Friday, March 8, 2013

Bangladesh BNP working as Pakistan agent:Ruling Awami League leader Mahbub-ul Alam Hanif

BANGLADESH NEWS
Ruling Awami League leader Mahbub-ul Alam Hanif has said ‘sorry’ to BNP leaders who were injured in clashes on Wednesday during a rally in front of the main opposition party’s headquarters at Naya Paltan.
But he felt pity for the party, saying it has gone far away from the spirit of the War of Liberation by enforcing shutdown on historic Mar 7.
“BNP’s situation is miserable as it has walked into the trap of Jamaat-e-Islami,” said Hanif, also a Joint General Secretary of the ruling party, on Thursday.
“Now it is just working as a Pakistani agent,” he told reporters in front of the party office on Bangabandhu Avenue.
On Wednesday, some BNP leaders were injured when police took action amid clashes and bomb explosions. But Hanif blamed Jamaat-e-Islami for Wednesday’s chaos that spoiled BNP’s rally.
The BNP on Thursday enforced a daylong shutdown across the country to protest against the police action. Jamaat called a general strike of its own.
Over whether the government would sit with the opposition, the Special Assistant to Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina said, “National unity is needed for everything. The Awami League is open to discussion on any issues.”
Earlier on Thursday, leaders and activists of the Awami League and affiliate bodies rallied in front of the party headquarters at the Bangabandhu Avenue denouncing the BNP-sponsored shutdown.

Make Bangladesh Razakar-free Shahbagh youths call at Suhrawardy Udyan rally

BANGLADESH NEWS
The Suhrawardy Udyan, formerly Race Course Maidan where Bangabandhu delivered his historic March 7 speech, reverberated with anti-Razakar slogans yesterday.
On the day in 1971, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman announced to the thunderous roars of hundreds of thousands: “The struggle this time is for emancipation. The struggle this time is for independence.”
Forty-two years after that independence was won, the Shahbagh demonstrators on the same ground declared the struggle this time was to rid the country of Razakar and Jamaat-Shibir.
Marking March 7, the protesters held the rally at the Shikha Chirantan at Suhrawardy Udyan yesterday, the 31st day of the movement.
Once again, demonstrators urged the countrymen to resist Jamaat-Shibir in every neighbourhood.
“March 7 is the inspiration of our sprit of unity and a guideline for our struggle…. Driven by this inspiration, we will continue our movement until our demands are met,” said Imran H Sarker, spokesperson for the protest that began on February 5 demanding capital punishment to all war criminals.
Marking the International Women’s Day today, the protesters will organise a Nari Jagoron Samabesh (rally for awakening women) at the Shahbagh intersection, now popularly known as Projonmo Chattar.
Imran called upon the women of different walks of life to join the rally and urged the garment owners and other organisations to allow a few hours’ leave for all women employees to join the rally.
The organisers will today announce the date, time and venues of rallies to be held in divisional cities outside Dhaka. Also, the deadline for the mass signature campaign has been extended till March 22. So far, 4.5 lakh signatures have been registered.
Like in previous rallies, Imran administered an oath to the protesters, who vowed to continue the movement until their demands are met.
Criticising the filing of a case against Imran over “disgracing the national flag”, Bangladesh Chhatra Moitree President Bappadittya Bashu said, “Nothing happens when Jamaat-Shibir men burn the national flag down. But when we call for hoisting the flag, it is denigration of it.”
Demonstrators also slammed Jatiya Party Chairman and former autocrat HM Ershad for giving “negative” comments about the Shahbagh movement.
Leaders of different student bodies spoke at the rally participated by various professionals and socio-cultural organisations.
At the rally, a nine-year-old child, Apurbo, rendered Bangabandhu’s full speech of March 7.
Earlier in the morning, protesters brought out an anti-hartal campaign from Shahbagh and marched through Matsya Bhaban, Jatiya Press Club and Purana Paltan before returning to the intersection.
Protesters took to the Shahbagh intersection on 5 February, just hours after a war crimes tribunal gave life sentence to Jamaat leader Abdur Quader Mollah for war crimes in 1971.
They have been demanding capital punishment to Mollah, saying a life term for him is too lenient a punishment.

Historic March 7:Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina pays homage to Bangabandhu

BANGLADESH NEWS
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina on Thursday paid rich tributes to Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman placing wreaths at his portrait in front of Bangabandhu Memorial Museum at Dhanmondi on the occasion of historic March 7.
She first laid a wreath at the portrait of Bangabandhu as the prime minister and stood in solemn silence for some time as a mark of respect to the memory of Bangabandhu.
Later, Sheikh Hasina, also the president of Bangladesh Awami League, and party leaders placed another wreath at the portrait of the Father of the Nation on behalf of her party.
Finance Minister AMA Muhith, Planning Minister AK Khandaker, Awami League Advisory Council Members Amir Hossain Amu and Tofail Ahmed, AL Presidium Members Begum Matia Chowdhury, Advocate Shahara Khatun and Abdul Latif Siddiqui, AL General Secretary and LGRD and Cooperatives Minister Syed Ashraful Islam, Labour and Employment Minister Engineer Khandaker Mosharraf Hossain, Cultural Affairs Minister Abul Kalam Azad, Land Minister Rezaul Karim Hira, Environment and Forest Minister Dr Hasan Mahmud, State Minister for Home Advocate Shamsul Haque Tuku, State Minister for LGRD and Cooperatives Jahangir Kabir Nanak, State Minister for Women and Children Affairs Dr Shirin Sharmin Chowdhury and State Minister for Labour and Employment Begum Munnujan Sufian were, among others, present.
Besides, Awami League joint general secretary Mahbub-ul- Alam Hanif, organising secretaries AFM Bahauddin Nasim, Ahmad Hossain, Khalid Mahmud Chowdhury and Abu Sayeed Al Mahmud Swapan and Information and Research Secretary Advocate Afzal Hussain, parliament members and other central leaders of the party and its associate organisations were present on the occasion.
Later, leaders and workers of Awami League’s associate organisations, including Awami Jubo League, Chhatra League, Mohila Awami League, Sramik League, Krishak League, Jubo Mohila League and Swechchasebak League also paid homage to Bangabandhu by placing wreaths at his portrait on the occasion.

Hartal rejected; no fear in public mind:Bangladesh Home Minister MK Alamgir

BANGLADESH NEWS
“There’s no fear among people during hartal hours as the law enforcers were directed to take action against the anarchists in case of any violence,” he said while talking to journalists at his office on Thursday.
The home minister said what the BNP-Jamaat wanted to gain through the strike would not be achieved.
About the affected minority families, Alamgir said an initiative had been taken to provide compensation to the affected Hindus whose houses and temples had been damaged by Jamaat-Shibir activists.

“Those who tortured the Hindus and vandalised their houses and temples are coward,” he said adding that they would be brought to book.
The minister claimed that now the law and order was under control as the law enforcement agencies were properly maintaining the order.
Replying to a question regarding the killing of a Jubo League activist in a clash between Awami League and BNP-Jamaat activists in Bholahat upazila of Chapainawabganj, the minister said the ruling party men could take revenge but they did not.
Later, the minister welcomed the Amnesty International report on protecting the Hindu minority in the country.
Replying to another question about the prime minister’s call to form ‘Terrorism Prevention Committee’ in every ward, union, upazila and district to resist BNP-Jamaat anarchy, State Minister for Home Samsul Haque Tuku said the authorities concerned, including Olamas across the country, have been directed to form ‘Terrorism Prevention Committee’.
Tuku said BNP-Jamaat was carrying out anti-state activities for damaging the Liberation War spirit.

Dhaka Shahbagh demonstrators march in city

BANGLADESH NEWS

The Shahbagh demonstrators brought out a procession in the capital on Thursday to protest the countrywide daylong Shutdown enforced by the main opposition BNP and its ally Jamaat-e-Islami- hartal.
Several hundred people joined the anti-hartal procession that began from Shahbagh intersection, now christened Projonmo Chattar, around 9:30am.
The hour-long procession paraded through Matsya Bhaban, Jatiya Press Club and Purana Paltan before retuning to Shahbagh.
Meanwhile, a grand rally is also scheduled to be held around 3:00pm at Shikha Chirantan in Suhrawardy Udyan today.
Commemorating the International Women’s Day on March 8, a rally will also be held at the Projonmo Chattar under the banner of “Nari Gonojagoron Mancha,”
The Shahbagh movement began on February 5, hours after Jamaat assistant secretary general Abdul Quader Mollah was sentenced to life in prison for rape, killing and genocide during country’s Liberation War in 1971.
Rejecting the verdict, Bloggers and Online Activist Network initiated the protest that soon turned into a mass movement.
It also spread to other parts of the country and eventually abroad later.


Bangladesh Government examining laws for ban on Jamaat

BANGLADESH NEWS
The government was scrutinising the laws to ban Jamaat-Shibir, as their terrorist and militant activities had wreaked havoc across the country, said Foreign Minister Dipu Moni yesterday.
“There have been strong demands from different quarters for banning the politics of Jamaat and its student wing Shibir,” she said.
Briefing foreign diplomats at the her ministry in the evening on the recent violence and atrocities by Jamaat-Shibir and their allies, Dipu Moni said the government was not thinking of deploying army to tackle the ongoing violence.
She said the government was also investigating whether there was any funding for the terror acts.
Meeting sources said ambassadors and high commissioners of Russia, Canada, the UK and the Philippines raised several questions on the ongoing situation.
Talking to reporters after the diplomatic briefing, the foreign minister said the diplomats had enquired mainly about three things — plan to ban Jamaat, possibility of army deployment and funding behind violence and its source.
On deployment of army, she said, “It seems the situation does not require it. But the government will take whatever steps necessary to protect the lives and property of the people.”
Dipu Moni said the foreign diplomas while asking the questions implied that there had been a huge funding behind the Jamaat-Shibir violence and if so, what had been the source, and also whether the government was investigating that.
“There have already been a lot of discussions on the matter in public domain and some independent researchers are working on it,” she added.
Emerging from the briefing, German Ambassador Albrecht Conze expressed grave concern over the loss of lives and property.
“The loss of innocent lives and public and private property is a matter of great regret,” he said, adding, “In the rundown of election in 10 months, I don’t know how this country can sustain, as in the coming months 10 verdicts and 13 appeals will happen. If the appeals are rejected, there will be more violence.”
The German ambassador said constitutionally available options were the best way to resolve the problems.
British High Commissioner Robert Gibson also expressed worry about countrywide violence and deaths.
Meanwhile briefing the diplomats, the foreign minister hoped that the international community would appreciate a new paradigm being set by Bangladesh to conduct the trials of 1971 war criminals and a strong sense of national ownership.
She said the government remains open to any constructive and legally feasible suggestions to ensure further international standards in the trials.
Dipu said the international community should also react to the fabricated propaganda run by the Jamaat-Shibir and their allies that the International Crimes Tribunals had been an excuse to politically undermine and persecute leading Islamist leaders and thinkers.
“It is unfortunate that such a false and malafide notion had gained some sympathies within the political circles and media establishments of some of our friendly countries without delving into the antecedents of the accused and the convicted criminals,” she said.
Dipu said, “We have seen how such misguided demonstration of support in certain foreign countries has been used by the Jamaat-Shibir to drive home their point among their local sympathisers about these trials being a pretext for political persecution only.”
The Foreign Minister urged all friendly governments to show respect to the popular demand for justice and join in their condemnation of those who have been found guilty of committing crimes against humanity.
Dipu said the difficult course of righting the wrongs that Bangladesh has taken up would not just signal an end to the culture of impunity but also have profound implications for opening up the possibility for justice for the genocides or ethnic cleansings in other parts of the world.
“’… our law enforcement agencies would maintain an uncompromising stance against any form of violence or terrorist acts under the pretext of political activities to save convicted criminals,” she said.
Dipu Moni said the government has largely been able to contain the spread of violence, which remains concentrated in certain identified pockets of the country.
“We have heightened intelligence operations and deployed additional police and Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB) forces in the violence endemic areas,’ she told the diplomats.
The district administrations have started distributing relief to the affected families and households including those of the Hindu minorities.
“We believe that the strongest firewall against the Jamaat-Shibir violence has been built by our youth at the Projonmo Chattar in Shahbagh. Their peaceful rallies and demonstrations have stood in sharp anti-thesis and rejection to the path of violence, murder, arson and vandalism chosen by Jamaat-Shibir and their allies,” Dipu Moni said.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina outlines grassroots committees

BANGLADESH NEWS
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina yesterday directed the cabinet secretary to start forming “Terrorism Resistance Committee” in each district, upazila and union in consultation with the deputy commissioners (DC) to combat violence and killings by Jamaat-Shibir men.
Hasina, also chief of the ruling Awami League, asked her party leaders and workers in each area to help the committee in saving  lives and properties of people by giving it the names and addresses of Jamaat-Shibir men involved in killings, arson and vandalism.
Addressing a discussion meeting at Bangabandhu International Conference Centre in the capital, the prime minister said imams, religious scholars, people’s representatives and professionals would be on the committee.
The AL organised the discussion to mark the historic March 7.
The premier said Jamaat-Shibir men are killing law enforcers, AL leaders and workers, setting fire to public and private properties and resorting to vandalism across the country.  “You [Jamaat-Shibir] are burning people’s houses and businesses. You also have houses, families and businesses. If people become furious and start setting fire and resort to vandalism, where will you [Jamaat-Shibir] go?” she asked.
“We don’t believe in violence. But [don't think] you will kill police and general people, and we will sit back and look on silently. We are not that weak,” she said amid slogans from the party men.
Blaming leader of the opposition and BNP Chairperson Khaleda Zia for all the killings and vandalism in the country, Hasina asked her to stop trying to save the war criminals by doing all this.
The premier asked the members of Islami Chhatra Shibir, student wing of Jamaat-e-Islami, why do they give their lives to protect those who committed crimes against humanity during the Liberation War in 1971?
She asserted that the trial of war criminals will continue, and none can stop it.
The AL chief also asked the Jamaat-Shibir men which religion they follow since they set fire to prayer mats, attacked mosques and temples and humiliated imams.
The premier urged the people to unitedly resist all this.
In his speech, AL General Secretary Syed Ashraful Islam asked the party rank and file to make all out preparations to face any situation in the country.
“We all will have to remain alert so that another 15 August [when Bangabandhu was murdered along with most of his family members in 1975] does not take place in the country. This is time to stand united firmly,” he said.
AL Presidium Member Syeda Sajeda Chowdhury chaired the discussion.  Others who spoke included party leaders Matia Chowdhury, Sheikh Fazlul Karim Selim, Mohammad Nasim, Mahbubul Alam Hanif, Dipu Moni, Jahangir Kabir Nanak and Mofazzal Hossain Chowdhury Maya.

Bangladesh 4 women BNP MPs released hours into arrest

BANGLADESH NEWS
Pickets vandalised and set fire to several vehicles and blasted cocktails in different parts of Dhaka to enforce a daylong hartal (shutdown) called by main opposition BNP (Bangladesh Nationalist Party) and its key ally Jamaat-e-Islami.
Number of vehicles on Dhaka streets however was more than the previous shutdowns though very few private cars were seen plying the city streets. Rickshaws were seen plying on almost all of the thoroughfares.
Despite pre-hartal violence the previous evening, people of different walks of life came out to the streets on Thursday to attend their offices.
Garment factories and other businesses in the city remained open. Most of the shops kept their shutters down in the morning.
Some schools and colleges remained open defying the hartal. But presence of students was very thin.
NAYAPALTAN
Four BNP lawmakers including Ashfia Ashrafi Papia and Shammi Akhter were detained from in front of the party’s Nayapaltan central office around 10:30am.
Police picked them up and took them to the office of Detective Branch of police on Minto Road, said Mehedi Hassan, additional deputy commissioner, Motijheel Zone.
Two other lawmakers are Rasheda Begum Hira and Rehana Akhter Ranu.
The ADC said the lawmakers started demonstration sitting on the road around 10:15am after they found the main gate of the party office locked from inside.
Police asked them to free the road as their sit-in was disturbing vehicular movements in the area, he said.
As they continued their demonstration defying police request, the law enforcers picked them up 15 minutes later, he added.
Shammi started brawling with policemen when they were pushed inside the police microbus. She fell off the vehicle along with a lady constable from the running microbus.
Constable Sharifa was sent to Rajarbagh Police Lines Hospital.
Soon after the detention, Opposition Chief Whip Zainul Abdin Farroque talked to media and criticised the police action.
The four were released around 6:15pm, Farroque told in the evening.
Two cocktails were exploded around 12:30pm near Jonaki Cinema Hall at Paltan.

SHAHBAGH
Two youths riding a motorcycle threw two cocktails near Ruposhi Bangla hotel around 1:15pm.
Policemen posted there fired rubber bullets at the attackers but missed to hit the targets, said a police sergeant, Amin (full name was not available immediately).
UTTARA
Pickets set fire to a stationed bus in Uttara House Building area around 8:00am.
The bus was damaged partially before firefighters from Tongi Fire Station rushed the spot and put out the blaze.
SHANIR AKHRA
A bus was vandalised near Saddam Market around 6:15am.
Activists of Islami Chhatra Shibir, a pro-Jamaat organisation, blasted four cocktails in the area around 7:00am.
JATRABARI
Pro-hartal activists vandalised a human hauler (leguna) at Bibir Bagicha in Jatrabari around 6:30am.
BACKGROUND
BNP and Jamaat declared the hartal protesting what it said Wednesday’s attacks on it leaders and activists by armed ruling party men and police brutality.
Activists of Jamaat-e-Islami and its student wing, Islami Chhatra Shibir attacked law enforcers guarding a BNP rally in the capital with homemade bombs and forced them to retaliate, spoiling the rally and resulting in a clash that left around 70 people injured.
It is the second hartal of BNP in last three days. The main opposition enforced a hartal on Tuesday to protest against what it said the deaths in February 28’s fierce clashes between law enforcers and rioting Jamaat-Shibir men.
Earlier, Jamaat, observed a 48-hour hartal till Monday to protest against the death penalty for its Nayeb-e-Ameer Delawar Hossain Sayedee for his crimes against humanity during the Liberation War in 1971.

Bangladesh Economy reels from hartals

BANGLADESH NEWS
In a modest assumption, 15 days of shutdown have cost the economy the equivalent of $3 billion, a figure that could well have financed the construction of the Padma bridge.
The costs do not take into account the brutal killing of people and damage to property.
Since December last year, the country has witnessed exactly 15 days of hartals — each day causing a loss of around $200 million, by one estimate.
The estimated annual average cost of hartals is between 3 percent and 4 percent of the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) — now around $110 billion.
These costs include foregone earnings and lost employment and output, as well as long-term impacts due to reduced savings, indebtedness, capital losses and reduced profitability for businesses.
One of the most serious aspects of damage caused is the negative image costs of hartals in deterring foreign investors from making their way into the country, making Bangladesh increasingly less able to compete with regional competitors.
Strikes also impose non-economic costs on people, including considerable psychological stress and a sense of personal insecurity.
A study conducted earlier by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and rough estimates by International Chamber of Commerce Bangladesh reveal these shocking figures and impacts.
This is the broader picture, but a farmer or a day labourer or a bus conductor might be least bothered about these figures and estimates. For them, every day is a struggle to earn their living and keep their heads above the water.
“I had no income in the last three/four days,” said Mohammad Ridoy, a teenaged bus conductor.
The owner did not operate the bus fearing damage and torching by picketers, said Ridoy, who earns around Tk 200 on a usual day.
The recent spate of hartals was unleashed by the Jamaat-e-Islami, protesting the verdict of the death penalty to one of its leaders — Delwar Hossain Sayedee — for war crimes he committed in 1971.
The BNP-led 18-party opposition alliance enforced yesterday’s strike in protest against what it said attacks by armed ruling party men and police on its leaders.
Ahsan Mansur, executive director of Policy Research Institute, a research organisation, said no systematic study had been done on the impacts of a shutdown on the economy.
But citing the recent strikes and the UNDP study, he said the nature of cost of hartals and its impact assessment had to be redone.
Mansur said the effect of recent shutdowns was higher than in the past because of a disruption in road and rail communication, and fear of insecurity among people as also a lack of buying spirit.
“The recent hartals are much more damaging because the economy today is more integrated,” said Mansur, citing the fact that goods-laden trucks could not ply on roads even at night amid fears of damage.
Damage to rail tracks by picketers also affected public movement and transport of goods. “The cost becomes very high if trucks cannot move even at night,” said Ahsan.
“So the impact is not limited to shipment of export consignments only. It has also hurt farmers who send vegetables, fish and other agricultural goods to urban areas,” he said.
Disruption in communication also takes a toll on industries that cater to the domestic market. Products are piling up at their warehouses, he said.
A feeling of insecurity have affected domestic demand. “Businesses keep shops and offices open. But customers don’t come,” Mansur said.
However, Akbar Ali Khan, a former adviser to the caretaker government, finds the estimates by the UNDP ‘highly blown up’.
The static losses of hartal per year are likely to be in the range of 0.5 percent to 1 percent of the GDP, he said
“Particularly, the losses resulting from strikes are compensated by private sector by substituting holidays as workings days and by working secretly during strike,” Khan said.
Khondaker Golam Moazzem, additional director (research) of the Centre for Policy Dialogue, said hartal impacts the economy as a whole. But the impacts on all sectors and all regions are not equal. So the overall effect may not be as high as it is perceived.”
“But the cost of economy would be higher for a prolonged hartal,” he said.
IMPACT ON INDUSTRIES AND TRADE
“Hartal affects the entire production and supply chain. We had to cut production to avoid congestion at warehouses,” said Asif Iqbal, executive director (marketing) of Meghna Group of Industries, a commodity processor.
Annisul Huq, a former president of the Federation of Bangladesh Chambers of Commerce and Industry, said the recent incessant shutdown affected production in his apparel factories as all workers could not attend work.
“We have to ship export consignments regularly. But we could not send clothes for shipment in the last five days,” said Huq, also a former president of Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association.
“One of the trucks carrying apparel items was torched. It was on the way to the Chittagong Port for shipment. The rest two trucks escaped the violence during the hartal,” he said.
Almost all the products, valued at $1.68 lakh, were burned, said Huq, who holds stakes in Mohammadi Group, a garment manufacturer.
“The major loss is the damage to our image abroad,” said Fazlul Hoque, a former president of Bangladesh Knitwear Manufacturers and Exporters Association.
At Chittagong Port, the incessant shutdown caused a dip in delivery of imported products, forcing importers to count huge losses for overstay of their imported goods in the port yards.
The daily delivery of import containers slumped to 200 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs) due to shutdown, from nearly 1,500 TEUs of containers on normal days.
Khurram Naieem, a clearing and forwarding (C&F) agent, said one of his Dhaka-based clients had to pay more than $250 as demurrage to the port authority.
He had to count extra Tk 4,000 for each of 20 trucks to transport the goods to Dhaka, he added.
FARMERS GET LOW PRICES
Torikul Islam, a farmer in Jessore, said he had stopped selling potatoes since Sunday as middlemen were offering low prices, citing a lack of transport movement.
“We got low prices for vegetables such as beans and gourds as the number of wholesalers was low in the market,” said Mohammad Shahbuddin, a farmer in Narsingdi.
“The quality of vegetables also falls unless we harvest in time,” he said.
PRICES GO UP IN CITIES
The prices of essential commodities also went up due to disruption in the supply chain. The prices of onions, potatoes and some vegetables edged up amid inadequate supply, according to Trading Corporation of Bangladesh.
Street vendors, hawkers and roadside retail shops also registered low sales.
Jahangir Alam, who sells cigarettes, betel leaves and candies on a footpath near Farmgate, said his sales drop to Tk 900 a day during hartal, from Tk 1,200 on a normal day.
“I do not support hartal. Low sales have eroded my income,” he said.