11, namely Homna, Daudkandi, Debidwar, Chandina, Burichang, Brahmanpara, Chouddagram, Nangalkot, Titas, Sadar Dakkhin and Barura.

The information of the civil surgeon's office is supported by the findings of a study by the Comilla office of the Department of Public Health and Engineering.

DPHE engineer Firoz Alam Chowdhury said under that study, conducted between early 2010 and March 2011, they found 15,000 tube-wells in the 14 upazilas containing arsenic much beyond the acceptable level. 

In Bangladesh the acceptable limit of arsenic in ground water is 0.05 milligram per litre while the World Health Organisation sets its limit in this regard at 0.01mg per litre.

The study also revealed that only two upazilas, namely Meghna and Comilla Sadar, of the district, so far, remained uncontaminated with the poisonous substance.

Firoz Alam Chowdhury further said that although they had marked the contaminated tube-wells red, a sign indicating water of that tube-well was poisoned with arsenic, in many places, people still continued to drink water from those as they lacked alternative drinking water sources in the area. 

During a recent visit to village Dumuria of Manoharganj upazila, Mohammad Nabiullah, a villager, told this correspondent that it was more than three years since arsenic was detected in the tube-wells of their village.

'Until now no one approached us with any solutions,' he said.

Humayun Kabir of village Fatepur of Laksam upazila, said the DPHE had advised them to drink rainwater to avoid being poisoned with arsenic.

'But as people are not habituated to preserve rainwater they continue drinking water from the contaminated tube-wells,' he said.

Comilla civil surgeon Abul Kalam Siddique provided the following account of the patients who were diagnosed with arsenic contamination between early 2010 and the first week of March 2011: Monoharganj – 1833; Laksam – 1557; Muradnagar – 1175; Homna – 363; Daudkandi – 153; Debidwer – 231; Chandina – 245; Burichang – 16; Brahmanpara – 79; Chouddagram – 15; Nangalkot – 154; Titas – 56; Sadar Dakkshin – 633; and Barura – 114.

High levels of arsenic in human body may lead to cancers of the skin, bladder, kidney, and lung, and diseases of the blood vessels of the legs and feet, he said.

Source : New Age

5 shops burnt, 4 injured

At least four persons were injured and five shops and properties worth about Tk 8 lakh were gutted in a fire incident at Basail Bazaar under Agoiljhara upazila in Barisal on Sunday morning.

The Agoiljhara police station officer-in-charge, Ashok Kumar Nandi, said that the fire originated from electric short circuit of electric and cosmetics   shop of Sekandar Shikdar and soon engulfed the other shops in the market.

Fire service team from Gournadi fire service station rushed to the spot and extinguished the fire with the help of local people. Four people were injured during extinguishing the fire, he said.

The shop owners claimed that valuables worth

about Tk 8 lakh of five shops were burnt to ashes in the fire.

Source : New Age

Salahuddin Ahmed dies

Former chairman of Dainik Bangla Trust Salahuddin Ahmed, also former defence secretary and deputy inspector general of police, died at Square Hospitals in Dhaka on Saturday at the age of eighty-seven.

He is survived by his wife Khaleda Salahuddin and son Khaled Salahuddin.

His namaj-e-janaza was held at Rajarbagh Police Lines in Dhaka after zuhr prayers on Sunday.

Source : New Age

Aminul Haque dies

Film actor Aminul Haque died at Uttara Crescent Hospital in the capital on Sunday morning at the age of ninety-one.

He had been suffering from pneumonia for a week.

Aminul Haque is survived by his wife and a son.

He was the actor of the first audiovisual movie of Bangla-desh 'Mukh O Mukhosh'.

He also performed in about 30 movies including 'Jowar Elo'; 'Godhulir Prem'; 'Tomar Amar' and 'Aparajeya'.

His namaz-e-janaza was held on Bashartek Mosque premises at Uttara after asr prayers. He was buried at Municipality Graveyard at Uttara.

In a message of condolence, information minister Abul Kalam Azad expressed his shock at the death of Aminul Haque.

He prayed for the departed soul and conveyed sympathy to the members of bereaved family.

Information secretary Hedayetullah Al Mamun also expressed his shock at his death.

Source : New Age

Ministers to submit annual wealth info to PM

The government has made it mandatory for ministers, state ministers, deputy ministers and others in public service of similar status to submit their income and wealth statements to the prime minister every year.

The cabinet division in a gazette notification on Sunday said that such people will have to submit their income and wealth statements every year to the prime minister in a month after the filing of their income tax returns to the National Board of Revenue.

The prime minister on her/his own decision will make public the asset statements to be given in a prescribed form, according to the gazette signed by the cabinet secretary, M Abdul Aziz. 

Earlier on July 4, 2011, the cabinet at its weekly meeting approved a proposal of the cabinet division for the submission of the ministers' wealth statements in keeping with the ruling Awami League's election pledge.

The decision came two years and a half after the AL-led alliance government had assumed office in January 2009.

The Awami League's election manifesto, A charter for change, said that wealth statements and sources of income of the prime minister, cabinet members, parliament members, and their families would be made public every year.

Source : New Age

JS panel to seek views of owners for okaying govt’s broadcasting policy

A parliamentary standing committee on Sunday decided to seek the views of the broadcasting company owners before lending its approval to the government's draft national broadcasting policy.

Committee sources said that they would also examine the policies of international broadcasting companies giving their nod.

They said that the committee on information ministry at a meeting reviewed the draft national broadcasting policy and decided to discuss it again on August 18.

They said that they would also examine broadcasting policies of other countries for the purpose.

They said that the committee decided to have discussions with the owners and top functionaries TV channels and radio stations to seek their views on the issue.

'We have decided to examine the policies followed by the British Broadcasting Corporation, Cable News Network, Aljazeera and some other international broadcasting companies for the purpose,' committee chairman Obaidul Quader told reporters after the meeting.

The committee, he said, would meet the authorities of privately owned TV channels and radio stations to seek their views on the issue.

Besides, he said, the committee would also seek the views of people at different all strata by e-mail.

'We would take all these views into consideration before approving the broadcasting policy,' Quader said.

Source : New Age

Caretaker system abolished as it is ‘undemocratic’: Amu

Ruling Awami League advisory council member Amir Hossain Amu said on Sunday that the election-time caretaker government had been abolished as 'it is undemocratic.'

'Undemocratic caretaker system cannot continue for an unlimited time,' he told a conference of the representatives of the party's Dhaka district chapter at Kazi Bashir Auditorium in the city.

The conference was organised as part of a decision of the party to hold countrywide programmes to explain the government's position in the face of criticism from the opposition.

Amu said that the AL-led coalition government abolished the 'unconstitutional system' from the constitution only to strengthen democracy.

He said that ruling Awami League took the decision to take the 'tough route of progress of democracy' to make democracy stronger.

Amu urged the ruling party workers to get united and reply to the opposition 'propaganda.'

AL organising secretary and LGRD state minister Jahangir Kabir Nanak, office secretary and state minister for housing and public works Abdul Mannan Khan, AL leaders Aktharuzzaman and Dhaka city unit leader and state minister for law Quamrul Islam and the district chapter general secretary Mahbubur Rahman spoke at the conference chaired by the district unit president Benzir Ahmed.

Nanak said that the opposition was trying call a movement by forming alliance with 'Oli, Moli, Toli.'

He urged the leader of the opposition Khaleda Zia not to create anarchy.

He said, 'If there is anarchy we would be compelled to take to the street'.      

Chanting of slogans, hailing leaders present by their supporters, particularly of lawmaker Murad Jhong, ignoring requests from the party functionaries on the stage, disrupted the conference proceedings.

Nanak's speech was interrupted by slogans hailing Murad Jhong.

Unable to stop Chhatra League members from raising slogans, Nanak requested Murad Jhong to do it.

At one point Nanak had to tell Jhong, 'You better do it at Savar.'

AL leaders urged party workers to elect honest and competent leaders ready to sacrifice for the party at its upcoming elections at ward, union and upazila tiers.

Source : New Age

Deadly clash in Libya rebel capital

A deadly clash broke out in Libya's rebel capital of Benghazi in the wake of the murder of their military chief, as the Gaddafi regime said Sunday it was in contact with rebel leadership members.

Four rebels were killed in the clash with a pro-Gaddafi group in Benghazi overnight, a rebel spokesman said.

'It was a long battle and it took many hours because they were heavily armed,' Mahmud Shamman said. 'In

the end we arrested 31 of them. We lost four people.'

He said the group, which suffered 'about 20 casualties,' was rounded up for its role in organising a prison break in Benghazi earlier in the week.

Rebel forces had surrounded the camp of the group linked to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi after they refused to obey an order from the rebels' National Transitional Council for all militias to disband and lay down their arms.

The clash follows last week's assassination of rebel military chief General Abdel Fatah Yunis, whose death remains cloaked in mystery. The general was a right-hand man to Gaddafi before his defection to the rebel ranks.

While the rebels tried to quash rumours about the mysterious death of their army chief, the Gaddafi regime said it was in contact with members of the NTC.

'There are contacts with Mahmud Jibril (number two in the NTC), and (Ali) Essawy (in charge of external relations), (religious leader Ali) Sallabi and others,' deputy foreign minister Khaled Kaaim told a Tripoli news conference.

Gaddafi on Saturday night renewed his pledge 'never to abandon' the battle, in an audio tape broadcast on state television despite NATO air strikes earlier the same day on the broadcaster's headquarters in Tripoli.

Libya's enemies would be 'defeated in the face of the resistance and courage of the Libyan people,' he said in a speech following the strikes which Tripoli said killed three journalists.

The rebels, who have frequently denied having had any direct negotiations with Tripoli, sought to stamp out rumours by giving details on Yunis's killing and bringing all militias under the control of the NTC interior ministry.

Meanwhile, the Benghazi villa of the murdered general was surrounded by checkpoints early on Sunday and no traffic allowed on the coastal city's main highway.

South of Benghazi, rebels reported an attack by pro-Gaddafi forces on the southern oasis town of Jalo, but said it had been repulsed.

On the western front in the five-month-old armed revolt, Libyan rebels on Sunday took the village of Josh at the foot of the Nafusa mountain range, AFP journalists said.

'We took Josh this morning and are now heading west. Now we're fighting to take Tiji,' further down the valley, Juma Brahim, head of the rebel fighters' operational command in the Nafusa region, said.

He gave a casualty toll of three dead and four wounded.

The Nafusa region has seen heavy fighting between rebels and forces loyal to Gaddafi since the insurgents launched a major offensive this month in a drive on Tripoli.

NATO said its warplanes carried out 50 strike sorties on Saturday, with hits in the areas of Brega, Zliten, Waddan and Tripoli.

France said on Sunday it was committed to striking Gaddafi's military assets for as long as needed for him to quit power, and called on Libyans in Tripoli to rise up against him.

'We say to Gaddafi that we will not ease our pressure and to his opponents that we will not abandon them,' the French defence minister, Gerard Longuet, was quoted as saying by the newspaper Le Journal du Dimanche.

'Things have to move more in Tripoli... the population must rise up,' he added.

Source : New Age

Two bodies recovered

A trawler, which capsized in the River Buriganga near Balurghat in Keraniganj model thana Saturday night, was salvaged Sunday.

So far, two bodies were recovered Saturday night and early Sunday following the accident, which also left five others injured. At least 25 passengers are still missing.

BIWTA salvage ship MV Rustam and MV Agrani reached the spot at 12:45pm Sunday and started the salvage operation with the assistance of Coast Guard, Navy and Fire Service personnel.

With the help of crane, the sunken trawler was pulled out of the river and taken to Nawab Bari Ghat in Kotwali thana of the capital, about 600 yards off the spot, at 3:00pm.

Sub-Lieutenant Ferdous Ahmed, Station Commander of Pagla Coast Guard, was injured during the rescue operation.

The trawler carrying about 100 passengers from

Babubazar Bridge Ghat to Kamrangir Char capsized in the midstream when it was hit hard by a barge (cargo vessel) at 8:15pm Saturday.

Navy divers recovered the body of Mostafa Kamal Ripon, 26, at 10:00pm on Saturday and another body of Amir Hossain, 40, at 2:45am on Sunday.

Ferdous Ahmed said most of the passengers either swam ashore or rescued by others, but 25 to 30 others might be missing till now.

Five passengers injured in the accident were admitted to Mitford Hospital.

Meanwhile, the government has formed a five-member committee, led by Dhaka district deputy commissioner Mohibul Haque, to investigate the incident and asked it to submit report within five days.

Source : New Age

Govt spends Tk 3,000 a day on bodies of 3 foreign prisoners in mortuary

The government is spending Tk 3,000 everyday on preserving bodies of two Indians and a Nepalese who died whilst serving their prison sentence in Bangladesh jails in 2010.

'We have sent letters to the authorities of the relevant countries through the home ministry every month about the bodies but the authorities are yet to respond,' the inspector general (prisons) Brigadier General Md Ashraful Islam Khan told New Age.

He said that the jail authorities had to keep the bodies in the mortuaries until a response from the host countries is received.

'If the countries respond claiming the bodies, the relevant governments will have to pay the mortuary fee but if they do not, we will have to bear the cost,' he added.

He also said that the bodies would eventually have to be buried in Bangladesh in case no one seeks recovery of the bodies.

Jag Narayan who came from Kapur Fubuya of Kathmandu in Nepal died in a Chittagong hospital on August 1, 2010 and Sen Swapan, from Madhya Gram municipality in West Bengal, died in Dhaka Medical College Hospital on August 31, 2010.

Sohye Uddin from Dasgram Kandi of Karimganj in Assam in India died in Diabetic Hospital in Sylhet on May 14, 2011.

According to the prisons directorate, 740 foreigners are now imprisoned in Bangladeshi jails — 393 from Myanmar, 314 from India, 19 from Pakistan, 5 from Nepal, 3 from Tanzania, and 1 each from Saudi Arabia, Japan, Australia, Nigeria and Hungary.

Nearly a third of these people, however, have served their sentence, said the prison officials. They include 157 Indians and 60 Myanmar citizens, most of whom were arrested for smuggling drugs or illegally entering Bangladesh.

'We send the necessary papers every month to our home ministry's external department but it cannot respond to us as the embassies concerned pay no heed,' the IGP (prisons) added.

Source : New Age

4 held for beating women in village arbitration

The police on Sunday arrested four people of Madhupur at Badarganj in Rangpur on a High Court directive in a case of torturing two women in village arbitration.

A bench of Justice AHM Shamsuddin Chowdhury and Justice Gobinda Chandra Tagore ordered the arrest of the four — Badarganj BNP leader Abdur Rouf Mondol, retired schoolteacher Mozahel Ali, Modhupur union council member Ilias Ali, and local madrassah teacher Sekandar Ali. They were produced in court in connection with the case on Thursday.

The court also directed the Badarganj police officer-in-charge, Mobarok Ali Sarkar, to produce the victims in court again on August 7 for their deposition regarding the incident in which Happy Begum and Shahida Begum were beaten in the presence of several hundred people Kashiganj in the district on June 26 centring on the death of Happy's husband Hashem.

The police officer-in-charge was also asked to arrest in seven days other people involved in the incident.

The court asked the police officials to frame charges which include abduction, conspiracy, repression against women, and illegally assembly against the people held responsible for 'extra-judicial punishment' of torture in the name of arbitration. 

The court also rebuked the police official for recording the case as bailable.

On Thursday, the police officer-in-charge along with seven — four arrested on the day and Enamul Haque, Enamul Hossain and Aynal Haque arrested earlier — appeared in court following its earlier order issued suo moto on July 24 after the media had reported the incident.

Source : New Age

Syrian army kills 90 in Hama

More than 90 people were killed on Sunday as the Syrian military launched an attack on the flashpoint protest city of Hama on the eve of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, a human rights activist said.

Ammar Qorabi, who heads the National Organisation for Human Rights, said that army attacks across Syria killed at least 121 people and wounded dozens more. Another activist put the overall toll at 123.

'The army and security forces launched an attack on Hama and opened fire on civilians, killing 95 people,' Qorabi said, adding he had a list of names of 62 of the dead.

He added that '19 people were killed in Deir Ezzor in the east, six more died in Harak in the south and one

in Al-Bukamal,' also in the east.

According to Qorabi, 'snipers took up positions on rooftops' in Deir Ezzor where 'most of those shot were hit in the head and the neck.'

Another rights group reported that 47 people were killed in and around Hama, including two shot dead by security forces in the village of Suran outside the city, bringing the day's overall death toll to 123.

Dozens were also wounded when security forces shot at 'residents who took to the streets to protest when they heard the news about Hama,' said Rami Abdel Rahman of the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

He quoted a Hama hospital source as saying: 'The number of those wounded is huge and hospitals cannot cope, particularly because we lack the adequate equipment.'

On the international front, British foreign secretary William Hague urged Assad to call off the Hama assault.

'I am appalled by the reports that the Syrian security forces have stormed Hama with tanks and other heavy weapons this morning, killing dozens of people,' Hague said.

'President Bashar is mistaken if he believes that oppression and military force will end the crisis in his country. He should stop this assault on his own people now.'

The German foreign minister, Guido Westerwelle, meanwhile, threatened new sanctions against the Syrian leadership.

Berlin 'calls on president Assad to immediately end violence against peaceful demonstrators,' he said. 'If president Assad fails to change course, we and our partners in the EU will impose new sanctions.'

Abdel Rahman also reported six dead and 50 wounded in Deir Ezzor and three killed and dozens wounded at Harak in the Deraa region near the border with Jordan.

One resident reached by phone said the army entered Hama at around 6:00am (0300 GMT) in an apparent operation to wrest back control after security forces withdrew from the city almost two months ago.

Another said: 'Five tanks are now deployed outside the governor's palace,' and spoke of intermittent gunfire.

The official SANA news agency reported two members of the security forces killed by 'armed groups' in Hama while state television said a colonel and two soldiers were 'martyred' by gunmen in Deir Ezzor.

SANA said the gunmen torched police stations and attacked private and public property in Hama, adding that soldiers were tearing down barricades and checkpoints set up by the armed men at the entrance of the city.

The Syrian Observatory said the army also launched an operation against Muadhamiya in the Damascus region.

'Security forces launched an offensive at 5:00am (0200 GMT) on Muadhamiya from the north, with tanks blocking the southern, eastern and western entrances to the town,' Abdel Rahman said.

The Syrian League for the Defence of Human Rights reported more than 300 people detained in Muadhamiya, where electricity supplies and communications had been cut.

Also arrested was Bagara tribal chief and opposition figure Nawwaf Ragheb al-Bashir, who was seized on Saturday in Deir Ezzor, Syria's main oil- and gas-producing region, according to the Syrian League.

The Syrian Observatory reported demonstrations in the central city of Homs and along the Aleppo-Damascus highway — which residents cut off in several points — to protest against the Hama crackdown.

Hama and the eastern oil hub of Deir Ezzor have been rallying points for pro-democracy protests since mid-March.

In 1982, an estimated 20,000 people were killed in Hama when the army put down an Islamist revolt against the rule of president Bashar al-Assad's late father, Hafez.

The president replaced the governor of Hama after a record 500,000 protesters rallied in the opposition bastion on July 1 calling for the fall of the regime.

Since security forces gunned down 48 protesters in the city on June 3, Hama had escaped the clutches of the regime, activists say. The next day, more than 100,000 mourners were reported to have massed at their funerals.

Since anti-regime protests broke out, the crackdown on dissent has resulted in the deaths of more than 1,500 civilians and more than 360 members of the security forces, according to a Syrian Observatory toll.

More than 12,000 people are also reported to have been arrested.

Source : New Age

Khulna Stalking: College teachers on strike

Teachers of Khalishpur Haji Mohsin College went on work stoppage for indefinite period yesterday in protest against stalking of a female teacher by a student of the same college.

Meanwhile, a five-member committee has been formed to probe the incident of stalking. Headed by former principal of the college Tofazzal Hossain, the probe committee has been asked to submit its report by Sunday.

Vice principal Nazmul Ahsan said that the work stoppage by all teachers would continue until expulsion of stalker Imran Hossain Shabuj from the college and arrest by police.

Imran Hossain Shabuj is a student of third year class and joint secretary of the college unit of BCL.

Source : The Daily Star

Ex-outlaw killed, 3 others arrested

A former outlaw was killed in Meherpur yesterday while three others were arrested in Jhenidah and Khulna yesterday and the day before.

A former activist of an outlawed outfit was shot dead at his residence at Mahajanpur village in Mujibnagar upazila of Meherpur yesterday.

The deceased was identified as Kadam Ali, 30, ex-member of Sathi group of Purba Banglar Communist Party. He was also known as a police informer in the area, reports UNB.

Police and local sources said a gang of 8/10 raided his house at about 1.00am and tried to kidnap him at gunpoint.

Being resisted by the victim, the criminal shot him point blank, leaving him dead on the spot.

In Jhenidah, police arrested two outlaws early yesterday from the house of Lutfor Rahman of Sreerampur village under Kotchandpur upazila, reports our correspondent.

The arrestees are Mejbah Uddin Mukul alias Rashed alias Tuhin and Shahjada alias Babu of Akhra Gilatala village under Khanjahan Ali upazila in Khulna district.

Police recovered some posters, leaflets and booklets, two pen drives, a motorbike and three mobile phones from their possession.

In Khulna, police arrested an outlaw from Bagmara village under Rupsha upazila on Wednesday evening, reports our staff correspondent.

The arrestee was identified as Nasiruddin Ripon, 32, operation commander of Janajuddho faction of outlawed Purbo Banglar Communist Party (PBCP), police said.

He was arrested in connection with an extortion case filed against him with Rupsha police station on July 26.

The arrestee was remanded for five days from yesterday.

Source : The Daily Star

Snaps And Snippets: AL man held with gun

An Awami League (AL) leader was arrested with a gun and three bullets in Jaliapara area under Ramgarh upazila of Khagrachhari district yesterday. Acting on a tip-off, an army team of Guimara zone arrested Abul Kasham, president of Halfchhari Union AL, at his house at Jaliapara at around 11:00am and recovered a gun and three bullets from his possession. After interrogation, the army team handed him over to Guimara police.

Prisoner dies

A district jail prisoner died at Adhunik Sadar Hospital yesterday morning.

Jailer Didarul Alam said, Enamul Haque, 45, an accused in a case under Women and Children Repression Prevention Act was gossiping with inmates. Suddenly he fell sick at around 7:00am. He was rushed to Chapainawabganj Adhunik Sadar Hospital where he died of cardiac arrest at around 7:30am.

Source : The Daily Star

Extortionists stab PP

Extortionists stabbed a public prosecutor (PP) in the town yesterday as he refused to accede to their demand.

The victim, Special Public Prosecutor advocate Delwar Hossain, came under attack in front of the Women and Children Repression Prevention Court at around 12:30pm

A gang of five stabbed Delwar, also the president of Jubo League Dinajpur district unit, as he refused to bow to their demand for Tk10, 000, Akramul Amin, general secretary of Dinajpur Lawyers' Association, quoted Delwar as saying.

Hearing screams, other lawyers and locals rushed to the spot, chased the extortionists and caught one of the gang members named Russel Munshi while the rest managed to flee.

Source : The Daily Star 

Snaps And Snippets: HSC examinee commits suicide

Failed in the HSC examinations, a girl allegedly committed suicide by taking poison at Majhiara village in Tala upazila on Wednesday evening. Sathi Dutta, 18, Daughter of Deddas Dutta, took poison after she came to know her results at around 6:0030pm. She died on way to Tala Upazila Health Complex at around 7:30pm. Sathi sat for the HSC examinations this year from humanities group from Tala Mohila College under Jessore education board.

Withdraw cases against Quader: Demand DU students

A group of Dhaka University (DU) students yesterday under the banner "Students Against Oppression" demanded withdrawal of cases against Abdul Quader, a biochemistry and molecular biology student.

At a press conference at Madhur Canteen, they also demanded Quader's release and punishment to police officers who tortured and filed false cases against him.

Terming the incident a recurrence of what happened to Limon, they criticised the DU authorities saying that it lacked responsibility and cooperation in this regard.

Source : The Daily Star

Ruhul Amin

Today is the fifth death anniversary of Principal Md Ruhul Amin, a prominent educationist, says a press release.

His students, colleagues, and well-wishers are requested to pray for the salvation of the departed soul.

Source : The Daily Star

Death anniversary

Today is the first death anniversary of Syeda Maksuma Aref, wife of Dr Margub Aref Jahangir and the eldest daughter of Syed Matinul Haq, says a press release.

On the occasion, a doa mahfil will be held at her residence in the city's New Eskaton after Asr prayers. Before her demise, Maksuma worked in Dhaka Ahasania Mission.

Source : The Daily Star 

Hearing in Koko's case deferred

A Dhaka court yesterday deferred till September 8, the hearing on charge framing against Arafat Rahman Koko, youngest son of BNP Chairperson Khaleda Zia, in connection with a tax evasion case.

Judge Mohammad Zohurul Haque of the Senior Special Judge's Court passed the order after Koko's lawyer, Barrister Mahbub Uddin Khokon submitted a petition seeking adjournment of the hearing.

Source : The Daily Star

Sacrifice of 20,000 Indian soldiers helped achieve Indo-Bangla ties: Says Shahriar Kabir

Journalist Shahriar Kabir at a discussion here said Bangladesh-India relations were achieved by sacrificing the blood of 20,000 members of the Indian Army during the War of Liberation in 1971.

It was strengthened by the thirty crore people speaking Bangla in Bangladesh and in India states of West Bengal, Tripura and Assam, all cherishing the same culture, spirit and social values, he said.

The discussion styled "Bangladesh-India relations: From Bangabandhu to Sheikh Hasina" was organised by Ekatturer Ghatak Dalal Nirmul Committee Khulna unit in the city's public hall on Wednesday.

Nirmul committee Khulna President Dr Sheikh Baharul Alam presided over the discussion.

Shahriar said the Indo-Bangla friendship treaty is based on the commitment of the countries towards secularism and democratic norms.

Yet, there are some unresolved problems between the two countries including water sharing issue, trade deficit, transfer of enclaves and border tension which must be resolved reasonably and diplomatically, he added.

Khulna University Pro-Vice Chancellor Prof Dr Mohammod Fayek-uzzaman and journalist Gouranga Nandi also spoke.

Source : The Daily Star

Hopes sparked as parents learn to handle autism: Workshop on autism ends today

When Dooye was three years old and his mother found that he had problem speaking and communicating, the mother rushed to different doctors, but they took long two years to identify it as Autism.

"Still I think, if it was diagnosed earlier, the chance of his improvement would increase", said Rokhsana Ahmed, mother of Dooye, who gave up her job only to spend time on her autistic child who is now six and a half years old.

Causes of autism are yet to be clearly known. Researchers, however, say abnormal birth presentations, foetal distress, birth injury or trauma, and maternal bleeding can play role in developing autism.

"I know some day science will be able to find out the reasons behind autism and its solutions. But we will not be there to see it", Rokhsana said.

But yesterday, she seemed so happy as she participated in the workshop on autism that will end today (Friday) at Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University (BSMMU) in the city. The workshop follows an international conference on autism, which ended Tuesday.

Today's session will be participated by 230 psychologists, doctors, and students at the seminar room of BSMMU's Centre for Neurodevelopment Autism in Children. Saima Wazed Hossain, daughter of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, and chairman of the Bangladesh National Advisory Committee on Autism, will be present there.

A total of 363 parents took part in yesterday's session where experts from abroad were present as resource persons.

"We have learnt many things from the workshop that include techniques to improve their speech, control their mood, engage them in work without annoying them or to make them study", she exclaimed.

Similar feeling swept over mothers of Pian, Amethy, Tawsif and many more. The parents of these autistic children are happy to see that more and more people now know about autism. They all felt this conference should have been held before so that they could learn these important things earlier.

As many therapists, doctors, teachers and psychologists are learning about autism in detail, the diagnosis and schooling of autistic children will be easier gradually, they expect.

Autism is a complex developmental disability involving a biological or organic defect in the functioning of the brain, said AFMZ Haque, psychiatrist of CPC Behavioural Healthcare, USA.

"In the US where an estimated 1.5 million individuals are autistic, it is diagnosed at the age of 18 months normally", he said, adding that the education department takes care of these children and provides schooling in way that the autistic adult get suitable job. They make them to lead a quality life there, he said.

"In Bangladesh, autism issue must be taken care of by the ministries of health, education, and social welfare to reach a standard position. Otherwise, fragmented activities cannot help much".

Source : The Daily Star

CU BCL man beaten up by rival faction

An activist of Bangladesh Chhatra League at Chittagong University was wounded Wednesday night as the rival faction attacked him in front of Shah Amanat Hall.

The injured Kowsar Ahmed Fuad, a third year student of soil science department, is under treatment in Chittagong Medical College Hospital.

CU unit BCL President Mamunul Hoque denied that it was a rivals' attack among BCL men. The incident might have resulted from personal enmity, he said.

Source : The Daily Star

PM should apologise to nation: Fakhrul

BNP acting secretary general Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir said yesterday Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has to apologise to the nation for curbing freedom of expression and snatching people's voting right by amending the constitution.

He said the ruling coalition dreams of the next parliamentary election excluding BNP, but they will not be able to stay in power if the poll is held without BNP.

Fakhrul was addressing a protest rally organised by Dhaka city unit BNP at Nayapaltan in the city as part of the party's countrywide demonstration against price hike of essentials and arrest warrant against the party's Senior Vice-chairman Tarique Rahman.

Several thousand leaders, workers, and supporters attended the rally with the party's Dhaka city unit convener Sadeque Hossain Khoka, also the city mayor, in the chair.

"You have to apologise for curbing freedom of expression and snatching people's right to vote. You have to apologise also for destroying democracy by the fourth amendment after the independence", he asked the prime minister, protesting her remark against Khaleda Zia.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina on Wednesday asked the BNP chairperson to apologise for her remark on the constitution that the present constitution would be thrown away if BNP comes to power.

Fakhrul said it is now clear to the people that the fifteenth amendment made the country's constitution contradictory.

Source : The Daily Star 

'Protect SC land'

Supreme Court (SC) yesterday upheld a High Court verdict directing authorities concerned to protect and maintain 55.5 acres of land on its (SC) premises in the city in accordance with the law.

Two SC lawyers Asaduzzaman Siddiqui and Aklas Uddin Bhuiyan, on January 31, jointly filed a writ petition as public interest litigation stating that different organisations are grabbing SC land.

Among the organisations, Roads and Highways Department (RHD) is illegally occupying around seven acres of land and Shishu Academy around 2.5 acres, they claimed.

The HC on March 10 this year directed authorities concerned to protect and maintain SC lands.

The HC also declared that the lands, recorded in the name of Bharat Samrat in 1910 under Central Survey (CS) Khatian No 16855 and CS Dag No 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22 and 16/162, are now SC property.

The academy and RHD filed two seperate leave-to-appeal petitions earlier for staying the operation of the HC verdict.

A seven-member bench of the SC Appellate Division headed by Chief Justice Md Muzammel Hossain dismissed the petitions and passed the order.

Manzill Murshid, counsel for the petitioner, told reporters on Thursday that authorities concerned of government and SC are to conduct survey to demarcate, restore and record the lands in the name of SC as per the apex court order.

Source : The Daily Star 

'One crore suffering from Hepatitis B, C in country'

Around one crore people have been suffering from Hepatitis B and C virus in the country, experts said at a seminar yesterday.

On the occasion of the World Hepatitis Day different organisations arranged programmes to make people aware of Hepatitis B and C virus, the leading cause of liver cirrhosis and liver cancer, which are taking an alarming turn across the globe.

The slogan of this year's World Hepatitis Day is 'This is hepatitis……….'

Currently one in every 12 has been suffering from Hepatitis B or C globally and the burden is much higher than HIV/AIDS, said the speakers at the seminar organised by the Liver Foundation of Bangladesh at Public Library auditorium.

According to the World Health Organisation, around 35 to 40 crore people across the globe have been suffering from Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) and 20 lakh of them die every year. The prevalence of HBV in the country is seven percent, they said.

Though Hepatitis B can be prevented through vaccination and has treatment, Hepatitis C doesn't. That is why it is important to create awareness in the society to prevent it, they said.

Hepatitis B and C can be transmitted sexually and through blood and blood products. New born babies also can be affected with HBV if their mothers are infected with the virus. Currently 3.5 percent of the pregnant women are suffering from HBV.

If a baby is given first dose of HBV vaccine within 24-hour of its age and then at the age of one month and six months, it could be prevented.

Social Welfare Minister Enamul Haque Mustafa Shahid was present as the chief guest. National Prof M R Khan, WHO representative to Bangladesh Dr Arun Bhadra Thapa, Prof Jamilur Reza Chowdhury, Attorney General Mahbubey Alam, Prof Anisur Rahman, Liver Foundation of Bangladesh Secretary General Prof Mohammad Ali and Prof Faruque Ahmed also spoke.

Source : The Daily Star

NHRC chief terms it an ominous sign

"The torture on Quader is an ominous sign for law and order in the country.... The state is responsible for incidents of torture of civilians by law enforcers."

National Rights Commission Chairman Prof Mizanur Rahman made the comment before the High Court yesterday during the hearing on a suo moto rule over police torture on Abdul Quader.

Law enforcers are accusing people in arms cases by planting arms on them after arrest, he said.

"We should be ashamed of such inhuman acts. We are worried by the action of law enforcers at the cost of people's rights," he said.

At this, Attorney General Mahbubey Alam reacted at the top of his voice, saying the whole state is not liable for any incident committed by a few law enforcers.

According to him, Prof Mizanur Rahman made the statement out of emotion.

Alam, however, expressed his gratitude to the journalists for finding out the facts upon which the court passes orders against any injustice.

Prof Mamun Rashid Chowdhury, chairman of biochemistry and molecular biology department at DU, told the court that he has been Quader's teacher from his honours first year. During the period, he found Quader to be modest.

Quader was never involved in any criminal activities, he added.

He alleged that police did not give Quader any food following the arrest. When Anis, one of Quader's friends, bought some food for him, a police constable at Khilgaon Police Station asked him not to give him any food.

Prof Mamun added that the constable advised Anis not to visit Quader any further, saying that he might face problem if Helal Uddin, officer-in-charge of the station, comes to know that they are friends.

Source : The Daily Star

Hijacked Ship: 3 Bangladeshis, other crewmen released

The three hijacked Bangladeshis along with 14 other crewmen of a UAE-flagged oil tanker were released yesterday.

MV Jubba XX and its 17 crewmembers were hijacked by the Somali pirates on July 16 from Umm Al Qaiwain port.

The three Bangladeshi crewmen are Mohammad Nurul Islam and Nurul Amin, two brothers Nunachhara village of Sitakunda, and Jahurul Alam of Mirsarai of Chittagong.

Nurul Islam's wife Baby Begum told The Daily Star that her husband telephoned her around 2:00pm after the release.

All the crewmembers are in good condition, she said.

Source : The Daily Star

'Mugger' beaten to death

An alleged mugger was killed and another injured in a mob beating at Kachikata village under Chatmohar upazila of the district early yesterday.

A gang of four to five muggers in the guise of passengers got on a locally-made three-wheeler from Chatmohar around 12:00midnight, police quoted the driver of the vehicle as saying. When the vehicle reached Kachikata, the muggers held the driver and passengers hostage at gunpoint. As they tried to rob the passengers and take away the vehicle, the passengers shouted for help.

Hearing this, locals rushed to the spot and got hold of two of the criminals while the others managed to flee, said Officer-in-Charge of Chatmohar Police Station Habibul Islam.

On information, police went to the spot and rescued the two muggers from mob beating, he added.

The two-- Sajib Rahman, 32, of village Munipur in Gazipur, and Nayan Das, 30, of village Nandanpur in Pabna-- were admitted to Chatmohar Upazila Health Complex.

Sajib, who was the leader of the gang, died early yesterday, said the OC.

Police recovered a sharp weapon from the spot. Driver of the vehicle, Shahdat Hossain, filed a case with the police station.

Source : The Daily Star 

Rajuk chief summoned: HC asks him to explain state of building safety

The High Court (HC) yesterday summoned Md Nurul Huda, chairman of Rajdhani Unnayan Kartripakkha (Rajuk) to explain the state of building safety and compliance of rules.

The court asked the Rajuk chief and four police officials-- including Syed Ziauzzaman and Shahabuddin Khalifa, the officers-in-charge of Sher-e-Bangla Nagar and Pallabi police stations-- to appear before it on August 3 to give their statements in connection with the death of a college student.

The two other policemen are Ajit Roy and Ansar Ali sub-inspectors (SI) of Pallabi Police Station.

The court also directed Khaled Mohammad Jewel Mollah, managing director of Sagufta Group, Walid Mollah, its director and Md Osman Ali and Sazzad Hossain the building contractors to appear before it on the same day to explain their roles over the death.

On July 16, Habibur Rahman Munna, 18, an HSC examinee of Tejgaon College, died on the spot when a brick dropped on his head from the 10th floor of a 15-storey building, a construction project of Sagufta Group, on Panthapath in the capital.

On July 26, the HC ordered the OCs to arrest the builders, Khaled and Walid Mollah and summoned the OCs, the builders and Osman to appear before it two days later.

The two OCs appeared before the bench yesterday saying they could not arrest the accused as they were "not available at their residences".

Advocate Anisul Huq, lawyer of the accused, prayed to the court for more time saying they had failed to appear before the court as one of the accused, Khaled had "taken ill".

Meanwhile, Osman told the court that Sazzad, the other contractor was responsible for maintaining the safety of the under-construction building, following which the court summoned Sazzad.

On July 19, the court issued a rule upon the commissioner of Dhaka Metropolitan Police, the two OCs and the builders to explain within two weeks why the company should not be punished for not taking adequate safety measures at the construction site.

Source : The Daily Star

Introduce school feeding scheme: DCs asked to check dropout of students

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has directed the deputy commissioners to start school feeding programme to check dropout from primary schools.

"The DCs' conference elaborately discussed checking of dropout. The prime minister asked them to begin the feeding programme in at least one school in each district and monitor it closely," Cabinet Secretary M Abdul Aziz told newsmen after the conclusion of the three-day conference at the secretariat yesterday afternoon.

The meeting also suggested the DCs to take measures to stop coaching business, he mentioned.

"They were directed to engage themselves in every development and service-oriented activity and play more effective role to ensure people get their services timely," noted Aziz adding, "The main message of the meeting for them was to provide services without any hassle."

Programmes like help desk, public hearing day and e-service are being introduced in every district to serve the people, pointed out the secretary.

The government arranged the conference at the beginning of the new fiscal year to inform the DCs about its new development projects and other steps.

The conference discussed 321 issues including the dilapidated roads and highways, magistracy power of DCs, load-shedding management during Ramadan, removing tailbacks in the capital, monitoring social safety net programmes, appointment of dealers, enactment of land usage act and proper implementation of women development policy.

Aziz said the meeting reviewed the limitations of the Mobile Court Act, 2009, which may be amended in future.

According to him, the mobile courts play a significant role in maintaining law and order and checking food adulteration and stalking women. But it can only give punishment if the offence is committed in presence of an executive magistrate or the offender makes a confession.

The district administrators were advised to implement women development policy and take strong stance against women and children repression. They were also told to provide legal support to the victims.

Source : The Daily Star 

Australia inflation up

Australian inflation unexpectedly jumped in the June quarter, data showed Wednesday, adding pressure on the central bank to hike interest rates further and sending the local dollar to a record high.

The Australian Bureau of Statistics said the consumer price index rose 0.9 per cent in the three months to June compared with the first quarter, while it was 3.6 per cent higher year on year.

Both figures were above market expectations of 0.8 per cent and 3.5 per cent respectively.

Economists said the figures removed any chance of a cut in interest rates — which some analysts had touted this month as the domestic and global economies show signs of easing — and increased the likelihood of a hike.

'Clearly with this sort of inflation there is no respite,' UBS chief economist for Australia Scott Haslem told the AFP.

'The Reserve Bank of Australia is going to be looking for the first opportunity, or any signs that growth is stabilising or picking up, to lean against inflation.'

Dubbed the 'Wonder from Down Under' after it survived the global slump without dipping into recession, the Australian economy already has one of the highest official interest rates in the developed world at 4.75 per cent.

It was the first to raise rates as it recovered from the downturn and raised rates a total of 175 basis points between October 2009 and November 2010.

The central bank aims to keep inflation within a 2.0-3.0 per cent range and economists said it would not want to be caught 'behind the curve' as it was in 2006 and 2007 when interest rates remained at low levels.

'The signal for the RBA is crystal clear and if they are in any way competent, they will hike rates at the next meeting,' said ICAP senior economist Adam Carr.

'The consequences of them delaying for another six months could be dire in 2012. They really need to get a grip and do what is good for the country.'

Source : New Age

Global FDI to recover to pre-crisis level in 2011: UNCTAD

World foreign investment flows are projected to recover to the pre-crisis level of $1.4 to $1.6 trillion in 2011, although debt crises in the rich world could hurt the recovery, the UN warned Tuesday.

'The recovery of FDI (foreign direct investment) flows will continue in 2011 and will reach a total of some $1.4 to $1.6 trillion, thus returning to the pre-crisis average,' according to the annual world investment report by the UN Conference on Trade and Development.

'Thereafter, flows are forecast to rise to $1.7 trillion in 2012 and $1.9 trillion in 2013,' it added.

However, the forecast could be scuppered by debt crises in the developed world and overheating in emerging economies.

'If there is a double-dip recession, there will be serious effects' on the world economy, said James Zhang, who heads UNCTAD's investment and enterprise division.

But while poor economic indicators could hurt investment, Zhang noted they could also spark opportunities.

'If governments are in heavy debt, one measure is to sell state assets. That may generate opportunities for transnational corporations to get in to acquire these assets,' he said.

In addition, Zhang said some governments which have injected funds into companies may also 'accelerate their exit from these firms' in the next few years.

'That creates further opportunities for investment entry for FDIs,' he said.

After all, large corporations are sitting on a mountain of cash.

'Firms have a record level of cash in their pockets, it reached close to $5 trillion — a historic high and even twice as much as pre-crisis levels,' Zhang pointed out.

Overall, the United States remained the biggest foreign investor country as well as the largest receiver of inflows in 2010.

China was the second largest recipient of inflows, followed by Hong Kong.

Germany meanwhile was the second biggest investor, followed by France

Source : New Age

South Korea growth slows in Q2

South Korea's economic growth slowed in the second quarter from three months earlier, the central bank said Wednesday, as export gains eased sharply due partly to global economic uncertainties.

Asia's fourth-largest economy grew 0.8 per cent quarter-on-quarter in April-June compared to a 1.3 per cent expansion in January-March, according to an advance estimate from the Bank of Korea.

Gross domestic product rose 3.4 per cent in the second quarter from a year earlier, slowing down from a 4.2 per cent annual increase in January-March.

'Private consumption steadily increased and facilities investment rose. But growth in exports slowed while construction investment remained sluggish,' the central bank said in a statement.

Wednesday's figures showed that exports, which account for about half of GDP, rose 1.8 per cent in the second quarter from the previous quarter, slowing from a 3.3 per cent rise in January-March.

The fall came amid growing global uncertainty sparked by the eurozone debt crisis and a possible US debt default.

The second-quarter performance was slightly below the central bank's initial estimate early this month and the market's expectations.

However the bank said growth is likely to pick up to 1.5 per cent in both the third and fourth quarters, indicating the economy remains on a robust recovery track.

'Exports of tech products remained weak last quarter mainly because prices of flat panel and chips have not yet recovered,' said Kim Young-Bae, director general of its economic statistics division.

Source : New Age

Obama seeks ‘Plan B’ as debt plans stall

A Republican plan to cut the US deficit faced delay and stiff opposition on Wednesday, piling anxiety onto investors and ordinary Americans hoping for a late compromise to avoid a crippling debt default.

Deeply divided Republican and Democratic leaders are scrambling to find common ground with less than a week before the government hits its borrowing limit approved by Congress, triggering a possible default that would roil global markets.

Even if that fate is avoided, a plan that flinches from hefty deficit cuts could result in a downgrade of America's top-notch credit rating that would raise its borrowing costs and deal a severe blow to its anaemic economic recovery.

After weeks of acrimonious debate, the contours of a possible deal have emerged but Republicans and Democrats are digging their heels in on some key demands and blaming each other for putting politics ahead of the national interest.

The chances of a quick resolution narrowed after a vote on a deficit plan by the top Republican in Congress was pushed back to Thursday from Wednesday.

Republican Speaker John Boehner rushed to rework his bill after an analysis found it would cut spending by $350 billion less than the $1.2 trillion over 10 years he had claimed.

President Barack Obama has threatened to veto the Boehner plan and top Senate Democrat Harry Reid described it as 'dead on arrival.'

The plan has also failed to win the backing of conservative Tea Party Republicans, who have steadfastly refused to back tax rises and want much heavier cuts to social programs that are traditionally protected by Obama's Democrats.

The White House said on Tuesday it was working with Congress to craft an unspecified 'Plan B,' providing a glimmer of hope that an 11th-hour deal could be reached as lawmakers feel the pressure from increasingly anxious financial markets.

The impasse has driven investors to seek safe havens for their money, most noticeably gold and the Swiss franc. The dollar slid to a record low versus the Swiss franc on Wednesday. Gold rose to a record high of $1,625.24, before easing to around $1,624.46.

There have been no signs yet of the panic that could be sparked by a default, with most investors confident that a deal will somehow be struck.

A Reuters/Ipsos poll showed Americans are overwhelmingly concerned about the crisis and a majority — 56 per cent — support a mixture of tax increases and spending cuts that Obama has advocated and Republicans have dismissed.

Despite their differences — sharpened by the looming presidential and congressional elections in November 2012 — there is common ground between Boehner's bill and a rival plan by Reid that calls for a $2.7 trillion deficit reduction over the next decade.

Reid said he could not understand why Republicans did not support the plan he presented since it does not raise taxes and the spending cuts in the proposal have been endorsed by them.

'It's everything Republicans have demanded wrapped up in a bow and delivered to their door,' he said.

Obama has said he cannot accept Boehner's two-step deficit plan because it extends the Treasury's borrowing authority only until early next year, risking a rerun of the debt impasse during the election campaign.

Obama, who will run for a second term, has backed Reid's one-step plan, which has a hike to the $14.3 trillion debt limit that would carry through the elections.

Neither plan goes far enough with deficit cuts to guarantee the US sovereign credit rating will not be downgraded, an action that would dent the global safe-haven status of the dollar and Treasury bonds.

All three big credit-rating agencies have warned the United States needs to come up with a credible deficit plan to keep its top rating in the long term.

Executives from Standard and Poor's and Moody's Investors Service are due to appear before a congressional panel on Wednesday, where they will face scrutiny over their views on the debt ceiling debate.

Obama and treasury secretary Timothy Geithner have stressed the government will run out of room to borrow funds on August 2, next Tuesday.

But Treasury officials have never said when the government will exhaust its funds to pay the nation's bills and the consensus among Wall Street analysts is that the cash will not run out until about two weeks later than that.

Source : New Age

Dollar steadies against euro after slump

The dollar steadied against the euro on Wednesday as investors paused for breath after the greenback had sunk to a three-week low point against the single currency on US debt strains.

In London deals, the European single currency stood at $1.4495 after earlier striking $1.4536, the highest level since July 5. The euro had traded at $1.4509 late in New York on Tuesday.

The dollar on Wednesday meanwhile hit a four-month low versus the Japanese currency, at 77.58 yen. It later stood at 77.69 yen compared with 77.94 yen late on Tuesday.

'The dollar seems to be holding up just about okay... but has been subject to quite a bit of weakness in the past few days,' said Simon Denham of trading group Capital Spreads.

'In the foreign exchange markets it's been the real safe haven currencies that have benefited the most throughout this extra ordinary time for financial markets, with the Swiss Franc being one of the most popular amongst them.

'Against the US dollar it has hit a new high... and the same can be said for the euro and sterling.

'When you think that the Japanese and many other emerging markets have been complaining about the weakness of the US dollar against their currencies, the Swissy is making new all time highs against just about every other currency out there.

Source : New Age

Khulna teachers on strike over sexual harassment

The Khulna Haji Mohammad Mohsin College teachers on Wednesday went on indefinite class boycott, protesting at sexual harassment of one of their colleagues.

They teachers complained that a male student of the college, Imran Sabuj, also a Bangladesh Chhatra League activist, sexually harassed a female teacher for long time.

They demanded expulsion of and punishment for Imran Sabuj, a first year Bachelor of Arts student and also general secretary of Khulna city ward no 12 Chhatra League committee.

He is also the cultural secretary of the college's students' union.

The teachers, as per their decision at a meeting on the campus on Tuesday, started class boycotting on Wednesday morning and declared to continue the strike until their demands were met.

In this regard, the teachers and college governing body members held a meeting with the acting principal Nazmul Ahsan in his room.

The meeting successfully formed a five-member committee, headed by former principal Tafazzel Hossain, to probe the allegations brought against Imran Sabuj, said a college teacher who was present in the meeting.

The committee was also asked to submit its report within three days, the teacher added.

Khalishpur police sub-inspector Kazi Reza said that a general diary was filed on Wednesday morning.

Source : New Age

BRAC signs MoU with JICA

BRAC and the Japan International Cooperation Agency on Tuesday signed a memorandum to facilitate collaboration on different issues, including working for the development of Africa, Bangladesh and other regions.

The two parties agreed to establish the institutional cooperation framework necessary to build the partnership, said a release.

JICA's senior vice-president Kenzo Oshima and BRAC group executive director Mahbub Hossain represented their respective parties in signing the MoU.

Currently BRAC is working to promote agriculture in many African countries and has gathered experience in community access and capacity building activities.

On the other hand, JICA, having recognised the increasing importance of rice production in Africa, launched the Coalition for African Rice Development at Tokyo International Conference on African Development IV held in May 2008 in Japan.

The two organisations have found common interests in exploring the possibilities of partnerships in promotion of agriculture and rural development in Africa, in particular through the promotion of CARD.

Source : New Age

Puffed rice factory fined, 2 jailed

A Dhaka mobile court fined two puffed rice producing factories at Gobindapur at Shanir Akhra in the capital on Wednesday for using chemicals injurious to human health.

The court also fined them a total of Tk 1 lakh and jailed two people of the factories.

The Bangladesh Standards and Testing Institution launched the mobile court with the help of Dhaka district administration, police and Rapid Action Battalion on the occasion of the forthcoming Ramadan.

A BSTI press release said that the mobile court was led by executive magistrate Mohammad Al-Amin under Bangladesh Pure Food Ordinance 1959 and the Bangladesh Pure Food (amendment) Act.

The court found Makka Food Products of the area to produce puffed rice using Hydroge (Sodium Hydro-Sulphide) which is severely harmful for human health and its use on food items is strongly prohibited.

The court jailed the factory owner Md Abu Siddiq Master, 50, for six months, fined him Tk 50,000 and destroyed about 3,000kg puffed rice.

The court, later, went to Khaja Food Products of the area and also found the factory to produce puffed rice using the same harmful chemical.

The court jailed the factory-in-charge Md Selim for one month on charges of proposing bribe to the court, fined another employee Md Julhas Tk 50,000.

The court also ordered the factory to destroy its 6,600kg puffed rice, the release added.

Source : New Age

Govt to form 20 new city corporations

The government will set up 20 more city corporations in greater districts to develop a strong representative local government system in the country.

LGRD and cooperatives minister Syed Ashraful Islam disclosed this to journalists after a meeting with deputy commissioners on Wednesday, the second day of DCs' conference, at the Bangladesh Secretariat.

The DCs' conference began Tuesday and concludes today.

Syed Ashraful Islam said the establishment of 20 new city corporations would be completed within the tenure of the present government.

He said Comilla and Narayanganj city corporations had already been formed and another city corporation comprising Tongi and Gazipur would be formed by December this year.

The minister said the present government was pledge-bound to build a strong elected local government system in the country.

He said the local government bodies would have to increase their income as economic self-reliance was necessary for their independence.

Development and services of local government bodies could be expanded if their tax collection was increased, he added.

Source : New Age

2 lakh saplings planted in an hour

The Bangladesh Tree Planting Association organised a massive tree planting in which 2 lakh saplings were planted across 200 miles coast from Teknaf's Saint Martin to Shahebkhali at Mirsarai in Chittagong in one hour on Saturday.

Through the programme, the association has reached the door of the Guinness World Records.

About 7,000 people, including 79 union council chairmen, 711 ward members, 8 city corporation councillors, joined the programme in 11 upazilas of Cox's Bazar and Chittagong.

Ratanpur Steel Re-rolling Mills was the event partner.

State minister of environment and forest Hasan Mahmud, former adviser to the caretaker government Hossain Zillur Rahman, Chittagong mayor Monjur Alam, lawmaker Abul Kashem, Cox's Bazar deputy commissioner Joynul Bari, Bangladesh Environment Forum president M Edrish Ali and RSRM chairman M Rahman also took part in the tree planting programme.

Source : New Age

Boy killed in road accident

A 6-year-old boy was killed in a road accident at Matwail of Jatrabari in the capital on Wednesday morning.

The deceased, Raqibul Islam, son of Rafiqul Islam, was a resident of Golapbagh at Sutrapur.

The police said that Raqibul died on the spot falling down from a pickup van when it was hit by a speeding truck on the back at about 5:30am.

Source : New Age

Re-polling in 37 centres, to 80 tied posts in UP today

The Election Commission is set to hold re-polling today in 37 centres of 33 union councils where elections were suspended because of irregularities and re-elections to 80 positions of chairmen and members in unions where the results were tied.

The commission in the second phase held elections to 3,813 union councils in a staggered manner between May 31 and July 5. The commission earlier held elections to 553 union councils from March 29 to April 3.

The snatching of ballot boxes and papers, occupation of polling stations, destruction of result sheets and other irregularities prompted the presiding officers as well as the Election Commission to suspend elections in 38 polling centres.

The commission is, however, not holding re-polling in another centre, Kulancho at Dirai in Sunamganj, because of inundation of the area by floodwater.

Results of elections to 26 positions of union council chairmen, 32 of members reserved for women and 28 of general members were tied as two contenders polled equal number of votes.

According to the Local Government (Union Parishad) Election Rules 2010, the commission will hold re-elections for the posts between the two contenders securing maximum and equal votes. 

This is for the first time re-elections are taking place between the two rival candidates who polled equal number of votes. In the past, such decisions were made by drawing a lottery.

Election commissioner Muhammed Sohul Hussain told New Age that the commission had made necessary preparations for the re-polling.

'In response to requests of the candidates, we have suspended polling in Kulancho union council at Dirai in Sunamganj as the area has been inundated,' Sohul said.

Source : New Age

Parimal’s bail rejected

A Dhaka court on Wednesday rejected the bail petition of Viqarunnisa Noon School and College teacher Parimal Jaydhar arrested earlier on the charge of raping a student.

The court of chief metropolitan magistrate sent Parimal to jail.

On Sunday, the victim made her deposition to metropolitan magistrate Shamima Parvin on Sunday.

Arrested at a house of one of his relatives at Keraniganj on July 6, Parimal had been remanded in police custody for five days for interrogation.

Parimal made a confessional statement before a metropolitan magistrate on July 11.

He was arrested after the victim's father filed a case with Badda police station for raping his daughter.

The principal Hosne Ara and the acting headmaster Lutfar Rahman of the day shift of Bashundhara branch of the girls' school have been charged for allegedly backing Parimal and destroying evidence and threatening the victim's family for filing the case.

Parimal went into hiding after students of the school and their parents took to streets demanding his arrest.

He is married with a three-year old son.

Parimal hails from Tungipara in Gopalganj.

On May 14, 2009, the High Court issued an order laying down detailed guidelines to educational institutions and work places to prevent sexual harassment of women and children.

The court also directed the authorities to stop harassment of women and girls on their way to educational institutions and work places. 

The court had directed the authorities to open sexual harassment complaint centres at work places and educational institutions, and constitute committees to investigate charges.

Members of a pro-liberation citizens' forum held a demonstration in the city demanding trial of the sacked teacher Parimal Jayadhar for his abominable crime against the student.

Members of Jatiyatabadi Muktijudddher Prajanma held a demonstration at the Central Shaheed Minar on Monday demanded his exemplary punishment.

Students and teachers of Viqarunnisa School and College also took part in the demonstration.

The education ministry and the local MP Rashed Khan Menon, who headed the now-dissolved school governing committee

drew widespread criticism for the incident which hilghlighted insecurity of girl students at educational institutions.

Former education minister Osman Faruk, BNP education secretary Khairul Kabir Khokon and Bangladesh Jatiya Party secretary-general Abu Naser Mohammad Rahmatullah also took part in the demonstration

Source : New Age

LDP, Kalyan Party support BNP

The main opposition party, Bangladesh Nationalist Party, on Wednesday held meetings with 10 political parties and groups including the Liberal Democratic Party and Bangladesh Kalyan Party and discussed the modalities of working together to intensify the current anti-government movement.

The acting secretary general of BNP, Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir, after three separate meetings claimed that the parties had extended their support to the ongoing BNP-led anti-government movement.

The 10 political parties and groups are the Liberal Democratic Party, Bangladesh Kalyan Party, Jatiya Ganatantrik Party, Nationalist Peoples Party, Muslim League, Bangladesh NAP, Islamic Party, National Awami Party-Bhasani, Labour Party and Democratic Alliance.  

A delegation of LDP on Wednesday met BNP acting secretary general at his Uttara residence and handed over some specific proposals to finalise the future course of action for a 'greater unity' against the government.

The meeting sources said that LDP leaders wanted clarification on a number of matters, including what would be the name of the alliance if they join

the BNP-led anti-government movement and the strategy for next general election.

The BNP side told LDP leaders the matters would be discussed at the

party's highest policy-making body and among the partners of BNP-led four party alliance.

The four-member delegation, led by LDP secretary general Jahanara Begum, included presidium members Redwan Ahmed and Syed Didar Bakht and senior joint secretary Shahdat Hossain Selim. BNP standing committee member Nazrul Islam Khan and party chairperson's adviser Shamsuzzman Dudu were present at the meeting.

After more than an hour-long meeting, at a joint press briefing LDP secretary general Jahanara Begum said her party has decided in principle to carry out joint movement with BNP against the government's 'anti-people' activities.

BNP acting secretary general Fakhrul told reporters that the day's meeting was the follow-up of his meeting with LDP chairman Oli Ahmed on July 20.

Replying to a question, Fakhrul said proposals of LDP would be discussed at the meeting of BNP's national standing committee, the party's highest policymaking body.

The Bangladesh Kalyan Party on Wednesday agreed to give support to all political programmes sponsored by the BNP in a bid to launch an anti-government movement on some common political issues, including restoration of caretaker government provision and scrapping of the 15th amendment to constitution.

Kalyan Party president Syed Muhammad Ibrahim extended the support at the meeting with BNP acting secretary general held at Ibrahim's residence at Mohakhali DOHS.

The BNP is scheduled to hold nationwide demonstrations today in protest against unusual price hike of essentials, crisis of gas, electricity and water, filing of case against Tarique Rahman and deterioration of law and order across the country.

Eight political parties and groups also held a meeting with BNP's acting secretary general at BNP central office at Naya Paltan. After the meeting, Fakhrul said that the eight political parties supported BNP's anti-government movement including Thursday's countrywide demonstration.  

Among others, Jatiya Ganatantrik Party President Shafiul Alam Prodhan, NPP chairman Shaikh Sawkat Hossain Nilu, Labour Party acting president Mustafizur Rahman Iran, Islamic Party chairman Abdul Mubin, National Awami Party-Bhasani president Sheikh Anwarul Huq, Muslim League secretary general Atikul Islam, Bangladesh NAP chairman Jebel Rahman Gani and and Democratic Alliance president Khondaker Golam Murtaza, among others, attended the meeting.

BNP has recently also made contact with Bikalpadhara Bangladesh of AQM Badruddoza Chowdhury and Krishak Sramik Janata League

of Kader Siddiqui in its effort to involve more

political parties in the ongoing anti-government movement

Source : New Age

Oil, gas body demands scrapping of ConocoPhillips deals

The National Committee to Protect Oil, Gas, Mineral Resources, Power, and Ports from rallies in different parts of the country on Wednesday called on the government to scrap the deals inked with ConocoPhillips for exploration and extraction of gas of offshore blocks 10 and 11.

The agreements were signed according to the Model Production and Sharing Contract-2008, with a provision for exporting 80 per cent of the extracted gas by the US oil company, the committee leaders said.

The committee on Wednesday also launched a four-day countrywide mass-contact campaign to drum up support for its seven-point set of demands.

The committee leaders, divided into five teams, started the campaign after holding a rally in front of the National Press Club.

The mass-contact programme will increase awareness of the people about the importance of safeguarding the country's natural resources from the hands of plunders, the committee convener, Sheikh Muhammad Shaheedullah, told a rally at Narsingdi.

The first team, heading for Sunamganj, will hold rallies and roadside meetings on the way.

Committee leaders Nurul Hasan, Syed Abu Zafar Ahmed, and Bazlur Rashid Firoz, among others, are in the first team.

The second team, led by member secretary of the organisation Anu Muhammad and committee leaders Abdus Satter, Asaduzzaman Khan Masum, and Firoz Ahmed, started for Potuakhali.

The third team, which was moving along the Dhaka-Mongla Highway, included Jahangirnagr University teacher Nasim Akter Hossain, Razequzzaman Ratan, Sazzad Zahir Chandan, and Babul Biswas, among others.

The fourth team, led by Shubhrangshu Chakrabarty, is headed for Cox's Bazar. The other members of the team include committee leaders Enamul Haque, Tipu Biswas, Ruhin Hossain Prince, Quamrul Ahsan, and Abul Hasan Rubel.

The fifth team, with Rangpur as its destination, included Nur Mohammad, Anisur Rahman Mollick, Saiful Huq, and Zonayed Saki, among others.

The teams will also hold rallies on the way today.

Source : New Age

Khaleda must seek apology for remarks on constitution: Hasina

The prime minister, Sheikh Hasina, on Wednesday called upon the leader of the opposition and BNP chairperson Begum Khaleda Zia to withdraw her 'audacious' remark about throwing away the country's constitution.

'The leader of the opposition must to seek apology to the nation for dishonouring the constitution achieved through laying down lives by 30 lakh martyrs. Otherwise, the nation will not forgive her,' she added. Sheikh Hasina said the people, who did not believe in the country's independence and sovereignty and could not accept victory in the War of Liberation, can make such an utterance – 'throwing away the constitution of the country.'

'It is very much usual to make such remarks by a person like Khaleda Zia who did not join the freedom struggle. Not only that, she broke all traditions by sending a condolence message at the death of a Pakistani army officer when she was prime minister,' she added.

The prime minister said this at a function organised by Swechchhasebok League, an associated body of Awami League, marking the 18th founding anniversary of the organisation at Ganobhaban in Dhaka.

Chaired by Sechchhasebok League president Molla Mohammad Abu Kaiser, the programme was also addressed by former president of the organisation and Awami League Organising Secretary AFM Bahauddin Nasim and General Secretary Pankoj Debnath.

Later, a cake was cut on the occasion. Jaif and Elija, son and daughter of Saima Wajed Hossain, also grand children of the prime minister, cut the cake amid repeated applause and slogans.

The prime minister said the constitution has been made clean through the 15th Amendment with the removal of all illegal matters.

She said the caretaker government bill, passed in the parliament formed after voter-less election, was 'faulty'. She said the nation has bitter experiences of the last caretaker government.

Sheikh Hasina said if Khaleda Zia wanted caretaker system, the leader of the opposition must admit that the last general election of 2008 was held in a free, fair and credible manner.  Even, she have to admit that the lawsuits filed by the caretaker government against her family members on charges of corruption were 'logical and authentic'.

The prime minister expressed her government's desire to achieve economic freedom of the country by establishing parliamentary democracy on a firm footing and maintaining its continuity.

Laying emphasis on continuity of parliamentary democracy for overall development, she said a country cannot achieve desired development without continuity of democratic government.

Besides, she the BNP-Jamaat government after assuming office in 2001, started plundering public money and perpetrating repression and oppression on the then opposition political parties. In protest against their repression, the people of the country cast votes for Awami League in 2008.

The Prime Minister said Bangladesh was dubbed as a country of corruption, terrorism and militancy during the BNP-Jamaat regime in the outer world. But, she said her government has been able to overcome the negative image of the country.

Sheikh Hasina said as a result of the country's positive image, foreign investors have been choosing Bangladesh as a good place of their investment destination. Blaming BNP for the power, electricity and gas situation, she said her government has been working relentlessly to solve the problems.

She described her previous tenure of the Awami League government as a golden era of Bangladesh when the country achieved self-sufficiency in food production, increased power generation and literacy rate as well.

But, she said all achievements have gone down during the BNP-Jamaat's tenure.

Listing various development programmes of the government, she asked the leaders and workers of Swechchhasebok League to supplement the government efforts for building a happy and prosperous Bangladesh free from poverty and hunger.

The prime minister asked the current leadership to hold the national council of Swechchhasebok League in September and October next. A large number of leaders and workers of the party joined the function.

Source : New Age