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Polythene choking drains, water bodies for lack of monitoring

Widespread use of polythene and plastic bags has become a matter of concern in Dinajpur town and other areas of the district as it is disrupting the drainage system and choking the water bodies.

The use of polythene has almost doubled in the month of Ramadan as the quantity and number of sold items went up from first day of the holy month and will rise further till Eid festival, said local traders.

Almost all the materials including food items are packed in polythene the bulk of which find its way into the waters.

Although there is law prohibiting the use of this product, scattered polythene bags are seen everywhere on the roads and in areas near the canals as people have continued use of the harmful item freely in absence of monitoring by the law enforcers.

Even in rural areas, polythene and plastic bags often disrupt irrigation by choking the points from where water enters the fields, said Rafiqul Islam, a farmer of Shatnala village in Chirirbandar upazila of Dinajpur.

There are many alternatives to polythene bags but shopkeepers often give the sold items in polythene bags as customers prefer it, said Abul Kalam Azad, a senior citizen of Dinajpur.

During the rainy season, the problem worsens as polythene and plastic products spoil the drainage system, much to the sufferings to people.

But no let in the use of the items are in sight due to absence of effective measures by the law enforcers and the municipality authorities.

"About two years ago, the municipality authorities took steps to check use of polythene and collect used polythene but the drive stopped shortly afterwards," said Md Abdul Kashem, a resident of Balubari area of the district town.

When contacted, Dinajpur Mayor Jahangir Alam said, "I will launch a joint drive in the municipality area soon to control the polythene menace."

"A mobile court is operating in the district to check the use of polythene. Additional measures will be taken during the Ramadan," said Md Jamal Uddin Ahmed, deputy commissioner of Dinajpur.

Source : The Daily Star

Karomjal faces fund crisis with new mouths to feed

Surprisingly though, the government-run crocodile breeding centre at Karomjal in Chandpai Range under the East Wing of Sundarbans Forest Division (SFD) has not received any fund for feeding the carnivorous reptiles during the last three months.

Started with six saltwater baby crocodiles in 2002, the centre has now a total of 143 small and big saltwater crocodiles, including the 59 babies coming out of their eggshells on Monday and Tuesday.

It was established on eight acres of land at a cost of Tk 32 lakh under the government's Biodiversity Preservation Project to save the crocodile population from extinction.

But the centre is now beset with manifold problems including fund crisis and lack of staff and modern equipment for proper maintenance of the giant reptiles.

Deputy Forest Ranger of SFD Md Abdur Rob has been working as supervisor of the breeding centre for the last three years.

He has some training and expertise in crocodile rearing but only two employees of the centre are too inadequate to assist him for the purpose.

"Providing adequate food for crocodiles in the breeding centre has become a problem due to fund crisis. At least one lakh taka is needed per month to maintain the centre while government allocation for it is less than half. Besides, I did not get any money to buy food for the carnivorous creatures during the last three months. I have asked for urgent fund for the purpose," Abdur Rob said.

In addition to the existing ten pans used for safe rearing of the crocodiles, the centre needs ten more pans, each measuring around 100 feet in length and 35 feet in width, the official said.

Among the three species of crocodiles in Bangladesh, only saltwater crocodiles have maintained their existence while marsh crocodiles and gharials have become nearly extinct, he said.

Source : The Daily Star

Khulna Low Lying Areas Flooded: Rain takes heavy toll on aman, fish enclosures

Heavy rain in the last few days hit aman plants, seedbeds and fish enclosures in low lying areas of the district.

Khulna Met Office recorded 379 mm rainfall in the last seven days.

According to Assistant District Fisheries Officer Bidhan Chandra Roy, heavy downpour has washed away nearly 3,000 metric tonnes fishes worth Tk. 41 crore from fish enclosures on over 46 hectares of land in the district.

Besides, financial losses related to infrastructural damages have been estimated at Tk 3 crore and 87 lakh.

Koira upazila of the district bore the brunt of hostile weather this time as shrimp and white fish enclosures on 3,836 hectares of land have been washed away due to unusual rainfall, officials said.

According to the ADFO, 160 metric tonnes of shrimps and 198 metric tonnes of white fishes worth 9 crore 56 lakh taka of fish enclosures on over 3,838 hectares of land and ponds on over 638 hectares have been washed away in the upazila.

According to agriculture extension department (DAE) sources, aman plants on over 5,770 hectares of land in the district have been flooded by rain water.

Besides, seedbeds on over 2,340 hectares have gone under water.

The DAE set 81,200 hectares of land as target for aman cultivation this season. Out of this, only 9,000 hectares so far were brought under cultivation, they said.

Meanwhile, Dakope upazila parishad and Dakope police station buildings have remained submerged due to flash flood caused by heavy downpour.

Besides, all the seven unions under Koira upazila have been inundated rendering over two lakh people homeless, said UNO Abul Bashar.

Source : The Daily Star

Youth commits suicide

A youth allegedly hanged himself from a fan at his residence in the city's Mirpur yesterday.

Police said the reason behind the suicide of Tanvir Hossain Rakib, 20, of Mirpur-1, was unknown.

Sub-inspector of Shah Ali Police Station Towhidul Islam said they recovered Rakib's body around 5:00pm and sent it to Dhaka Medical College morgue for autopsy.

Source : The Daily Star

Textile mill fined Tk 71.50 lakh

The Department of Environment (DoE) yesterday fined a textile mill Tk 71.50 lakh at Hotapara in Gazipur for polluting the Turag river and an adjacent water body with untreated liquid waste.

A DoE team led by Munir Chowdhury, director of monitoring and enforcement, penalised Masuma Khatun Textile Mills Ltd for not using its effluent treatment plant (ETP) ignoring repeated notices, according to a DoE press release.

The mill has been operating without environmental clearance since 2006.

In three previous visits this year, the DoE officials had found that the factory was releasing untreated liquid waste in the nearby Labanga Sagar canal using a bypass line, the release added.

The untreated waste flowed to the Turag river and polluted it.

The mill processes around 20 thousand pounds of yarns everyday and it has discharged over two lakh cubic metre of untreated toxic waste in the nearby canal.

The DoE has warned to take legal action against the mill owner and seal the factory if they do not immediately start using the ETP.

Source : The Daily Star

Appeal for help

Md Shafiquer Rahman, 45, an employee of a garment factory, is suffering from kidney disease, says a press release.

He is fighting for life as both of his kidneys have been damaged while his condition deteriorates day by day.

Shafiqur is now undergoing treatment in Kidney Foundation Hospital in the city's Mirpur-2.

According to the doctors, he needs a kidney transplant immediately, requiring Tk 20 lakh. But it is not possible for his family to afford such a huge amount of money.

His family and friends fervently appeals to the well-off people of society to come forward and extend their financial support to save his life.

Financial assistance can be forwarded to Md Shafiquer Rahman, Savings A/C #0000100068148, Sonali Bank, Kalyanpur Branch, Dhaka.

Interested people can also call at 01715499036 and 01911478035.

Source : The Daily Star

Case against Qazi Faruque to move now

The High Court yesterday cleared the way for running a money laundering case filed against Qazi Faruque Ahmed, former chairman of Proshika, and his son Qazi Rubayat Ahmed.

Anti-corruption Commission (ACC) on June 22, 2008, filed the case against them with Pallabi Police Station on charge of laundering Tk 1.03 crore.

The HC yesterday in a verdict rejected a petition filed jointly by Faruque and Rubayat in May 2009 for quashing the proceedings of the case, ACC lawyer Khurshid Alam Khan told The Daily Star.

Source : The Daily Star

24-hr Access to Dahagram, Angarpota: Deal likely during Manmohan's visit

Bangladeshis will get unfettered 24-hour access to Dahagram and Angarpota enclaves in India through the Tin Bigha Corridor under a landmark boundary agreement expected to be signed during the Indian premier's Dhaka visit next month, an Indian newspaper reports.

The road connecting the enclaves will be open 24 hours a day and have an automatic signalling system, as per the report in the Business Standard newspaper.

At present, the use of the corridor is restricted to 12 hours from 6:00am to 6:00pm or sunrise to sunset.

After the accord is signed, Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina is likely to travel to Angarpota and Dahagram to launch a bus service connecting the mainland, the report added.

The agreement on 4,096-km border between the two countries (262 km with Assam, 443 km with Meghalaya, 318 km with Mizoram and 856 km with Tripura) will be the centre-piece of Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's September 5-6 visit to Bangladesh.

The report quoted Indian officials as saying that the agreement could serve as a model to other countries in the region in resolving the vexed boundary disputes.

Source : The Daily Star

Convict held with fake notes

An absconding convict was arrested along with fake notes worth around Tk 30,000 from the port city early yesterday.

Detective Branch (DB) of police arrested Ershad Hossain from Nurul Master Lane around 2:30am and seized the fake notes from his possession.

He was sentenced to ten years imprisonment in an arms case in 2004 and remained absconding, police said. A case was filed with Double Mooring Police Station in this connection.

Source : The Daily Star

Veg prices shoot up

Prices of a number of vegetables and green chilli shot up in the city markets yesterday because of a fall in supply as continuous downpour of the last few days hampered harvesting.

Many farmers, meanwhile, have started panicking that their income will go down as continuous rainfall from Monday last week caused water-logging in their fields and thus damaged crops.

In some places, roots of the vegetable plants started rotting in the flood water, said farmers.

The vegetable markets yesterday saw the price of green chilli rise to Tk 140-150 a kilogram from Tk 80-100 on Sunday.

Prices of eggplant, long gourd, snake gourd, pointed gourd/parval and ladies finger also went up along with that of leafy vegetables.

''It's mostly the rainfall to blame,'' said Ahmed Hossain, a vegetable retailer at Wari in Old Dhaka.

''We are buying most of the vegetables at higher prices from the wholesale market today [yesterday],'' he said claiming that he had to buy green chilli at Tk 110 a kg which was Tk 60 two days ago.

At Karwan Bazar, one of the main wholesale depots in the city, a five-kg slot of green chilli was being sold at Tk 450-550.

Mosharraf Hossain, a farmer at Mahashtangarh, Bogra, said the rainfall and the consequent water logging damaged one-fourth of the crop fields in his village, which caused a fall in supply and a spike in the prices.

''The price hike is good for traders. But farmers get affected most when their crops rot in flood water," he said. His red amaranth field has been submerged.

Khalid Hasan, a farmer at Sonaidanga village of Kustia, said, ''My eggplant field was fine and raised hope of better margins before the rainfall. But that prospects now look dim.'' Kustia is one of the main vegetables producing districts.

The Department of Agricultural Extension is yet to assess the crop loss because of the rainfall.

However, DAE Director General Habibur Rahman said rainfall will be beneficial for growing early variety vegetables such as carrot, tomato and red amaranth.

"The rainfall has become a good help for transplanted aman rice as well. A drought-like situation was prevailing in many areas earlier,'' he noted.

Source : The Daily Star

Killing of Students: Judicial probe body visits Aminbazar

The one member judicial committee, formed on Wednesday to probe the killing of six students at Aminbazar on the outskirts of the capital, visited the spot yesterday and talked to the locals.

During his visit at around 1:30pm, committee member Metropolitan Magistrate Utpal Chowdhury told the reporters that the committee would submit its report within 30 days fixed by the High Court.

In response to a writ petition filed by the National Forum for Protection of Human Rights, the HC on August 3 asked the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate to form a committee with a magistrate to investigate the tragic incident.

Six students were killed brutally by several hundred people at Keblar Char in Aminbazar during early hours of July 18.

The deceased students are Tipu Sultan of Tejgaon College, Towhidur Rahman Palash, Kamruzzaman Kanto and Ibrahim Khalil of Mirpur Bangla College, Shams Rahim Shamam of Maple Leaf International School, and Sitaf Jabi Munif of Bangladesh University of Business and Technology.

Anwar Hossain, sub-inspector of Savar Police Station, filed a case accusing around five hundred unidentified villagers.

On July 28, the government ordered to include Aminbazar killing in the home ministry's list of sensational cases.

Source : The Daily Star

EC now stronger: Chief insists it is capable of holding free polls

The Election Commission has become strong enough in the last four and a half years to hold credible polls, its chief said yesterday.

"We've overcome all sorts of infrastructural weaknesses," Chief Election Commissioner ATM Shamsul Huda said at a roundtable discussion at the Jatiya Press Club in the capital.

"And I must say the polls management body has turned into a much stronger organisation in the last four and a half years' time."

The CEC said, "The next national polls shall be held in 2014 and there shouldn't be any doubt about it."

Political parties' dilly-dallying on the next general polls won't continue for long, he said, as the people will force them to go for a timely election.

Shujan, a platform for civil society members, organised the discussion styled Amendment Proposal of the Election Commission and Some Relevant Ideas.

Strengthening the commission became a burning issue after parliament on June 30 scrapped the provision of caretaker government through the 15th amendment to the constitution, allowing general elections under an elected partisan government.

Different political parties, including the main opposition BNP, reacted sharply to the repeal of the system and said they will not participate in any election under a political government.

They argued the EC would be unable to remain neutral while organising polls under a political government.

Shamsul Huda told yesterday's meet the government has taken a Tk 278 crore project to construct an office complex for the EC that now uses the Planning Commission's building.

He also said the government has created 562 posts at the Election Commission. "We have also drawn up action plans for the next five years."

"Even the chief justice needs approval of the Prime Minister's Office to visit abroad. Such formalities are not required for me and two other commissioners," he said to note the commission's liberty.

"I also get money whenever I need for the activities of the commission."

About different elections held so far under the present government, Shamsul Huda said administrative officials, except for a few deputy commissioners and superintendents of police, fulfilled their duties relating to the polls.

He, however, said the functions of officers-in-charge and upazila nirbahi officers during the elections could not be monitored.

The commission chief stressed the need for an administration free of nepotism and partisanship to hold free polls.

Source : The Daily Star

Kibria killing trial delayed: No regular judge in tribunal for 6 months

Prosecution took further time yesterday in former finance minister Shah AMS Kibria killing case as the trial court has been running without a regular judge.

The post has remained vacant for the last six months since the previous judge was transferred.

The District and Sessions Judge Md Mizanur Rahman set August 23 as the next date for starting trial. He is holding the additional charge of the tribunal.

Earlier yesterday, Special Public Prosecutor (SPP) of Sylhet Divisional Speedy Trial Tribunal Ashoke Kumar Kar prayed for time.

Contacted, the SPP said due to absence of a regular judge, the trial of the sensitive case could not be resumed even after filing of the supplementary charge sheet nearly two months back.

The process of hearing on the supplementary charge sheet and the no-confidence petition filed against it by late Kibria's wife Asma Kibria also remained pending, he added.

Criminal Investigation Department submitted the supplementary charge sheet on June 20.

Lawyer Alamgir Bhuiyan Babul moved the no-confidence petition against the supplementary charge sheet on behalf of Asma Kibria, as she termed the charge sheet incomplete and flawed.

Kibria, his nephew Shah Manzurul Huda, local Awami League leaders Abdur Rahim, Abul Hossain and Siddique Ali were killed in a grenade attack on a public meeting at Baidderbazar of Habiganj on January 27, 2005.

Source : The Daily Star

Heart attack follows arrest: One of the lawyers accused in cop assault case at court fights for life at hospital

A pro-BNP lawyer suffered a massive heart attack in police custody and was rushed to a city hospital hours after police picked him up from Segunbagicha area early yesterday.

The arrestee MU Ahmed is one of accused in a case filed on charge of assaulting police personnel and preventing them from discharging their duties at the Supreme Court premises on August 2, said police.

A joint team of Detective Branch (DB) of police and Shahbagh Police Station arrested Ahmed around 2:30am from an apartment on the third floor of a six-storey building.

Talking to The Daily Star the ailing lawyer's wife, Selina Begum claimed her husband was quite well when police arrested him.

But hours later she came to know that Ahmed has been hospitalised. She demanded an investigation into how her husband ended up seriously ill in police custody.

Mohammad Jamal, a security guard of the building, said police reached there around 1:30am and picked up Ahmed within one hour after searching all the 19 apartments of the building. The lawyer lives in a flat on the fourth floor.

Ahmed was rushed to National Institute of Cardiovascular Diseases (NICVD) after he fell sick at the DB office around 4:30am, said Md Masudur Rahman, additional deputy commissioner of Dhaka Metropolitan Police.

Director of NICVD Prof Abdullah Al Shafi Majumder noted the detainee suffered a massive heart attack.

A 10-member medical board has been formed to ensure his proper treatment, added the director.

The High Court earlier on Wednesday rejected bail prayers of MU Ahmed and 10 other pro-BNP-Jamaat lawyers in the police assault case.

Shahbagh police filed the case and arrested three accused lawyers earlier. The arrestees are Syeda Asifa Ashrafi Papia, Abu Bakar Siddique and Gazi Towhidul Islam.

Meanwhile, a Dhaka court yesterday rejected a 10-day remand prayer of police to interrogate the trio in the case, two hours after they got bail in another case filed for vandalising a vehicle.

In a latest development, the three lawyers were shown arrested yesterday in another case filed with Shahbagh Police Station for torching a vehicle in the city's Kataban area on June 4.

DB Sub-Inspector Entaz Ali, also the investigation officer of the case, submitted a 10-day remand prayer for each of them. The hearing on the remand prayers will be held on August 16.

KHALEDA CONDEMNS 'TORTURE' ON AHMED
BNP Chairperson Khaleda Zia last night condemned the alleged custodial torture on lawyer MU Ahmed, who is now undergoing treatment at the NICVD under police custody.

The leader of the opposition warned the government of bearing all the responsibilities if the ailing lawyer's condition deteriorates, said a release.

"The government is suppressing the people's democratic rights in a brutal way. The law and order is getting worse for using Rapid Action Battalion and police as party wings," she complained.

Khaleda also alleged there is no security of lives of common people, artists, intellectuals, lawyers and journalists in the country.

Meanwhile, the BNP chief visited the NICVD last evening and enquired doctors about Ahmed's health condition.

Source : The Daily Star