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Activities at Hili port resume

Workers resumed loading and unloading of good at Hili land port yesterday noon following fruitful talks with port authority, district police administration and truck owners.

Earlier on the day, Police Superintendent Md Moinul Islam held a meeting with the officials of Panama Hili Port Link Ltd, truck owners and truckers in the port area.

In the meeting, truck owners and truckers agreed to abide by the rules of Panama Hili Port Link Ltd inside the port area. Truck owners assured the port authority and police superintendent that from now on the truckers, not helpers will run their vehicles inside the port.

Workers stopped loading and unloading of good on Thursday afternoon following death of a fellow worker under the wheels of a truck inside the port.

The incident occurred when the workers were unloading goods from an Indian truck at around 1:30pm. Suddenly, a Bangladeshi truck ploughed through the area, killing a worker named Nawshed on the spot and injuring two others.

Protesting the death of Nawshed, took out a procession inside the port and vandalised three trucks. They also and assaulted several staff of Panama Hili Port Link Ltd, a private port operator at Hili land port under Hakimpur upazila of the district.

Being informed, police and members of the Rapid Action Battalion (Rab) rushed to the spot and brought the situation under control.

The angry workers alleged that the accident occurred when a helper was parking the truck inside the port. They demanded immediate arrest of the trucker and his helper who managed to fled the port areas soon after the accident.

Md Nuru Sardar, a leader of the port workers, claimed that two workers were killed by trucks inside the port in the last eight months.

Nuru Sardar demanded that the port authority impose a ban on driving trucks inside the port by the helpers.

Source : The Daily Star 

Four outlaws held with firearms in Pabna

Police arrested four cadres of outlawed Purba Banglar Communist Party (PBCP) Janajuddha faction at a house at Vainapara village under Ataikula upazila early Saturday.

The arrestees are Md Sujan Sheikh, 27, son of Hanif Sheikh, Md Lalon Hossain, 25, son of Afzal Hosain of Goneshpur village, and Md Sujan Rahman, 30, son of Md Anaruzzaman of Vainapara village in Ataikula upazila, and Md Shahin Rahman, 28, son of Jamal Rahman of Uttarhatbari village in Santhia upazila .

Officer-in-Charge of Ataikula Police Station Md Robiul Hassan Sarkar said the PBCP cadres were holding a secrete meeting at Sujan Rahman's house at Vainapara village early Saturday.

Acting on a tip-off, law enforcers raided the house at around 4:40 am and arrested the four. They recovered two firearms four sharp weapons from the arrestees.

The PBCP cadres were yesterday produced in a Pabna court that sent them to jail.

Source : The Daily Star

Mother of newborn fights for life: Caesarean by non-medic clinic owner!

Following a Caesarean operation conducted allegedly by a clinic owner, who is a non-medical person, mother of a newborn baby is fighting for life at Thakurgaon Sadar Hospital.

"My wife Kohinoor Begum, 20, was admitted to Seven Day Clinic at Tantipara in the town with labour pain at about 3:00am on July 30. I made a contact with Aminar Rahman alias Aman, one of the clinic owners, for a Caesarean at a cost Tk 8000," said the victim's husband Chan Miah, a day labourer of Akcha village in Sadar upazila.

Kohinoor gave birth to a female child through a Caesarean operation on July 30 and she was released from the clinic on August 6.

"But two days later, her surgery stitches began to get loosened, accompanied by bleeding from the spot. I brought her to the clinic on August 9 but the clinic owners refused to take responsibility.I and my relatives also told them to call the doctor who conducted the operation. But the clinic owners were making delay showing different excuses," Chan Miah said.

At one stage it was revealed that Aminar Rahaman, who is not a doctor, performed the operation on Kohinoor Begum with the assistance of a nurse and a few other staffs of his clinic.

As Kohinur remained at the clinic without treatment, Chan Miah and his relatives met acting Civil Surgeon Dr Shahidul Islam and informed him of the matter. Dr Shahidul Islam went to the clinic with a team on Thursday afternoon and arranged sealing off its operation theatre.

The next day, police went to the clinic and took Kohinur to Thakurgaon Sadar Hospital in a critical state.

During a visit to the clinic on Friday, this correspondent saw that there was only a nurse there. A few patients, including those who underwent operations earlier, said no doctor visited them after Kohinoor's incident was revealed. All the five owners (shareholders of the clinic) also fled the scene.

Kohinoor's release order issued from the clinic on August 6 mentioned that Dr Amzad Hossain, a former civil surgeon, conducted her caesarean while and Dr Abul Kashem, medical practitioner in the town, worked as anaesthetist.

When contacted, Dr Amzad Hossain told this correspondent, "I did not conduct the operation. When the patient [Kohinoor] returned to the clinic from home with complications, the clinic owner requested me to say that I performed the operation. I strictly denied them.

Dr Abul Kashem said he was in Dhaka on July 30, the date of the caesarean operation.

"We are making preparation to file a case against the clinic owners including Aminar Rahman who conducted the operation, posing to be a doctor," Dr Shahidul Islam said.

Aminar Rahman and other shareholders of the clinic could not be contacted in spite of repeated attempts as they were not in the town and their cell phones remained out of reach.

Source : The Daily Star

6 suspected militants arrested

Bagerhat Model police arrested six suspected militants on Rupsha-Bagerhat Old Road at Kuliardair village under Karapara Union of Bagerhat Sadar upazila on Friday and recovered three motorbikes from their possession. The arrested are Hafez Md Shahadat Hossain Sabuj, 30, of Uloshi village under Jessore, Hafez Md Abu Naim, 25, of Uttar Kachua village in Jhenidah district, Hafez Noor Islam Mallik, 22, of Baroipara village under Bagerhat, Hafez Rafqiul Islam, 23, of Khanpur village under the same district, Hafez Hujjatul Islam, 25, of Madartola village under Kachua upaizla and Hafez Md Noor-e-Alam Siddiqui, 21 of Harinkhola village under Khulna district. The arrestees were yesterday produced in a court that sent them to jail.

Uncle killed by nephew

An elderly man was killed by his nephew at Joynagar village under Netrakona Sadar upazila on Friday night.

The dead is Mohammad Ali,70, of the village. Police and locals said Ali and his nephew Abdul Aziz exchanged hot words over ownership of a land. At one stage, Aziz hit his uncle Ali with a sharp object, resulting his death on the sport.

Source : The Daily Star

PM condoles death of Natore AL leader

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina yesterday expressed deep shock at the death of Natore District Awami League General Secretary Advocate Hanif Ali Sheikh.

In a condolence message, the prime minister said Hanif Ali was a dedicated leader of the party. "He played an important role in different movements of the country," she said.

Source : The Daily Star

Don't try to be over enthusiastic AL activists: Quader urges law enforcement agencies

Awami League Presidium Member Obaidul Quader yesterday urged members of the law enforcement agencies to discharge their duties with utmost neutrality.

He said, "Your impartial attitude will help enhance image of the government".

"Please try to act as neutral officers rather than being over enthusiastic Awami League activist for the welfare of the country," he advised them.

Quader, also chairman of parliamentary standing committee on the ministry of information, said this while he was addressing a discussion organised by Jubo League at the Institute of Engineers marking the National Mourning Day.

He urged the BNP leaders to come up with constructive criticism against its political opponents and refraining from spreading "falsehood" against the government.

"Every one has the right to criticise the government, but this should be based on facts. Negative and baseless criticisms are not good for the nation as well as democracy," he said.

Refuting allegations of BNP acting Secretary General Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir that Bangabandhu Memorial Trust has Tk 300 crore, he said the BNP leader has to beg pardon to the nation, if he fails to prove the allegation.

State Minister for LGRD and Cooperatives Jahangir Kabir Nanok, Jubo League General Secretary and Whip of the Jatiya Sangsad Mirza Azam, also spoke at the discussion.

Source : The Daily Star

Tk15 lakh support for Room to Read

Room to Read, an organisation working on literacy and gender equality in education, received a donation worth Tk 15 lakh from Rehana Siddiqi (RS) Fund, a local charity organisation, yesterday.

RS Fund Chairman Rehana Siddiqi handed over the check to Zaki Hasan, country director of Room to Read, at a city restaurant.

Dr Muhammad Ibrahim, chair of Federation of NGOs in Bangladesh, was present on the occasion as the chief guest while Dr Badiul Alam Majumder, country director of Hunger Project-Bangladesh, Farida Akhter, executive director of Nari Gronthho Probortona and Rehana Siddiqi spoke at the programme.

The secondary level students are getting tutorial support for mathematics and English as well as life skill support from Room to Read while the primary level students are learning to read properly at their mother tongue through programmes like language game, school library and reading festival, Zaki Hasan said at the programme.

Room to Read is currently covering 275 government primary and registered schools in Sirajganj and Brahmanbaria to develop literacy skills and a habit of reading among the school children.

At the same time, it is providing need-based support to a total of 544 secondary level girl students of different char areas of Sirajganj so that they can go for higher education.

Source : The Daily Star

15th amendment ensures citizens' equal rights: PM

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina yesterday said the government has amended the constitution to ensure equal rights of all citizens as well as seal off the usurpation of power in the future.

"We want to ensure rights of all citizens irrespective of their religion and race," she said this while she was addressing the leaders of Bangladesh Puja Udjapan Parishad and Janmasthami Udjapan Parishad at her official Gono Bhaban residence.

Hasina said the present government wants to create an atmosphere where every citizen would feel that they are enjoying equal rights like others. "That's why we've brought about the 15th amendment to the constitution," she said.

Referring to the critics of the amendment, she said some vested quarters have emerged all on a sudden and are threatening to throw away the constitution. "I don't know what their problem with the constitution is," she said.

Hasina said the amendment was done to ensure that no one could grab the state power, everyone should get their rights and people could cast their votes in favour of the party of their choice.

She also said the amended constitution envisages provisions to punish those who will grab the power illegally in the future.

"We want to ensure that no one can play game with the fate of the people," she said.

About the caretaker government, Hasina said it was true that she had launched movement for establishment of the caretaker system. "But there were some loopholes in this system as the BNP government passed this system by an illegal parliament," she said.

Hasina said the people have experienced unique experience about the caretaker system since 1990.

Recalling the 'dark days' of 2001, she said not only Hindu, Buddhist or Christians faced oppression; the people who worked for Awami League faced the heinous oppression by the then BNP-Jamaat government. "Even Muslims were not safe from their tortures,' she recalled.

Hasina said AL is the only party in the country that believes in communal harmony.

She said Bangladesh people are very cordial by nature and have respect for other religions. "That's why the people of one religion participate in the religious festivals of the other religions," she said.

Bangladesh Puja Udjapan Parishad Chief Adviser CR Dutta, Prof Durga Das Bhattachariya, Puja Udjapan Parishad President Adv Subrata Chowdhury, General Secretary Mongol Ghosh, Janmasthami Udjapan Parishad, Chittagong chapter General Secretary Adv Tapan Kanti Das and Mahanagar Sarbojanin Puja Udjapan Parishad General Secretary Babul Debnath also spoke on the occasion.

Source : The Daily Star 

Qatar Road Crash: Victims' families get compensation

The responsibility of looking after the interest of every Bangladeshi working abroad lies with the company concerned, the government and the recruiting agency, speakers at a function said yesterday.

They were speaking at a function organised to hand over two cheques worth Tk 20 lakh of life insurance for the two Bangladeshi workers killed in a road accident in Qatar to the members of their families, says a press release.

Secretary of the expatriates' welfare and overseas employment ministry Zafar Ahmed Khan handed over the cheques to members of the victims' families while Debate for Democracy Chairman Hasan Ahmed Chowdhury Kiron was present.

Victim worker Awlad Hossain's father Rafiqul Islam and Anwar Hossain's father Abdul Sobhan received the cheques at the function at Dhaka Reporters Unity in the city.

Source : The Daily Star

Ministers, MPs isolated from: people Says PM's adviser

An adviser to the prime minister yesterday strongly criticised the ministers and MPs of the ruling Awami League, saying many of them have been isolated from the people and are not playing their due role.

"Some MPs [Members of Parliament] appear to be part-timers. They think they do not need to be MPs anymore," said Prof Alauddin, education and political adviser to the PM.

Addressing a discussion on Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, he said some of the top AL leaders do not visit their constituencies, which is far different from the ideology and political culture of Bangabandhu.

He said, "We have to criticise our activities so that we can learn from our wrong".

Prof Alauddin said some people who were associates of the killers of Bangabandhu are now moving around the prime minister. Even in the administration, some officials praising Bangabandhu are actually working against his ideals, he said.

Attorney General Mahbubey Alam said Bangabandhu is an asset of the whole nation. He suggested making documentaries on the great leader to propagate his life and teachings.

Mujahidul Islam Selim, general secretary of Communist Party of Bangladesh (CPB), said the government should bring back the fugitive killers of Bangabandhu and punish them. National and international conspiracy behind the killing of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman should be brought to light to establish the true history, he said.

Dhaka University Vice-chancellor Prof Dr AAMS Arefin Siddique, Barrister Amirul Islam, Jatiya Party presidium member Barrister Anisul Islam Mahmud, and Buet VC Prof Dr Nazrul Islam also addressed the discussion with journalist Iqbal Sobhan Chowdhury in the chair.

Peshajibi Samannay Parishad, an organisation of pro-Awami League professionals, organised the programme at the city's Jatiya Press Club, on the occasion of the 36th death anniversary of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman.

Bangabandhu was mowed down along with his family on August 15, 1975.

Source : The Daily Star

Death of Mishuk Munier: Shocking end to a devoted soul

A broadcast journalist with multiple talents, who ran after news throughout his whole career, made himself the top headlines in the media as his life was shockingly shut yesterday.

With the electronic media beginning to emerge over a decade ago in the country, it was Mishuk Munier who struggled every moment to uplift the quality of broadcast journalism.

Sadly, he fell victim to the similar fate like hundreds of others we lost on roads.

Big shock and grief settled over private TV channel ATN News where Mishuk was working as the chief executive officer (CEO) until yesterday.

It was a complete atypical scenario that prevailed in the newsroom of the TV station. Most of the staff members were sobbing with others having vacant look on their face.

"It is not a loss of an individual or an institution. It is a permanent loss to the whole nation," said one of Mishuk's co-workers, Munni Saha, also a well-known TV reporter.

In Bangladesh, he played the pioneering role in flourishing broadcast journalism by involving advanced technologies, said Munni, deeply mourning in tears.

Immediately after the heartbreaking news spread, many of his friends, co-workers, students, fans and artistes thronged the TV station to condole the death together.

Words failed noted litterateur Anisul Hoque for a few minutes as the shock struck a blow to him. "We have lost a shelter. I do not know how the nation will fill up the vacuum created by their (Tareque and Mishuk) death," he said.

Anisul, also a friend of Mishuk, asked, "How many more lives will be lost in road accident".

Many of his students, who are now well established in the country's mass media, think his departure as a loss of their guardian.

"I have learnt the basics of broadcast journalism from him. We will be deprived of learning many things due to his early departure," said Bayezid Milky, one of his students and editor (input) of ATN News.

Mishuk Munier, 52, son of martyred intellectual Munier Chowdhury, gained repute as a camera director in international arena. He was considered 'Simon Dring' of Bangladesh.

For over 10 years, he worked as cameraperson for BBC world service, WTN, ARD1, Channel 4, ETV, CBC, and Discovery Health in Bangladesh, India, Afghanistan, Singapore, Malaysia, and Canada.

He covered tough assignments in conflict zones and during the time of natural disasters, political upheavals and turmoil.

Mishuk worked as the head of news operations for the first private terrestrial television in Bangladesh, Ekushey Television (ETV), and taught broadcast journalism at the University of Dhaka.

Earlier, he worked as the head of broadcast operations in Canada-based Real Television.

Mishuk finally joined ATN News early last year as its CEO.

As the chief cameraperson, he also shot popular film "Runway" by noted filmmaker Tareque Masud who was also killed in the same road accident yesterday.

The two were heading to Manikganj sadar from visiting a shooting spot for Tareque Masud's new film "Kagojer Phul" in the district's Shibalaya upazila.

Source : The Daily Star

Banned Hizb ut flexes its muscles

Police picked up 15 members of banned religious outfit Hizb ut-Tahrir Bangladesh yesterday when they brought out a procession in the capital's Paltan area to hold a rally at Muktangon.

At least 10 persons including a policeman sustained minor injuries as the law enforcers used batons to break up the procession around 12:30pm.

Witnesses said some 60 activists of Hizb ut-Tahrir started the procession and marched towards Muktangon to hold the pre-scheduled rally.

At one stage police intercepted them near the Paltan intersection and used batons to disperse them.

Bringing out another procession, some of them tried to go to Muktangan taking another lane, but police again barred them resulting in a scuffle.

Chases and counter-chases also took place between the law enforcers and the outfit members.

Injured patrol inspector Abu Hazzaz of Motijheel Police Station received treatment at Dhaka Medical College Hospital for cuts to his head.

Anwar Hossain, deputy commissioner (Motijheel division) of police, said they dispersed the Hizb ut-Tahrir activists as it is a banned militant outfit.

Law enforcers will arrest them wherever they are found, he noted.

Paltan police last night filed a case against the 15 arrestees under the Speedy Trial Act, 2002 for obstructing policemen in discharging their duties and assaulting them.

A strong contingent of police surrounded the Muktangan area from the morning to foil the programme.

Earlier, the banned Islamist outfit had pasted a huge number of posters on city walls declaring to hold the rally.

The posters visible at different strategic points contained various calls including establishment of Khilafat system (an Islamic system of governance) by ousting the present government.

The government banned the organisation on October 22 in 2009 citing it had been carrying out subversive and anti-democratic activities in the country.

Hizb ut-Tahrir--an international Islamist political party--was founded in Jerusalem in 1953. It started its activities in Bangladesh in 2000.

Source : The Daily Star

Israel braces for social justice rallies

The leaders of a social protest movement that has rocked Israel for a month called on demonstrators to "get out of Tel Aviv and Jerusalem" to bolster demonstrations yesterday in a dozen other cities.

"We are expecting tens of thousands in Beersheva in the south where the main gathering will be held," protest leader Uri Metuki told AFP.

The goal, he said, is to expand the geographic and demographic scope of the movement, as so far the middle class has been the driving force behind social justice rallies.

"In these periphery cities people's lives are even more difficult than in the centre, near Tel Aviv. It is essential to express the solidarity of the whole movement with the populations of these communities," she added.

Israel has been gripped since mid-July by a rapidly growing protest movement demanding cheaper housing, education and health care.

Last Saturday, more than 300,000 people demonstrated in Tel Aviv and other cities calling for "social justice" and a "welfare state."

Source : The Daily Star

'Break rules' now rules highways: About 4,000 people die in around 20,000 accidents a year for reckless driving

Lawlessness and anarchy have gripped the country's road communication with drivers wilfully violating traffic rules and exposing people to hazardous accidents every day.

The scenario on roads is strikingly similar throughout the country. Drivers of buses, trucks, vans, private cars and microbus are constantly involved in mindless and wild races without the slightest respect for human lives. This is all happening right under the nose of law enforcers, who unfortunately don't carry much respect from the defiant drivers for obvious reasons.

Statistics show every year nearly 4,000 people die in around 20,000 road crashes across the country. Damages worth crores of taka are incurred due mainly to unabated reckless driving amid an anarchic situation on the roads. In addition, a quarter of a million people sustain minor to grave injuries in the accidents, adding to the increasing number of people without limbs.

Officials of the Bangladesh Road Transport Authority (BRTA), the only regulatory body after the law enforcers, openly admit that up to five lakh "drivers" are active without valid licences. Even drivers with valid licences are mostly unaware of traffic laws because the country lacks proper driving schools, BRTA officials add.

The BRTA has failed to set up modern driving schools as it had envisaged in its planning. The failure of BRTA has prompted thousands of unemployed young men from the rural areas, many of them without literacy, to seek lessons from unqualified sources for entering an ever increasing job market throughout the country.

Every day 200 vehicles get registered with the BRTA to add to the swarming number of 1.5 million vehicles, crammed into a dilapidated and grossly inadequate road network.

Among all the vehicles shuttling between districts, passenger buses and lorries are the most notorious for reckless driving. The inter district bus drivers with their powerful motor vehicles cross all driving rules and often reach the speed of up to 130 kilometres per hour. These drivers do not even bother to slow down while crossing bazaars and localities or even speed breakers set up by angry villagers in a bid to slow them down.

While overtaking another vehicle, a bus driver commonly undertakes the most dangerous manoeuvres ignoring the oncoming vehicles. It is a very common on the highways to find vehicles taking evasive measures by leaving the main road lane and sheltering on the hard shoulder to avoid a head-on collision. With most roads and their shoulders badly damaged, fatal accidents have become inevitable in these circumstances.

Dilapidated roads also play a big role in the occurrence of accidents at an alarming rate. Many time-bound bus drivers madly speed up over potholes and ditches refusing to slow down. This often leads to skidding.

A BRTA official said lakhs of vehicles of all modes are plying the major roads without fitness certificates. "Most of the older vehicles, including long distance buses and trucks, are not fit at all," said the official requesting not to be named.

Relation between police and transport workers has, in fact, grown on the basis of the massive irregularities in the road transport sector. Every bus, truck, microbus and commercial vehicle has to pay a monthly "fee" to the police. In return, the drivers and the owners enjoy an unwritten clemency.

"There is no respect among the transport workers for the police mainly because they think they have bought them up," said the BRTA official.

The highway police, created in 2005 to secure the highways and prevent accidents, are in reality content themselves by ensuring smooth passage for VIPs crossing the area.

According to a retired police officer, there is not an instance that the highway police have punished a driver for violating traffic laws or plying without a licence or fitness certificate, he added.

Deputy Inspector General of Police (DIG) Humayun Kabir said the over 2000-strong highway police were mainly formed to prevent accidents on the roads.

The highway police in its Eastern and Western zones have only eight serving officers, which is "grossly inadequate" for maintaining safety on the highways because officers are required to prosecute an offender, said Kabir.

"In the Eastern zone comprising 29 districts, we have only four officers, while the same scenario prevails in the Western zone covering 35 districts," the DIG added.

"We have only one outpost in the entire division of Barisal led by a sub-inspector," he added, explaining the constraints he has been facing with the highway police.

Source : The Daily Star

Tareque, Mishuk among 5 killed: Passenger bus crushes film-making unit on microbus at Manikganj; Tareque's wife Catherine among injured

Noted filmmaker Tareque Masud, media personality Ashfaque Munier Mishuk and three others died yesterday in a fatal road crash on Dhaka-Aricha highway in Manikganj, sending shockwaves through the nation.

Tareque's wife Catherine Masud, painter Dhali Al Mamun, his wife Dilara Zaman Jolly and film production staff Saidul Islam were injured in the accident. They are now receiving treatment at the Square Hospital in the capital.

The wounded are now out of danger, said Syed Modasser Ali, health adviser to the prime minister.

The microbus carrying the team to Manikganj town collided head-on with a bus on the Dhaka-Aricha highway at Ghior in the afternoon. The team was on its way to meet the Manikganj deputy commissioner for permission to shoot for Tareque's latest project "Kagojer Phool" after visiting a shooting spot in Shibalaya upazila.

Police found the bus 40-50 yards off the spot.

Film production crew Wasim and Jamal, and microbus driver Mostafizur Rahman are among the dead.

Bodies of Tareque Masud and Chief Executive Officer of ATN News Ashfaque Munier, popularly known as Mishuk Munier, would be taken to the Central Shaheed Minar at 10:30am today for people to pay last respects, said Nasiruddin Yusuf Bachchu, president of Sammilita Sangskritik Jote.

Body of Mishuk will be brought to ATN News office at Karwan Bazar at 10:00am today, reported the private television station.

Their bodies were kept at the mortuary of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University.

Rois Uddin, officer-in-charge of Ghior Police Station, told The Daily Star that a Chuadanga-bound bus from Dhaka collided with the microbus travelling to Manikganj town in Joka area at about 12:15pm.

The bus left Dhaka with nearly 50 passengers after 10:30am. It was travelling at high speed when it hit the microbus coming from the opposite direction, said several passengers of the bus.

"The passengers told us that they could hardly see anything outside as it was raining heavily at that time," said Noor-e-Alam, assistant superintendent of police of Shibalaya Circle.

The driver did not slow down the bus even before taking a left-turn in Joka area. It hit the microbus at high speed after travelling about 10 yards from the turn. Half of the microbus was smashed on impact.

"I saw five bodies tangled in the wreckage. The wounded were trying to crawl out of it," said 70-year-old Bomkesh Sarker, who lives just 15 yards off the scene.

Locals rushed there to rescue the victims and one of them informed police about the incident.

Catherine Masud, painter Dhali Al Mamun and his wife Dilara Zaman were whisked off to Manikganj Sadar Hospital at about 12:45pm.

They were later taken to the Square Hospital in the capital.

The five bodies were first taken to Manikganj Sadar Hospital morgue at 2:00pm and then to Dhaka Medical College morgue around 6:00pm.

Bodies of Wasim, Jamal and Mostafizur have been handed over to their respective families, mentioned Nasiruddin Yusuf Bachchu.

The bus driver left the vehicle with passengers 40-50 yards off the spot after the accident.

"The bus staff fled the scene leaving the vehicle," said Noor-e-Alam.

Police seized the bus and took it to Borongail police outpost.

The bus driver, Jamir Uddin, is from Daulatdiar village in Chuadanga, reports our Kushtia correspondent.

Bus owner Mujibul Haque Khokon said Jamir has been driving bus for three decades and working for him for the last two years.

Khokon claimed that he lost contact with Jamir after the accident.

"If I manage to contact Jamir, I'll ask him to surrender," he said.

Meanwhile, President Zillur Rahman, Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, Leader of the Opposition Khaleda Zia, and leaders of socio-cultural organisations expressed deep shock at the deaths.

The communications ministry formed a three-member committee, headed by Arifur Rahaman of Roads and Highways Department, to probe the accident, reports UNB.

The committee has been asked to submit report in a week.

Source : The Daily Star 

Italy adopts new 45.5b euro austerity plan

Italy's cabinet approved a 45.5-billion-euro ($64.8-billion) austerity budget Friday that prime minister Silvio Berlusconi said was due to pressure from Finland, Germany and the Netherlands.

The draft measures-which must still go before parliament for final approval expected early September-include a new tax on high earners and deep cuts to local government and cabinet costs.

They seek to assuage jittery markets by returning Italy to a balanced budget in 2013 instead of 2014 as previously planned, and come on top of a 48-billion-euro package agreed in July when Rome first came under pressure.

'It's 20 billion euros in 2012 and 25.5 billion euros in 2013,' Berlusconi told reporters after the government meeting.

The premier said the measures were in line with demands from the European Central Bank in return for support given to Italy's bond markets this week.

'This programme goes in the direction of what the ECB recommended,' he said.

'After concentrating on Greece, financial speculation was concentrating on our position,' Berlusconi said, adding: 'In this situation we could not do anything but seek the intervention of the European institution.

'We therefore decided to meet the demands that the institution was making of us in order to justify itself to other European countries, particularly Germany, the Netherlands and Finland, for spending public money,' he added.

The 74-year-old centre-right leader said the plan included a five-per cent tax for two years on people with an income of between 90,000 euros and 1,50,000 euros a year, and 10-per cent on those earning more than 1,50,000 euros.

'My heart is bleeding,' Berlusconi told reporters, saying the tax went against his promise 'never to put my hand into the pockets of Italians.'

But he emphasised the measures were necessary in 'a dramatic situation.'

Italy last week saw panic sell-offs of stocks and bonds that sparked investor worries that the eurozone's third largest economy could be dragged into the same debt spiral as Greece, Ireland and Portugal.

'Faced with an emergency, our country knows how to react,' junior finance minister Luigi Casero told TG4 news.

'We will move as quickly as possible. We hope the approval will come at the beginning of September,' he said.

But Pier Luigi Bersani, the leader of the main centre-left opposition Democratic Party, said the measures would hurt the working and middle classes, adding: 'This austerity programme does not resolve the problem.'

A stock rally cleared the air before the government meeting, with the benchmark FTSE Mib index in Milan ending the day up 4.0 per cent.

Banks led the rally after the Italian market regulator imposed a temporary ban on short-selling for banking and insurance company stock.

Economists welcomed the measures but cautioned on their effect on growth.

The new austerity programme 'goes in the right direction,' said Fabio Fois, an analyst with British investment bank Barclays Capital.

But he warned the measures 'risk having a negative effect on consumption by slowing down growth next year.'

He said that what was needed were 'structural reforms to increase the growth potential and offer guarantees on debt reimbursement in the long term.'

Italy's growth rate has been at about one per cent for a decade and the economy expanded by a sluggish 0.3 per cent in the second quarter-although higher than the 0.1-per cent rate in the first three months of the year.

ECB intervention on Italy's debt markets this week has helped drastically reduce the difference between Italian 10-year government bonds and benchmark German bonds-an indication of greater investor confidence.

Italy is burdened by one of the highest public debts in the world-equivalent to about 120 per cent of gross domestic product.

Finance minister Giulio Tremonti said the measures would reduce the budget deficit to 1.4 per cent of output by 2012, and to zero by 2013.

Asked whether he was concerned the new austerity measures could hurt Italy's growth prospects, he answered: 'We do not have any alternative.'

Source : New Age

Global inflation: ‘the dog that doesn’t and won’t bark’

An anorexic under doctor's orders to put on weight might fret unnecessarily about getting fat one day. Today's generally subdued inflation prompts similar worries. Surely the extraordinary steps central banks are taking to jump start growth will eventually push prices sharply higher, inflating away the debts hobbling the global economy?

To monetarists wedded to Milton Friedman's mantra that inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon, the bloated balance sheets of the Federal Reserve and other major central banks are so much dry tinder ready to catch fire.

'The Fed says long-term inflation projections are stable, but when I look at things I see money growth has gone way up, the dollar has depreciated even against weak currencies like the euro and now productivity growth has slowed. Those are not comfortable signs,' said Allan Meltzer, a professor of political economy at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Only the sort of outcry from Main Street that prompted US president Jimmy Carter to appoint Paul Volcker as Fed chairman in 1979 with a mandate to crush inflation could prevent prices from spiralling higher, he said.

'That message has to come from the public. We won't get it from the bond vigilantes and not from the Fed and not from this administration,' said Meltzer, author of A History of the Federal Reserve.

Yet the solid consensus is that inflationary worries are misplaced given the dim outlook for growth that prompted the Fed this week to say it intended to keep short-term interest rates close to zero until 2013.

'When it comes to most of the developed world, there are no domestically generated inflationary pressures,' said Richard Cookson, global chief investment officer at Citi Private Bank in London.

Cookson says many countries find themselves in the position Japan has been in for the past two decades: as the private sector pays down unsustainably high debt, consumers and businesses are loath to borrow and spend.

Under such circumstances, the mechanism whereby newly created central bank reserves are multiplied into loans and bank deposits breaks down. Moreover, cash is flowing through the economy much more slowly than usual, removing another potential generator of inflation.

At some point, the money multiplier will function normally once more, but not any time soon, Cookson said. 'The problem is that it could take many years because balance sheets are so ravaged,' he said.

With yields on conventional US, German and British bonds languishing at historic lows, markets seem to share the view that economic recovery will be gradual.

'I think the Fed correctly came to the realisation that it is going to be a long slow slog, and long slow slogs generally don't generate a lot of inflation,' said Michael Feroli, an economist with JP Morgan in New York and a former Fed staffer.

Harm Bandholz, chief US economist at UniCredit Research in New York, said the Fed's easing, taken in isolation, could be viewed as adding to price pressures.

'But general inflationary pressure is not high in this type of environment of continued slow growth and deleveraging,' he said.

A weak US labour market is Exhibit A in making the low-growth, low-inflation case.

So many Americans have given up the search for a job that only 58 per cent of the working-age population was employed in July, a 28-year low.

Moreover, those in work saw their inflation-adjusted hourly compensation drop 1.2 per cent in the second quarter from a year earlier, confirming the trend of real wage stagnation that has marked the US economy since the 1970s.

Economists at Standard Chartered Bank said they expected the jobless rate, now at 9.2 per cent, would still be at 8.5 per cent at the end of 2012. 'This means weak wage growth and low inflation pressure,' they said in a report.

True, the spread between 10-year nominal and inflation-linked US treasury yields, a key indicator of inflation expectations, is much higher than in early 2009 when fear of deflation was raging at the height of the global financial crisis.

And gold, a classic hedge against inflation, scaled a record high this week and is up 24 per cent so far this year.

But John Higgins, senior market economist at Capital Economics, a London consultancy, said inflation expectations were likely to recede as commodities lose altitude.

'What might trigger that is further signs of economic weakness and signs that inflation itself is subsiding,' Higgins said.

Oil has fallen about $20 a barrel since April and copper, another super-sensitive barometer of global economic demand, fell to an eight-month low this week.

The retreat in key commodities partly reflects slowing growth in China brought on by steady monetary tightening.

This in turn has fanned expectations that China's own stubbornly high inflation, which touched 6.5 per cent in the year to July, is close to cresting. Indeed, economists at JP Morgan reckon inflation across emerging markets has probably peaked.

But that does not mean policymakers in developing countries can lower their inflation guard. Talk of currency wars has not gone away. Beijing for one has voiced anger that the Fed, with its latest easing, could once again export inflation by fuelling capital inflows and cheapening the dollar.

'The recent correction in global commodity prices could help to ease some of the inflationary pressure in the short run, but in the medium run loose monetary policy in the West may heighten imported inflation concerns,  Jianguang Shen, chief China economist at Mizuho Securities in Hong Kong, said in a note.

Source : New Age

US consumer confidence hits three-decade low

US consumer confidence plunged to the lowest level in more than three decades in early August, according to data published Friday by Reuters and the University of Michigan.

Their index of consumer sentiment tumbled to 54.9, its lowest reading since May 1980, when the index sank to 51.7.

The decline was much sharper than expected, and followed an equally sharp fall in July, to 63.7 from 71.5 in June.

The average analyst forecast for the August number had been 62.5.

The survey was taken during a period of high volatility in markets and when US politicians were battling over the country's debt and deficit-paring plan.

'Most of the hit was in the expectations index, which is most sensitive to stocks,' said Ian Shepherdson of High Frequency Economics.

Source : New Age

More dangerous times ahead for economy: WB

World Bank chief Robert Zoellick on Saturday warned of a 'new and more dangerous' time in the global economy, with little breathing space in most developed countries as a debt crisis hits Europe.

Zoellick said the eurozone's sovereign debt issues were more troubling than the 'medium and long-term' problems which saw the United States downgraded by Standard and Poor's last week, sending global markets into panic.

'We are in the early moments of a new and different storm, it's not the same as 2008,' said Zoellick, referring to the global financial crisis.

'In the past couple of weeks the world has moved from a troubled multi-speed recovery - with emerging markets and a few economies like Australia having good growth and developed markets struggling - to a new and more dangerous phase,' he said in an interview with the Weekend Australian newspaper.

People were in less debt than during the credit crunch and current events did not have the same 'sudden shock' factor, but Zoellick said there was less room to manoeuvre this time around.

'Most developed countries have used up their fiscal space and monetary policy is about as loose as it can be,' he said.

Zoellick said the eurozone's structure 'could turn out to be the most important' challenge currently facing the world economy, with some hope for Spain and Italy but debt-crippled Greece and Portugal unable to devalue.

European Union action taken to date falls short of what is needed, the World Bank chief said.

'The lesson of 2008 is that the later you act, the more you have to do,' said Zoellick, questioning whether the troubled European nations could 'ever get ahead of the problems that have plagued them.'

He also urged British prime minister David Cameron not to be deterred from austerity measures by recent riots - the country's worst in decades - saying his spending cuts were 'really necessary.'

'My concern would be if the politics knocked them off course,' Zoellick said.

Markets swung wildly this week on rumours of a French credit downgrade over the debt crisis, which started in Greece and is now fuelled by fears Spain or Italy might default, sparking a break up of the 17-nation currency.

Investors are questioning whether France and Germany, the eurozone's two largest economies, can continue to underwrite other states' debts without losing their top credit ratings and falling victim to the crisis themselves.

Zoellick said power, influence and weight was shifting 'very fast by historical standards' to developing economies led by China, but he described the Asian superpower was a 'reluctant stakeholder' in the global system.

Aside from tackling overheating Zoellick said Beijing faced a number of big domestic policy questions - keeping its industrialisation 'green', financial system reform, and the balance of state-owned firms with private enterprise.

Source : New Age

Rumours surrounding SEC action against manipulators continue to dog stocks

Dhaka stocks ended last week in red, extending the losing streak to the third week as the investors remained on the edge in volatile trading resulted from panic-driven sell-offs by retail investors and a wait-and-see policy taken by institutional ones.

Rumours about the possible legal actions by regulators against some market manipulators continued to dampen the market in the week.

The benchmark general index of Dhaka Stock Exchange, or DGEN, lost 47.04 points, or 0.75 per cent, in five trading sessions to close at 6,212.86 points on Thursday. The index had dropped by 327.91 points, or 4.98 per cent, in the previous week.

A decreased participation of institutional investors hit the transaction volume of the bourse with the average daily turnover dropping by 42.52 per cent to Tk 508.08 crore in last week from that of Tk 883.90 crore in the previous week.

The DSE recorded its highest average daily turnover in a week this year positing a Tk 1,562.00-crore average daily turnover in the week of July 10 to 14.

'The market suffered volatility in last week and investors became highly reactive to any rumour,' said Yawar Sayeed, managing director of AIMS Bangladesh Ltd.

He, however, said that the downtrend in the stock market was a usual trend during the month of Ramadan.

He said that the bear run in the market was somehow justified as there was no positive signal for the investors.

'The overall economic forecast is not encouraging for businesses and a possible political unrest also affected the market,' he said.

The latest bear run in the stock market began at the end of July with poor corporate disclosures announced by a number of listed companies and the tight monetary policy adopted by the Bangladesh Bank. The situation was worsened by the announcement made by the SEC that it would take legal actions against the market manipulators. The announcement triggered a large-scale disinvestment by the big fishes, analysts said.

Market operators said the market was facing a liquidity crisis again as the large and institutional investors remained almost inactive.

'The institutional investors are waiting for the share prices to come down further to buy them at a cheaper rate,' said a DSE stockbroker.

'The possible legal actions by regulators against some market manipulators also hold large individual investors back from being active in the market,' he said.

In last week, the Anti-Corruption Commission announced that it would file case against four people including an executive director of Securities and Exchange Commission for market manipulation during the January's stock market crash.

Of the five trading days, the DGEN gained in two days. In the week, investors held protests following steep plunge in share prices.

Some investors said that they were yet to recover losses they incurred in the January debacle and the market started to collapse again.

Finance minister Abul Maal Abdul Muhith, in the last week, termed the demonstrating investors 'Fatkabaj'. He also said that the capital market was now under the grip of gamblers. 

On Sunday the DGEN shed 139.74 points, or 2.23 per cent. The plunge prompted investors to take to the streets and the investors staged rowdy demonstration in the business hub Matijheel in the capital.

On Monday, the index shot up by 103.78 points, or 1.69 per cent on institutional buying after a massive fall in share prices in two days.

The index dipped again by 46.12 points, or 0.74 per cent, on Tuesday on selling pressure. On Wednesday, the index dropped further, losing a moderate 15.13 points, or 0.24 per cent.

On Thursday bargain hunters pulled Dhaka stocks following two days of slides when the DGEN gained 50.18 points, or 0.81 per cent.

All sectors except, banks, telecommunications and cement closed red as the market witnessed selling pressure all across the board during the week.

Banking sectors gained 1.09 per cent, telecommunications 4.09 per cent and cement advanced by 0.83 per cent during the week.

Grameenphone advanced by 4.09 per cent in the week following the news that the government had finalised licence renewal fee of mobile phone operators.

Cement sector closed positive as Lafarge Surma Cement gained 4.81 per cent following the news that their Indian subsidiary has started mining operations in limestone mine in Meghalaya.

Of the total 265 issues, 73 gained, 190 declined and two issues unchanged.

Beximco Limited topped the turnover leader with shares worth Tk 121.19 crore changing hands. The rest of the top-10 turnover leaders were Gremeenphone, Keya Cosmetics, Malek Spinning, Lafarge Surma Cement, RN Spinning, United Airways, City Bank, MI Cement and National Bank.

Source : New Age

Declining price of jute frustrates farmers

Jute farmers are frustrated as they are not getting the expected price in the absence of the government drive to procure jute at fair prices.

They expressed their dissatisfaction as jute prices price had fallen much this year and feared that they would not be able to recover even the production cost.

They said that prices of a maund (37.3.kg) of jute ranged between Tk 800 and Tk 1,800 while the prices in the last season ranged  between Tk 1,500 and Tk 2,500. The high price of jute in the last season inspired the farmers to grow more jute this year.

Although the harvest of jute this year started about a month ago, the state-run Bangladesh Jute Mills Corporation is yet to set the procurement price.

The corporation usually sets the procurement price before harvest to contain price manipulation on the market.

Farmers of Pakerhat in Dianjpur sold jute for prices between Tk 800 and Tk 1,000 a maund on Saturday.

Abdul Hamid, a farmer of the area, said that he had been disappointed at the price for which he had sold jute was below the production cost.

He said that a few days ago, jute was selling for prices between Tk 1200 and Tk1400 at Pakerhat but the prices were gradually falling.

In Thakurgaon, a maund of jute is selling for prices between Tk 1,200 and Tk 1,300 much to the disappointment of local farmers.

Abu Saleh Md Fattah of Baghmara in Rajshahi said that the production was good this year. He expected that the government would set the procurement price at Tk 2,000 a maund which would give farmers a satisfactory profit margin.

Another farmer, Manoranjan Das, of Mahamudkati at Paikgachha in Khulna said that he had to sell some of his jute for Tk 1,000 a mound on the local market and the prices ranged between Tk 900 and Tk 1,200 on Thursday.

He said that he had been encouraged to grow jute as he had received good price in the past season. He, however, said if the level the price had fallen this year continued, farmers would not longer grow jute in coming years.

Traders at Shailkupa in Jhenaidah, Chandpur in Rajbari and Baghmara in Rajshahi said that jute prices ranged between Tk 1,200 and Tk 1,800 a maund depending on the quality of the fibre, its length, colour and moisture.

'The price was between Tk 2000 an Tk 2400 a maund in the past season,' said Mohammad Kawsar Morol, a trader of Chandpur in Rajbari.

The Bangladesh Jute Association's president Mahbubul Hauque said that the price this year had declined much compared with the prices of the past year.

He said that the jute grown in Jessore and Kushtia was selling for prices between Tk 1,200 and Tk 1,400, down by about Tk 800 a maund from the the price of the last year, the jute grown in the north was selling for prices between Tk 1,500 and Tk 1,800 down by about Tk 500 and the jute grown in Faridpur was selling for prices between Tk 1,800 and Tk 2,200, down by about Tk 4,00.

A high BJMC official said that they were buying jute at their buying centers and at mill gate at market price.

'Buying jute at market price means that there was a possibility of controlling the price by traders and misappropriation by both mill officials and traders,' said  Hafizur Rahman Bhuian, joint convener of the Jute, Yarn and Textile Workers and Employees' Action Coordination Committee.

The leader said that the government should set a price which would benefit the farmers.

'The price of jute ranges between Tk 800 and Tk 1,300 per maund in most of the areas and if the government does not set the price, traders and middlemen will be benefited when farmers' stock is finished,' said Sajjad Jahir Chanda, general secretary of the Bangladesh Krishak Samiti.

He demanded that the government should set the price at Tk 2,000 a maund.

Source : New Age

Barisal people call for steps against filling Jail Khal in city

A human chain was formed in the Barisal city on Saturday in protest at construction of culvert filling the major canal in the city and demolishing bridge over it.

They also called for preservation of rapidly disappearing ponds, canals, river, water bodies in the city and surrounding areas and demanded steps against construction of culvert on Jail Khal.

Nadi Khal Bachao Andolon, Barisal organised the programme in the morning in protest at the under-construction culvert over the historic Jail Khal at Kawnia of the city.

Among others, Akkas Hossain, president,  Enyaet Hossain Shiplu, secretary of the Andolan, Mizanur Rahman, member-secretary Barisal Nagarik Samaj, Shamsul Alam,  Mukul Das and Biswanath Das Munshi addressed the programme.

The speakers at the programme said not only government agencies were reluctant to take action against those responsible for quick disappearance of canals, ponds and filling of rivers and the water bodies in and around the city, but local government agencies like Barisal City Corporation was filling the canals instead of re-excavating or preserving the existing ones.

BCC instead of re-excavating Battala Khal, another wide and major canal of the city, filled it and construct market on it, the protestors said.

According to a survey, there were nearly 600 ponds, canals and water bodies in and around the city 50 years ago.

But rampant filling of water bodies has reduced the figure to only one Jail Khal canal, nine water tanks, 101 ponds and 20 other water bodies.

Source : New Age

JU students bring out mourning procession

Jahangirnagar University history students on Saturday brought out mourning procession and formed a human chain on the campus, commemorating a student of the department who committed suicide last week.

About a hundred students from different departments also joined the programmes began at about 11:00am.

Master's degree student Marzia Jannat Sumi of batch 35 committed suicide by hinging with a ceiling-fan at her room in Jahanara Imam hall on Wednesday.

The university authorities a day after the incident formed 3-member investigation committee on Thursday to probe the suicide and asked it to submit reports within a month.

The speakers at the human chain said that a botany teacher, who is supposedly abetted Marzia Jannat to commit suicide, should be punished.

They complained that the university authorities was not enough careful to find out the truth that forced Marzia to death.

They also alleged that the university authorities gave long time to the investigation committee so that the justice could not be established among procrastination.

Source : New Age

4 cops among 6 held for mugging in Sirajganj

Six persons, including four police constables, were arrested at Sirajganj police lines and different parts of Bogra by the Sirajganj DB police Friday midnight for snatching 221 tolas of gold.

The arrested are Ashim Hossain, Shahnewaz Suman, Razu Ahmed, Golam Rabbani of Sirajganj police lines, Ataur Rahman, son of Mokbul Hossain of village Sakhabaria, Doulat Jahan, son of late Bachu Mia of village south Thengamara under Bogra.

The accused were produced in court Saturday evening and they were sent to jail.

Source : New Age

Sahara warns troublemakers of stern action

The home minister, Sahara Khatun, has vowed to take tough action against those who would be found responsible for making sabotage in the country to foil the trial of war criminals.

'The main opposition and their like-minded parties have long been trying to create anarchy in the country aiming to save the war criminals,' she said while addressing as the chief guest a discussion titled 'Execution of Trial of War Criminals' organised by Muktijoddha Sangskritik Sangsad at Shilpakala Academy in Dhaka Saturday.

The present government is pledge-bound to complete the trial of the war criminals and nothing could stop it, she said.

She also said her government was relentlessly working to solve the problems of the freedom fighters as per the directive of the prime minister, Sheikh Hasina.

The nation became guardianless after the killing of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman on August 15 in 1975, the minister said, adding that since then a vested quarter has been trying to kill his two daughters, who escaped the carnage.

The then government awarded the killers of Mujib by providing them with lucrative jobs and passed indemnity ordinance to save them (killers), she said.

Source : New Age

Flash flood damages crops, washes away fishes in Satkhira

Standing crops on vast areas of land have damaged and fishes in several ponds, enclosures were washed away by flash flood in Satkhira .

Fishes worth over Tk 194 crore, transplanted Aman on 12,330 hectares, Aush on 2,550 hectares and Aman seedbeds on 1,995 hectares were damaged due to the flood caused by incessant rain, sources said.

District fisheries office sources said 2,296 tonnes of shrimps worth over Tk 144 crore of 3,300 shrimp enclosures and 3,942 tonnes of freshwater fish worth over Tk 36 crore in seven upazilas of the district were washed away by the flood.

Official sources said the flood disrupted normal life in the district and left several thousand people marooned.

Meanwhile, the government in the first phase has allocated 71 tonnes of rice for the affected people.

Source : New Age

BSF regrets killing of 2 Bangladeshis by Khasias

The Border Security Force of India on Saturday regretted killing of two Bangladeshi youths by Indian Khasias in Bogaiya stone quarry in Bichhana-kandi frontier in Goainghat on Friday morning.

The apology came at a flag meeting between the BSF and Border Guard Bangladesh held in Bichhanakandi border at 12 noon.

BGB-5 Battalion commander Lieutenant Colonel Shafiul Azam said BSF expressed sorry for killing of two Bangladeshi youths in the frontier by Khasias and assured him of take necessary step to stop recurrence of such incidents in future.

A gang of armed Khasia tribes shot to death Kamal Mia, 25, son of Nasir Uddin and Kamal Uddin, 24, son of Iman Ali of the village when they were lifting stone in River Bogaiya in Bichhana-kandi area at 5:00am.

Source : New Age

16 people diagnosed with anthrax in C’nawabganj

At least 16 people have been clinically diagnosed with anthrax in Hadinagar Kuripara village in Shibganj upazila of Chapainawabganj district, said officials of the Institute of Epidemiology Diseases Control and Research.

Local doctors diagnosed the infectious disease in the patients after examining the symptoms, said IEDCR director Mahmudur Rahman on Saturday.

'The patients are undergoing treatment according to the national treatment guideline of anthrax,' he said.

New Age correspondent in Chapainawabganj reported that four of the anthrax patients were admitted to Shibganj upazila health complex.

The patients are Afzal Hossain, 60, Belal Uddin, 62, Laltu, 30, and Shariful Islam, 40.

Patients said that they fell sick after eating the meat of a cow sold by one Tariqul who had brought it from Rajshahi city on August 7.

Abdul Matin, medical officer of Chapainawabganj civil surgeon's office, said a medical team had been sent to the affected area.

Anthrax commonly infects both wild and domesticated animals which ingest or inhale the bacterium while grazing, physicians said. Diseased animals can then spread it to humans, either by direct contact or through consumption of their meat.

Experts said there three types of disease could be caused by such infection – cutaneous anthrax, inhalation anthrax and gastrointestinal anthrax.

They said the patients of cutaneous anthrax or skin anthrax complained of red-brown raised spots on skin.

Mahmudur Rahman said, 'Cattle vaccination is a must to check the disease.'

He also advised people not to come in touch with infected cattle. 

Source : New Age

Garment workers observe work abstention at Ashulia

Workers of a garment factory at Ashulia observed work abstention on Saturday to press for their demands, including transport allowance hike.

Police and factory sources said the workers of Indian-owned Pearl garment factory, located at Palashbari came to the factory in the morning and started work abstention although the management had raised their tiffin allowance and the police released a worker who was arrested earlier.

Nazrul Islam, Sumon Talukder, Arif and some other workers said the management with the help of police were harassing them by filing cases against them.

'For the last few months the workers have been demanding hike in their perks, including transport, overtime and festival allowances. But instead of meeting our demand, the management resorted to oppression on the workers in many ways, including illegal termination and filing of false cases,' the said.

At one point, the Ashulia police arrested Manjurul Islam, a superviser of the factory, on Friday night, the workers said.

As the news spread, the workers became agitated and came out of the factory and tried to block the highway in protest. They demanded immediate release of their colleague.

On information, the police went to the scene and after discussion with the workers, released the arrested worker.

The factory management also raises the workers' tiffin allowance from Tk 26 to Tk 30.

But the workers announced that they would continue the work abstention until their other demands were met.

Ashulia police sub-inspector Kazi Khairul Alam said the workers had been staging demonstrations for last few days for tiffin allowance hike. He also said that police had arrested a worker in a case filed by another worker of the factory.

After releasing the arrested worker, police also assured them that no more cases would be filed against the workers, he said.

Additional police have been deployed on the factory premises to prevent further trouble.

Source : New Age

Nat’l committee’s rally attacked by AL men

Some Awami league-backed miscreants on Saturday attacked the central leaders of the national committee and foiled a rally at Badshahganj in Netrokona.

A team of the central committee of the National Committee to Protect Oil, Gas, Mineral Resources,

Power and Ports joined a spontaneous rally there on their way to Saifurhati, the junction of Netrokona and Sunamganj, to join their scheduled rally there.

But the local administration imposed Section 144 there as the local unit of the Awami League had suddenly declared that it would stage a rally in the same venue, claimed a press statement of the national committee.

The committee leaders were addressing the rally in Badshahganj when a group of unidentified miscreants, backed by Awami League's leaders and activists, attacked the rally in presence of the police when the member secretary of the committee, Anu Muhammad, was delivering his address.

The attackers threatened the participants with dire consequences and told them to leave the venue, claimed the national committee.

Anu Muhammad condemned the attack and said that the national committee would not refrain from carrying out its protest programmes in spite of any attack or threat.

He called on the people to be united against the 'conspiracy' of the government to sell the nation's gas to foreigners.

The committee's central leaders — Ruhin Hossain Prince, Bazlur Rashid Firoz, Jonayed Saki, Moshtak Hassan, Mehedi Hasan and local readers Anisur Rahman and Rahman Mizan — were among those who participated in the rally.

The committee's leaders met the local police officials and demanded punishment of the attackers.

The national committee had scheduled a rally in Saifurhati and the local leaders had earlier taken permission to hold the rally, they claimed.

The convener of the committee, Sheikh Muhammad Shaheedullah, in a press statement condemned the attack and demanded punishment of the assailants.

The president of the Communist Party of Bangladesh, Manzurul Ahsan Khan, and general secretary, Mujahidul

Islam Selim, also condemned the attack and demanded punishments of the attackers.

The central coordination committee of the Ganasanghai Andolan also denounced the attack by the ruling party's men on a peaceful rally of the national committee.

Source : New Age

Dhaka-Tangail highway bus strike begins today

Train derailment in Bhairab on Saturday intensified the sufferings of commuters since the bus service on the Dhaka-Mymensingh highway remained suspended for the third consecutive day due to the awful condition of the road.

Bhairab station officials said that rail communication on the Dhaka-Mymensingh route was suspended since 8:30am after two compartments of the Dhaka-bound intercity train, Egarosindhu, veered off the tracks at the entrance of Bhairab Railway Station in

Kishoreganj. The train was on the way to Dhaka from Kishoreganj.

Thousands of people were depending on the trains with no buses running between Dhaka and Mymensingh since Thursday.

The Tangail District Bus Owners Association on Saturday called an indefinite transport strike on the Dhaka-Tangail route in protest against the dilapidated condition of the road.

Bus-owners on Thursday suspended all service on the Dhaka-Mymensingh highway for an indefinite period, demanding immediate repair of the road which has become unfit for traffic.

Two trains got stuck at Bhairab station and another at Kuliarchar of the district after the derailment, said Bangladesh Railway officials.

The Kishoreganj-bound Egarosindur Express

from Dhaka, Chittagong-bound Nasirabad Express from Mymensingh and Dhaka-bound Isa Khan Express from Mymensingh had to remain stationary till 6:00pm, said the officials.

A relief train from Akhaura in Brahmanbaria reached the spot around 12:00 noon and started salvage work, said Bhairab's station-master Abdul Motaleb. It will take two to three hours to resume the train service on the route, he added.

The suspension of bus service has caused untold suffering to the commuters who travel from the capital on various routes to Mymensingh, Netrakona, Kishoreganj, Sherpur and Jamalpur on a regular basis. It has also cut off communication with parts of Gazipur district.

Our correspondent in Tangail reported that leaders of the Tangail Bus-Coach Owners Association, Tangail Minibus Owners Association and Tangail Bus-Coach-Minibus Labour Organization, at a press conference in Tangail, jointly announced an indefinite strike from today in protest against the horrendous condition of the road.

The transport leaders said that the heavy rain in the last few days had caused the formation of deep ruts and potholes in the highway. Consequently, it had become impossible for them to operate buses on the route.

Valuable parts of the buses are being regularly damaged, causing huge financial losses for the owners, they mentioned.

It now takes up to eight hours to reach Dhaka from Tangail, which usually took two hours before the degradation of the highway, they added.

 President Zahidur Rahman Kakon and secretary Kamruzzaman Khan of the Tangail Minibus Association, acting secretary Safiul Alam Tusar of Tangail Bus-Coach Owners Association, president Chitto Ranjan and secretary Lutfor Rahman Lalju of Tangail Labour Association and adviser of Tangail Transport Association Faruk Ahmed were present at the press conference, along with others.

Source : New Age

Celebrations in Cuba as Fidel Castro turns 85

Cuban revolutionary icon Fidel Castro turns 85 on Saturday amid celebrations in his honour that he so far failed to attend.

Cuba has been partying

since Tuesday, with concerts, ballet performances and art exhibitions organised on behalf of the man who led the island nation for nearly 50 years before ill health led him to cede power to his brother Raul in 2006.

The celebrations culminated late Friday with a 'Song of Loyalty' gala at the Karl Marx Theater, Cuba's largest with a capacity of 5,000.

Most of the events have been organised by the Guayasamin Foundation, named for the Ecuadoran painter Oswaldo Guayasamin, a close friend of Castro. The organisation is often involved in planning Castro's birthday celebrations.

Castro's public appearances are increasingly rare. The last came in April, at the ruling Communist Party's annual congress, when Raul officially succeeded his older brother as party leader.

Since that time, Fidel has only been seen in video footage visiting ailing Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez — who is receiving chemotherapy treatment in Cuba.

'Raul is in charge now,' Michael Shifter, president of the Washington-based Inter-American Dialogue think tank, said.

'Fidel gave him the power to make decisions, but he also set limits, especially for reforms which are slowly moving forward, with great caution.'

Raul, who turned 80 in June with little fanfare, is trying to push through a series of reforms of Cuba's centrally planned economy that would encourage small private businesses and slash the country's massive bureaucracy.

'Fidel belongs in the history books,' Cuban dissident economist Oscar Espinosa said.

'The party congress marked the consolidation of power for Raul, who is not a democrat but a pragmatist, and is trying to correct the errors and failures left behind by his brother. Cuba today is not the Cuba of 2006.'

Castro's birthday comes as Latin America, which he hoped would adopt his revolution, has swung to the left, with a wave of progressive governments taking power from Argentina to Nicaragua.

Chavez, Castro's political heir of sorts, could make an appearance at his birthday celebrations, which coincide with the Havana carnival.

Castro now spends his time writing books and 'reflections' on international issues — he has so far published 361 such works — from his home in western Havana, which he shares with his wife Dalia Soto del Valle.

Born August 13, 1926 to a prosperous Spanish immigrant landowner and a Cuban mother who had been his housekeeper, Castro was the hero of the island's revolution which swept Fulgencio Batista from power in 1959.

A communist icon when the Cold War was at its height, the unrepentant anti-American and anti-imperialist leader is seen by supporters as a great revolutionary and by critics as a merciless dictator.

His enemies say the revolution will die with him, but Castro's illness has allowed for a smooth transition of power.

When asked what will follow his eventual death, observers can only agree on one thing — 'a historic funeral.'

Source : New Age

5 killed as bus skids off road into ditch

Five were killed on the spot as a bus skidded of a road into a ditch at Ganghati on the Pabna-Nagarbari Road about 2.15pm on Saturday. Four were rescued injured from inside the bus.

The police and witnesses said that a bus of the Tamanna Paribahan, headed from Sirajganj and Pabna, skidded off the road as it tried to void dashing a rickshaw-van. The water height

of the ditch was about 12 to 15 feet. Some passengers came out of the bus through the window.

The police, fire fighters and the district administrations started rescue operation immediately after the accident. Rescuers dragged out bodies of five who died and rescued four others. All the injured were sent to Pabna Medical College Hospital.

The deceased were Luthfar Rahman, 35, and Sharmin Khatun, 22, of Shalgaria,  Golam Mostafa, 45, of Laskarpur in the Pabna municipal area, Abdul Aziz, 55, of Kismatpur in the Pabna district headquarters, and Mohammad Sohel, 25, Dhanuaghat at Fardipur in Pabna.

The state minister for home, Shamsul Haque Tuku, who was in Pabna on an official tour, visited to the spot.

The deputy commissioner, Mostafizur Rahman, the superintendent of the police, Jahangir Hossain Matubbar, and the Santhia upazila nirbahi officer, Abdur Razzak Sarkar, visited the spot.

Local people blocked the road after the accident and vehicles remained stranded on both ends of the road stretch. The police later cleared the road.

Rescue work was going on till the evening.

Source : New Age

The Economist must offer apology: Matia

The agriculture minister, Matia Chowdhury, has said The Economist must offer apology to Bangladesh for publishing 'false' news about Bangladesh.

'After the overwhelming victory of the grand alliance in 2008, The Economist published news on free and fair elections of Bangladesh. Forgetting this, now it has

published false news patronised by the money from drugs, smuggling and militancy,' she said.

The minister made the remark at a discussion organised by Bangladesher Samyabadi Dal at the National Press Club marking the 36th death anniversary of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman on Saturday.

Chaired by industries minister and Bangladesher Samyabadi Dal general secretary Dilip Barua, the meeting was addressed, among others, by foreign minister Dipu Moni, professor AAMS Arefin Siddique and Awami League leader Bahauddin Nasim.

Matia Chowdhury said the defeated force of the liberation war and friends of Pakistan killed Mujib along with his family members as he had introduced Bangladesh in the world map by snatching independence from Pakistan.

She said Mujib was able to build the economy of the war-ravaged country on a strong footing within three years of the independence.

The minister said later on, the fundamentalist force and the BNP hatched conspiracy to destroy the country's economy by killing Sheikh Mujibur Rahman on August 15, 1975.

Source : New Age