Monday, March 25, 2013

BNP MP Salauddin Quader Chowdhury’s:ICT prosecutor, judge in verbal spat

BANGLADESH NEWS
Prosecutor Zead-Al-Malum and tribunal Justice Jahangir Hossain had a heated exchanged that eventually came to a stop with the intervention of the tribunal Chairman Justice ATM Fazle Kabir.
One of the Jamaat-e-Islami defence counsels, Tajul Islam, prayed that his senior Abdur Razzaq would deal with the final part of closing argument in the
war crimes case against Jamaat guru Ghulam Azam on Wednesday.
The three-judge International Crimes Tribunal-1 is in the midst of hearing the closing arguments in the Azam case and has indicated that it wants to get through it sooner rather than later.
Tajul Islam told the tribunal, set up to try crimes against humanity during the 1971 Liberation War, that senior defence counsel Mizanul Islam would argue through the day and conclude his part.
He also prayed on behalf of BNP MP Salauddin Quader Chowdhury’s lawyer, who was present at the court, that witness cross-examination be adjourned for the day and kept for Monday.
The tribunal appeared to have taken the prayer well but Prosecutor Zead-Al-Malum went up to oppose it. He said that the prosecution was being deprived of justice because of such delays where the witnesses had to stay in Dhaka, away from their homes, for weeks together. “This seriously prejudices our case.”
During his prayer, he mentioned Salauddin Quader Chowdhury, also indicted for war crimes, as ‘Saka’, after the first two initials of the politician’s name in Bengali, which Chowdhury disapproves of very strongly.
Chowdhury’s lawyer Ahsanul Huq stood up to protest immediately and said he had strong objections to the prosecutor calling his client ‘Saka’.
When the tribunal told the prosecutor to refrain from calling the accused in any name other than the real one, the prosecutor complained, “But they call me a lot of things inside the court and outside, my lord.”
On a previous occasion, when Salauddin Quader was present and objected in habitually voluble manner, the prosecutor had told the court, “But he calls me ‘Halum’, my lord.”
Halum is the Bengali word for the growl of tigers and lions, used mostly with children.
Justice Jahangir Hossain explained that the prosecutor should not be calling the accused in any other name. “Please be careful not to repeat it.”
The prosecutor said, “Alright I have said ‘Sorry’,” and continued on a similar vein speaking on how he faced harassment at the hands of Salauddin Quader Chowdhury and his defence.
Justice Jahangir Hossain had to repeat himself to put a stop to it, and this time he did so loudly. “This should not be repeated!”
The prosecutor stopped for a second and took on a different tone. “Why can’t you stand me, my lord? You rebuke me right and left.”
Justice Hossain said, “Why would I do that? What could possibly be my benefit?!”
The prosecutor insisted that the judge was harsh on him all the time.
Justice Hossain said, “What are you saying? It is not you in particular, I cautioned everyone here that this should not be repeated.”
Prosecutor Malum kept protesting and insisted that the judge would come down heavily upon him in particular all the time.
Tribunal Chairman, Justice Fazle Kabir intervened at this point. “You may be aggrieved Mr Malum. But you cannot discuss this in the open court.”
This put a stop to the prosecutor complaining and he moved on to his argument.
The tribunal granted the defence prayer and adjourned Salauddin Quader Chowdhury’s case for the day and asked the defence counsel to begin.
Mizanul Islam went through his submissions through the day drawing the tribunal’s attention to the investigator’s cross-examination where he admitted that he had no idea how ‘auxiliary forces’ were run and maintained.
The defence lawyer stressed upon this point since Ghulam Azam, as head of Jamaat’s East Pakistan (that later became Bangladesh) in 1971, is being held accountable for the actions of auxiliary forces said to have been mobilised by his party.
The defence counsel concluded his arguments saying that charges against his client were laughable and the evidence contradicted one another.
Jamaat Guru in ICT-1
On Dec 12, 2011, the prosecution brought a 52-point charter of charges against Azam and appealed for his arrest. Later, following the tribunal order, charges were re-arranged and presented to the tribunal on Jan 5. There are 61 counts under five charges against the former Jamaat leader.
He was produced before the tribunal on Jan 11 and sent to jail the same day. Since that evening, the 90-year old former Carmichael College professor has been kept at the prison cell of the Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University for better treatment considering his delicate health.
Ghulam Azam’s indictment hearing began on Feb 15 and the court charged him on May 13.
A former chief of Jamaat-e-Islami, arguably the largest Islamist organisation in the subcontinent, Azam is allegedly among the key people who pioneered anti-liberation efforts in 1971 colluding with the Pakistani military junta of that time.
He is widely perceived to have been among core group of right-wing supporters of the Pakistani Army, who came out strongly in support of a united Pakistan.
Ghulam Azam, then chief of Jamaat, was instrumental in setting up the infamous Peace Committee at the national level. The Razakars, an auxiliary force set up mainly to actively thwart the liberation forces, are said to have been mobilised through the Peace Committees across Bangladesh.
Among the most notorious vigilante militia are the Al Badr, whose membership is said to have been mainly dominated by the Jamaat's student wing called the Islami Chhatra Sangha at that time.
The Al Badr is alleged to have spearheaded execution of the intellectual elites of Bangladesh just days before the victory on Dec 16, 1971.
Azam also spoke in favour of Pakistan to the Middle Eastern countries during the war, according to the prosecution.
He stayed in London for seven years after 1971 and returned to Bangladesh in 1978 during BNP founder Ziaur Rahman's rule. Having led Jamaat for long, Azam retired from active politics in 1999.
His party remains a key ally of the main opposition BNP. Two Jamaat leaders, also behind bars for war crimes charges, have even served as ministers during the BNP's last tenure in government between 2001 and 2006, when Azam's party was part of the ruling coalition.
Azam was indicted on five charges — 61 counts — including incitement, conspiracy, planning and complicity on May 13, 2012 

I was out of the country when Twaki went Missing:Awami League MP Shamim Osman

BANGLADESH NEWS
Twaki , son of Narayanganj’s ‘Ganajagaran Mancha’ convener Rafiur Rabbi was found dead in a canal in Narayanganj’s Charargop area on Mar 8, two days after he went missing.
The ruling party MP made the statement at a press brief under the banner ‘Swacheton Nagarik Shomaj’ on Sunday.
He said, “I was out of the country when Twaki went missing and later when his body was found. So the allegation of my active involvement in his murder can never be true.”
He said this alone proves that he and his son Ayon Osman have been wrongly accused of Twaki’s murder, “in an attempt to save the real killers.”
“I will take legal action if the charges against me are not withdrawn in the next 48 hours.”
This is the second press brief by Shamim Osman after Twaki’s death, the first one being on Mar 16 at Hira Mahal, his residence in Chashara.
Shamim Osman held up his passport during Sunday’s press brief saying, “this has stamps that can prove my departure and return.”
The Awami League leader however did not mention the country where he was visiting.
Rafiur Rabbi, father of the murdered teenager Tanvir Mohammad Twaki filed a written complaint with the police on Mar 20 accusing seven people, including Shamim Osman and his son Ayon Osman, for their active involvement in his son’s murder.
Shamim Osman, however, claimed that he and the others were being implicated to ‘hide the real killers and to mislead the case’.
SP Syed Nurul Islam told reporters that the complaint of Rabbi against all, including Shamim Osman, would be looked into.
In his earlier press meet at Chashara, the Awami League MP criticised Communist Party of Bangladesh President Mujahidul Islam Selim for the comments he made regarding his involvement in the murder.
He also said that Selina Hayat Ivy, Mayor of Narayanganj should not have given a statement accusing him of Twaki’s murder.
The body of the 17-year-old A-Level student of the ABC International School was recovered from the bank of the Shitalakkhya River on Mar 8, two days after he went missing.

Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission (BTRC) threatens amarblog.com

BANGLADESH NEWS
The telecom watchdog clarified its legal authorities in a media statement, two days after the blog refused to provide it with information it had earlier sought.
BTRC on Thursday sent a letter to amarblog.com asking for information about six of its bloggers. But amarblog.com refused to do so and talked about providing those bloggers with legal assistance.
”As per Bangladesh Telecommunication Control Act, BTRC can ask for information from anyone having telecommunication license or any Internet user to ensure proper usage of information technology,” BTRC said in the statement.
It also said according to law, not providing it with the sought information was a punishable crime.
The government has already formed a committee in wake of the recent allegations against some blogs and Facebook pages that they were hurting people’s religious feeling misusing social networking sites. The committee will recommend taking actions against those involved in such acts.
On Feb 20, BTRC closed 12 blogs and Facebook pages including ‘Sonar Bangla’ and ‘Basher Kella’ reportedly run by people tied to Jamaat-e-Islami and its student wing over last few days.
The closure by the BTRC’s Computer Security Incident Response Team came as those blogs and pages had been accused of spreading hatred and hurting religious sentiment of the people.
The BTRC formed the security response team on Jan 25 last year and launched a special drive to thwart cyber crimes to ensure national security.
The team started receiving complaints and suggestions through email: contact@csirt.gov.bd to thwart cyber crime from Apr 22 the same year.
The government on May 29, 2010 temporarily blocked access to Facebook following the arrest of a youth for uploading satiric images of some leading politicians including the Prime Minister and leader of the opposition.

Malaysian jobs Registration for women starts Apr 7

BANGLADESH NEWS
Online registration of female workers for foreign jobs will begin on April 7 across the country.
The move comes after the government in January successfully ended registration of male workers for Malaysian jobs.
Considering the demand for female workers in different Asian and Middle- Eastern countries, the government has decided to prepare a database of qualified female workers, Khandaker Mosharraf Hossain, minister for expatriates welfare and overseas employment, said yesterday.
“We want to register the names of prospective female workers who will work abroad as domestic helps, caregivers, garment workers, cleaners and also in other professions,” he told a press conference at his ministry office.
The registration in Rajshahi, Rangpur and Sylhet divisions will commence on April 7 and end on April 11.
Females from Khulna and Chittagong divisions will register their names on April 12-16, while those from Dhaka and Barisal divisions will be registered on April 17-21.
Jobseekers will register at information service centres at union and ward levels between 9:00am and 5:00pm every day.
The minimum salary for a female worker in Singapore and Hong Kong will be Tk 40,000, while the amount will be Tk 15,000 for the workers in the Middle East, mentioned Mosharraf.
The migration costs, added the minister, will be between Tk 20,000 and 30,000 each. Probashi Kalyan Bank will finance the costs for the selected workers, which will be adjusted later from their (workers’) monthly wages.
Minimum educational qualification for female workers in Singapore and Hong Kong is Secondary School Certificate, while the requirement is Junior School Certificate for the Middle-Eastern countries.
The workers should be aged between 25 and 45.
After preliminary selection, the jobseekers will undergo two months’ training on language, culture and work pattern.
The minister said the government presently does not have any specific demand for workers from any country. But it is in talks with Hong Kong, Jordan, Bahrain and some other countries to send trained female workers there.
Regarding the workers’ protection, he said Bangladesh and the recruiting countries will look after the safety of female workers.
An eight-member Saudi Arabian delegation will reach Dhaka on March 30 to discuss reopening its job market to Bangladeshi workers, noted Mosharraf.
Begum Shamsun Nahar, director of Bureau of Manpower, Employment and Training, said they were planning to send 72 domestic helps to Hong Kong by the end of next month.

Prosecution starts closing arguments:Jamaat-e-Islami Assistant Secretary General Muhammad Kamaruzzaman

BANGLADESH NEWS
The prosecution yesterday started placing their closing arguments in the war crimes case against Jamaat-e-Islami Assistant Secretary General Muhammad Kamaruzzaman.
Placing a brief argument, chief prosecutor Ghulam Arief Tipoo said Kamaruzzaman was the “chief organiser of Al-Badr force” in greater Mymensingh during the Liberation War and was “utterly responsible” for the crimes committed against the people.
The three-member International Crimes Tribunal-2 led by Justice Obaidul Hassan with members Justice Md Mozibur Rahman Miah and Judge M Shahinur Islam heard the argument before adjourning the proceeding until today.
The tribunal as per relevant laws will set a date for delivering the verdict after hearing the closing arguments from both the prosecution and the defence.
Earlier, Abdur Rahim, fifth and last defence witness in the case, gave his five-minute testimony.
Recalling Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, four national leaders and martyrs of the Liberation War, Tipoo placed his 12-minute arguments.
He said some local aides who were mainly members of fanatic and right-wing political parties such as Jamaat-e-Islami, Muslim League and PDP (Pakistan Democratic Party) conspired and collaborated with the Pakistani army and executed their plans during the Liberation War.
“Among them, Jamaat-e-Islami and its then student wing Islami Chhatra Sangha, pursuant to the plans and policies of the Pakistani soulless regime, substantially contributed, facilitated and committed international crimes,” he added.
The prosecutor said the crimes, which were committed during the nine-month-long war, could not have taken place in such a  massive scale by an invading army without the active involvement of Jamaat and Chhatra Sangha.
“The [then] ameer of Jamaat-e-Islami Prof Ghulam Azam along with other fanatic and rightist leaders like this present accused [Kamaruzzaman] formed Peace Committee, Razakar, Al-Badr and Al-Shams, which acted as auxiliary forces to help the Pakistani occupation army in order to execute the same plans and policies,” he argued.
Kamaruzzaman had regular cooperation with the occupation army of Mymensingh, Jamalpur and Sherpur, said Tipoo, adding that he was one of those who “substantially contributed and facilitated” in the field level commission of the crimes in association with the Pakistani army.
“He [Kamaruzzaman] was the chief organiser of Al-Badr force in greater Mymensingh area. He was utterly responsible for the crimes committed against innocent Bangalees people, who supported independence of Bangladesh,” he added.
He claimed the prosecution had been able to prove the charges brought against Kamaruzzaman beyond any shadow of reasonable doubts.
Later, prosecutor AKM Saiful Islam, during his submission, gave a description how and which Pakistani officers had gone to greater Mymensingh during the war.
Saiful said in the course of Pakistani military deployment, Major Riaz and Major Ayub were under the command of Brig Qadir in Mymensingh, Jamalpur and Sherpur and two prosecution witnesses had mentioned the major’s names in their testimonies.
“Muhammad Kamaruzzaman was the chief organiser of Al-Badr in Mymensingh, Jamalpur and Sherpur and was seen operating, supervising and planning various operations along with Major Riaz and Major Ayub,” he added.
Kamaruzzaman had founded a good number of army, training and torture camps for Razakar and Al-Badr throughout Mymensingh, Jamalpur and Sherpur, Saiful added.
“That’s how the accused contributed effectively, as a superior, to committing the offences defined under section 3 of the International Crimes (Tribunals) Act, 1973,” he added.
When the prosecutor wanted to place “lengthy” arguments on historical matters, the tribunal asked him to place arguments on factual matters.
“If you have lack of preparation, you can seek an adjournment for today. But you have to complete your arguments within three days including today [yesterday],” the tribunal told the prosecution.
Later, the tribunal adjourned the proceeding until today when the prosecution are set to place further arguments.
‘FREEDOM FIGHTER’ UNAWARE OF RAZAKAR, AL-BADR
Earlier in the day, Abdur Rahim, who claimed himself as a freedom fighter, gave his testimony as the fifth and last defence witness in the case against Kamaruzzaman.
During his five-minute testimony, the 69-year-old witness from Mymensingh said he was a member of a voluntary team in Mymensingh after the Liberation War and discharged duty as the general secretary of that team.
“During the Liberation War and after that when I was serving as a volunteer I never heard from anyone that there was a Razakar or Al-Badr member by the name of Kamaruzzaman in Mymensingh,” said Rahim.
During cross-examination, prosecutor Saiful Islam asked Rahim only four questions.
“Were there any pro-liberation or anti-liberation forces in 1971?” asked Saiful.
Rahim replied in the affirmative.
“Do you have a freedom fighter’s certificate?” Saiful asked.
“No,” replied Rahim.
“Do you know that Razakar and Al-Badr forces were formed during the Liberation War?” asked Saiful.
“I don’t know,” replied the ‘freedom fighter’.
“You have given false testimony supporting Muhammad Kamaruzzaman,” suggested Saiful.
“It is not true,” replied Rahim.
Kamaruzzaman, who was indicted on seven charges of crimes against humanity, was produced at the dock.
ICT-1
The defence of Ghulam Azam yesterday completed placing their arguments on facts and evidence submitted by the prosecution to the International Crimes Tribunal-1.
The defence placed the arguments for the sixth day yesterday and would place arguments on law points from Wednesday.
The three-member tribunal led by Justice ATM Fazle Kabir adjourned the proceeding until March 27.
Earlier, prosecutor Zead Al Malum distortedly pronounced the name of war crimes accused Salauddin Quader Chowdhury triggering a heated atmosphere at the courtroom.
The situation erupted when Azam’s counsel prayed to the tribunal that he would need the day for completing argument and prayed for an adjournment in the case against SQ Chowdhury until today.
The tribunal accepted his prayer.
At this point, Malum stood up and said, “The prosecution have an objection to the adjournment of Saka’s [SQ Chowdhury] case…”
Before he could say another word, SQ Chowdhury’s counsel raised objection to pronouncing his client’s name distortedly.
Member of the tribunal Justice Jahangir Hossain Selim told Malum, “It’s not right to call someone by distorted names.”
Malum replied, “It seems you don’t like me. Why do you admonish me for reasons and without reasons?”
“What are you talking about?” Justice Selim responded.
The tribunal chairman intervened and said, “What is going on? You may be aggrieved for some reasons but what are you saying in an open court?”
Justice Selim further said, “Do I have any benefit by admonishing you? How would you feel if you are also called by distorted name?”
The prosecution however offered their apology before the tribunal. Malum also said, “Sorry.”
Defence counsel Ahsanul Haque Hena yesterday filed a petition seeking police protection during shutdown and political programmes.
The tribunal fixed today for hearing on the petition.

Llegal Process to Bring war Crimes Charges Against the Jamaat-e-Islami by March 26:bigger network

BANGLADESH NEWS
As the Shahbagh movement enters its 49th day today, its organisers focus on building up new networks and strengthening the old ones so as to make the protests more democratic and inclusive.
They say they are already organising people at the grassroots level, and will soon come up with a detailed plan to this end.
The nonstop, peaceful mass movement began on February 5 in the capital’s Shahbagh intersection, demanding capital punishment to all war criminals. On February 21, organisers announced a six-point demand, including initiating the legal process to bring war crimes charges against the Jamaat-e-Islami by March 26.
At the February grand rally, the protesters also decided to hold rallies in different parts of the capital and other divisional cities to garner public support in favour of their demands.
About the demand for banning Jamaat, Maruf Rosul, a key organiser of the movement, said: “Before a party can be banned, its registration with the Election Commission has to be cancelled. A case filed in 2009 to cancel the Jamaat’s registration has recently been revived,”
According to him, the Jamaat, which actively opposed the country’s liberation from Pakistan in 1971, can be banned through any one of three ways: trial under the amended war crimes law, an executive order of the government or scrapping its registration.
“The third option is very complicated and time-consuming, although that is the path the government has chosen. We want to ask the government, ‘why not the first two options?’” Maruf
Imran H Sarker, spokesperson for the Gonojagoron Mancha, agrees. “We hope the government will take appropriate steps and support the mass demand.”
The protesters will be forced to announce tougher programmes if the government fails to take effective steps. At the same time, organisers are concentrating on expanding the movement. In the next phase, they will continue to spread the movement to different parts of the country, he adds.
So far, the organisers have failed to hold their pre-announced programmes in divisional cities. They even had to cancel their Chittagong rally on March 13 in the face of the radical Islamist group Hefazate Islam’s threat to resist the rally.
“We are determined to hold our first rally in Chittagong. But while we make preparations for that, we are reaching out to different stakeholders, including labour organisations, media houses, cultural and political groups at the same time,” says Imran.
Imran, convener of the Blogger and Online Activist Network, which initiated the Shahbagh movement, adds that the Shahbagh activists also want to form a cultural front of the movement. To this end, a stage has already been set up at the Shahbagh intersection, now also known as Projonmo Chattar.
“Since our movement is about a political issue, we need to maintain our presence on the streets. But because it is also an ideological issue, we need to turn it into a cultural movement.”
On a similar note, Badiuzzaman Shohag, president of Bangladesh Chhatra League, argues that greater attention needs to be given to the cultural front of the struggle.
“We will centre our programmes around different national days at various venues to inspire the people towards the cause,” he said.
SM Shuvo, president of Chhatra Union, maintains that the main focus is to successfully hold rallies in all seven divisions of the country.
“We are also continuing dialogues with cultural and political organisations, and we are initiating the process of bringing all the pro-liberation forces to the streets again,” he said.
Different political groups have already begun the process of mobilising their grassroots activists and supporters, said Bappaditya Basu, president of Bangladesh Chhatra Moitree.
Several teams of the Gonojagoron Mancha will also begin mobilising people in different districts soon, he said, adding that it was time to shift the focus of the movement from mass awareness to mass resistance.
According to Probir Shaha, president of Chhatra Federation, the movement will enter a new phase after the March 26 ultimatum.
The process of amending the International Crimes Tribunal Act and the revival of a case to cancel the Jamaat’s registration are the outcome of popular pressure, he said, adding that their next course of action would depend on how the government responded to their demands.
Asked if the organisers have managed to include diverse interest groups and individuals within the decision-making process, Imran said: “In the beginning we were a little sceptical about letting just about anyone in, for fear of infiltration by Jamaat-Shibir. So we included established organisations and groups with a clear pro-liberation stance in the decision-making process.”
But now the protesters are making efforts to include the opinions and concerns of a wider range of groups.
The organisers say they will hold meetings and dialogues with activists and supporters in different parts of the country to ensure that their opinions are reflected in the Gonojagoron Mancha programmes.
However, it is difficult, logistically and otherwise, at the moment to hold meetings on a large scale, they said, adding that they were trying to find a way to facilitate democratic participation of the protesters.

Dhaka Mirpur section-13 Blast kill two kids

BANGLADESH NEWS
They thought it was their plaything. They did not know it was death stuffed into a container wrapped in black and red duct tape.
With a child’s natural curiosity, seven-year-old Kulsum and her five-year-old niece Riya picked up the suspect package. Then just as they started toying with the container, it went off with a big bang.
The blast, which left two construction workers injured, occurred at a construction site in Mirpur in the capital yesterday.
The two girls died at Dhaka Medical College Hospital hours after they were taken there.
Police said they suspected the cocktail went off when the kids were playing at the construction site of a six-storey building at Mirpur section-13 in the afternoon.
The two kids might have mistaken the cocktail for a toy kept under some construction materials, Kazi Wazed Ali, officer-in-charge of Kafrul Police Station,
Police are yet to ascertain who kept the cocktail there or why.
The injured are Nur-e-Alam and Kawsar.
Nur-e-Alam told police that a few minutes before the explosion he saw the two kids playing and soon afterwards heard a loud explosion and saw black smoke. Hit in the abdomen, Nur-e-Alam found himself bleeding and the two kids lying on the ground.
Locals rushed to the spot and took the kids to a hospital in Mirpur. But as their condition deteriorated, the two were shifted to Dhaka Medical College Hospital.
Mosharraf Hossain, a neighbour, told this correspondent he heard a loud bang while passing by the building around 3:30pm.
The building has tenants in most of the flats from the first floor to fifth floor.
Kulsum and Riya lived with their parents on the building’s ground floor, surrounded by construction materials and rubble. Riya’s father, Riaz Hossain, works as a caretaker of the building.
Riya was admitted to a Brac school at Mirpur this year while Kulsum took admission in a local madrasa last year, said Riaz.
Kazi Wazed Ali said they had visited the spot and found splinters of cocktails, some scotch tape and a shopping bag near the staircase on the ground floor.

Tornado at Chinair village in Brahmanbaria:death toll now 23

BANGLADESH NEWS
The death toll from Friday’s tornado in Brahmanbaria rose to 23 after a teenage boy succumbed to his injuries yesterday afternoon.
Shubho, 14, from College Para in Chinair village, died at Comilla Medical College Hospital.
The twister left an eight-km trail of destruction in its path.
The authorities are working to rehabilitate the victims and so far put up 100 tents to accommodate 100 families, relocated 32 families to four primary schools, 10 families to a high school and 10 other families to a kindergarten school. The rest were seen roaming about in dire misery.
Another 400 tents would be set up by Monday, said Nur Mohammad Majumder, deputy commissioner of Brahmanbaria.
District administration provided each family with 20 to 30 kilograms of rice.
Voluntary bodies and individuals are providing the victims near the main roads and the town with cooked and dried foods, but the ones in remote areas remain dependent on only the rice given to them by the administration.
Six medical teams along with a 58-member team from the Army Medical Corps are providing treatment to the victims.
The government, meanwhile, has promised to provide each family with four bundles of corrugated iron sheets and Tk 9,000 so that they can rebuild their houses. Almost all have voiced their frustrations and anxieties, as they have received neither the funds nor the materials to construct roofs over their heads.
Many thronged Chinair Anjuman-ara-High School yesterday afternoon, demanding what was promised to them.
“We are not sure whether we will get the relief and if it will be distributed properly at all,” said Aleya Begum, 55, from Noyghar of Chinair village.
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina is scheduled to visit the tornado affected areas today. She will address a rally in Chinair village during her visit, said the DC.
Meanwhile, hundreds of curious people from different areas around Chinair flocked to the village to witness the destructive power of the tornado, which had torn off the roof of a building and had flung it 200 yards away

Pakistani rights activist:Friends of Liberation War Honour from Prime Minister Sheikh

BANGLADESH NEWS
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina yesterday said the forces defeated in the Liberation War were out to mar the process of war crimes trial with militancy and sparking off people’s religious sentiment.
The people of Bangladesh never accepted such design in the past and would not allow it in the future, as they are religious but not bigots, she said while speaking at a programme to honour friends of liberation of Bangladesh at Bangabandhu International Conference Centre in the capital yesterday.
“The spirit of the Liberation War always keeps them alert; they are committed to building a prosperous and non-communal Bangladesh free from hunger, poverty and illiteracy,” she added.
The government awarded 69 foreign friends with “Bangladesh Liberation War Honour” and “Friends of Liberation War Honour” for their outstanding contribution to the independence effort in 1971.
Hasina said, “Like your support in 1971, I am sure that we will get your support in building a non-communal poverty-free Bangladesh.”
Highlighting the progress made by Bangladesh, Hasina said, “Bangladesh is now a role model in terms of social and human resource development and considered as one of the star performers in alleviating poverty.”
The Awami League chief said Bangladesh stands 5th in terms of achieving long-term growth braving the global recession.
She expressed deep gratitude for the foreign friends’ invaluable contribution to the country’s Liberation War.
Some of the foreign friends presented Hasina books, some wrote letters to her, and some handed her letters from their near and dear ones who could not be at the programme yesterday.
The prime minister received them, opened the letters and books, and went through some.
Foreign Minister Dipu Moni, State Minister for Liberation War Affairs AB Tajul Islam also spoke at the programme while Cabinet Secretary M Musharraf Hossain Bhuiyan read out citations of the award recipients.
A one-minute silence was also observed in memory of late president Zillur Rahman. Hasina dedicated yesterday’s programme to the president.
Yesterday’s awardees included 43 friends from India, 13 from Pakistan, four from the USA, three from Nepal, two from Japan, and one each from the UK, Australia, Cuba and Sweden.
Prof Tomio Mizokami of Japan, who spoke on behalf of the award recipients, expressed gratitude towards the government of Bangladesh for recalling their contribution 42 years ago.
“I am so happy today. I did not think I’ll ever be honoured,” he said, adding that he would tell the people of Japan about this when he returns home.
Mizokami hoped that the friendly relations between Japan and Bangladesh would be strengthened further.
Bangladesh Liberation War Honour was given to Fidel Castro, former president of Cuba, and Lord Harold Wilson, former British prime minister.
Cuban ambassador to Dhaka Abelardo Cueto Sosa and Wilson’s son Prof Robin Wilson received the honour on their behalf.

Bangladesh’s History:Night of March 25, 1971

BANGLADESH NEWS
n Bangladesh’s history, indeed in the dark tales of time, the night of March 25, 1971 will remain noted for the ferocity with which the Pakistan army went after 75 million unarmed Bangalees of what had till then been Pakistan’s eastern province. It was a night when duplicity came full circle — from the military junta headed by General Yahya Khan, from his political accomplice Zulfikar Ali Bhutto.
On the pretext of negotiations with Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman on the issue of a transfer of power to the elected representatives of the people, the regime increased the strength of the army, in ammunition as well as manpower over a period of ten days. The eventual objective, as was revealed in the hour or so that remained before the day would pass into the next, was a crushing of Bangalee nationalism.
All through the day, the Awami League team to the tripartite talks involving the junta, the People’s Party and itself waited for a response to its latest proposals on a constitutional settlement from the regime. A spokesman of the junta had earlier promised to call the Awami League leadership, ostensibly to set up another meeting. The call never came.
As dusk fell, rumours began to abound about imminent military action against the province. For his part, Bangabandhu advised his party colleagues and everyone else who went to see him at his residence at 32 Dhanmondi to leave the city. He made it clear, though, that he was going to stay, for if he did not, the army would raze Dhaka to the ground. In the event, they were to do that bad job anyway.
At 7:30 in the evening, President Yahya Khan boarded a Pakistan International Airlines flight in absolute secrecy and took off for Karachi. Before stealthily going out of Dhaka, he instructed the army high command to commence operations against the Bangalees, but only after he had landed in Karachi. This message was passed on by General Tikka Khan, martial law administrator of East Pakistan, to Maj Gen Khadem Hossain Raja. “Khadem, it’s tonight,” said Tikka, referring to what would infamously become known as Operation Searchlight.
At 11:00pm, army units fanned out in different directions across the city. One headed for Dhaka University, where soldiers swooped on Jagannath Hall and the homes of teachers, shooting their way in and killing everyone they came across.
Another made its way to Dhanmondi, the clear objective being to take Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman into custody. Other units busied themselves destroying the Kali Mandir in the centre of the Race Course and the Central Shaheed Minar. Troops also went out in search of a number of senior Awami League leaders, almost all of whom escaped capture.
Contingents also went to the Rajarbagh police headquarters and the East Pakistan Rifles in Pilkhana.
As March 25 gave way to March 26, Dhaka was on fire. ZA Bhutto, from his suite in the Intercontinental Hotel, watched the offices of the radical pro-Bangalee nationalist newspaper The People burn. In Dhanmondi, Bangabandhu declared the independence of Bangladesh through wireless, a message that was soon passed on to MA Hannan, a prominent Awami League leader of Chittagong. Bangabandhu’s declaration read:
“This may be my last message. From today Bangladesh is independent. I call upon the people of Bangladesh, wherever you might be and with whatever you have, to resist the army of occupation to the last. Your fight must go on until the last soldier of the Pakistan occupation army is expelled from the soil of Bangladesh. Final victory is ours.”
Minutes after he made the declaration, Bangabandhu was arrested by the Pakistan army and driven away, to what was then an under-construction national assembly building in the Second Capital area (today’s Sher-e-Bangla Nagar). He was then moved to Adamjee College in the cantonment, where he spent the night, before being shifted to Flagstaff House. After three days there, he was flown to West Pakistan and put in solitary confinement in Mianwali jail.
The night between March 25 and March 26 was given over to unmitigated bloodletting by the Pakistan army. In that single night and well into the morning of March 27, the soldiers killed and pillaged. Thousands were to die.
Among those murdered were such respected academics as GC Dev Jyotirmoy Guhathakurta, badly wounded, would die three days later. Students at Jagannath Hall were killed and their bodies, at the orders of the soldiers, were dumped into a mass grave on the premises of the hall by their fellow students. And then those students too were shot. Bodies of Bangalees — rickshaw pullers, pedestrians and others — lay sprawled all over the city.
Terror was writ large across the land.

Army can’t sit idle:Opposition leader Khaleda Zia tells Bogra rally

BANGLADESH NEWS
Opposition leader Khaleda Zia yesterday said the army would not play the role of “a silent spectator while people are getting killed” and that it would “play its role in due time”.
She said members of the armed forces would not be picked for peacekeeping missions if there was unrest in Bangladesh. “But if there was no peace in Bangladesh, foreigners would then say that the army is not capable of maintaining peace in other countries.”
Speaking at a rally at Matidahali intersection in Bogra on her way to Joypurhat, she said, “The army is a part of our country and therefore it has responsibilities towards it.”
Citing police firing during the violence between February 28 and March 3, which left 18 people dead in Bogra and Joypurhat, the BNP chairperson said, “I thank the army personnel as they went out on the roads [of Bogra] on that day [March 3] but did not open fire on people like the police had done.”
Khaleda said if necessary, the country would be crippled in order to oust the Sheikh Hasina-led “most autocratic, bloodthirsty, killer and most corrupt government”.
She said her party would declare fresh agitation programmes today to oust the government as well as to “save the people of the country”. The fresh agitation would start after March 26, she added.
She urged all to ensure success of the programmes through spontaneous participation.
The BNP chief said, “The prime minister must be brought to book and she [Hasina] must be made accountable for the killing of people and for the BDR carnage.
“She [Sheikh Hasina] thinks she will cling to power at any cost or flee. We are hearing many things … we have all the documents related to your [Hasina] widespread corruption and killings … where will you go? You will be tracked down in any corner of the globe and you will be put in the dock.”
On Saturday afternoon, Khaleda left Dhaka on a two-day visit to Bogra and Joypurhat. She plans to visit the bereaved family members of people who died during the violence.

The violence erupted after the international crimes tribunal on February 28 sentenced Jamaat-e-Islami leader Delawar Hossain Sayedee to death for crimes against humanity. Jamaat is a key ally of the BNP-led 18-party opposition alliance.
On her way to Bogra and Joypurhat from Dhaka, Khaleda did not have any reception from her party followers, as the BNP was observing a three-day period of mourning for late president Zillur Rahman.
There were no arches on the roads she travelled through.
The BNP chief yesterday also addressed rallies at Shalaipur High School playground at Panchbibi upazila in Joypurhat and Araibazar at Shahjahanpur upazila of Bogra.
She also visited a temple at Gabtoli upazila in Bogra. The temple was vandalised during the violence.
The opposition leader handed over Tk 1 lakh to each of the families of the 12 deceased and directed local BNP leaders to provide all kinds of assistance to those who had been injured in the violence.
Apart from BNP activists, a large number of leaders and activists of the Jamaat-e-Islami and pro-Jamaat student body Islami Chhatra Shibir attended Khaleda’s rallies.
At the rally on Shalaipur High School playground, she said the government was on the brink of collapse and could be ousted with a nudge. “It’s now a matter of time,” she added.
Alleging that people of no community or religion are safe as long as Awami League is in power, Khaleda said, “More than 174 people were killed within a span of just 15 days, which has been internationally termed as genocide. This government must be tried for committing crimes against humanity.”
The BNP chief said the leaders of Awami League would be brought to the court with fetters on, just as the government had treated the opposition alliance’s senior leaders.
She called upon people of all profession, including civil administration and police department, to join the mass people.
“People’s movement will definitely win and none will be able to resist it. Weapons, bullets and bombs will be of no use when people wage a movement,” she said, adding, “We will no longer shed tears. Instead, we will create stronger resistance. Bogra will be the door of the movement.”
Khaleda said the government had stopped bus and launches during the opposition’s earlier “Dhaka Cholo” [March to Dhaka] programme.
Addressing the rally, she said, “But if necessary, you will again go to Dhaka and this time you will return home ousting the government.”
During the speech yesterday, the BNP chief refrained from directly accusing police of killing people which she did during her visit to Manikganj on March 16. Instead, she accused the government of committing “genocide” during the recent violence.
“Armed ruling party cadres are blending in with police so that police cannot act neutrally. We will not blame police [for attacking and killing people]. They act as per government directions,” she said.
In another rally at Ariabazar in Shajahanpur upazila of Bogra around 8:00pm, the former prime minister demanded that the army is deployed during the next polls, otherwise, she said, the election would not be free and fair.
She also claimed that the election commission was not acting independently and that it had redrawn the electoral constitution as per government instructions.
Earlier around 6:30pm, the BNP chairperson visited three temples at Bamunia and Sabekpara in Gabtali upazila. The temples were badly damaged during the recent violence in the areas.
In her brief speech at a roadside rally at Bamunia, Khaleda blamed the ruling party for the vandalism and announced to contribute 16 tonnes of rice to rebuild the temples.
BNP leaders including Moudud Ahmed, Selima Rahman, Sadeque Hossain Khoka, Mirza Abbas accompanied Khaleda in her Bogra-Joypurhat visit.
The BNP chief reached Bogra Saturday night and spent the night at the circuit house.
She left for Dhaka around 9:00pm.
Khaleda was scheduled to visit Bogra on Friday but she postponed the tour until yesterday to mark the three-day mourning on the death of president Zillur Rahman.