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River Pollution in Tangail: 3 industries fined Tk 60 lakh

A mobile court of the Department of Environment (DoE) yesterday fined three mills and industries Tk 60 lakh for polluting the river Louhajang in the sadar upazila.

Penalised are Alauddin Textile Mills in Khudirampur and Universal Yarn Dyeing and Supti Chemical Works in Tangail BISIC area.

The mobile court fined Alauddin Textile Tk 30 lakh for not setting up effluent treatment plant (ETP) properly and polluting the adjacent Louhajang river. It also directed the mill authorities to keep their production shut until the ETP is properly set up.

Universal Yarn Dyeing was fined Tk 22 lakh for operating without the ETP and polluting the river and for not having the DoE clearance certificate renewed.

The mobile court fined Supti Chemical Works Tk 7 lakh as the industrial unit was found running without ETP and polluting the river. Supti authorities were also directed to keep its production shut till setting up of the ETP.

Mohammad Munir Chowdhury, director (monitoring and enforcement) of the DoE, led the drive. Mahbubur Rahman, an assistant director of the DoE, and Hasan Imam, acting assistant director, Tangail, accompanied the team, among others.

Source : The Daily Star

Death anniversary

Today is the 20th death anniversary of Advocate Shamsudd-in Molla, a former lawmaker and also an organiser of War of Liberation, says a press release.

On the occasion, different organisations have chalked out various programmes including offering prayers and placing wreath at his grave, distribution of food among orphans, qurankhwani, milad mahfil and discussion.

Relatives and well-wishers are requested to attend the programmes.

Source : The Daily Star

Unequal distribution threat to food security

Speakers at a symposium yesterday identified unequal distribution of food as a threat to food security rather than growing population.

Dr Ahmed AN Neaz, assistant professor of American International University of Bangladesh, presented the keynote paper at the programme.

He said 11.5 million tones of food were produced in 1975, and food production tripled to 31.6 million tones in 2009-10 when the country's population doubled. Still food security could not be ensured, he said, quoting a report of the United Nations.

The symposium "Population growth and the challenge of food security" was organised by United Nations Association of Bangladesh (UNAB) in the city's Bilia auditorium.

UNAB President Prof Muzaffer Ahmed and Secretary General Syed Mohammad Shahed addressed it among others.

Source : The Daily Star

AUW asks 12 expelled students to leave campus

The authorities of Asian University for Women (AUW) asked 12 expelled students to leave the campus as their expulsion order was upheld following a meeting with the guardians and students yesterday.

On June 12 the students including nine Bangladeshis, two Sri Lankans, and one Indian were expelled for poor academic performance in their second semester.

Source : The Daily Star

2 held with 80kg of marijuana

Police arrested yesterday morning two alleged drug traders in the city's Jatrabari and seized around 80kg of marijuana from their possession.

Arrested are Helal, 30, and Alai, 40.

Police said they stopped a microbus at the check post near Kazla Haq Petrol Pump and found the marijuana and 205 pieces of Indian sarees following a search.

The arrestees told police that the drugs they were carrying belong to a Haq Kazi, and those were meant for a shop at Babubazar in Old Dhaka.

Police seized the microbus. A case was filed with Jatrabari Police Station in this connection.

Source : The Daily Star

Cabinet Body Meets Tomorrow :13 procurement proposals likely to get nod

The cabinet purchase committee will consider a total of 13 procurement proposals in a meeting tomorrow.

Import of railway locomotives, setting up of power plants in public and private sector, and import of petroleum fuel will dominate the agenda in the meeting to be chaired by Finance Minister AMA Muhith.

Of the proposals, four will be placed by railway division of the Communications Ministry while three each by power division and energy division of the power and energy ministry. The water resources ministry, housing and public works ministry, and industries ministry will place one proposal each.

The railway division's proposals include import of 10 broad gauge (BG) locomotive under the Indian credit, turnkey tender for rehabilitation of Chandpur railway section, import of 20 sets of metre gauge (MG) diesel electric multiple unit for railway and track doubling between Laksam and Chinkastana on Dhaka-Chittagong railway route.

The energy division's proposal include import of 150,000 tonnes of diesel and 80,000 tonnes of furnace oil from ENOC of the United Arab Emirates (UAE), import of 640,000 tonnes of diesel and 170,000 tonnes of jet fuel from Kuwait Petroleum Corporation and fixing of premium for import of petroleum fuel from MIDOR of Egypt.

The power division's proposals include awarding contract for 200-300MW peaking power plant at Ghorasal, importing 8.15 million compact fluorescent lamp (CFL) bulb for Rural Electrification Board (REB), and setting up 100-150MW dual-fuel independent power producer plant in Kaliakoir of Gazipur.

The industries ministry will seek approval for import of 14,000 tonnes of urea fertiliser while the housing and public works ministry will seek approval for awarding contract for construction of apartment complex at Mirpur in the city.

Source : The Daily Star

Gas Exploration in Deep-sea Blocks: Call to ensure transparency in deal

The government should ensure maximum transparency in the production sharing contract signed with US oil company ConocoPhillips for oil and gas exploration from two deep-sea blocks, said noted academician Prof Muzaffer Ahmad yesterday.

Terming the contract "opaque", he said it does not guarantee people's ownership on the country's oil and gas, and that transparency must be ensured to establish people's ownership effectively.

He was speaking at a press conference organised by Bangladesh Poribesh Andolon (Bapa) at Dhaka Reporters' Unity yesterday.

The government should include a provision in the contract making it mandatory to sell the entire gas except that for recovery cost to Petrobangla to fulfil the country's energy demand, said Prof Ahmad, the president of Bapa.

On the environment issue, he said the nation experienced environmental disasters while exploring gas in the past. "The government should remain alert so the gas and oil exploration does not cause any damage to the environment."

Condemning the police attack on leaders and activists of the national committee to protect oil, gas, mineral resources, power and ports during the half-day hartal last Sunday, he said all sorts of disagreement should be resolved through dialogues, not through violence or by force for the sake of democracy.

Reading out a written statement, Bapa Joint Secretary Zakir Hossain demanded formulation of a law to ban export of mineral resources in order to solve energy crisis in the country.

Bapa General Secretary Abdul Matin also spoke at the press conference.

Source : The Daily Star

'Vested quarter trying to confuse people over 15th amendment'

Agriculture Minister Matia Chowdhury yesterday said a vested quarter is trying to confuse people by claiming that "Islam" as state religion and the phrase "Bismillahir Rahmanir Rahim" have been deleted from the constitution.

They are misinterpreting the 15th amendment to the constitution with the aim of calling hartal and creating chaos.

"They are calling general strike as they want Islam as state religion be abolished and the phrase Bismillahir Rahmanir Rahim scrapped from the constitution", she said.

The constitution was amended and ratified by the order of the Supreme Court and the 15th amendment was made retaining Islam as state religion and the phrase Bismillahir Rahmanir Rahim in the preamble, she said, urging people not to listen to their propaganda and remain alert against their politics with religion.

Matia Chowdhury made the call while speaking as the chief guest after distributing cheques under a Test Relief (TR) project in Nakla Upazila Auditorium.

Source : The Daily Star

Negative attitude towards neighbours has proved counterproductive

Foreign Minister Dr Dipu Moni yesterday said the present government has taken steps to improve relations with India and other neighbours as negative attitude towards them proved counterproductive in the past.

"There is no alternative to maintaining good relations and friendship with the neighbours . . . the people had felt severely what cost they had to pay for maintaining strained relations with neighbours in the past 40 years," she said this while she was speaking at a book launching ceremony.

Dipu Moni said the past bitter experiences prompted the current government to take steps to develop ties with the next-door neighbours.

She made the comments a day after her Indian counterpart SM Krishna's three-day visit, considered crucial ahead of Indian Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh's visit in September.

She termed her talks with Krishna "very successful and productive" saying "significant progress has been made on all unresolved issues". "I hope the progress that has been made on different issues will have a successful conclusion during Indian premier's visit," she added.

Dipu Moni referred to her "positive discussions" with Krishna on water sharing of the Teesta river, lands in adverse possession and enclaves saying, "We hope that two countries would reach a consensus on these crucial issues during Manmohan's visit."

She said steps have been taken by both the countries to reduce the huge gaps in bilateral trade and develop the land ports along Bangladesh-India borders.

Referring to the transit issue, she said development of regional connectivity was a must for improving the livelihood of the people of the region and "We have been working together to fulfil the hopes and aspirations of the one-fifth population of the world who are living in the region."

Later, she unveil the cover of the book titled 'Global flashpoint: South Asia and Middle East' authored by eminent journalist and columnist Zaglul Ahmed Chowdhury.

University Grants Commission (UGC) Chairman Prof AK Azad Chowdhury chaired the function.

Former ambassador Barrister Harun ur Rashid, columnist Hasnat Abdul Hye, columnist Dr Mizanur Rahman Shelley, journalist Hasan Shahriar, People's University Vice-Chancellor Prof Mustafizur Rahman and publisher of the book M Shamim Wahid were present at the publication ceremony.

Source : The Daily Star

Bus Rapid Transit Line: Project faces hurdles at beginning, say experts

The implementation of Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) Line-3 will be a huge challenge for the government as it is facing numerous hurdles and complications at the preliminary stage, experts said yesterday.

They said finalisation of its proposed alignment stretching from Uttara to Sadarghat via Shahjalal International Airport, Mohakhali, Moghbazar, Babubazar, and Gulistan may take a couple of years more due to the city's unplanned urbanisation and transport system.

Potential conflicts with the under-construction elevated expressway and Kuril, Moghbazar, Mohakhali, and Gulistan flyovers as well as the proposed metro rail are the other hurdles of the BRT line outlined in the Strategic Transport Plan (SPT) in 2008.

The narrowness of the roads is another major barrier for the BRT line, observed the experts in a presentation of inception reports on the BRT route and Dhaka Bus Network and Regulatory Reform Implementation Study at Sonargaon Hotel in the city.

Three BRT lines have been outlined in the STP, a 20-year plan, which aims at removing the ever-increasing traffic congestion in the capital. Of them, the government chose the BRT line-3 as a priority, which was later extended to Gazipur from Uttara.

About three years ago, the Asian Development Bank and the World Bank came forward to help the government conduct feasibility study for the BRT-3.

The ADB has already completed the study and is now preparing detail design of the BRT while the WB just concluded the pre-feasibility study. It will start feasibility study soon.

"The Kuril flyover will be the first bottleneck of the BRT", said Arnest J Mata, leader of the WB team for the BRT line, while presenting his inception paper. "It will be a big challenge for us to overcome all the hurdles and complications as we move with the BRT line", he added.

International consultant Sergio Tio placed his concept paper on "Dhaka bus network and regulatory reform implementation study and design work project".

He said, "We will face a challenge to reorganise routes for various types of transports in the existing road networks, huge population, and the unplanned transport system in the city".

"Seventeen projects are now being implemented in the city in an unplanned way that will make the task difficult", he said, urging the WB experts to look into the projects before finalising the BRT alignment.

Communications Minister Syed Abul Hossain spoke at the function as the chief guest. Buet's Prof Dr Alamgir Mujibul Haque moderated the programme.

Source : The Daily Star

Terrorism region's cancer: Manmohan asks countries to fight together

India yesterday called on the South Asian countries to join hands to tackle terrorism.

"The scourge of terrorism has taken a huge toll on all our societies. It is a cancer that, if not checked, will consume us all," said Prime Minister Manmohan Singh while inaugurating the fifth conference of the Association of Saarc Speakers and Parliamentarians.

He said the South Asian region cannot realise its full potential unless and until the region solves its differences peacefully and develops the culture of solving its problems on its own.

"Others cannot solve our problems for us," he told the gathering of speakers and parliamentarians from Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Maldives and Nepal.

The Bangladesh delegation at the three-day conference is headed by Jatiya Sangsad Speaker Abdul Hamid.

Singh said the countries of the region shared a cultural heritage. "We celebrate our pluralism and diversity of religion, language and culture while finding our strength in unity. We must learn to speak with one voice on the common challenges that face us."

Indian Parliament Speaker Meira Kumar greeted the delegates at the Central Hall of Parliament. She welcomed Afghanistan, the newest member of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (Saarc) formed in 1995.

"As parliamentarians, we are the keepers of the people's will and therefore it is our responsibility to understand and appreciate the power of democratic institutions, especially those that encourage social cohesion and inclusiveness," Kumar said.

Source : The Daily Star

Graft, Truth Commission: Ministry soft on amnesty-seekers

The Superior Selection Board (SSB) has instructed the communications ministry to take measures against the Roads and Highways Department (RHD) officials who went to now-defunct Truth and Accountability Commission to seek clemency for their misdeeds.

SSB, a powerful committee dealing with promotion of cadre officers, gave the direction recently following criticism in the media over promotion of some of the RHD officials including Chief Engineer Shahab Uddin.

Cabinet Secretary M Abul Aziz heads the selection board while six other secretaries are members.

The communications ministry, however, is reluctant to take any steps against the officials.

"The law ministry or the Anti-Corruption Commission can take actions against them, not the communications ministry," said Communications Minister Syed Abul Hossain.

Some 40 RHD officials went to the then truth commission under the voluntary disclosure of information ordinance during the last caretaker rule and sought clemency.

Many of the graft suspects got reappointed and promoted upon recommendations from SSB after the Awami League-led government assumed power in 2009.

The chief engineer disclosed that he had earned some illegal money, most of which was spent for social welfare. He promised not to indulge in corruption in future.

He obtained clemency by depositing Tk 3 lakh.

Shahab Uddin, however, claimed that he did not write anything to the truth commission. He said, "The then administration made me appear before the commission and sign papers."

Asked about Shahab Uddin's corruption as the chief engineer, the communications minister said the performance of RHD enhanced since his appointment. "I don't have any knowledge of him being engaged in any irregularities."

Shahab Uddin went into retirement on November 18, 2009. He joined the RHD on December 14 the same year after the government had extended the service-age limit for freedom fighters by two years. But many of his colleagues opposed this appointment.

The Supreme Court has recently upheld the High Court verdict that declared the truth commission illegal, clearing the way for trying those who disclosed their misdeeds to the commission and deposited ill-gotten money to the state coffer.

In July 2008, Shahab Uddin submitted his wealth statement to the ACC, mentioning that he owned a three-katha land in Uttara, which he got from Rajuk; a 10-bigha land in his home district Laxmipur; a shop in Genetic Plaza in the capital; and Tk 15 lakh in different banks.

The ACC then suspected that Shahab and his wife might have amassed properties worth around Tk 40 crore. The anti-graft body, however, could not prove it.

The communications ministry formed a committee in October last year to investigate appointments, promotion and corruption of Shahab Uddin and Bangladesh Railway Director General TA Chowdhury, who recently went on retirement. It found no corruption of irregularities of them.

Source : The Daily Star 

South Sudan becomes newest nation

Tens of thousands of South Sudanese danced and cheered as their new country formally declared its independence yesterday, a hard-won separation from the north.

South Sudan became the 193rd country recognised by the United Nations and the 54th UN member state in Africa through the raising of the new country's flag at an independence ceremony in the capital, Juba.

The President of South Sudan Salva Kiir stood next to his old civil war foe the President of Sudan Omar Hassan al-Bashir, who now leads just the north, at a ceremony to mark the birth of the new nation.

South Sudan's parliamentary speaker James Wani Igga read out the formal declaration of independence.

"We, the democratically elected representatives of the people ... hereby declare Southern Sudan to be an independent and sovereign state," said Igga before Sudan's flag was lowered, the South Sudan flag was raised and the new anthem sung. Salva Kiir took the oath of office.

The independence declaration was read out in front of dozens of heads of stated foreign dignitaries.

The presence of Bashir, who campaigned to keep Africa's largest nation united, was an important signal of the north's goodwill.

North Sudan's Khartoum government was the first to recognise the new state on Friday, hours before the split took place, a move that smoothed the way to the division.

US, Britain and France formally recognised the newly formed state and pledged supports necessary for the impoverished nation.

Kenya and Egypt were among the first African nations to recognise South Sudan.

The under-developed oil-producer won its independence in a January referendum -- the climax of a 2005 peace deal that ended decades of fighting with the north which killed millions.

Source : The Daily Star

Cyclone Sidr: India hands over 1,600 houses to families

At least 1,600 families in Sharankhola of Bagerhat, who were affected by Cyclone Sidr in 2007, yesterday received new houses built by the Indian government.

Food and Disaster Management Minister Abdur Razzaque and Indian High Commissioner to Bangladesh Rajeet Mitter handed over the holding numbers to the recipients at Rayenda Primary School in Bagerhat, said Golam Kibria, senior public relations officer of the food ministry.

The floors of the two-room tin houses are brick-built, he said.

Twelve hundred similar houses will be handed over to the Sidr victims in Morelganj shortly, the official added.

Source : The Daily Star 

Dhaka-Tangail Highway: Miles long tailback stays for 3 days

A 15-kilometre long tailback on the busy 2-lane Dhaka-Tangail highway for last three days has been causing untold sufferings to the people.

The tailback from Konabari and Chandra of Kaliakair upazila of Gazipur to Mirzapur upazila in Tangail was due to potholes on the narrow road.

Hundreds of vehicles including passenger buses and goods-laden trucks were seen stranded.

Earlier, due to rain for several days, the road was damaged badly at Pakulla, Dholla, Mirzapur, Deohata, Icchail, Charpara, Gorai, Hatubhanga and Sohagpara areas under Mirzapur upazila in Tangail and Chandra, Kodda, Konabari, Boardghar and Shafipur areas at Kaliakair upazila in Gazipur, sources in Gorai Highway Police said.

This correspondent while visiting the areas yesterday morning found that only a few members of law enforcers were trying to ease the tailback on the roads but failed due to the pressure of hundreds of vehicles.

AKM Hafiz Akter, superindent of police (SP) of Tangail, said the tailback was created as hundreds of vehicles of the 23 north and northwest districts started moving on the broken road just after the end of 48-hour hartal.

The Roads and Highways (RHD) Department was already requested to repair the damaged road immediately, he said.

"Moreover, the only small wrecker of Tangail police to remove troubled vehicles from the busy road has been out of order for last few days," said the SP.

The RHD executive engineer in Tangail could not be contacted despite repeated attempts over the cell phone.

However, an RHD official seeking anonymity said that the pressure of over 10,000 vehicles on the busy 2-lane highway every day cannot be manageable as they have capacity for only 5,000 vehicles.

Source : The Daily Star

Bharti mobile phone tower arm eyes $500m IPO

Bharti Infratel, the mobile phone tower arm of India's Bharti Airtel, plans an initial public offering for at least $500 million and is expected to file regulatory papers in September or October, sources with direct knowledge of the matter said on Friday.

Bharti Infratel, which has more than 30,000 mobile phone towers, also holds a 42 per cent stake in joint venture tower company Indus Towers, which is the world's top telecoms tower firm with more than 1,10,000 towers.

Standard Chartered and Morgan Stanley are among the frontrunners to help manage the initial public offering, three of the sources told Reuters.

Details of an IPO by Bharti Infratel are being worked out and the deal size could change depending on valuation, said two of the sources, who declined to be named as the matter was not public yet.

A spokesman for Bharti Airtel, India's largest cellular carrier, declined to comment.

In 2007, Bharti Airtel sold up to a 9 per cent stake in the tower unit to seven international investors, including Temasek Holdings and Goldman Sachs for a total $1 billion.

Other investors in Bharti Infratel include Macquarie Group, Citigroup, India Equity Partners, Investment Corporation of Dubai and AIF Capital.

In February 2008, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co also agreed to invest $250 million in the tower arm.

Bharti Airtel last year acquired telecoms operations in 15 African countries from Kuwait's Zain in a $9 billion deal and became the world's fifth-biggest mobile operator by subscribers.

Bharti has previously said that it would take its tower unit public but has not disclosed the issue size or the timeline for the share sale.

India's equity capital market has been sluggish this year with companies raising $7.1 billion in the first half of 2011, down nearly 42 per cent from the same period last year, data from Thomson Reuters showed.

Many companies, including state-run firms such as explorer Oil and Natural Gas Corp and steelmaker Steel Authority of India Ltd, have delayed their shares sale plans due to poor market sentiment.

Source : New Age

MCCI hopes to get duty-free access of 61 products to India market

Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce and Industry on Saturday hoped that Bangladesh would get the long awaited duty free access for 61 products to the Indian market during the visit of the Indian prime minister in September.

The association in a state expressed hoped that Indian premier Manmohan Singh would also agree to remove tariff, para-tariff and non-tariff barriers in exports of Bangladeshi product to India.

It said that more Indian investments would flow into Bangladesh after the two countries signed a bilateral document on deals promotion and protection of investment during the Indian external affair minister's recent visit.

The association also said that another deal signed during the same visit on allowing Bhutanese vehicles to Bangladesh through Indian territory would promote both bilateral and multilateral trade in the region.

Source : New Age

Dhaka stocks surge for third week on govt stimulus

Dhaka stocks continued with the gaining streak for the third straight week with an increased turnover as the investors went on a buying spree following the government move to allow investment of undisclosed money in stocks.

The benchmark general index of Dhaka Stock Exchange, or DGEN, had gained 194.57 points, or 3.18 per cent, over the past week to finish at 6,311.80 points, against 269.97 points gained in the previous week.

The average daily turnover in the week rose by 35.00 per cent to Tk 1,080.76 crore from that of Tk 800.55 crore in the previous week.

The National Board of Revenue on Tuesday announced that the investors of undisclosed money in stocks must keep it in the capital market till June 2013 to avail the opportunity of legalising it by paying a 10 per cent tax.

Market insiders said an active participation of institutional investors, with individual investors following suit, surged the turnover of the bourse in the past week.

They said the recent extension of the deadline for the commercial banks to bring their exposure in the capital market within the limit and reassess their credit-deposit ratio on source fund offered by the Bangladesh Bank also brought the institutional investors to the trading floor.

Individual investors have also been gradually regaining their confidence in the market after the government decision to allow investment of undisclosed money in stock investments, they added.  

'Increased institutional participation, with individual investors following suit, boosted the turnover in the past week,' said a stockbroker.

He said, 'Institutional investors came out of their cocoons as the BB's measures prevented the situation from becoming worse for them.'

He also said, 'After the government accommodated the long-standing demand of the equities market stakeholders to allow investment of undisclosed money in stocks, it sent the message to the investors that the government was really concerned about and willing to stabilise the market.'

Of the five trading days of the week, the DGEN slid a little on one and rose on the remaining four days. 

The turnover of the bourse on Sunday crossed the Tk 1,100-crore mark again after two and a half months, with the DGEN adding 40.28 points, or 0.65 per cent, following the government decision to allow investment of undisclosed money in the equities market.

On Monday, the index fell by 33.06 points, or 0.53 per cent, on a profit-taking selling pressure after a five-day bull run. The turnover on the day also dropped to Tk 881.77 crore.

Dhaka stocks rebounded on Tuesday amid volatile trading, with the DGEN gaining 40.81 points, or 0.66 per cent. But, the turnover of the bourse dropped to Tk 875.60 crore on the day.

On Wednesday, the index posted a sharp rise of 78.07 points, or 1.26 per cent, with the turnover crossing the Tk 1,000-crore mark again in the week amounting to Tk 1,158.63 crore.

The index on Thursday made another jump of 68.47 points, or 1.09 per cent, with the turnover hitting a three-and-a-half-month high of Tk 1,348.33 crore, as the investors continued with the post-budget buying binge.

Of the 263 issues traded in the week, 225 advanced, 35 declined, and five remained unchanged. 

Beximco topped the turnover leaders, with shares worth Tk 169.16 crore changing hands. The other top-10 turnover leaders of the week were One Bank, MI Cement Factory, United Commercial Bank, Aftab Automobiles, Social Islamic Bank, United Airways, City Bank, National Bank, Peoples Leasing & Financial Services.

Source : New Age

Millers asked to finish appt of dealers before Ramadan

The government on Saturday ordered mill owners to complete recruitment of sugar and edible oil dealers before the Ramadan, and refrain from hiking the prices of the essential commodities during the Muslims' month of fasting.

Commerce minister Faruk Khan, at a meeting with business leaders including sugar and edible oil refiners, said that there was sufficient stock of sugar and edible oil in the country, moreover letters of credit have been opened for import of a large quantity of these items.

'So there is no reason for instability in the prices of these two commodities during the Ramadan. There will be no gap between the demand and the supply of these products if the appointment of dealers is done properly,' he said.

Although business leaders agreed that there was sufficient stock, they cautioned the government that they could not be held responsible if the prices of sugar and edible oil rose because of agitation programmes like hartal.

The Federation of Bangladesh Chamber of Commerce and Industry's president AK Azad, commerce secretary Ghulam Hossain and leader of sugar and edible oil refiners Fazlur Rahman were present at the meeting, along with others.

Faruk told reporters after the meeting that the refiners had so far appointed 7,061 dealers after the delivery order system was scrapped last month. 'Many of the refiners are yet to appoint dealers, and will have to do so as soon as possible,' he said.

Urging opposition parties not to enforce hartal, Faruk said that some quarters increase the prices of commodities on the excuse of hartal or bad weather.

Ghulam said that the total stock of sugar would reach around 3.75 lakh tonnes during Ramadan against the demand for 2.75 lakh tonnes, while the amount of edible oil would be 4.68 lakh tonnes against the demand for 2.5 lakh tones.

AK Azad said that a huge amount of commodities were stuck at the seaports because of the hartal.

He said that businessmen should not be held responsible if the prices shot up due to political movements.

Source : New Age

Business leaders express mixed reaction

Business leaders of the country on Saturday expressed mixed reaction to a study report that put Chittagong port at the top of 69 ports of 17 Asian countries in terms of efficiency, with the majority of them terming the report lopsided.

Most of them think the port is still suffering from a range of serious flaws including inadequate number of equipment and manpower, corruption in management, inefficient transportation, and high cost of using its facilities. They also said the facilities offered by the port were inadequate for the local businesses, although there was enough scope for making it a port of international standard.

The report titled Benchmarking the Efficiency of Asian container Ports, run by the African Journal of Business Management on February 14 and followed up by a number of Bangladesh news media in the past two days, focused only on the container handling in Chittagong port, ignoring the service standard, said most of the business leaders.

Federation of Bangladesh Chambers of Commerce and Industry former president Mir Nasir Hossin said ranking the Chittagong port first among 12 'super efficient ports' in the 17 countries by the report was totally 'one-sided'.

He said, 'The cost of using the port facilities, the turnaround time of shipment, and other factors have not been considered in the report. The report is mainly focused on the existing capacity of container handling of the port and the total number of containers handled by it, where the quality of service and the cost of using the port facilities are not mentioned.'

According to Mir Nasir, in terms of capacity, area, service, cost, and efficiency, most of the other Asian ports are better than Chittagong.

He said, 'If we see the existing scenario of Chittagong port, it is clear that the quality of service has not increased much in recent years, the cost of using port facilities is still very high, and the turnaround time is approximately five to six days,'

Inefficient management of the port is forcing the businesses to pay extra charges, he alleged. 'To make the Chittagong port more efficient, the government should ensure a corruption-free management of the port and efficient transportation of containers,' he added.

Bangladesh Knitwear Manufacturers' and Exporters' Association former president Fazlul Haque said the actual situation of the port was not identified in the study.

The port is operating with limited resources which are not enough to handle the volume of trade, which is rising by the day, he said.

'The government should increase the logistics of the port as well as its efficiency of delivering the services,' he added.

FBCCI president AK Azad, however, said, 'The recognition is a sign of the improvements made by the port and it needs more attention to make it even more efficient.'

He said the government was very much active to develop the port and increase the volume of regional trade through it.

The chief of the country's apex trade body said, 'At present, the situation of Chittagong port is satisfactory and we urge the government to ensure effective operations of the port for reducing the cost of using its facilities.'

'If the government improves the service-delivery capacity and management of Chittagong port, it can become a regional hub of connectivity, which will benefit the local businesses too,' he added.

Exporters' Association of Bangladesh president Abdus Salam Murshedy said the situation of Chittagong port was really alarming in 2009 and 2010, when the export-oriented garment factory owners had suffered a lot. It was a time when they had to go for air shipment, spending a huge amount of extra money, to ensure delivery of goods in time, due to mismanagement at Chittagong port, he mentioned.

Murshedy said, 'The main problem of the port is "process loss" due to mismanagement and limited logistics. Businesses frequently face trouble in making shipment due to malfunctioning machines and other equipments.'

'But,' in his opinion, 'the port is now relatively better managed with defence personnel in charge.'

Source : New Age

15 countries take part in kite exhibition

Kites from more than 15 countries were on display at the 'Prime Bank Asian Kite Exhibition 2011' that began at Nalinikanta Bhattashali Gallery of National Museum on Saturday.

Cultural affairs state minister Promad Mankin inaugurated the two-day kite exhibition organised by socio-cultural organisation Dhakabasi, said a press release.

Indonesian ambassador Zet Mirzal Zainuddin, Chinese embassy's counselor Qian Kafia, Dhakabasi chief adviser Enam Ahmed Chowdhury, Bangladesh Kite Federation president Sukur Salek were, among others, present on the occasion.

Kites from Indonesia, China, Malaysia, South Korea, Japan, Thailand, Pakistan, Srilanka, Turkey, Bhutan, Singapore, Mayanmar, Maldives, the United Arab Emirates and Bangladesh are being exhibited at the show.

The closing ceremony will be held on Sunday at Nalinikanta Bhattashali Gallery of Bangladesh National Museum at 4:00pm following an art competition, the press release said.

Source : New Age

Two held, cannabis seized

The police arrested two persons and seized two maunds of cannabis on Saturday at Jatrabari in the capital city.

The police said they had arrested 30-year-old Mohammad Helal and 32-year-old Alauddin Mia and seized two maunds of cannabis from their possession.

Jatrabari police officer-in-charge Abul Khasem told reporters that they seized a microbus and found the cache of cannabis in it.

A case was filed against the two.

Source : New Age

AUW sticks to expulsion order

The authorities of the Asian University of Women in Chittagong have decided to stick to their stance on the expulsion of 12 students, who, the authorities said, failed to achieve the required marks in the semester examinations.

The university authorities held a scheduled meeting with the expelled students and their parents Saturday morning.

The authorities also ordered the expelled students to vacate their residential hall by 3:00pm on Saturday.

Till filing of this report at 5:50pm, the students were mulling legal fight and informed that they would go to former city mayor ABM Mohiuddin Chowdhury at 7:00pm on Saturday.  

After the meeting with the parents of expelled students, the AUW authorities also held a meeting with newsmen at about 1:00pm on the day.

The meeting was attended, among others, by Mary J Sansalone, vice-chancellor, AUW, Rehana Khan, director for admission, and Omar Shareef, chief operation officer.

Explaining the ground of the expulsion order, Mary J Sansalone told New Age that the AUW sat individually with the parents.

'Unfortunately there was no way to allow them to continue their academic career. The expelled would not get any certificate; however, we would give the academic transcript,' informed Mary.  

Replying to a question, the vice-chancellor said the AUW had a very rigorous curriculum and they could not compromise their high standard of academic excellence.

Omar Shareef, chief operation officer, supplied a copy of grading system (August 2010) to the newsmen at the meeting.

The copy contained no signature or date of issuance from the authorities either. It reads: if a student's GPA for a semester falls below a 2.0, the following action can be taken: a warning can be issued and the students' performance would be closely monitored through the next semester or the student can be suspended for one semester or one year or the student can be expelled.

Khaleda Sultana, a student of AUW who was expelled on January 1, 2011, for poor academic performance, told New Age that there was no such provision of expulsion in 'Student Handbook for Second Year Undergraduate Students 2010-2011'.

'The AUW is running without any transparent or concrete policy. The policy they follow is choppy and changing. We managed to collect a copy of Grading System August 2010 which reads that teachers should not share Grading System August 2010 with the Students, given the faculty will use different approaches to using percentage', added Khaleda.

Mentionable that the expelled students are of the first batch of AUW, which was set up in 2008.

Of the 12 expelled students, two are from Sri Lanka, one from India and the rest nine from Bangladesh.

The university students went on demonstrations on Thursday following an expulsion order served by the AUW authorities on June 12 on behalf of the then provost Mary J Sansalone.

Since the inception of the university, more than fifteen professors and teachers have been fired and two deans have resigned without fulfilling their terms. 

More than nine professors and writing assistants were fired while on vacation in 2010, while five access academy teachers were fired later the same year. 

Source : New Age

Democracy trampled under boot of police: Mosharraf

BNP front ranking leader Khandaker Mosharraf Hossain has lamented that the country's democracy has been trampled under the boot of the police.

It has been exposed through recent 'brutal' attack on the opposition chief whip, he said.

Mosharraf made the remarks while addressing a discussion titled 'State Terrorism During Hartal, Falsehood and Future of Democracy' organised by Bangladesh Jatiyatabadi Samajik and Sangskritik Jote at the National Press Club Saturday.

Jote president Hasanuddin Sarker presided over the discussion.

Mosharraf said the attack on the opposition chief whip, Zainul Abdin Farroque, was not only an attack on him, but also attack on all members of parliament.

The way Farroque was hit on his chest the democracy has been trampled under the boot of the police, he added.

He said the Awami League-led government was now using the police like Rakkhi Bahini, which was formed by post-independence AL government.

Source : New Age

Negative attitude towards neighbours counterproductive: Dipu Moni

The foreign minister, Dipu Moni, has said the current government has taken up steps to develop better ties with India and other neighbours as negative attitude towards neighbours proved counterproductive in the past.

'There is no alternative to maintaining good relations and friendship with the neighbours . . . the people had felt severely what cost they had to pay for maintaining strained relations with neighbours in the past 40 years,' she told a book launching ceremony.

Moni added that the past bitter experiences prompted the current government to take steps to develop ties with the next-door neighbours.

The foreign minister's comments came a day after her Indian counterpart SM Krishna left Dhaka for home after a three-day Bangladesh tour, considered crucial ahead of Indian prime minister Manmohan Singh's scheduled Dhaka visit in September.

Moni called her talks with the Indian external affairs minister 'very successful and productive' saying 'significant progress has been made on all unresolved issues' during Krishna's visit. 'I hope the progress that has already been made on different issues will have a successful conclusion during Indian premier's visit,' she said.

Moni particularly referred to her 'positive discussions' with Krishna on water sharing of the River Teesta, lands in adverse possession and enclaves saying 'We hope that two countries would reach a consensus on these crucial issues during Manmohan Singh's visit.'

Besides, she said, steps were taken by both the countries to reduce the huge gaps in bilateral trade and develop the land ports along Bangladesh-India borders.

Referring to the transit issue, the foreign minister said development of regional connectivity was a must for improving the livelihood of the people of the region and 'We have been working together to fulfil the hopes and aspirations of the one-fifth population of the world who are living in the region.'

Later, Moni unwrapped the cover of the book, 'Global Flashpoint: South Asia and Middle East', authored by  journalist and columnist Zaglul Ahmed Chowdhury.

The University Grants Commission chairman, professor AK Azad Chowdhury, chaired the function, joined by former ambassador Harun ur Rashid, columnist Hasnat Abdul Hye, political analyst and columnist Mizanur Rahman Shelley, journalist Hasan Shahriar, vice-chancellor of Peoples University professor Mustafizur Rahman and publisher of the book M Shamim Wahid.

Source : New Age

Nanak urges Khaleda to wait for next polls

The LGRD state minister has suggested the BNP chairperson, Khaleda Zia, that she should to shun movement for snap polls and wait until the next general elections.

'Please wait until [completion of our] five years as we have made our position in people's minds through development, and you won't be able to divert them through conspiracy,' Jahangir Kabir Nanak said at a programme in the city on Saturday.

The main opposition, who observed a 48-hour hartal from Wednesday, has extended its support for the 30-hour general strike called by 12 parties, mostly Islamist.

He was speaking at the programme organised to celebrate 12 years of Palli Daridra Bimochon Foundation at the Bangabandhu International Conference Centre.

Source : New Age

National VAT Day today

The National Board of Revenue will observe National VAT Day for the first time today to motivate businesspeople to pay the tax duly, officials said.

The divisional VAT (value added tax) offices have taken separate programmes to observe VAT Day. The revenue board has formed a committee to make the day's programmes a success.

The programmes include discussion, rally and honouring the top VAT payers. Currently, the revenue board awards nine top VAT payers under three categories — production, service and business.

VAT officials said the government was planning to widen the scope next year to award more businesses for VAT payment.

In the current fiscal, collection of VAT posted the highest 35 per cent growth among the three wings of the NBR.

The government has fixed a Tk 328.62 billion target for VAT department for 2011-12 fiscal, expecting a 28 per cent growth over the current fiscal.

Source : New Age

ADR should be alternative to overburdened courts: Shafique

Alternative Dispute Resolution should be an alternative to the overburdened courts, the law minister Shafique Ahmed, has said.

He was speaking at a dialogue on 'Court Interventions in Arbitration' jointly organised by Bangladesh International Arbitration Centre and Dhaka Chamber of Commerce and Industry in the conference room of DCCI on Saturday.

Former chief justices Latifur Rahman, Syed JR Mudassir Husain and Tafazzal Islam echoed Shafique on the ADR process and the role of the courts.

Among others, Barrister Rafiqul Haque, M Zahir, former attorney general Hasan Arif, chairman of BIAC Mahbubur Rahman, BIAC chief executive Toufiq Ali, DCCI president Asif Ibrahim spoke on the occasion.

Senior lawyer of the Bangladesh Supreme Court  Ajmalul Hossain presented the keynote paper on the topic focusing on the relationship between international arbitrations and national courts.

Shafique said the Arbitration Act-2001 and amendment of the Civil Procedure Code were made to facilitate ADR, particularly arbitration.

Settlement of disputes must be on the basis of an understanding between the parties, and such understandings must not be overturned by courts, he added.

Mahbubur Rahman, who chaired the meeting, highlighted the role of the private sector in the development of the economy.

He said the private sector needed options for speedy and effective resolution of business disputes, and arbitration provided the channel.

Source : New Age

UZ chairs, vice-chairs want legitimate rights

Upazila chairmen and vice-chairmen have unequivocally called for ensuring their legitimate rights for strengthening the local government institutions to institutionalise democracy side by side with establishing good governance.

Terming themselves the nearest people's representatives, they viewed that the hopes and aspirations of the grassroots people couldn't be reflected until their institutional power and responsibilities were ensured.

They made these observations while addressing the Rajshahi Divisional Conference of the

upazila chairmen and vice-chairmen at Uttara Community Centre in the city Saturday.

USAID under its Strengthening Democratic Local Governance programme supported the conference.

In his address of welcome, chairman of Charghat upazila Abu Sayeed Chand outlined the objectives of the conference while SDLG team leader Kajal Chatterjee gave an overview of the roles and responsibilities of the upazila chairmen and vice chairmen and the importance of the local government institutions.

With Godagari upazila chairman Ataur Rahman Khan in the chair, SDLG's chief of party Jerome and its deputy party chief Zarina Rahman Khan, secretary general of Municipal Association of Bangladesh Shamim Al Razi and president of Khulna Divisional Upazila Chairmen and Vice-Chairman Association Golam Mourtoza spoke on the occasion as resource persons.

The speakers said the upazila-level service delivery activities especially the infrastructure development, healthcare, education, livestock, fisheries, family planning and agriculture should be made accountable to the upazila chairmen for ensuring transparency in the activities.

'We have no way but to ensure participation of the people's representatives in the civic services for betterment of the people in general,' said upazila chairman Ataur Rahman Khan.

For successful implementation of the government's uplift programmes he said the upazila

chairmen and vice-chairmen should be given responsibilities for overseeing the implementation process.

Most of the upazila chairmen and vice-chairmen from eight districts under Rajshahi division attended the conference putting forward a set of recommendations on how to strengthen the local government institutions as a whole.

Later, they formed a 21-member executive committee styled 'Rajshahi Divisional Upazila Chairmen and Vice-chairmen Association' headed by Ataur Rahman Khan.

Source : New Age

CPB calls for movement against govt’s failures

Communist Party of Bangladesh announced on Saturday it had decided to build a mass movement against the Awami League led government for establishing the ideals of the

War of Independence and realising the demands of

the people.

CPB said, in a resolution adopted at a two-day meeting of its central committee,  it would hold countrywide demonstrations on July 13, opposing export of gas and to press its demands for safeguarding the interests of Bangladesh in its deals with India on transit and water sharing.

It said that the government of Bangladesh must ensure transparency in its deals with India on the issues.

CPB said that it would hold the demonstrations to press its demands for the Bangladesh government to ensure that the Indian Border Security Force stops killing Bangladeshis in along the border between the two neighbouring countries.

It condemned the AL led government for abandoning the spirit of the Liberation in its recent 15th amendment of the Constitution of the Republic.

It called upon the democratic, left and progressive forces and the people to build a movement against the government for its failure to tackle the crisis the people were facing in their daily life.

Losing public support, the government has taken the course of repression on opposition political parties, CPB said in a resolution it took at a two- day central committee meeting of the which ended at its central office on Saturday.

CPB condemned police assaults on opposition chief whip Zainul Abedin Farooque on the first day of 48-hour hartal called by BNP led opposition parties.

It also condemned

police attacks on the leaders and activists of oil, gas, national committee during the hatral it had called on July 3.

CPB demanded restoration of the Constitution

as it was on its adoption in 1972, dropping the 'communal sections' retained by the recent 15th amendment.

The Awami League government, it said, retained the 'communal sections' in the Constitution though they are contrary to the spirit of the War of Independence.

CPB general secretary Mujahidul Islam Selim presented the political report at the meeting chaired by the party president Manzurul Ahsan Khan.

The party's central committee leaders Shahidullah Chowdhury, Haider Akbar Khan Rano, Mohammad Shah Alam, MM Akash, Ruhin Hossain Prince, Dibalok Singh, Joly Talukder took part in the discussion, among others.

Source : New Age

7 killed in N’ganj road accident

Seven workers were killed and at least seven others injured as a truck carrying them fell into a ditch at Kendua Mayar Bari in Rupganj upazila of Narayanganj on Saturday.

The deceased were Saiful Islam, Tarek Mia, Rakib Hossain, Moklesur Rahman, Zahirul Islam, Taiful Islam and Jahid Hossain. They all hailed from different areas in Chapainawabganj and Rajshahi.

The police said the accident took place on the Asian Highway at about 7:00am when a goods-laden truck skidded off the road and plunged into a ditch, leaving six dead on the spot and injuring others.

Another injured died after admission to upazila health complex.

About 10 to 15 hired construction workers were on board the truck.

The truck driver and helper jumped out of their vehicle during the accident.

Then they fled the scene.

The truck carrying goods of mobile operator Airtel met with the accident as its driver lost control over the steering while going to Nabinagar in Brahmanbaria from Gazipur.

The injured was admitted to upazila health complex.

The truck was rescued from the ditch at about 3:00pm.

A case was filed.

Source : New Age

South Sudan comes into being

Celebrations erupted in South Sudan on Saturday as the world's newest nation proclaimed formal independence and turned the page on five decades of devastating conflict with the north.

'Our martyrs did not die in vain... We have waited for more than 56 years for this day. It is a day that will be forever engraved on our hearts and minds,' the president, Salva Kiir, told tens of thousands of jubilant southerners at the official ceremony in Juba.

Earlier, parliament speaker James Wani Igga read out the declaration of the south's secession from the north following a near unanimous vote for separation in a January referendum.

'We, the democratically elected representatives of the people, based on the will of the people of South Sudan, and as confirmed by the outcome of the referendum of self-determination, hereby declare South Sudan to be an independent and sovereign nation,' Wani Igga told the cheering crowds.

South Sudan's national flag was then raised, to wild applause, tears and song.

'I should cry for the recognition of this flag among the flags of the world,' shouted one tearful man.

'We have been denied our rights. Today, no more shall that happen.'

The declaration of independence affirmed the new state's democratic and multi-ethnic and multi-confessional character, and its commitment to friendly relations with all countries 'including the Republic of Sudan.'

The Sudanese president, Omar al-Bashir, guest of honour at the ceremony, watched a parade by thousands of members of his former military foes, the SPLA, whom he failed to defeat as head of the northern army for 16 years.

In a conciliatory speech, Bashir repeated his wish to see the newborn nation succeed.

'We will fulfil our commitment to help the new state of South Sudan in its first steps, because we want it to succeed, and because its success will be our success,' Bashir said.

From early morning, revellers had gathered at the venue amid tight security for the ceremony which was attended by dozens of African leaders and senior Western officials.

It was the largest international gathering ever seen in the war-damaged former garrison town on the White Nile that lacks even basic infrastructure, and army generals were asked to vacate their seats to make space for foreign guests.

International dignitaries attending the ceremony included the UN secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, US ambassador to the UN Susan Rice, EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton and British foreign secretary William Hague

More than a dozen African leaders also attended.

Recognition of the newly independent state flooded in from around the world, with the US president, Barack Obama, vowing to support South Sudan in the 'hard work' of nation building.

The British prime minister, David Cameron, called it a historic day 'for South Sudan and the whole of Africa.'

France recognised the newly state, the president, Nicolas Sarkozy, said, calling for establishing diplomatic relations.

The European Union recognised the new nation and congratulated the African country's people on their independence, a statement published in Brussels said.

Ethiopia's president Meles Zenawi said his country recognised South Sudan's sovereignty and looked forward 'to welcoming you as a full member of IGAD.'

China's special envoy extended president Hu Jintao's 'warmest congratulations' to the 'young Republic' of South Sudan, while noting the ongoing negotiations between north and south.

He said Beijing, Sudan's main trading partner and the largest investor in its key oil industry, hoped the two sides could be 'good neighbours, partners and brothers forever.'

Ban hailed the new state's birth 'after a struggle that destroyed so many lives for so many years,' and said it was an important day for the United Nations which has been engaged in promoting peace in Sudan for many years.

South Sudan's independence came exactly six months after southerners voted almost unanimously to split with their former civil war enemies in the north.

For decades, until a peace agreement was signed in 2005, southern rebels fought successive wars with the north, leaving the region in ruins, millions of people dead and a legacy of mutual mistrust.

The independence ceremony was held at the mausoleum of the late rebel leader John Garang, who died just months after signing the peace accord that ended Africa's longest-running conflict and opened the door to nationhood.

Roman Catholic Archbishop Paulino Lokudu appealed for reconciliation after the long years of civil war.

'We pray for a new mentality of mutual understanding and cooperation between our two new neighbouring nations,' he said.

Some at the ceremony were critical of Bashir, who is wanted by the International Criminal Court on charges of crimes against humanity and genocide in Darfur, Sudan's war-torn western region.

Around 200 supporters of Darfur rebel leader Abdelwahid Nur held a banner reading: 'The

new beginning,' and 'Together we must stop genocide in Darfur, Nuba Mountains.'

The Nuba Mountains in South Kordofan state in the north have seen deadly clashes in the run-up to southern independence between northern troops and pro-southern militia.

But Khartoum was among the first countries to officially recognise the fledgling nation, which now needs all the help it can get to meet the challenges of building a stable and prosperous future.

Kiir called on his people to forgive those who had caused them suffering and urged them to take responsibility for building a 'strong foundation' for their nation.

Source : New Age

Schoolgirl raped, hospitalised

A seven-year old schoolgirl was admitted to Lalmonirhat sadar hospital with grievous injuries after being raped by a middle-aged man at Karnapur Mandaltari village on Friday night.

The victim, daughter of a poor rickshaw-van puller, is a student of class I of a local primary school.

Police said the rapist, Mojibar Rahman, had dragged the girl into a bamboo cluster when she went out after dusk to buy rice from a grocer, tied a piece of cloth around her face and raped her.

Hearing her screams, local people went to the spot and found the girl bleeding.

The alleged rapist, Mojibar Rahman, 35, of neighbouring Baparitari village, went into hiding after the incident.

The victim's mother said she had sent her daughter out to buy rice from a grocer near their house. 'Mojibar Rahman of the neighbouring village picked up my daughter on the way, took her into a bamboo cluster and raped her,' she said.

The victim's parents said they wanted justice. 'I want exemplary punishment for the culprit who raped my daughter,' said her father.

Medical officer of Lalmonirhat sadar hospital Nabiur Rahman said the child had sustained critical injuries and bled profusely. 'We have completed her medical test and confirmed the rape. She is not out of danger yet.'

A rape case was lodged against Mojibar Rahman with Lalmonirhat sadar thana on Friday night and the police were trying to arrest him, the police said.

Source : New Age

Hasina helped Yunus get Nobel Prize: Ashraf

The LGRD minister has said it was Sheikh Hasina who helped Muhammad Yunus get the Nobel Peace Prize by making him familiar globally.

'Had our prime minister Sheikh Hasina not introduced Muhammad Yunus at the Global Microcredit Summit in Washington, the economist would not become so familiar and win the Nobel Prize,' Syed Ashraful Islam said on Saturday.

Addressing a programme in the city, he said, 'She [Hasina] had also introduced microcredit worldwide through the [first] global summit in Washington [in 1997] in presence of the US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, the then US first lady, and the Queen Sophia of Spain and many more.'

'Our country is a place of history distortions, and everyone forgets these,' he told the programme, organised at the Bangabandhu International Conference Centre, marking the 12 years of Palli Daridra Bimochon Foundation.

Hasina inaugurated the programme, addressed, among others, by state minister for LGRD Jahangir Kabir Nanak and chairman of the parliamentary standing committee on the ministry Mohammad Rahmat Ali.

Known as microcredit pioneer, Yunus was awarded the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize, along with Grameen Bank, for their contributions to establishing peace through efforts to create economic and social development.

The government removed the Nobel laureate as the managing director of the bank early this year and he lost all the legal battles subsequently.

The Bangladesh Bank relieved him for flouting rules when he was reappointed in 1999, and the prime minister and many leaders in the ruling party criticised him sharply.

Without naming Yunus, Ashraf said the word 'microcrdit' was not invented by any particular economist. 'It was PDBF which introduced it. If Nobel Prize is given for microcredit, it should go to PDBF.'

The then Awami League government founded PDBF in November, 1999 and then prime minister Sheikh Hasina launched its activities on July 9 the next year.

The organisation has been working for the elimination of rural poverty by ensuring social development, men-women equality and women's empowerment. Starting its activities in 139 upazilas, PDBF has now spread over 208 upazilas with 253 branches.

The LGRD minister also criticised the past BNP-Jamaat alliance government for 'holding back its all activities'.

Calling upon all to come forward for rural development, he said, 'Bangabandhu [Sheikh Mujib] had dreamt of a golden Bengal, not golden Dhaka. It was not supposed to be that high-rises will be built in and cars will ply Dhaka only. Development must be there in rural areas, too.'

Joynab Bibi, a beneficiary of PDBF from Jamalpur, shared her good experiences of becoming self-reliant through small loans she had taken from the organisation.

She had her son graduated and married off her two daughters on completion of their secondary education through the income generated from her agricultural farm.

'We've managed to change our fate through PDBF loans. Now we can arrange our foods and clothes. No one takes away our cattlehead for failure to repay our loan instalments,' a happy Joynab told the programme.

She also alleged that different micro-financing organisations, including Grameen Bank, repress the borrowers for realising the loan instalments.

With the rural development and cooperatives secretary Mihir Kanti Mojumder in the chair, the programme was also addressed by PDBF managing director Mohammad Mahbubur Rahman.

Six of the most successful PDBF beneficiaries, six meritorious children of the beneficiaries and as many best employees were given awards and cash reward at the function.

Source : New Age

FBCCI calls for withdrawal of hartal

The Federation of Bangladesh Chambers of Commerce and Industry, the country's apex business body, has urged the Islamic parties to withdraw their 30-hour hartal in order to allow the continued economic flow of the country.

The FBCCI president, AK Azad, made the appeal from a press conference held at

FBCCI office in the capital Saturday afternoon.

Azad said the country and its people just experienced a 48-hour marathon hartal and another 30-hour hartal begins to today.

He said the political scenario in the country had been deteriorating due to frequent hartals called by different political parties, which create uncertainty in conducting business activities.

'Hartal impedes economic advancement. Markets of our products will shift to other countries where stable political situation prevails. At any cost, we have to resist the culture of hartal.'

He requested all political parties to 'shun destructive and anti-productive politics like hartal' for the greater interest of the common people.

The FBCCI president said the business community felt that there was no alternative to strengthening democracy and democratic institutions for a universal and balanced socio-political development of the country.

He informed that the FBCCI leaders would visit different parts of the country to create mass awareness against hartal. 'We'll arrange meetings and discussions with business community, professionals and working people for creating opinion against hartal.'

President of the Dhaka Chamber of Commerce and Industry Asif Ibrahim, Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association president Shafiul Islam Mohiuddin, Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce and Industry vice-president Nihad Kabir and Chittagong Women Chamber of Commerce and Industry president Monwara Hakim Ali also spoke at the press conference.

Source : New Age