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Change in temperature unlikely

Light to moderate rain or thundershowers accompanied by temporary gusty wind is likely at a few places over Khulna, Barisal and Chittagong divisions and at one or two places over Rajshahi, Rangpur, Dhaka and Sylhet divisions till 6:00pm today.

Day temperature may remain nearly unchanged over the country, Met Office said.

The sun sets in the capital today at 6:20pm and rises tomorrow at 5:40am.

The country's highest temperature, 35.4 degree Celsius, was recorded on Sunday in Sylhet and the lowest, 24.7 degrees, at Srimangal.

Source : New Age

Especial dishes for DU students on Eid day

Dhaka University authorities have decided to arrange especial dishes on Eid day for the residential students who cannot leave the campus on various purposes, especially to get prepared for forthcoming examinations.

The students will get the especial meals at breakfast and launch hours.

The authorities concerned also decided to brighten up halls and academic buildings with outdoor miniature and animated lights.

Zahurul Haque hall provost Abu Mohammad Delwar Hossain told New Age that some students have to stay in halls to sit for examinations or other purposes, namely to attend the outsourcings.

'Each hall will arrange especial dishes for the students,' he confirmed.

DU vice-chancellor AAMS Arefin Siddique said that he directed the hall authorities to take proper steps to ensure adequate facilities for the students.

A second year student Reza told New Age that he could not go home as his examinations neared.

Final year student Abdul Aleem Dhrubo said that he had to stay in hall to attend his part-time job albeit he had a wish to celebrate the Eid with his family.

Source : New Age

Unofficial holidays threaten healthcare

Healthcare in the Barisal city witness a sudden slowdown after hospitals, both public and private, went on unofficial Eid holidays on Friday.

Patients at Barisal Sher-e-Bangla Medical College Hospital are facing serious trouble as most the doctors and nurses have gone on holidays.

The hospital data on Sunday show that only 105 out of 708 staff are in their workplace, including emergency ward, for the patients.

Patients complained that the hospital authorities had released a good number of patients who were not cured fully in last few days to escape the pressure.

Hospital director Abdur Rashid, however, admitted that the patients usually did not get proper attention during Eid holidays.

He also admitted the outdoor patients' suffering and said it became even difficult for them to provide quality healthcare to the indoor patients during holidays.

'We cannot deny the staff members' right to go on holidays on religious festivals,' Abdur Rashid said.

'Normally, more than 1,200 patients go under treatment in indoor wards of this 500-bed hospital each day, but today there are few more than 800,' he said while talking to New Age on Sunday.

'The manpower shortage will not affect the healthcare,' he expressed his hope.

'The private hospitals have made special but very limited arrangement than public hospitals to provide services to the patients and always try to refer the patients to us,' said the SBMCH director.

A private hospital manager Nazrul Islam said that the consultants had already stopped doing surgery and discharged all their patients.

Source : New Age

Rajshahi Eid shoppers in grip of grim tailback

The Rajshahi city is experiencing serious traffic congestion because of illegal parking of unauthorised rickshaws, auto-rickshaws and human-haulers near markets, shopping malls and other key installations.

The problem is further intensified by the huge number of people rushing to markets for Eid shopping.

According to informal sources, there are about 30,000 rickshaws, 3,000 auto-rickshaws, 1,500 human-haulers playing the city roads and most of them are unauthorised.

The Rajshahi City Corporation authorities, however, said the number of rickshaws would not be more than 18,000.

City dwellers claimed the rickshaws hinder the parking and movement of cars as the rickshaw-pullers, most of whom are illiterate, hardly go by the traffic rules.

Unauthorised auto-rickshaw stands at busy points on the Rajshahi-Natore, Rajshahi-Chapainawabganj and Rajshahi-Naogaon highways also add to the congestion in the city.

Although the Rajshahi City Corporation has set up rickshaw stands at different points in the city as well as in all of the 30 wards, rickshaw-pullers do not park their rickshaws at the stands, sources in the RCC said.

Professor Ruhul Amin Pramanick, joint secretary of Rajshahi Association, a civic group, told New Age that the number of road accidents in the Rajshahi city had increased alarmingly in the recent times because of the unauthorised vehicles.

He also demanded implementation of the ban on the battery-run auto-rickshaws, human-haulers and others risky vehicles.

One of the other main reasons behind the traffic jam in the Rajshahi city is makeshift shops on the roads.

Hawkers have grabbed the roads at Ganakpara, Saheb Bazar and New Market and they have set up shops for Eid marketing on the roads, causing serious traffic jam.

A deputy commissioner of the Rajshahi Metropolitan Police, acknowledging the problem of unauthorised auto-rickshaw stands, told New Age that they would launch a drive against illegal parking and unauthorised stoppages.

Source : New Age

Cap corners in Dhaka city draw shoppers

Eid shoppers, beside purchasing dresses, shoes, cosmetics and other outfits, procure prayer accessories to accomplish their festival preparation.

People are buying prayer cap, rosary, attar, prayer mat, etc to attend Eid congregation in the morning with religious fervour.

Baitul Mukarram market is the hub of prayer accessories in the city. More than one hundred shops deal in the items - local and imported.

Many kinds of prayer caps, such as haji tupi at Tk 50 to Tk 200, Yemeni tupi at Tk 150 Tk 200 and China tupi at Tk 200 per piece is available in the market.

'As people are getting more fashion conscious, style in prayer cap has also been changing in course of time' said salesman Shafiq, selling the item for eight years.

Prayer hat is available inside and in front of the all other shopping centres, including Piryani Market, Dhaka College and New Market.

However, for expensive caps, people go to Basundhatra City where Malaysian VIP prayer cap sales at Tk 3000 and Pakistani velvet caps at Tk 1,250.

There are also rosaries made of precious materials like ivory at the cost of Tk 95,000 which came from Madina.

100-bead Kala Marzan and Cuk cost Tk 30,000 and 33-bead black coral rosary is sold at Tk 30,000. Pearl rosary is available at Tk 1,500 to Tk 8,000.

'In a 100-bead rosary, beads are divided into three groups by slightly larger three beads which is placed after every thirty-three beads,' said salesman Abdul Kader of Al- Musk shop at Basundhara City.

Rosaries, made of gold, silver, amber, coral, etc are also available at Baitul Mukarram.

Atoshi bead rosary costs Tk 1,500, white Akik Tk 650, Akik Tk 200-600 and crystal rosary beads are sold at Tk 50-200.

Japani fibre rosary sales at Tk 30, radium China rosary costs Tk 40 and radium China local Tk 20 is very popular at present.

China counting rosary of 1 lakh beads is sold at Tk 120.

Nahida from Badda bought Pakistani jaitun rosary at Tk 150 and China jaitun rosary at Tk 80 for her family and one Bangladeshi cod prayer mat at Tk 150.

Indonesian velvet prayer mat is sold at Tk 600 and Turkish velvet one at Tk 550.

However most of the customers choose foreign mats from Belgium at Tk 2000-9000, Syrian at Tk 1600-2000, Turkish Tk 900-1500, said Jashim, salesman of a Basundhara city shop.

'Wearing a new prayer cap during Eid has a traditional appeal more than religious significance' said Mizan who came to buy rosary and prayer mat near Baitul Mukarram.

Source : New Age

Poor catch of hilsa frustrates fishermen

Poor catching of hilsa in the beginning of the season has frustrated the fishermen, fish merchants, investors and ice factory owners in greater Noakhali coastal areas.

Catching of hilsa is started normally from the first week of Bengali month Jaishtha and continued to late autumn.

The fishermen in the district alleged that after lifting of the ban of hilsa netting on June 1, the fishermen started catching fishes again, but they were returning home almost empty handed.

According to locals, a large number of fishermen are going to the river and deep sea with their fishing trawlers to catch hilsa. But most of them are being frustrated due to poor catching of hilsa.

Thousands of people engaged in hilsa trade, including fishermen, trawler owners, ice factories, capital investors and net lenders, have been badly affected by the sudden fall in the hilsa netting carrying processing in greater Noakhali region.

Fishermen said that hundreds of fishing boat and trawler were busy in netting hilsa almost 24 hours at Nalchira, Bhuiyarhat, Sandip, Nizumdip, Alexander, Moju Chowdhury Ghat, Hatiya ghat, Nalerchar ghat, Jahajmara, Sonadia, Rahmat Khali coastal areas of greater Noakhali on branches and estuaries of River Meghna. But poor catching of Hilsa was making them frustrated, the fishermen said

According to locals, the ice factories have gone into operation for producing ice for the processing of hilsa. The whole sellers have opened hilsa purchasing centres. But poor catching of hilsa is making frustration among them.

On the other hand, the price of hilsa fish has gone beyond the purchasing capacity of the common people due to poor catching. Workers at hilsa fishing trade centers of the greater Noakhali are passing their times by playing cards and gossiping.

Sukur Mazi, a hilsa wholesaler of bhuiyar hat in Noakhali fish market, said that since last few years hilsa traders had been facing an acute crisis of hilsa fish during the starting of the season.

Hazrat Ali, a fisherman of Alexander in Lakshmipur district, who went to the bay for hilsa fishing and returned after 12 days, said that they had returned with only one and half maunds of hilsa spending about Tk 1.50 lakh.

He also said that at the same time of last year they managed to net about 60-70 maunds of hilsa per trip.

The traders of the Noakhali-Lakshmipur region who had already invested over Tk 70-80 lakh in hilsa trading in advance this year were suffering from frustration.

They blamed climate changes and man-made disasters for poor netting of hilsa fishes.

Source : New Age

President hosts iftar party

The president, Zillur Rahman, Sunday hosted a special iftar party in honour of the prime minister, Sheikh Hasina, members of the cabinet, diplomats, editors, the elite and high civil and military officials at Bangabhaban on Sunday.

Chief Justice Md Mozzammel Hossain, former president HM Ershad, former chief adviser to the caretaker government justice Habibur Rahman, ministers, advisers to the prime minister, state ministers, lawmakers, dean of the diplomatic corps, ambassadors and high commissioners of different countries, election commissioners, judges of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court, editors of newspapers and chiefs of electronic media and senior journalists, cabinet secretary, chiefs of the three services, governor of the Bangladesh Bank, chairmen of different commissions, secretaries, national professors, vice-chancellors of universities, senior lawyers and high civil and militaryofficials attended the iftar party.

Before the iftar, a special prayer session was offered seeking continuous welfare and advancement of the country and nation as well as unity and prosperity of the Muslim Ummah on the occasion.

Source : New Age

Greenpeace ship arrives at Ctg port Monday

Protest ship Rainbow Warrior 11 of the international environment watchdog Greenpeace, given to a Bangladesh charity, arrives at the Chittagong port on Monday morning, port officials said.

Non-governmental organization Friendship is ready to receive the vessel after it anchors at the marine jetty of the port at 6:00 am on Monday, they added. Frienship renamed the vessel as Rangdhanu, which means rainbow, they said.

A Friendship official told New Age that the ship had been handed over in Singapore and it would be used as a floating hospital along the Bangladesh coast to provide the poor with medical services.

Greenpeace earlier used the ship in its protest against whaling and nuclear testing, he said.

The ship was given to Friendship free, he added. The ship can also cater to the need of the coastal people during any natural disasters, he said.

Source : New Age

50 BNP men sued in Natore

A case was filed against 50 BNP leaders and activists on Saturday following assault on a police officer by some BNP activists at Alaipur in the district town.

Natore thana SI Abdul Majid filed the case.

Sources said as part of the central programme district BNP activists arranged a meeting and staged demonstration in the town. At one stage, some BNP activists were locked into altercation with SI Abdul Latif during their meeting.

Later, the BNP activists assaulted him at the meeting venue, the police said.

The police arrested BNP activist Ali Hossain from Hazratpur in Sadar upazila early Sunday in connection the case.

Source : New Age

More time needed to bring Mujib killers back: Quamrul

The state minister for law, Quamrul Islam, has said the government needs more time to bring the fugitive killers of Sheikh Mujib back home.

Speaking at a discussion at Dhaka University on Sunday, Quamrul said, 'We're trying to bring them through Interpol. It has taken 35 years to try the killers. Some more time will be needed (to bring them).'

'Please be patient. The killers will be returned and executed,' he added.

His comment came as many groups have raised their concern over apparent slow approach of the government to take the killers back.

On Saturday, Bangabandhu Sangskritik Jote leader and noted film actor Faruk Ahmed said they would stage a 'fasting protest' to press for bringing six fugitives back home for their execution.

They are Abdur Rashid, Shariful Haq Dalim, Noor, Risalder Moslemuddin, Rashed Chowdhury and Captain Majed.

The government says it has information on the fugitives' whereabouts but will not disclose details to make its efforts successful.

Of the 12 former army men convicted for the crimes of killing independence leader Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, five were hanged on January 28, 2010. The 12th convict Aziz Pasha died in Zimbabwe.

Source : New Age

Flood victims block road demanding relief

Thousands of flood-hit people of three districts set up blockade at Chuknagar crossing in Dumuria upazila of Khulna demanding relief and steps to save them from flood.

The residents of Satkhira, Khulna and Jessore enforced the programme on Khulna-Jessore and Khulna-Satkhira highways for one hour from noon, which halted traffic movement ahead of Eid-ul-Fitr.

Local people under the banner of Pani Committee and Banbhashi Sanghoti Mancho organised the blockade programme.

Earlier, they held a rally on Chuknagar Girls' High School premises where principal ABM Shafiqul Islam, president of the Water Committee, chaired the occasion.

Among others, member secretary of Banbhashi Sanghoti Mancho Sheikh Ashraf-uz-Zaman, Awami League leader Shyamol Singh Rai, local JSD leader Zillur Rahman and local CPB leader Mohendranath Sen spoke at the rally.

The speakers criticised the government as it did not take necessary steps for the flood victims in three districts though they remained marooned for nearly one month. They also deplored the inadequate measures taken by the health and food & disaster management ministers.

They deplored that the affected areas were not declared disaster zone and the victims were not provided with relief. Their Eid celebration is going to be uncertain under the circumstances, they said.

They expressed opinion that there was no scope to escape from flood in the areas if no initiative was taken to save Kobadak river. 

Around 15 lakh people of Khulna, Satkhira and Jessore districts have been more or less affected due to the flood.

Source : New Age

5 hurt in clash at Chandnichawk

Al least five people, including a woman, were injured in a clash near Chandnichawk in the New Market in the capital on Sunday evening.

Of the injured, restaurant owner Mafijul Islam, Shohel, Farhad and Juthi were sent to Dhaka Medical College Hospital, hospital source said.

The New Market police said that some customers picked up a quarrel with Mafij over standing in front of the restaurant.

Later, some other customers attacked the restaurant, in which the restaurant owner and others were injured.

The police said that the window of the restaurant had been broken.

The critically injured Mafijul, alleged that the attackers had looted Tk 20 lakh from the restaurant.

The police said that

they were investigating

the matter. No case was filed.

Source : New Age

Dhaka, Delhi in intense talks: adviser

Bangladesh and India are engaged in intense negotiations to finalise the agreements and other issues to be signed and discussed during the visit of the Indian prime minister, Manmohan Singh, an adviser says.

The Indian prime minister is due in nine days.

Two advisers to the prime minister and other senior government officials are holding talks with Indian national security adviser Shiv Shankar Menon at the Prime Minister's Office.

'We are holding meeting with Indian officials and it will continue until Monday afternoon,' international affairs adviser to the prime minister Gowher Rizvi said around 7:00pm on Sunday.

Menon arrived in the city in a special plane around 11:00am.

The meeting will fine tune all the aspects that will be discussed in the forthcoming visit of Manmohan Singh, he said.

Menon will meet the prime minister, Sheikh Hasina, on Monday.

Source : New Age

Rights groups demand investigation against private hospitals, health officials

Right groups on Sunday demanded investigation into allegations of wrong practices at private hospitals.

Speaking at a demonstration in the city leaders of the groups put forward a nine-point demand asked the authorities to ensure exemplary punishment for negligence in treating patients and stopping admission of new patients by private hospitals.

They demanded stopping anarchy in the health sector prompted by profit motive.

They were the protesters who had joined a human ain formed by rights organisations Nagarik Sanghati and Suraksha Agragati Foundation in front of National Press Club against malpractices at hospitals.

They said that private hospital owners formed a syndicate to rob people's money and life in the name of providing treatment.

They criticised the health minister and senior health service officials as well as Bangladesh Medial and Dental Council for their negligence of responsibility.

They demanded investigation into their negligence of responsibility.

Nagarik Sanghati general secretary Sharifuzzaman Sharif, PEACE secretary general Ifma Hossain, Protect and Progress Foundation general secretary Jivananda Jainta , Citizens Rights Movement secretary general Tushar Rehman, spoke among others.

Source : New Age

Barapukuria strike paused for Eid

Miners at Barapukuria have postponed their strike until September 3 after five days of work abstention but has declared that new protest plans will be announced after Eid vacation.

More than 1,000 contractual workers of the Barapukuria Coal Mine Company Limited began the strike on August 23 demanding that their jobs should be brought under regular payroll. They are contracted by Chinese firm Xuxu Machineries Company.

Rabiul Islam, president of Barapukuria Coal Mine Workers Union, said on Sunday their decision to pause the strike came to celebrate the Eid but they would not return to work.

'We are postponing the strike until September 3,' he said. 'But we won't join the work for now. New protest plans will be announced after Eid.'

Meanwhile, BCMCL managing director engineer Mohammad Quamruzzaman said they had agreed to meet the demands of the workers.

'But they submitted a memorandum on Saturday placing some new demands,' he said.

According to the union, the mine's agreement with the Chinese firm ended on October 10 last year. Petrobangla renewed the deal on the following day for six more years but their demands were not left out in the deal.

Source : New Age

Nepal gets new PM

Nepal's new prime minister, Baburam Bhattarai, is a Maoist party ideologue who played a key role in transforming the rebel guerrillas into a political set-up that won elections in 2008.

The 57-year-old engineer from rural western Nepal, is the vice chairman of Maoist party, which waged a decade-long 'People's War' that ended in 2006 after the deaths of 16,000 people.

His brief stint as finance minister in the Maoist-led government that fell in May 2009 earned him accolades for a rise in revenue collection in one of the world's poorest countries.

Bhattarai, who studied in India, has worked for a long time in the shadow of Maoist leader Pushpa Kamal Dahal — better known as Prachanda.

But Prachanda proposed Bhattarai as the party's prime ministerial candidate after the resignation of Jhalanath Khanal, leader of the Unified Marxist Leninist party, earlier this month.

Born in the family of priests in Gorkha, a hill district from where Nepal's erstwhile Shah rulers hailed, Bhattarai persistently campaigned for the end of monarchy, which was deposed in 2008.

In the late 1970s, while studying engineering in Delhi, he was also schooled in Marxist ideology by Nepal's veteran politicians who were in exile, fearing persecution.

In 2005, when the Maoist insurgency was at its peak, Bhattarai argued for an alliance with parliamentary parties, which paved the way for mass protests in 2006 and the end of the monarchy two years later.

'I believe that the country's future is very bright and we can accomplish the task of constitution drafting and complete the peace process,' Bhattarai told parliament on Sunday.

But some expressed scepticism over his ability to lead a coalition government, saying Bhattarai, who spent years justifying the Maoist insurgency, may flounder in Nepal's fractured political environment.

He has described himself as introverted and he has earned a bookish reputation based on rigid ideals — in contrast to the colourful Prachanda.

Sudheer Sharma, editor of Nepal's leading newspaper Kantipur, described Bhattarai as a 'dedicated leader' but added that 'this is his first foray into leading the country and therefore we can't be sure whether he can deliver'.

'With the full backing of his party, he has the chance to take the country ahead. But, I would also like to caution that it's yet to be seen whether he can work as well in a team,' Sharma said.

Nepal's politics have suffered repeated deadlocks in recent years as rival parties struggle for power while little progress has been made on the nation's much-needed post-war reforms.

Source : New Age

Rebels tighten noose on Gaddafi bastion

Libyan rebels closed in on Muammar Gaddafi's hometown of Sirte from both east and west on Sunday, a senior military commander said, as the insurgents also scrambled to get Tripoli back on its feet.

Rebel forces moved 30 kilometres closer to Sirte from the west and captured the town of Bin Jawad 100 kilometres to the east, the rebel commander in Misrata, Mohammed al-Fortiya, said.

'We took Bin Jawad today' on the eastern front, and 'the thwar from Misrata are 30 kilometres from Sirte' in the west, Fortiya said.

Rebels pushing west from the oil hub of Ras Lanuf had been stuck for four days outside Bin Jawad, a key town on the road hugging the shores of the Gulf of Sirte, as Gaddafi's forces kept up a defiant resistance.

Sirte is the elusive Gaddafi's last bastion after rebels smashed his forces in Tripoli and seized his Bab al-Aziziya headquarters, and now the insurgents are focusing on capturing the embattled Libyan leader.

Although his whereabouts remain a mystery, there is widespread speculation that Gaddafi is holed up in Sirte, 360 kilometres east of Tripoli, among tribal supporters there.

Fortiya said talks were under way with tribal leaders in Sirte for its surrender, adding that only tribal leaders were involved, and that to his knowledge no direct contact had been made with Gaddafi himself.

'We are negotiating with the tribes for Sirte's peaceful surrender,' he said.

In the capital, where life is slowly returning to normal after six months of bloody rebellion to end Gaddafi's 42-year iron-fisted rule, sporadic gunfire was heard overnight.

As rebels scrambled to get Tripoli on its feet and appealed for funds, the Arab League early on Sunday urged the UN Security Council to unlock billions of dollars in Libyan assets and property.

Several explosions and machine-gun fire rattled Tripoli overnight, but it was unclear if those responsible were Gaddafi loyalists or rebels celebrating the takeover of the capital a week ago.

Rebel chief Mustafa Abdel Jalil, meanwhile, promised that Gaddafi and his senior aides would be given a fair trial if they surrendered.

'We call on Muammar Gaddafi and his associates to surrender so we can protect them and spare them illegal execution,' Abdel Jalil said. 'We guarantee them a fair trial, whatever their position.'

The rebels have offered a $1.7 million-dollar reward for Gaddafi's capture, dead or alive.

Speaking in the eastern city of Benghazi, where the rebellion began in February, the National Transitional Council (NTC) chief also called for emergency humanitarian aid for Tripoli, especially medical supplies.

'We are calling all the humanitarian organisations and telling them that Tripoli needs medicines, first aid products and surgical material,' Abdel Jalil told a news conference.

Blaming 'sabotage by Gaddafi's forces' for water and electricity shortages in Tripoli, he said: 'We are working on resolving these problems.'

Abdel Jalil's plea for help was heard loud and clear at Arab League headquarters in Cairo where a special meeting of foreign ministers urged 'the UN and countries concerned' to 'unfreeze the assets and property' of Libya.

A statement early on Sunday by the ministers also called on the United Nations 'to permit the National Transitional Council to occupy the seat of Libya in the United Nations and its various organisations.'

NTC number two Mahmud Jibril, who headed the Libyan delegation at the Cairo gathering, warned of 'instability' in Libya if the rebels failed to restore salaries and services.

Meanwhile NTC spokesman Mahmud Shammam said the rebels would start distributing 30,000 tons of petrol to Tripoli residents and would also provide cooking gas within the next 48 hours.

They were also working to bring the Zawiyah refinery back on line, Shammam said, pleading for patience and calling on all public, private and oil sector employees to return to work.

'We are starting from point zero in this situation. Do not ask for miracles, but we promise to try to make this difficult period as short as we can,' Shammam said.

He admitted that there were still pockets of pro-Gaddafi resistance.

'Anybody who thinks that there is not a fraction of people who support Gaddafi or that there is no fifth column who will try to trouble the peace of Tripoli would be mistaken.'

On Sunday insurgents expanded their control over the airport and other parts of Tripoli where some pockets of resistance remained.

On Saturday they said they had captured the base of the elite 32 Brigade, commanded by Gaddafi's son Khamis, after a NATO air strike and seven hours of fierce fighting that left 11 rebels dead.

In an adjoining cinder-block building an AFP correspondent saw the charred remains of some 50 people who residents said were captives killed on Tuesday by rifle fire and grenades.

Rebels also captured on Friday the Ras Jdir border post with Tunisia, through which it was feared that Gaddafi, his henchmen and family might try to escape.

They also took two villages from which Gaddafi loyalists had been bombarding Zuwarah, between the border and the capital, an AFP correspondent with them said.

Tripoli residents are preparing for the Eid al-Fitr celebration which ends the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan next week.

Meanwhile the United Nations, African Union, Arab League and European Union urged both sides in Libya to avoid reprisals, EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said after a gathering of the so-called Cairo Group.

Source : New Age

Police yet to record FIR

The police are yet to record the First Information Report, submitted to the Ramna police, on the death of the former deputy attorney general, Momtaj Uddin Ahmed, who was allegedly tortured after being arrested on August 11 and died at Square Hospitals in police custody on Friday afternoon.

'We have received the complaint…We are investigating. After investigation, we will decide whether or not it will be recorded as a case,' the Ramna thana's officer-in-charge, Rafiqul Islam, told New Age.

After the death of MU Ahmed, his widow Selina Ahmed on Friday sued home minister Sahara Khatun, attorney general Mahbubey Alam, home secretary, Dhaka Metropolitan Police commissioner, Detective Branch's deputy commissioner and Shahbagh thana's officer-in-charge on charge of killing her husband.

Sources in the police said that any allegation should be recorded with the concerned thana either as a General Diary or a case.

Ramna thana's officer-in-charge, when asked, declined to make any comment.

He, however, requested this correspondent to contact the Dhaka Metropolitan Police's media cell if he had any other questions.

A group of lawyers, led by Supreme Court Bar Association's president Khandker Mahbub Hossain, submitted the First Information Report, signed by Selina, to the Ramna police on Friday night.

MU Ahmed's colleague Sana Ullah Miah told New Age on Sunday that the police had received their FIR, and given them a copy of the receipt.

Ramna thana's operation officer, sub-inspector Altaf Hossain, who received the FIR, on Friday night told New Age, 'We have received the complaint, but a decision has not yet been made whether it will be recorded as a regular case or a General Diary, as the officer-in-charge is out of the office.'

 But on Sunday, when asked, Altaf refused to make any comment.

On Saturday, the police took MU Ahmed's body from BIRDEM's mortuary without informing his family or his lawyers. Later, he was buried at Bogra.

MU Ahmed, who was admitted to the hospital on August 16, breathed his last at around 1:10pm on Friday. Before being admitted to Square Hospitals, he underwent treatment at National Institute of Cardiovascular Diseases in custody.

Within hours after his arrest on August 11, MU Ahmed fell sick in the office of the Detective Branch and was taken to the Dhaka Medical College Hospital, but the physicians there referred him to the NICVD.

Source : New Age

SCBA, BNP blast AG

The Supreme Court Bar Association and the opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party on Sunday brushed aside the attorney general's accusation of committing 'politics of dead body' and held him responsible for the death of MU Ahmed. 

The bar association president, Khandakar Mahbub Hossain, at a news con- ference in his house said that the attorney general, Mahbubey Alam, was responsible for the death of former deputy attorney general MU Ahmed.

MU Ahmed, who was admitted to hospital on August 16 as he suffered a heart attack after his arrest on August 11 in a case filed in connection with a fracas in the High Court between the lawyers leaning towards the BNP and the ruling Awami League when the court warned Khaleda Zia against making any derogatory comments about the constitution in the future, died in Square Hospitals in police custody on Friday.

'If the attorney general had wanted, he could have saved the life of MU Ahmed. We sought bail for him but it was the attorney general who opposed it in court and he rather sought that all [the accused in the case] should be sent to jail,' he said.

Mahbub said that after the court ruling for the medical treatment of MU Ahmed at government expense, he had requested the attorney general to take the responsibility but Mahbubey Alam refused to do so. 'A day after, he asked me to continue with the treatment on our own,' he added.

The acting BNP secretary general Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir at an iftar party blasted the attorney general for his remark about doing politics over dead bodies  saying that it was the Awami League that was engaged in such politics.

'Politics of dead bodies is typical of the Awami League. The party has proved this several times. After the BNP had left office in 2006, it [the Awami League] killed a number of people with oars and sculls on the streets of Dhaka. Now the party says that we are engaged in politics of dead bodies,' he said.

The government implicated MU Ahmed in a false case, Fakhrul said. 'Ahmed was not even in Dhaka on the day the fracas took place in the High Court. But the government arrested him at his house and tortured him in custody.'

Khandakar Mahbub said that MU Ahmed's widow had filed a first information report with the police but it was yet to be recorded as a case. 'We will take action after the Supreme Court reopens or even during the Eid holidays,' he said.

As for attorney general's claim of being hurt at his allegation of doctoring MU Ahmed's inquest report comment and his plan for filing a defamation suit, Mahbub said, 'If he had gone there on humanitarian grounds, he could have informed us or taken the people of his party. He went there in his car and left in a police vehicle through the basement.'

'His activities made us doubtful. Why did he go there with a magistrate instead of his party people or us?' Mahbub said.

The Jatiyatabadi Ainjibi Forum president, Rafiqul Islam Mia, also a BNP standing committee member, demanded a judicial inquiry to the death of MU Ahmed.

At a human chain of Jatiyatabadi Muktijuddher Prajanma, Rafiqul demanded punishment of all who are responsible for the death of MU Ahmed.

He asked the attorney general why he had gone to the hospital. 'You did not even offer condolences on the death of MU Ahmed.'

Source : New Age

Irene batters shuttered New York

Hurricane Irene battered New York with heavy winds and driving rain on Sunday, knocking out power and flooding some of Lower Manhattan's deserted streets even as it lost some of its strength.

Irene was downgraded to a tropical storm on Sunday morning but was still sending waves crashing onto shorelines and flooding coastal suburbs.

There was about a foot of water in the streets at the South Street Seaport in Lower Manhattan and the tide seemed to be rising, although there was less damage than many had feared.

'It's not bad as we they said it would be. The streets are flooded but not as bad as I thought,' said John Harris, 37, who defied an evacuation order and stayed home overnight in the Rockaways. 'But I'm going to keep my eye on it. I know how to get out of here if I have to.'

Heavy rains and wind forced the closure of three bridges leading to the Rockaways peninsula facing the Atlantic Ocean, and further east on Long Island sand-beams built to hold off the flooding and protect coastal businesses appeared to have failed. Irene was blamed for at least nine deaths in North Carolina, Virginia and Florida as it headed up the East Coast. About 3.3 million homes were without electricity and several million people were under evacuation orders.

New York City's normally bustling streets were eerily quiet after authorities ordered tens of thousands of residents to evacuate low-lying areas and shut down its subways, airports and buses.

Forecasters said Irene still posed a serious threat of storm surge that could raise water levels by as much as 4 to 8 feet in coastal areas from Virginia to Massachusetts. Isolated tornadoes in the New York area were possible.

The storm dumped up to eight inches of rain on the Washington region, but the capital appeared to have avoided major damage. Some bridges were closed but airports remained open and transit operated on a normal schedule.

Rick Meehan, mayor of Ocean City, Maryland, said initial assessments showed flooding and continuing power outages in some areas of the seaside resort, but not much damage.

'It looks like we dodged a missile on this one,' Meehan told the local Fox News station, WBOC News.

From the Carolinas to Maine, tens of millions of people were in the path of Irene, which howled ashore in North Carolina on Saturday, dumping torrential rain, felling trees and knocking out power.

'The edge of the hurricane has finally got upon us,' New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg told the more than eight million people who live in New York as he warned that tropical storm-force winds would hit the city.

Times Square, often called the crossroads of the world, was almost empty as Irene rolled into the city with full force.

Broadway shows were cancelled, coffee was hard to come by with Starbucks stores closed and burgers and fries were in short supply as McDonald's outlets were shut.

The city's streets were quiet although some people were out checking on the storm's damage.

'I was hoping to come out to see the worst,' said Tom Wall, 38, a mechanical engineer dressed in sandals and an orange rain jacket as he walked along the South Street Seaport. 'So far it's much less dramatic than I expected.'

After Irene, weather watchers were keeping an eye on Tropical Storm Jose, which formed near Bermuda.

Bloomberg had warned New Yorkers Irene was a life-threatening storm and urged them to stay indoors to avoid flying debris, flooding or the risk of being electrocuted by downed power lines.

In midtown Manhattan, there was a substantial police presence on the streets but most people heeded Bloomberg's warning to stay inside.

About 3,70,000 city residents were ordered to leave their homes in low-lying areas, many of them in parts of Brooklyn, Queens and Manhattan.

Some refused to leave. Nicholas Vigliotti, 24, an auditor who lives in a high-rise building along the Brooklyn waterfront, said he saw no point. 'Even if there was a flood, I live on the fifth floor'

Flood waters forced officials in Hoboken, just across the Hudson River from Manhattan, to evacuate a storm shelter, the mayor of Hoboken, Dawn Zimmer, said on Twitter.

The Miami-based US National Hurricane Centre said Irene's winds dropped to 65 miles per hour on Sunday morning but forecast a storm surge of up to 8 feet for Long Island and metropolitan New York. That could top the flood walls protecting the south end of Manhattan.

Summer vacationers fled beach towns and resort islands. More than a million people left the New Jersey shore and glitzy Atlantic City casinos were dark and empty.

This year has been one of the most extreme for weather in US history, with $35 billion in losses so far from floods, tornadoes and heat waves.

The US president, Barack Obama, who cut his vacation short on the Massachusetts island of Martha's Vineyard to return to the White House, was keeping a close eye on preparations for the hurricane.

Utility company Consolidated Edison warned that downtown Manhattan, including Wall Street, could face more blackouts as low-lying areas flooded.

When Irene hit the North Carolina coast on Saturday, winds howled through power lines, sheets of rain fell and streets were flooded or littered with tree branches.

Source : New Age