Tuesday, April 17, 2012

After Suranjit, BNP Now Wants Govt Out


DHAKA NEWS

Dhaka, Apr 16  After the resignation of railway minister Suranjit Sengupta, now BNP has demanded ouster of the government.

Party's acting secretary general Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir made the demand while reacting to Suranjit's resignation on Monday following his aide's alleged involvement in the cash scandal.

"The World Bank has suspended fund for the Padma bridge project for corruption in it. Parliamentary standing committee alleged corruption in Biman. Corruption is in every ministry.

"Suranjit's resignation has proved that the government's whole set-up has become corrupt. So we want the government to go immediately," Alamgir said.

Suranjit had been under pressure since Tk 7 million unaccounted-for cash was recovered from a car carrying his assistant personal secretary Omar Faruq and two top railways officials last week.

Although the minister had said he would not quit on BNP's demand, he became the second to resign during the Awami League's current tenure.

Speaking to reporters at BNP chairperson Khaleda Zia's Gulshan office, Alamgir said they cannot understand why prime minister Sheikh Hasina did not shielded Suranjit 'like Syed Abul Hossain', who was transferred from the communications ministry to the information and communication technology ministry following charges of corruption against him.

He also said proper probe into the cash scandal is unlikely as Surnajit's APS Faruq and the driver of the car are traceless.   

Aid Helps More Children Reach Five: Report


BANGLADESH NEWS

Four million more children in the world including Bangladeshi a year are living beyond their fifth birthday than in 1990, a new report for Save the Children and Unicef has found.

Research by the Overseas Development Institute shows that aid is a key factor in improving children's well-being around the world.

It says economic growth and good government policies also help improve their life-chances.

Children in Brazil, Bangladesh and Vietnam have made great improvements.

The report for Save the Children and the UN children's charity Unicef found that:
In the decade to 2009, 56 million more children worldwide were going to school than previously.

In Sub-Suharan Africa the countries which received the most aid saw children making the most progress.

Stunted mental and physical development as a result of malnutrition dropped by more than a quarter between 1990 and 2008.
131 countries now have immunisation coverage of more than 90% for diphtheria, tetanus and major preventable diseases such as measles, compared to 63 in 1990

The percentage of people living on less than $1.25 a day (£0.79) has fallen from 45% in 1990 to 27% in 2005, although it increased in some unstable areas such as Central Asia and the Caucasus.

The report identified six key influences on the improvements seen over the past two decades: international aid; commitment and leadership from national governments; social investment and economic growth; well-planned programmes aimed at the most marginalised groups; and technology and innovation.

But Save the Children says it is hard to show the exact impact of aid on its own, because it generally works best when used alongside good governance and economic growth.

"Where funding gaps exist, for example for primary education or child health, aid can make all the difference," said Save the Children's Chief Executive Justin Forsyth.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina Pays Homage to Bangabandhu


DHAKA NEWS

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina Tuesday morning paid rich tributes to Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman by placing a wreath at his portrait in front of Bangabandhu Memorial Museum at Dhanmondi in the capital on the occasion of historic Mujibnagar Day.

After laying the wreath, the PM stood in solemn silence for some time as a mark of respect to the memory of Bangabandhu, the architect of the independence.

Flanked by central leaders of the party, Hasina, also the president of Bangladesh Awami League, placed another wreath at the portrait of Bangabandhu in front of Bangabandhu Memorial Museum on behalf of her party.

Deputy Leader in Parliament Syeda Sajeda Chowdhury, Awami League Advisory Council Member Amir Hossain Amu, presidium members Begum Matia Chowdhury, Dr Mohiuddin Khan Alamgir, Advocate Sahara Khatun, Advocate Yusuf Hossain Humayun and Satish Chandra Roy; PM's Adviser Dr Syed Modasser Ali, Shipping Minister Shajahan Khan, State Minister for Home Advocate Shamsul Haque Tuku and State Minister for Housing and Public
Works Advocate Abdul Mannan Khan were present, among others.

Besides, AL Organising Secretaries AFM Bahauddin Nasim,
Ahmed Hossain and Misbahuddin Siraj, parliament members and other central leaders of the party and its associate organisations were present on the occasion.

Later, the leaders of AL's associate bodies including Jubo League, Chhatra League, Mohila Awami League, Jubo Mohila League, Swechchhasebak League, Sramik League and Krishak League laid wreaths at the portrait of Bangabandhu.

On this day in 1971, Bangladesh's first government in exile was formed at the Baidyanathtola mango grove in Meherpur, the then Kushtia.

The place was later renamed Mujibnagar in tribute to Bangabandhu who had been declared as the president of the government-in-exile.

Syed Nazrul Islam was appointed as acting president in the absence of Bangabandhu.

Tajuddin Ahmad was appointed as the first prime minister, while Khandaker Moshtaq Ahmed, Captain M Mansur Ali and AHM Quamaruzzaman were made cabinet members.

The successful leadership of the core cabinet steered the Liberation War to the victory on December 16 that year.

Suranjit Shown The DooR


DHAKA NEWS

Nearly five months into his taking over as railway minister, Suranjit Sengupta resigned yesterday on the prime minister's instructions the night before, following the midnight recovery of Tk 70 lakh from the microbus of his close aide.
The money had allegedly been collected as bribe from railway job seekers.
“At the meeting with the prime minister on Sunday night, I told her that I wanted to relieve myself of the charge of the railway ministry, and she happily accepted it,” a pale-looking Suranjit told a press briefing at the Rail Bhaban yesterday afternoon.
He said he had decided to step down taking full responsibility for scandal surrounding the cash haul. “As a minister, I'm responsible for all good and bad things in my ministry.”
Only a couple of days ago, he had said he would not quit. Since the beginning of the cash haul affair from his assistant personal secretary's (APS) microbus on the night of April 9, he strongly defended his aide by saying he would not take action against the APS until the latter had been found guilty.
He also said the vehicle with the money was not heading for his Jigatola residence in the capital, contrary to the claims of the APS and two other railway officials travelling in the microbus.
But then, the Sunday night meeting with Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina led to a change of mind in him. Sources at the Prime Minister's Office told The Daily Star that Suranjit got a "clear signal" from the one-to-one meeting with the PM that he was no more expected to head the ministry.
Suranjit, who has a long 55-year political career, told the press that he would also stay away from politics until he came “clear” through investigation, terming it a "break" in his political career.
“I made the decision for the sake of a fair investigation and to set an example, acting beyond the existing practice, and to uphold democracy,” an embattled Suranjit told a large crowd of journalists who gathered at the Rail Bhaban following hints that he might step down.
The seven-time parliamentarian from Sunamganj in the northeast region also hoped that the “truth” would emerge through the inquiry.
Earlier in the morning, Suranjit skipped the regular cabinet meeting. He went to his Jatiya Sangsad Bhaban office and prepared a draft which he read out at the briefing.
He went to the railway ministry around 12:45pm on a vehicle flying the national flag. But after the announcement of his resignation, he left the ministry in the same car without the national flag at 3:15pm.
Before leaving, he had a farewell meeting with the officials and employees of the ministry and exchanged greetings with them.
Suranjit, who had originally been left out of the cabinet after the general elections of December 2008 apparently because of his "compromising" role during the 2007-08 military-backed caretaker government, finally got a berth in the newly-formed rail ministry in December last year, about three years into the government's tenure.
After taking office, he appeared to be a crusader against corruption in the railway and his vow to "catch the black cat from the bag" made such a bang that his downfall came almost like a whimper, an absolute anti-climax.
And the beginning of the end of his short ministerial career was signalled when the driver of his APS swerved the vehicle into the BGB headquarters in Pilkhana on the night of April 9 and raised an alarm about the APS and two other railway officials -- the now-suspended general manager (East) Yusuf Ali Mirdha, and Dhaka Division security chief Enamul Huq -- carrying Tk 70 lakh in bribe money.
The money is said to be part of the bribe taken recently from job seekers for about 7,000 posts in the railway.
In a belated reaction, Suranjit on Sunday sacked the APS and suspended the GM and the security chief.
He also formed two committees to probe the scandal. But both the committees came under question as they were staffed by his personal secretary, a railway ministry joint secretary and the director general of railway, which is also under the ministry.
THE BRIEFING
The press briefing was scheduled to begin at 12:00noon but it began around 1:30pm.
At the briefing, Suranjit said he did not want to be a liability to his party, the government or the prime minister.
“Many cling on to power despite criticism. But I've made my decision going above the country's traditional politics. It'll brighten the image of the prime minister, my party and the government,” he said.
He said a serious debate had surfaced centring on the April 9 incident. “Since my APS and an important official were involved in the incident, the ministry must take responsibility for it.”
“I want to relieve myself from the ministry by taking responsibility for my failure as a minister, which has not been the culture in the 40-year history of Bangladesh,” Suranjit said, adding he had been facing challenges since his childhood.
“I created history during my long political career. But today I am facing a conflict. I have a tough time ahead.”
He went on, “I want to say with regret that in the last 40 years of democracy, we've only enjoyed the advantages of democracy, but nobody came forward to offer sacrifices when democracy was in crisis. Today, I'm facing a challenge like that.”
He added that he wanted to set a "rare example" in the political arena of Bangladesh by making such a decision.
Explaining his position since the cash haul, Suranjit said he had first formed two committees to investigate the matter, sacked his APS and suspended two railway officials.
“I also sent all documents of my APS to the ACC. But questions were raised by the media, civil society and leaders of my party that the probe would not be free of influence if I remained minister,” he said.
“I'll prove my innocence and return to politics. I'm giving a pause in politics.”
Suranjit said democracy in the country had time and again been disrupted. “The enemies of democracy are conspiring through taking advantage of the present situation. They are not plotting against an individual, but against the democratic system.”
In the same way, a political party is trying to thwart the country's hard-earned parliamentary democracy, he said.
On his performance, Suranjit said he had tried his best to pull up the dying railway sector after the prime minister had split the communications ministry to create the railway ministry and given him charge of the new ministry.
“The present government undertook projects worth thousands of crores of taka to give new life to the ministry through expansion,” he added.