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Sheikh Fazilatunnesa Mujib's 81st birth anniversary today

Today is the 81st birth anniversary of Sheikh Fazilatunnesa Mujib, the woman behind the successes of Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman.

Ruling Awami League (AL) chalked out elaborate programmes to mark the day. The party will place wreaths at her grave at Banani graveyard at 9:00am and organise special prayers for salvation of her departed soul.

A discussion on her life will be held at Ruposhi Bangla Hotel at 11:00am with President Zillur Rahman as the chief guest. Awami Sweschasebak League will also organise similar programmes.

Fazilatunnesa was born in Tungipara of Gopalganj in 1930. She lost her father and mother at the age of five and was groomed by her future mother-in-law.

She married Bangabandhu at the age of eleven and had three sons and two daughters. She was killed along with Bangabandhu and most of her family members by a disgruntled group of army officers on August 15, 1975. Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and Sheikh Rehana are her two surviving daughters.

Fazilatunnesa inspired Bangabandu in all movements and through numerous hardships. She was kept under house arrest by the Pakistani military intelligence until December 17, 1971, a day after the country was liberated.

AL General Secretary Syed Ashraful Islam urged all leaders, workers and admirers of AL and its associated bodies to observe the day in a befitting manner.

Source : The Daily Star

Goods transport owners' strike postponed

Dhaka Goods Transport Agency Owners' United Council yesterday postponed its indefinite strike programme scheduled to be started from today, following assurance from the authorities concerned of taking initiatives to stop hijacking of goods-laden vehicles on highways.

"We have postponed the strike programme after a fruitful meeting with the DMP officials at the DMP headquarters in the city," Dolan Kanti Barua, coordinator of the council, told The Daily Star.

DMP authorities will issue a circular allowing trucks and covered vans to ply on the city streets between 9:00pm and 8:00am within a day, said Dolan who also took part in the meeting.

Source : The Daily Star

Sustainable Use of Water: Workshop begins today

Fathimath Dhiyana Saeed, secretary general of South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (Saarc), will launch a three-day training workshop in the city today on sustainable use of water resources to promote food security in South Asia.

The workshop titled "Saarc-Australia Project on developing capacity in cropping systems modeling for sustainable use of water resources to promote food security in South Asia" is scheduled to be held at Saarc Agriculture Centre (SAC).

The project is being undertaken by Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization and International Rice Research Institute. The main interface with Saarc is through SAC, says a SAC press release yesterday.

The two-year project will capitalise on SAC's core capability in convening and executing multi-country training courses and workshops and fostering multilateral collaboration across Saarc member states.

The project will provide a series of training workshops, with associated experimental activities, to researchers, designed to obtain quality datasets for modeling purposes and deepen experts' skills and knowledge in data acquisition and participatory techniques.

SAC notes that the decrease in or lack of water available for agriculture and the need for improved water productivity in both rain-fed and irrigated agriculture is one of the major emerging threats to food security in South Asia.

Source : The Daily Star

Two killed in road crash

At least two people were killed and 20 others injured when a bus plunged into a roadside ditch at Kamarpara under Turag Police Station in Ashulia yesterday.

The deceased are passenger of the bus Shohidul Islam, 26, and its helper Mohammad Ripon, 28.

Of the injured, condition of four was stated to be critical. The injured were admitted to local hospitals.

Witnesses said the accident took place when an Uttara-bound bus of Kheya Paribahan fell into the ditch after colliding head-on with a Tangail-bound bus while giving side to the Tangail-bound bus.

Police sent the bodies to Dhaka Medical College morgue for autopsy.

Source : The Daily Star

Stolen car, car-parts recovered, 3 arrested

Detective Branch (DB) of police in separate drives recovered a stolen car and car parts worth around Tk 70 lakh and arrested three alleged thieves in the capital and on its outskirts Gazipur on Saturday.

The arrestees include ringleader of the gang, Rafiqul Islam Rafiq, 48, Rubel, 22, and Rana, 56.

Acting on a tip off, a police team led by Mohammad Mokhlesur Rahman, a senior assistant commissioner (AC) of DB, arrested the trio from Bangshal, Jatrabari and Gazipur and recovered the stolen car along with components of at least 12 cars.

Quoting Rafiq, the AC said the gang used to break into different garages in Chittagong and dismantled the parts which they brought to the city to sell. They packed the parts and mailed those through courier services to exercise caution.

Police seized packets of five stolen car parts from a courier service agency at Kakrail and recovered the stolen car from Rubel's possession at Jatrabari.

They stored the components at warehouses of various car workshops of Dholaikhal, he said.

Even owners of some car workshops are also involved in these crimes, the AC said.

Source : The Daily Star

Sagufta asked to compensate victim's family

The High Court yesterday directed Sagufta Group to pay Tk 15 lakh in compensation to the family of Habibur Rahman Munna who died after a brick falling from an under-construction building of the firm hit him on the head.

It also asked the real estate company to pay the compensation within a week and submit a report on compliance of its order within 10 days.

Munna, 18, an HSC examinee from Tejgaon College, on July 16 was hit by a brick that fell from the 10th floor of a 15-storey under-construction building of a Sagufta project at Panthapath in the capital. He died on the spot.

An HC bench of Justice AHM Shamsuddin Chowdhury Manik and Justice Gobinda Chandra Tagore passed the order during the hearing of a suo moto rule earlier issued by it in connection with the tragic incident.

On July 19, the court issued the suo moto rule upon the commissioner of Dhaka Metropolitan Police and the officers-in-charge of Sher-e Bangla Nagar Police Station and Pallabi Police Station to explain within two weeks why Sagufta Group should not be punished for not taking appropriate safety measures at the construction site.

Khalled Mohammad Jewel Mollah, managing director of Sagufta; Director Walid Mohammad Mollah and police personnel concerned appeared in the court yesterday as summoned earlier.

The trial of the case, filed against Sagufta Group officials and staff following the incident, will continue at the lower court.

Advocate Anisul Huq argued for Sagufta Group, Yusuf Hossain for the police personnel while Deputy Attorney General ABM Altab Hossain represented the government.

Source : The Daily Star 

Indigenous issue draws arguments

Against the backdrop of much debate over constitutional recognition of non-Bangalee indigenous communities, Law Minister Shafique Ahmed yesterday said in light of the ILO convention no 169 they are "tribal" people, not "indigenous".

There are two criteria in the International Labour Organization (ILO) convention no 169, he said adding, the first criterion which gives definition of tribal people is applicable for Bangladesh, but the second criterion that gives definition of indigenous people is not applicable for Bangladesh.

Following the minister's remark, Dhaka University history professor, Mesbah Kamal, who works with indigenous minority communities, categorically disagreed with the minister, saying they have all qualities to be regarded as "indigenous".

The ILO convention no169 says, "This convention applies to (a) tribal peoples in independent countries whose social, cultural and economic conditions distinguish them from other sections of the national community, and whose status is regulated wholly or partially by their own customs or traditions or by special laws or regulations. (b) peoples in independent countries who are regarded as indigenous on account of their descent from the populations which inhabited the country, or a geographical region to which the country belongs, at the time of conquest or colonisation or the establishment of present state boundaries and who, irrespective of their legal status, retain some or all of their own social, economic, cultural and political institutions."

The law minister was speaking as the chief guest at the closing session of a two-day long national conference on "Land, Forest and Culture of Indigenous Peoples", in the LGED Bhaban in the capital on the occasion of International Day of Indigenous People tomorrow.

Blaming Chittagong Hill Tracts Land Commission members for making the commission dysfunctional, Shafique Ahmed said, "The chairman calls meetings but the members do not attend. If the commission cannot function, land dispute will not be resolved." He was referring to the land dispute between indigenous minority people of CHT and Bangalee settlers.

But, Bangladesh Indigenous Peoples Forum President Jyotirindra Bodhipriya Larma, widely known as Santu Larma, alleged that the commission remains dysfunctional due to undemocratic attitude of the chairman.

Larma, who chaired the session, firmly demanded amendment of the CHT Land Dispute Resolution Commission Act, 2001.

Earlier in a separate session, Obaidul Quader, chairman of the parliamentary standing committee on information ministry, said if there are some anomalies in the latest constitutional amendment, necessary measure might be taken to further amend the charter.

Mozammel Haque, chairman of the parliamentary standing committee on land ministry, said measures taken by the government to end discriminations against indigenous people in CHT and to protect their rights are insufficient.

Presenting the keynote speech, Information Commissioner Prof Sadeka Halim said indigenous people shrunk from 80.6 percent to 51.4 percent between 1974 and 1991 in CHT.

Barrister Sara Hossain, chairperson of Bangladesh Legal Aid and Services Trust, said the government insulted indigenous people by defining them as "tribal", "ethnic minorities", and "small nationalities".

Sultana Kamal, co-chair of the CHT Commission, also spoke at the session.

Earlier two separate sessions titled "International Mechanism and the Wider Regional Context", and "Courts, Commission and Council: The Effective Use of Existing Institutions" were held.

Prof Meghna Guhathakurata, executive director of the Research Initiatives, Bangladesh (RIB); and Prof Amena Mohsin of the international relations department of Dhaka University, chaired the sessions respectively.

Dr Vincent Darlong, country programme officer of International Fund for Agricultural Development, India; Sanjoy Hazarika, director of the Delhi based Centre for Northeast Studies; Basilio Wandag, executive director of the National Commission on Indigenous People (NCIP) of the Philippines were present at the sessions among others.

Source : The Daily Star

Six-month maternity leave a must: PM reminds private sector

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina yesterday urged the private sector employers to implement six-month maternity leave for their staff.

"It is very unfortunate that many private sector employers do not allow six-month maternity leave to the expectant mothers working in their organisations, though all the government offices have already implemented it," she said.

The premier was addressing the inaugural function of the national programme arranged to mark the World Breastfeeding Week '2011 at the city's Bangabandhu International Conference Centre in the morning.

Hasina in her speech also requested the private sector employers to set up breastfeeding corners for creating ideal environment for the new mothers.

Breastfeeding corners should also be set up at the shopping malls and bus, rail and launch stations, she said, adding that such corners are being set up at all government offices, banks and insurance companies, and semi-government institutions and organisations.

"Babies have to be breastfed properly, which will help them to grow up with the best health. We need talented generations to build Bangladesh as a modern country," she said.

Mentioning the UN award given to Bangladesh for its success in reducing child mortality, Hasina said the country has also been able to reduce maternal mortality rate significantly.

The government has taken steps to appoint 3,000 midwives for ensuring better services to mothers and children, the premier said.

It has already upgraded 17 district hospitals to 250-bed units while the rest district hospitals would be upgraded gradually, she said.

Upazila health complexes are also being developed to 50-bed hospitals from 31 beds, she said, adding that already 206 health complexes have been upgraded to 50-bed hospitals.

Referring to the new appointments of 5,000 doctors, Hasina said soon another 500 doctors and 14,000 health assistants would be appointed.

She further told the function that the government has restarted 11,000 community health clinics across the country and supplying free medicines among the people.

Telemedicine facilities would also be provided to the mass people by these community clinics, the premier said.

This year the World Breastfeeding Week is being observed in Bangladesh with a call to all citizens to speak out on the importance of breastfeeding.

Health Minister AFM Ruhal Haque, State Minister for Health Majibur Rahman Fakir, Adviser to the PM Prof Syed Mudasser Ali, Bangladesh Breastfeeding Foundation Chairperson Dr SK Roy, among others, also spoke at the function.

Source : The Daily Star 

Kadar leaves hospital

Dhaka University (DU) student Abdul Kadar, who was tortured brutally in police custody on "false" charges, left Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University (BSMMU) yesterday.

Doctors of the orthopaedic unit of BSMMU released Kadar around 2:00pm as his physical condition improved, says his friend Anisur Rahman.

Kadar, a student of the biochemistry and molecular biology department, had received severe injuries to his left leg as a police officer allegedly stabbed him with a machete.

Anisur said his friend can now walk on his own.

Family members took Kadar to Fazlul Haque Hall of Dhaka University around 2:30pm, he added.

On July 16, Kadar was picked up by Khilgaon police from the capital's Segunbagicha area when he was on his way back to his dormitory from his cousin's house around 1:30am, Kadar said.

Khilgaon police claimed that they arrested Kadar and "one of his accomplices" Mamun near Khilgaon Police Outpost around 3:30am. According to police, Kadar and Mamun sustained injuries in a mob beating after a team of Khilgaon patrol police intercepted a car carrying six robbers including Kadar and the gang tried to escape arrest.

After his arrest, Kadar was implicated in three cases-- two with Khilgaon Police Station on charges of robbery and the other with Mohammadpur Police Station on charges of carjacking.

Kadar had been undergoing treatment in BSMMU after his release on bail on August 3.

Meanwhile, DU students yesterday formed a human chain on the campus demanding immediate withdrawal of the cases.

The students under the banner of "Students against repression" organised the programme in front of the biochemistry and molecular biology department.

Blaming police for torturing Kadar mercilessly in custody, they demanded exemplary punishment to those involved.

They also demanded that the government take immediate measures to put an end to repression on people in custody by police and members of the Rapid Action Battalion (Rab).

Source : The Daily Star 

Protests in CHT: 15 hurt in student-cop clash

At least 15 people including eight policemen were injured yesterday in a clash between police and indigenous students over bringing out a protest procession in Khagrachhari district town.

Witnesses said the students of Khagrachhari Govt College under the banner of eight indigenous students' forums brought out a procession from the college gate at about 11:00pm, demanding constitutional recognition of the indigenous people of Chittagong Hill Tracts.

To foil the protest rally, police swooped on the demonstrators indiscriminately charging clubs that injured seven students, said Mayon Tripura, a member of Tripura Students Forum.

Mayon also protested the police action terming it undemocratic.

The injured are Tithi Tripura, Amarun Tripura, Suman Chakma, Dipan Chakma, Gourinanda Tripura, Ripan Tripura and Ulapru Marma.

Contacted, Abu Kalam Siddique, superintendent of police of Khagrachhari, said the students brought out the procession without taking any permission from the local administration.

As police tried to bar the students from staging demonstration, they hurled brick chips at the law enforcers leaving eight policemen injured, he said.

To bring the situation under control, police charged truncheons on the agitators, the SP said. "The situation is under control now," he added.

The injured policemen were given primary treatment at Khagrachhari Adhunik Sadar Hospital.

Bipul Chakma, organising secretary of Pahari Chhatra Parishad, in a press release condemned the attack and demanded an immediate inquiry into the incident.

Meanwhile, different student organisations of indigenous communities yesterday brought out processions in the hill town of Rangamati, protesting the foreign minister's recent statement on the issue of indigenous people.

Source : The Daily Star 

Gulf stocks drop after US credit downgrade

Gulf stock markets dropped on Sunday a day after Saudi shares tumbled over five per cent as news of the historic US credit downgrading sent jitters through the region's markets.

Following the Muslim weekend, the Dubai Financial Market Index opened trading down 4.5 per cent before clawing back some ground to end the day 3.69 per cent weaker at 1,484.31 points.

Shares in property giant Emaar Properties shed 5.26 per cent.

In neighbouring Abu Dhabi, the General Index closed down 2.53 per cent at 2,603.22 points after opening in red, with banks losing 3.30 per cent and real estate shedding 5.61 per cent.

The Saudi stock market fell for the second consecutive day after being the first market globally hit by a selloff after international agency Standard & Poor's cut its credit rating for the United States.

The Tadawul All-Shares Index traded 0.83 per cent down at 6,023.18 points after the largest Arab bourse shed 5.46 per cent of its value on Saturday.

The Kuwait Stock Exchange closed 1.61 per cent at 5,927.8 points, while the Qatar Exchange was still trading down 2.3 per cent at 8,295.47 points. The Bahrain Bourse closed 0.33 per cent down at 1,276.86.

Source : New Age

Tel Aviv exchange halts trade after 6 per cent fall

Trading on Israel's Tel Aviv stock exchange was temporarily halted on Sunday after share prices fell six per cent at the open on news of a US credit rating downgrade, public radio reported.

Trading opened as normal on Sunday, the first day of Israel's working week, but mandatory suspensions went into effect minutes into the session as the stock exchange plunged.

Both the blue-chip TA-25 and the TA-100 indices dropped more than five per cent in pre-trading, prompting the exchange to put into effect a practice known as an 'English opening,' with trading delayed for short periods.

'What happened this morning is that during pre-trading, the TA-25 went down more than five per cent, so there are a few actions that are taken,' exchange spokeswoman Idit Yaaron told the AFP.

'The first is an English opening, where the trading is delayed by three to five minutes, after that, the trading system checks the data again, if it's still up or down by five per cent, it's delayed another three to five minutes.'

After the first two short suspensions, the indices had failed to stabilise sufficiently, prompting the exchange to authorise a 45-minute suspension, Yaaron said.

The delay allowed trading to return within the five-per cent band, and trading resumed shortly afterwards, but both indices quickly began to fall again.

Source : New Age

market Disclosures

Prime Bank

East Coast Shipping Lines Ltd, one of the corporate sponsors/directors of the bank, has reported its intention to sell 30,00,000 shares out of its total holdings of 1,20,40,272 shares of the bank at prevailing market price through the stock exchange within next 30 working days.


Navana CNG

Normal trading of the shares of the company will resume today after record date.


International Leasing & Financial Services

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 the entitlement of rights share from August 8 to 10. Trading of the shares of the company will remain suspended on record date on August 11.


Federal Insurance

Trading of the shares of the company will remain suspended on record date today for entitlement of rights share.


Jamuna Bank

MA Khayer, one of the sponsors/directors of the bank, has reported his intention to sell 73,590 shares out of his total holdings of 10,73,590 shares of the bank at prevailing market price through the stock exchange within next 30 working days.


Peoples Insurance

Md Farhad Ahmed Akanda, one of the sponsors/directors of the company, has reported his intention to sell 2,50,000 shares out of his total holdings of 12,88,547 shares of the company at prevailing market price through the stock exchange within next 30 working days.


Information Services Network

Suman Celine Huq, one of the sponsors/directors of the company, has reported his intention to sell 21,500 shares out of his total holdings of 2,38,646 shares of the company at prevailing market price through the stock exchange within next 30 working days.


Barakatullah Electro Dynamics

The board of directors has recommended 20 per cent stock dividend for the year ended on June 30, 2011. The AGM will be held on September 22 at 11:30am at Sunrise Community Centre at Pathantola in Sylhet. Record date will be on August 24.

    Source: DSE

Source : New Age

Nigeria signs deal on rescued banks

Nigerian financial regulators signed a deal Saturday to transfer the management of three acquired banks to a recently established asset company as part of efforts to restore them to sound health.

The government on Friday announced the takeover of Afribank Plc, Bank PHB and Spring Bank over their inability to recapitalise by a September 30 deadline.

The assets and liabilities of the failed banks were transferred to three new 'bridge banks' by the Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation.

The three 'bridge' banks are to be called Enterprise Bank Limited, Keystone Bank Limited, and MainstreetBank.

Source : New Age

Myanmar govt to spend $661m to build 1,400 GSM towers

Myanmar telecommunication authorities, in cooperation with private companies, will invest over $661 million for building over 1,400 GSM mobile line towers under the first phase of its five-year plan starting this year, a local media reported in this week's issue.

Under the first phase, a total of 4 million GSM mobile phone lines will be installed in eight big cities, the 7-Days News said.

Meanwhile, the Myanmar telecommunication authorities are planning to expand Myanmar GSM mobile phone coverage to Asian countries while allowing in coverage of GSM SIM cards from ASEAN members within two years.

The GSM SIM cards of China and Vietnam have been in use in Myanmar under a pilot project since Myanmar's annual gems emporium held in March this year.

According to the official statistics, there are over 1.09 million auto-telephones and 2.1 million mobile phones in Myanmar totalling 3.19 million at present compared with 74,855 in 1988, adding that telephone density has hit 5.4 per cent in the entire nation with 30 per cent in Yangon and 20 per cent in Mandalay.

There remains lesser density in rural areas and efforts are being made for installation of cellular, CDMA-450, CDMA-800 and GSM phones for the increase of the telephone density, better facility and wider coverage of telephone in the rural areas.

Internet users reached 3,80,000 in Myanmar in March 2011, up 28,610 compared with the same period of 2010.

Source : New Age

12 Ctg shops, including KFC fined Tk 2.66 lakh

Mobile courts on Sunday fined 12 shops, including chain fast food shop KFC, Tk 2.66 lakh on various charges at different parts of the Chittagong city.

A court, led by executive magistrate Mukitul Islam, fined the KFC outlet at Ishpahani crossing Tk 25,000, Fitstop restaurant Tk 40,000, Fitstop sweets Tk 10,000 and two fruit shops in the same area Tk 10,000, Fulkoli sweet factory at Chowmuhuni Tk 60,000, Fresh Inn restaurant Tk 50,000, a medicine shop in the same area Tk 5,000.

The magistrate said the fast food shop KFC was fined for unhygienic condition in the kitchen, keeping date-expired sauce and cooking broiler chicken without pre-examination. 'KFC has no standard although it is a famous food shop,' the magistrate added.

He also said other food shops were fined on charge of producing and selling food in unhygienic condition while the fruit shops were fined for using formalin in fruits.

The medicine shop was fined for selling date-expired medicine, he added.

Another court, led by executive magistrate Juthika Sirkar, fined the sweetmeat factory of Shad on Omar Ali Road of Chaktai Tk 60,000 and Sadhu sweets Tk 5,000 on charge of producing and selling food in an unhygienic condition.

One more mobile court, led by executive magistrate Jannatul Ferdous, fined two fish traders Tk 500 each on charge of cheating in weight.

Source : New Age

Body formed to probe RU theatre and music dept crisis

The Rajshahi University Syndicate on Saturday formed a committee, asking it to investigate the present crisis around three teachers of its theatre and music department.

At the same meeting the majority of the syndicate members spoke in favour of retaining the three temporarily appointed teachers, Solok Hossain, Monoz Kumar Pramanik and Abdus Salam, who were lately asked by the university authorities to stop their work.  

The four-member committee formed by the Syndicate would be headed by Khalekuzzam, director of the RU Institute of Biological Sciences.

Its other members are Mohammad Abdul Khaleq, chairmen of botany department, Golam Kabir, teacher of the same department, Saiyed Sadiqul Alam, a RU Syndicate member.

The committee was asked to submit its report by this September 30.

On July 25 theatre and music department academic committee verbally told the three teachers that their services were no more required.

Sources in the department said that their jobs were not made permanent because of their involvement in the movement that went on between March and May this year for the removal of the then department chair Moloy Kumar Bhoumick from the post.

Meanwhile, thirteen other teachers of the department, who had also taken part in that movement, said they should have been punished too if those three had to suffer any punishment for participating in the movement.

'Our movement against Moloy Kumar Bhoumick was peaceful and to do so is our democratic right,' a teacher of the department said, preferring anonymity.

The accused teachers were appointed on ad hoc basis on July 25, 2010 and according to the custom of the university, a temporarily-appointed teacher usually gets permanent appointment after six months.

Sadequl Arefin Matin, general secretary of RU Teachers' Association, said they had submitted a memorandum to the vice-chancellor, Abdus Sobhan, demanding permanent appointment of the three teachers.

The VC told New Age that the authorities would take final decision after submission of the report by the probe committee.

Source : New Age

BRTC starts Eid ticket sale on August 16

The Bangladesh Road Transport Corporation is going to start selling tickets on August 16 in the city for its special services for those intending to observe Eid-ul-Fitr outside Dhaka, said the corporation officials.

The tickets for Bogra, Rangpur, Mymensingh, Pabna, Comilla, Mawa and Shibalay will be available at Kalyanpur bus depot (telephone no 9002531), double-decker bus depot (9002395), Zoarsahara bus depot (8911778) and Motijheel bus depot (9002531), BRTC deputy general manager (operation) Major Quazi Shafique Uddin told New Age on Sunday.

He said intra-district Eid service would also be available in Barisal, Comilla Chittagong, Pabna, Rangpur, Bogra, Khulna and Sylhet.

Tickets for the intra-district service would be found at Barishal bus depot (0431-3793), Comilla bus depot (081-61988), Chittagang bus depot (031-683423), Bogra bus depot (051-66145), Pabna bus depot (0731-64768), Rangpur bus depot (0521-64110), Khulna bus depot (041-786143) and Sylhet bus depot (01916721044).

About 300 buses, including 25 air-conditioned ones, would ply to-and-from Dhaka, said Quazi Shafique Uddin and added that different

organisations could also reserve buses during the festival.

The buses would start for different districts from Motijheel, Joyarsahara, Kalyanpur, Mirpur 12, Phulbaria, BRTC bus terminal at Gabtoli, Mahakhali bus terminal and Airport/Cantonment rail station, he added.

He said in all the buses some seats would be reserved for women and people with disabilities and added that a special committee would monitor the whole service.

A control room would be opened at the corporation's head office with contact number 954361, he added.

Source : New Age

Torrential rain brings life in Rajshahi to a halt

A torrential downpour since Thursday in the Rajshahi city has submerged the lower portion of the Rajshahi city, causing water stagnation and suffering to the city people.

City dwellers stayed inside their households till Sunday midday due to incessant rain, with poor drainage system further aggravating the situation.

The city people have said that they could not go for Eid shopping after Ramadan had begun because of the rainfall and poor number of public vehicles on city streets.

As a result of the rain from Thursday night, a good portion of the city became waterlogged, houses were inundated and road communication was snapped.

People living in suburbs and vegetable traders are suffering the worst as they cannot reach city markets to buy or sell products.

Some of the roads that link suburbs to the city have gone under water and some roads have become muddy.

The badly affected areas are Rajshahi Court area, Bhulanpur, Terakhadia, Kairdara, Achintala, Seroil Colony, Choto Bangram, Boro Bangram, Sultanganj, Central Jail area and Sepaipara.

People of these areas face serious trouble as they have to wade through knee-high water on roads.

Sohag Ahmed, a resident of Terakhadia area, has told New Age that after the rainfall the roads in front of the divisional stadium became waterlogged.

'A number of CNG-run auto-rickshaws have gone out of order on the road, triggering sudden traffic congestion,' he added.

Sultanaganj resident Waliur Rahman Babu said rainwater collected on all roads of his area after the rain stated Thursday night.

Mahmuda Khatun, a housewife of the Court area, said about two thirds of all roads in the area went under water and pedestrians, particularly women and children, were facing serious difficulties.

Meanwhile, transports have come to a standstill for hours and several hundred vehicles fell stranded on both sides of Sheheb Bazar Zero point as water submerged the potholed road stretch Sunday afternoon.

Traffic police brought the traffic movement under control after a few hours.

Admitting the allegation of poor drainage system, Sariful Islam Babu, Rajshahi panel mayor, told New Age that the RCC staff were on duty to develop the drainage system at Saheb Bazar and the RCC would gradually strengthen its drainage for smooth flow of water.

Source : New Age

Minor boy drowns

A two-year-old boy drowned into a pond near his house at village Charkanda of Bhanga upazila in Faridpur on Sunday.

The deceased was Swadhin, son of Rafiq Munshi of the village Charkanda.

Locals said that Swadhin was playing in the yard near the pond. Suddenly Swadhin fell in the pond and drowned.

Swadhin was later taken to Bhanga Upazila Health Complex where the physician declared him dead.

Source : New Age

Bicyclist killed in road accident

A bicyclist was killed in a road accident at Mohipur Bazar under Gobratala union in Chapainawabganj sadar upazila on Sunday morning.

The deceased was identified as Shafiqul Islam, 45, son of Sohrab Ali, of village Munssefpur under the upazila.

The police said that a bus headed for Chapainawabganj from Rahanpur hit Shafuqul Islam when he was coming at Mohipur Bazar by a bicycle at about 9:30am, leaving him dead on the spot.

Being agitated, local people ransacked the bus and blocked Chapainawabganj-Rahanpur Road for one hour.

On information, the Chapainawabganj sadar thana police went to the spot and took the situation under control.

Source : New Age

Govt to introduce new Gas Dev Fund policy

The energy ministry is likely to annul the Gas Development Fund Policy, a guideline for release and utilisation of Gas Development Fund formulated by the Bangladesh Energy Regulatory Commission, said an Energy Division official.

The decision came from a meeting of the energy sector's high officials at the Energy Division on Sunday, he said.

The BERC tabled the idea of creating the GDF and its utilisation to enhance the capacity of the state-run oil and gas exploration and production companies while announcing the last gas price hike. The commission, in consultation with the government agencies concerned and other stakeholders in the sector, finalised the draft of the regulatory guideline, the GDF Policy, made by Petrobangla for release and utilisation of the fund and introduced it on January 16 this year.

But, earlier in 2009, the energy ministry also finalised the draft of another policy prepared by Petrobangla for the same purpose and introduced it on December 15 the same year.

The official said the energy ministry would formulate within 15 days yet another draft policy for release and utilisation of the GDF following the self-financing policy for autonomous agencies formulated by the planning ministry.

The energy ministry will send the draft to the Cabinet Division within this month after vetting of the law ministry, he said.

When asked about the initiative of the Energy Division, its secretary Mesbahuddin said there were a few procedural complications in the GDF policy formulated by the BERC.

'The policy needs a revision and a few amendments. After doing that, we may send the draft to the Cabinet Division,' he said.

When asked whether the ministry would annul the GDF Policy formulated by the BERC, Mesbah said it was too early to make a comment on that. It requires a review and then the government will take the decision, he said.

About the authority of releasing and utilising the fund, he said the issue would also be resolved after the ministry reviewed the GDF Policy.

Meeting sources said the ministry found that the BERC could not formulate any policy as per the Section 4(IX)(a) of the Rules of Business.

According to the Allocation of Business, all policies and matters relating to energy will be formulated by the Energy and Mineral Resources Division. 

The sources also said that the ministry found a few loopholes in the GDF Policy introduced by the BERC in allocation and release of the fund.

There are also a few differences between the policy adopted by the government and that by the BERC.

The BERC, however, has been countering the ministry's assessment of the guideline formulated by the commission for release and utilisation of the fund.

According to the BERC's explanation, the ministry has mistakenly taken the guideline for the GDF as a kind of government policy. But, it is absolutely a guideline in which Petrobangla has been given the authority for releasing and utilising the fund for implementing projects in specific fields. Petrobangla will submit half-yearly activity plans of its oil and gas exploration and production companies to the commission and, after the commission approves the projects, Petrobangla will be able to release the fund required for implementing the projects.

In the meeting, the BERC chairman is reported to have said that the commission will cooperate with the government.

He is also reported to have expressed his concern at the procrastination in utilisation of the fund, as it two and a half years have already passed since the move was taken.

Source : New Age

Early Aug salary for non-gazetted staff

The government will pay wages to non-gazetted officials and disburse pension to the retired public servants for the current month on August 23, ahead of Eid-ul-Fitr.

All non-gazetted and retired officials of government and semi-government organisations, statutory government bodies and non-commissioned army officials will get the wages and allowances a week ago for the largest Muslim festival.

Source : New Age

Truckers call off proposed strike

Dhaka's goods transport owners' alliance, who ferry grocery, pharma and electronic items, has withdrawn its proposed indefinite strike from Monday.

Member secretary

Abdul Mannan told the news agency on Sunday that the agitation was called off following an assurance from additional police commissioner Mili Biswas.

The five-point charter of demands of the group includes putting an end to mugging and extortion from trucks and allowing them to ply on the capital roads from 9:00pm to 8:00am.

'The police have agreed to our demand to allow plying of trucks and covered vans on the city roads from 9:00pm to 8:00am.'

Currently, some 1,000 goods-laden trucks enter the capital between 10:00pm and 8:00am every day.

'They also assured us of holding a meeting with the police top brass to stop mugging and harassment on the highways,' Mannan said.

The meeting was also attended among others by Dhaka Metropolitan Police joint commissioner Mahbubur Rahman, advisers of the group Iqbal Mahmud and Arun

Banik, and convenor Aman Ullah.

Most of these mugging incidents take place around Savar, Dhamrai, Ashulia and Kanchpur Bridge near Narayanganj, Comilla's Daudkandi and Chouddagram, and Mirsarai and Sitakunda of Chittagong.

The association claims they have lost about Tk 300 million to the muggers in the recent past.

Their other demands include allowing passage to trucks through Babubazar and Buriganga, and permission to park some trucks near these places since there is no terminal.

Source : New Age

CHT land disputes not resolved for difference of opinion: Shafique

The law minister, Shafique Ahmed, on Sunday said that land disputes in the Chittagong Hill Tracts could not be resolved because of the difference

of opinion among the

CHT land commission members.

Addressing the closing session of a two-day conference on land and forest rights of the national minorities at the LGED Bhaban, Shafique also said that the appointment of a new chairman at the CHT Land Disputes Resolution Commission would not help to resolve the disputes if the commission members were not interested about addressing the problems.

Land commission member Jyotirindra Bodhipraya Larma, widely known as Santu Larma, also the president of the Parbatya Chattagram Jana Sanghati Samiti, however, differed on the law minister's remark.

He accused the land commission chairman, Justice Khademul Islam Chowdhury, of making unilateral decisions without informing the members of the commission.

Socio-political organisations of the Chittagong Hill Tacts have for long been demanding removal of Justice Khademul on the same allegation.

Shafique also said that neither historically nor

by the International Labour Organisation convention the national minorities living in the country could fulfil the criteria to be recognised as 'indigenous.'

Santu referred to Article 23A of the constitution, as amended by the 15th amendment, which includes the phrase 'small anthropological groups' particularly to refer to national minorities.

Such a phrase does not indicate specific identity as every person fit in the phrase 'anthropological group,' he said.

 'I was not a Bengali in 1972. I cannot be a Bengali now and I would rather  die,' Santu said as he

spoke about on the 15th amendment to the constitution.

At the same session, Dhaka University's history teacher Mesbah Kamal also differed on the law minister's remark and said historically and by the ILO convention, national minorities fulfil all the requirements to be called 'indigenous.'

Referring to the foreign minister's recent remarks on 'adivasi,' Obaidul Kader, the ruling Awami League's presidium member, said that the people speaking on behalf of the government had lack of experience in defining indigenous and lack in understanding CHT issues.

'The constitution is not the "Holy Quran" that it cannot be changed. Imposition of terms on you [national minorities] will not do any good,' Obaidul said.

The speakers also expressed their concerns about the the absence of the lawmakers who were invited to the conference and termed such absence 'political sickness.'

He said that he had chosen to attend the programme rather than 'pretending sick' because as a ruling party lawmaker he could not brush aside the responsibilities of the 'anomalies' done by the government.

Source : New Age

Pro-AL lawyers skip trouble-shooting meet

A trouble-shooting meeting called by Supreme Court Bar Association president Khandker Mahbub Hossain on Sunday ended inconclusive as the pro-Awami League senior lawyers did not turn up.

The meeting was called to resolve the problems arising out of the scuffle between pro-BNP and pro-AL lawyers on August 2 on advice of the chief justice.

The trouble broke out when a High Court bench made certain remarks about opposition leader Khaleda Zia while issuing orders upon a writ petition against Mufti Fazlul Huq Aminee for his derogatory remarks against the constitution.

The police filed two cases on the incidents of August 2-3 against 22 pro-BNP and pro-Jamaat lawyers, accusing them of assaulting police. Three of them – Syeda Asifa Papya MP of BNP, Tauhidul Islam and Abu Bakar Siddque – were arrested on August 3. One of the accused lawyers, Mohammad Ali, took shelter in the office of the SCBA president to avoid arrest.

In view of the situation, Khandaker Mahbub Hossain, following the advice of the chief justice invited about 70 senior lawyers of the bar to the meeting at 3:30pm. But pro-AL lawyers did not attend the meeting on the plea that the SCBA president had been working in the interest of a particular political party and giving shelter to an accused lawyer.

However, 19 pro-BNP and pro-jamaat lawyers including Maudud Ahmed, former law adviser Mainul Hossain, AF Hassan Arif, AJ Mohammad Ali, Rafiqul Islam Mia, Abdur Razzak, ABM Nurul Islam, Khan Saifur Rahman, Abdur Rezzak Khan, Abdul Wahab, and Rafiqul Islam attended the meeting.

The meeting was adjourned till 3:30pm today without any decision. The SCBA president would take fresh initiative to woo the pro-AL lawyers to attend today's meeting.

Source : New Age

5 return from Afghanistan

Five Bangladeshis, who were freed on August 2 seven months after being abducted in Afghanistan, returned home on Sunday morning.

The five who worked as road construction workers with South Korea's Samwhan Corporation in Afghanistan described their plights on their arrival at Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport about 8:40am by an Emirates flight.

The Afghan police had blamed the Taliban for the abduction of the seven Bangladeshis on December 17 from a construction site near Mazar-e-Sharif in Afghanistan.

The abductors shot dead Bangladeshi engineer Kazi Altaf Hossain at the place from where they were abducted. They set free two of the captives two days later.

The five workers who reached home on Sunday are Samwhan's excavator operators Aminul Islam and Mahbub Ali, grader operator Imam Uddin and surveyors Abdur Rahman Lovelu and SM Shafiul Alam Khokan.

'The abductors used to say that they had kidnapped us as we, being Muslims, were working for non-Muslims,' Aminul Islam said. 'The abductors said that they faced problems in carrying out their activities because of the development works.'

'I lost hopes for survival,' Mahbub Ali told New Age as he recalled the days when they nearly starved. He said that they had not been physically tortured but they had been kept shackled at night.

Aminul Islam said they had been given only breads three times a day. 'They gave us only 10 litres of water, for drinking and other purposes, a day. We had not taken bath when we were captives.' he said. 'It was like a jungle.'

'We were routinely told that they would set us free in two to three days.

But it took seven months for us to be set free,' Mahbub said.

After their abduction, they were moved three times to different places in the Mazar-e-Sharif province and sometimes they were kept in caves and sometime on hill tops.

Mahbub said that the day before they would be released, one of the abductors videoed them. 'We told them that we would leave the country soon after our release.'

The abductors set them free in a remote place n the province the next morning. They could contact their employers over telephone after walking for two hours. And they could reach the office.

Physicians examined their health and found that Mahbub and Abdur Rahman had contracted typhoid. 'I am also suffering from kidney problems,' Mahbub said.

The victims, however, said that their employers had paid them their salary each month when they were in Taliban custody.

The families of the victims said that they had passed their days in anxiety and uncertainty.

'I had always thought that my father would return one day. And this has finally happened,' said Ashikur Rahman, son of Abdur Rahman, at the airport.

The foreign minister, Dipu Moni, earlier received them at the airport.

The government had negotiated the release of the workers with the Afghan government and the Korean company, Dipu Moni told reporters at the airport.

She thanked the Samwhan Corporation for its efforts in having the Bangladeshi workers set free.

The minister also gave an assurance of all necessary help to the workers from the government.

'We will talk with the people who returned and help them,' said Dipu Moni referring to the cases that happened with the people who returned from Libya.

Asked whether they were freed in exchange for ransom, the foreign minister said the government did not know whether a ransom was paid.

Samwhan Corporation paid for the travel of the workers, the officials said.

Aminul and Shafiqul are from Kalihati, Tangail; and Abdur Rahman is from Chowdhury Malancho of the same district. Mahbub is from Charghat in Rajshahi and Imam Uddin is from Rangunia in Chittagong.

Source : New Age

RMG owners to pay workers’ wages before Eid

Owners of readymade garment factories on Sunday assured the government that they would clear the workers' dues and pay wages of the current month along with festival allowance before Eid-ul-Fitr.

The assurance came at an inter-ministry meeting on law and order in the readymade garment sector with home minister Sahara Khatun in the chair at the secretariat.

'RMG factory owners have agreed to pay the wages and festival allowances to their workers before Eid,' Sahara told reporters after the meeting.  

Garment sector generally witnesses workers' unrest before Eid over non-payment of wages and allowances, she added.

It is feared that non-payment of wages and festival allowance may cause labour unrest in the garment industry in and around the capital ahead of Eid.  

The meeting decided to open a control room at the labour ministry to monitor the situation in the readymade garment sector throughout the month of Ramadan as Eid-ul-Fitr, one of the biggest festivals of the Muslims, is likely to fall on August 31 or September 1.  

It also directed the crisis management committee to hold a meeting every other day to avoid trouble in the RMG sector. 

Labour and employment minister Khondker Mosharraf Hossain, state minister for labour  Monnujan Sufian, state minister for home Shamsul Haque, representatives from Bangladesh Readymade Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association and Bangladesh Knitwear Manufacturers and Exporters Association and senior officials from law enforcement agencies, among others, attended the meeting.

The home minister said that the factory owners had been requested to clear the workers' dues and pay their wages before Eid so that no quarters could create trouble in the garment industry in the month of Ramadan.

BGMEA president Shafiul Islam said that garment factory owners would pay monthly wages along with festival allowance to the workers by the end of the month although a fresh recession in the world economy was likely to affect the sector.

'We have conveyed our concern to the finance minister over the fresh recession in global market. We have agreed to pay the dues and current month's salary to the workers before Eid despite the crisis,' he told reporters. 

The inter-ministry meeting also asked the Bangladesh Bank to take steps to keep open the commercial banks on weekly holidays for smooth transactions before Eid.

Source : New Age

9 to die for Kazi Aref killing

The Appellate Division of the Supreme Court on Sunday upheld the death sentences of three ultra-left outfit operatives for killing four leaders of the Jatiya Samajtantrik Dal including its president Kazi Aref Ahmed at a rally in Kalidaspur village under Daulatpur upazila in Kushtia on February 16, 1999.

On August 5, 2008, a High Court bench of Justice AKM Fazlur Rahman and Justice ATM Fazle Kabir affirmed the death sentences of nine out of the 10 people, who were given the capital punishment by the trial court on August 30, 2004.

The convicts were reportedly members of the Gana Bahini, an aberrant offshoot of the JSD, and blamed for killing scores of people over the years in Kushtia and neighbouring areas, known as a stronghold of communist outlaws.

The High Court also acquitted 12 others, who were jailed for life by the trial court, of the charges.

Five of the nine who were sentenced to death, are on the run, while the remaining one did not file any appeal with the Appellate Division against his death sentence upheld by the High Court, additional attorney general Momtaj Uddin Fakir told New Age.

The eight-member Appellate Division bench chaired by the chief justice, Md Muzammel Hossain, dismissed the petitions filed by the three – Eliach Hossain, Rashedul Islam (popularly known as Zhantu), and Anwar Hossain –seeking permission to appeal against the High Court verdict that had affirmed their death sentences.

The five of the convicts on the run are Mannan Mollah, Mohammad Baer, Raushan Ali, Jahan, and Jalal.

The ninth condemned convict, Shafayet Hossain, also known as Habib, who had filed an appeal with the High Court against his conviction, however, did not make any appeal to the Appellate Division, said Momtaj Uddin.

The Appellate Division, also set today for passing its order on another petition filed by the government against acquittal of two convicts – Rafa and Sohir Uddin.

Sohir was among the 10 people sentenced to death by the trial court and Rafa among the 12 people sentenced to life imprisonment but the High Court acquitted them of the murder charges.

The court also dismissed three other petitions, involving 10 people, filed by the government against their acquittal by the High Court, said the additional attorney general.

According to the prosecution, the assailants sprayed Kazi Aref with bullets as he was about to leave the rostrum after delivering a speech against political violence in a rally.

JSD Kushtia district unit president Lokman Hossain and general secretary Yakub Ali and activists Israil Hossain and Shamser Mandal also died while trying to save the valiant freedom fighter.

The police filed a murder case with Daulatpur police station the same day.

Source : New Age

Pakistani weapons made us weak: ULFA chief

For the first time in the history of the United Liberation Front of Asom, someone as authoritative as its chairman, Arabinda Rajkhowa, admitted on Friday that it had been backed by Pakistani fundamentalists. And that, he said, led to ULFA's alienation from the people, reports Hindustan Times.

Rajkhowa, 57, who is in the Capital now, leading an ULFA team for peace talks with the Centre, told HT in an exclusive interview that the Pakistani elements — a fundamentalist strand within the state establishment — started supplying weapons to the rebels from 1990.

'Our secular ideology took a hit and we started depending more on them.'

'ULFA took to arms because a democratic space was absent. The Assamese were losing their political rights in their own homeland even as illegal immigration continued unabated encouraged by powers that be. But all this while, we knew that a military solution was not possible.'

He said sophisticated weapons were being brought in ships to Bangladesh and then transported inland in trucks.

'One big consignment was caught in Chittagong, many ships were captured and in one case an entire shipload of arms was dumped into the sea to evade seizure. But many made it through.'

'Ironically, the seized weapons are being used by the elite Rapid Action Battalion of Bangladesh now, the same force that nabbed me,' Rajkhowa said.

Rajkhowa was arrested by the RAB on November 30, 2009 and later handed over to the Indian security agencies.

Claiming that the close ties with the Pakistani fundamentalists led to 'a rot within the organisation', he said, 'Many deals were taking place without the knowledge of the ULFA central committee.'

'There were severe misunderstandings, emanating from commercial transactions in weapons procurement. It also led to mistrust with like-minded groups in Nagaland, Manipur and Tripura, as the ULFA was the chief procurer of weapons,' he said.

The ULFA chief also claimed that the main force behind the ULFA making an impact in the international fora was Nobel laureate Jose Ramos Horta of East Timor.

'We went to the United Nations in '95, '96, and '98 and garnered a lot of support in Geneva.'

Source : New Age

London rioters torch cars, buildings

Emergency services on Sunday restored order to a London district where rioters torched homes and looted shops as a protest at the fatal shooting of a local man by police turned violent, leading to 42 arrests.

The police said 26 of its officers were hurt, one with a head injury, while arrests were made following the violence in Tottenham, north London, late on Saturday, which sparked condemnation from prime minister David Cameron's office.

'The rioting in Tottenham last night was utterly unacceptable,' a Downing Street spokesman said in a statement.

'There is no justification for the aggression the police and the public faced, or for the damage to property. There is now a police investigation into the rioting and we should let that process happen.'

The police on Sunday said they were still having to deal with 'isolated pockets of criminality in the Tottenham area involving a small number of people.'

A spokesman for the London Fire Brigade said all the fires were under control.

'We are still at the scene of some of them to damp them down and make sure everything is out,' he added.

The mayhem, which broke out in Tottenham just before sunset on Saturday, followed a protest over the death of a 29-year-old man last week during an apparent exchange of gunfire with the police.

Thursday's killing of Mark Duggan, a father-of-four, was 'absolutely regrettable,' police commander Adrian Hanstock said in a statement, adding that an investigation into the shooting was underway.

'It is absolutely tragic that someone has died, but that does not give a criminal minority the right to destroy businesses and... livelihoods and steal from their local community,' he said Sunday.

'There was no indication that the protest would deteriorate into the levels of criminal and violent disorder that we saw,' Hanstock said.

The demonstration had been a peaceful rally outside the police station on Tottenham High Road before two police cars were attacked with petrol bombs and set ablaze.

A double-decker bus was then torched as the violence rapidly spread, with gangs of hooded youths descending on the area, in turn setting alight homes and businesses and looting shops.

There was concern that the unrest was fuelled by rapid posts on social media inciting others to join in.

Central London has seen student and trade union protests turn ugly in the last 12 months but this outbreak of rioting was the worst seen for years in the suburbs.

One eye-witness said Saturday's scene resembled the Blitz, or when parts of London burned following German bombing in the Second World War.

'So many people have lost everything. It's just crazy. It looks like it's the Second World War. It looks like the Blitz where we were living,' Tottenham resident Stuart Radose told Sky News television.

Tottenham is an ethnically-diverse urban area best known for its English Premier League football club Tottenham Hotspur.

'This is an attack on Tottenham, on people, on ordinary people,' local member of parliament David Lamy told reporters.

'Women who are now standing on the streets homeless. These are ordinary shop keepers who live above their shops.'

Duggan was killed when specialist firearms officers stopped a minicab in which he was travelling to carry out a pre-planned arrest.

The Independent Police Complaints Commission, which investigates all police shootings said they were accompanied by officers from Trident, the unit focused on tackling gun crime in the black community.

The march against Duggan's death began at Broadwater Farm, a 1960s public housing estate in Tottenham that is notorious across Britain.

In 1985, police constable Keith Blakelock was hacked to death on the estate in some of the worst urban rioting in Britain in the past 30 years.

Source : New Age