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Hazari
sentenced for 7 years
The Divisional
Speedy Trial Tribunal, Chittagong, has handed down the jail term for seven
years to former Awami League (AL) lawmaker and allegedly godfather of
an organised criminals' network in Feni Joynal Abedin Hazari in his absence
for illegally possessing ammunition.The verdict will take effect from
the day police arrests Hazari or he surrenders. Hazari has been hiding
since the take-over of the caretaker government in 2001. Earlier on August
10, a court in Feni sentenced Hazari and one of his aides to life imprisonment
in another arms case. Moreover, there are 16 cases still pending against
Hazari. However, the joint forces in a raid on Hazari's office at his
Love Market in Feni on August 17, 2001 recovered five .303 rifle bullets,
two 7.62mm rifle bullets, three pistol bullets, eight gun cartridges and
four fire pins. And the case was lodged on the same day following recovery
of the ammunition.
-Jugantar, 29 September.
Defamation
charge against editor
A
Dhaka court has framed charges against the editor and the publisher of
the daily Jugantar in the defamation case filed by Housing and Public
Works Minister Mirza Abbas in the last year. The defendants are Golam
Sarwar, editor of the newspaper, publisher Advocate Salma Islam and chairman
of the group, Nurul Islam Babul. Metropolitan Magistrate Khondaker Fatema
Begum frames charges against the defendants in their presence. The court
fixed October 26 for trial of the case. -Jugantar, 29 September.
Five
kids rescued from traffickers
Four
children abducted from Muktagacha have been rescued from Trishal bus stand
in the district town by local people.The rescued children are Shokkuri,
9, Sagar 7, Mintee, 5 and Sirajul 3, all children of one Chan Miah of
Elachhai village in Muktagacha upazila. Police reveals that people at
the bus stand see the five children weeping and approaches them.They tell
the people that they were going to their father at Nutun Bazar at Muktagacha
upazila headquarters from their village home. On the way, two persons
offered them biscuits and brought them to Mymensingh town. Seeing the
unknown place, they started weeping. At this the two persons left them.
The children have been handed over to Kotwali police. - The Daily
Star, 28 September.
Publication
of PSC result stayed
An
High Court (HC) Division bench composed of justices Md Mozammel Hossain
and Md Mizanur Rahman Bhuiyan has stayed the results of the September
26 preliminary test for recruitment of sub-registrars for two months.
It has also issued a rule asking the Public Service Commission (PSC) that
arranged the test and the establishment secretary to explain why the preliminary
test by cancelling the registration of the petitioner, who challenged
the test in a writ, should not be declared unlawful and null and void.
Mohammed Abdul Halim, an applicant for the sub-registrar post, files the
writ with the HC asking for declaration of the examination illegal and
holding of the examinations afresh as he was not issued with an admit
card. The government is to reply to the HC rule by six weeks. In the preliminary
examinations, some 13,000 of the 38,000 applicants did not get admit cards.
It is argued that the petitioner applied properly for the post but the
PSC arbitrarily cancelled his registration and issued no admit card in
his favour. It is a clear violation of the fundamental rights. -Ajker
Kagoj, 30 September.
Taxmen
and Police tops corruption list
The
Bangladesh chapter of Berlin-based Transparency International has reported
that the police are the most corrupt institution in Bangladesh whose chronic
graft problems have not been improving. In terms of financial loss --
including an estimated one-fifth of the one billion dollars of international
aid each year -- the tax and customs departments were the most corrupt.
The database of the TIB shows corruption in financial sector as 37.3 percent,
police 22.4 in terms of number of corruption incidents, 12.9 in education
sector and 10.1 per cent in local government. In 35.9 percent cases, government
officials and employees were found indulged in corruption.
The TIB observes that "political will" is needed first for removing
corruption. The watchdog also suggests independent anti-corruption commission,
appointment of ombudsmen, speedy trial of corrupt people, press freedom,
separation of the judiciary and administrative reforms as the remedies.
- Ittefaq, 30 September.
Kolkata
HC bans rallies on working days
The
Kolkata High Court in a judgement has banned processions and public meetings
in the city on working days. The judgement says, "people suffer much
due to processions and Public Meeting on working days." Few days
ago Justice Lala himself had been delayed by several hours to reach the
court due to processions in the city that created acute traffic congestion,
on the same day the judge summoned the opinion of the police to justify
their permission to allow processions and public meetings on working days.
Members of the civil society have welcomed this verdict but political
parties are disappointed of the ruling. - Independent, 30 September.
Lawyers'
court boycotts
Lawyers
boycott courts countrywide on October 1 to press their six-point demand,
including repeal of the amended Civil Procedure Code, bringing judicial
activities to a near-stop. The demonstrators, grouped in the Six-point
Demand Implementation Committee, also call for independence of the judiciary,
rescinding of the rule on compulsory filing of income tax returns and
trade licences, transparency in appointment of judges and recruitment
of efficient judges. This boycott is the second since August 6, the day
that saw a countrywide court boycott by the same lawyers on the same demands.
Vice-chairman of Bangladesh Bar Council and convenor of the demand implementation
committee Barrister Amir-Ul Islam urges the lawyers to join a human chain
on October 8, stage a token hunger strike on October 15 and make the October
24 rally a success. The Supreme Court vacation benches pass the day virtually
without work because of the absence of pro-boycott lawyers. - Sanbad,
2 October.
Top
terror Liakot arrested
At
last one of the most wanted criminals Liakot Hossain Howlader has been
arrested. Members of the Rapid Action Team (Rat) plant themselves near
the Road No 32 bridge and ambush a private car carrying Liakot, one of
the 23 most wanted and listed criminals in Dhaka. The team also arrests
Liakot's bodyguard Shohag Sardar and driver Badal Hawlader in the spot.
Earlier the home ministry announced a reward of Tk 1 lakh for his arrest.
Liakot fled to India immediately after the announcement. Liakot has nine
cases and four GD entries against him in Motijheel, Tejgaon, Dhanmondi,
Mohammadpur and Gulshan police stations. He is one of the accused in the
armed attack on a procession at the Malibagh intersection on February
13, 2001 in which four people were killed. He is also an accused in one
attempt-to-murder case, two arms cases and four cases of robbery. -Bhorer
Kagoj, 2 October.
Jail
killing trial restarts Oct 20
The
trial of the Jail Killing Case is resuming on October 20 after an eight-month
stay. Judge of the Court of Metropolitan Sessions Judge, Dhaka, has fixed
the date.The High Court (HC) Division on January 26 stayed all proceedings
of the Jail Killing Case and issued a rule asking the government to explain
why the case should not be heard by the HC itself. The rule came after
Zohra Tajuddin filed a petition with the HC for holding trial of the case
in the court instead of the lower court. In the petition, she raised the
apprehension of not getting justice in the lower court. After hearing,
an HC division bench rejected the petition on August 25. The HC observed
that there was no need to transfer the case from the lower court. Following
the observation, the case is getting a fresh start in the lower court.
-The Daily Star, 2 October.
Over
1,000 raped in last 9 months
1,021
women and children raped has been raped in the last nine month all over
the country. This was revealed by Odhikar, a coalition for human rights.
Twelve traumatised rape victims committed suicide. The report based press
reports and Odhikar's own sources also said 278 women were victims of
dowry during the same period. Of them, 184 were killed, 20 committed suicide,
67 were physically tortured, 11 sustained injuries from acid attack and
two were divorced. During nine months from January to September, law enforcers
killed 56 people while 61 others died in their custody. The report also
mentioned that casualties from political violence included 306 dead and
4,779 injured; 1,885 were arrested on political grounds. Incidents of
human rights violation in the hill tracts accounted for 28 cases of murder
and 85 abductions. Twenty women and children were also raped and 84 people
sustained injuries in different incidents. Child victims of violence numbered
1,212 -- 339 were killed, 257 injured, 383 raped, 85 committed suicide,
49 sustained acid burns and 99 fell victims of trafficking. -The Daily
Star,1 October.
Nurul
Islam murder case free for trial
The
Appellate Division of the Supreme Court has stayed the order of the High
Court Division on Advocate Nurul Islam Murder case for three months. The
Order came on a petition submitted by the Government against the High
Court Division order. Following the order of the chamber judge of the
Appellate Division, the trial of the case will continue. The case is now
pending with the Divisional Speedy Trial Tribunal, Chittagong. On September
22, the High Court Division stayed the proceedings of the trial court
in the case on hearing of a writ petition filed by accused Md Abu Taher
, his wife and three others with the High Court Division. -The Daily
Star, 25 September.
Cabinet
Okays amendment to CPC
The
cabinet has approved the draft of the amendment to the amended Civil Procedure
Code Ordinance, 2003. The amended CPC was scheduled to take effect 01
October but with the presidential promulgation of the ordinance, it will
be put on hold indefinitely. However, lawyers have made it clear that
they will accept nothing short of a total repeal of the amended CPC, excepting
for its Section 115, and are set to boycott courts across the country
tomorrow. -Law Desk.
Muslim
teacher wins fight over headscarf
Ultimately
the highest court in Germany has ruled that a Muslim teacher has the right
to wear a headscarf in class. Thirty-one year-old Fereshta Ludin was denied
a job in the state of Baden-Wuerttemberg in 1998 because she insisted
on keeping her head covered in school. The State said her headscarf would
contravene Germany's constitutional religious neutrality, an argument
that was upheld by a lower federal court last year. Ludin argued that
the Constitution guaranteed religious freedom. The German Constitutional
Court has now ruled by five votes to three votes that, under current law,
she can wear the scarf. However, the Court says that German states should
seek to find an acceptable balance in law between religious freedom and
neutrality in schools. - The Daily Star, 25 September. |