August 14, 2013

16
News 4 Bangladesh has recently seen an increase in mob violence, resulting in 12 deaths on average each month. A lack of trust in law enforcement agencies and a weak criminal justice system are cited as the reasons for people taking law in their own hands. International 9 India’s army accused Pakistan on Tuesday of firing across the de facto border that divides Kashmir, in the latest confrontation fuelling tensions between the nuclear-armed rivals. Op-Ed 11 The US State Department’s decision to close its mission in Dhaka, along with another 22 of its missions in other countries due to an al-Qaeda terror attack plan came as a surprise to many Bangladeshi citizens. Special We could have unleashed anarchy: Ahmad Shafi 5 16 pages plus 8-page Treehouse children’s supplement | Price: Tk10 Shraban 30, 1420 Shawwal 6, 1434 Regd. No. DA 6238 Vol 1 No 142 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 2013 | www.dhakatribune.com 7 Business Muhith to take stock of big credit scams INSIDE Tk4bn government land up for grabs The Roopnagar canal was wide and flowing in 2007, top left. But grabbers started encroaching upon the water body by filling it, top right, in 2009; now in 2013, the canal has become a narrow strip filled with hyacinth, bottom, due to the grabbing SYED ZAKIR HOSSAIN Roopnagar Canal in city is almost choked, some portions of the encroached land changed hands through fake documents n Abu Bakar Siddique A government-owned land of around 19.06 acres located in Roopnagar in the capital’s Mirpur area has been left open for misappropriation, scams and illegal construction. The property, identified in official records as RS Dag number 2074, has an approximate price of Tk3.81bn. Several land grabbers have already sold differ- ent portions of the land as their own property and some others are still try- ing to sell the land, including, alleged- ly, the chairman of ATN Bangla. Some portions of the land have even been sold several times. Unofficially, the price of per decimal land in that area is about Tk2m. According the land office, RS Dag number 2074 is situated at Digun Mou- ja of Pallabi, Mirpur, beside the Botan- ical Garden, and consists of 19.06 acres of land. Of this, the government’s Roo- pnagar housing project occupies 16.85 acres of land, 2.08 acres of land is vest- ed property belonging to Dhaka WASA and a 13 decimal land has been given to Eastern Housing, a private developer. However, the Roopnagar housing project in fact controls only a small portion of the land it has been allocat- ed, with the rest controlled by various grabbers. Md Jahid Hasan, executive engineer of the housing project, ac- knowledged the fact and told the Dha- ka tribune that they still have not oc- cupied the entire land acquired for the project. ATN Bangla Chairman Mahfuzur Rahman allegedly grabbed a 2.31 acre portion of the land, mainly on the Roo- pnagar canal, and later filled up the PAGE 2 COLUMN 3 More questions added to BPL saga n Minhaz Uddin Khan It had been hoped, if not expected, that the press conference held by the Inter- national Cricket Council (ICC) and the Bangladesh Cricket Board yesterday re- garding fixing allegations from the sec- ond edition of the Bangladesh Premier League would clear up matters after a comprehensive investigation that last- ed more than a 100 days. Anti-climactically, all it did was raise some eyebrows, trigger speculation and increase suspicion in cricketing circles. A five member ICC team, compris- ing the “high-ups” of the organization arrived in Dhaka for the event a couple of days ago. It was the ICC’s Acsu who had been called in to investigate cer- tain suspicious games from the BPL, so it was appropriate for the ICC to be present at the press conference. PAGE 2 COLUMN 1 Forex reserve hits record $16bn n Kayes Sohel and Jebun Nesa Alo Bangladesh’s foreign exchange reserve yesterday crossed $16bn for the first time in the country’s history piggy- backing on double-digit export growth, strong remittance flow and falling im- port payments. The volume increase pushed Ban- gladesh into becoming the second highest foreign currency reserve hold- er in South Asia, after India. “A combination of many factors helped us achieve this,” Bangladesh Bank Governor Atiur Rahman told the Dhaka Tribune pointing out that fall in food imports due to higher agricultural output, stable exchange rate and dou- ble-digit export growth all played a role. “Bangladeshi expatriates are turn- ing more to regular banking system to remit their earnings as the payment system has improved.” PAGE 2 COLUMN 4 Vandalism, arrests mark first day of Jamaat’s hartal n Tribune Report The first day of 48-hour nationwide hartal enforced by the opposition Bang- ladesh Jamaat-e-Islami was marked by stray incidents of vandalism, bomb blasts, clashes and arrests across the country yesterday. Some 15 vehicles, 16 houses and four shops were damaged, 48 crude bombs blasted and 70 people injured across the country, according to UNB. The law enforcers also arrested over 60 Jamaat-Shibir men during the first day hartal. The party activists torched and van- dalised around 12 vehicles across the country throughout the day. Besides, they set off 27 cocktails till 4pm yesterday from 6am, according to PAGE 2 COLUMN 1 Adilur’s remand order cancelled n Kailash Sarkar Soon after getting the copy of a High Court (HC) directive staying remand order against Adilur Rahman Khan, general secretary of the human rights body Odhikar, a Dhaka court on Tues- day instructed authorities concerned to send Adilur to jail. Masudur Rahman, a deputy com- missioner of Dhaka Metropolitan Po- lice (DMP) told the Dhaka Tribune that Ashraful Islam Khan, an inspector of detective branch of police, who was also the investigative officer of the case filed against Adilur, placed the HC or- der before the chief metropolitan mag- istrate’s court around 3:30pm. Earlier on Tuesday noon, the HC di- rective staying the remand order pre- viously handed down by a lower court reached police officials. Complying with the HC order, Chief Metropolitan Magistrate Mostafa Sha- riar Khan cancelled the previously passed remand order asking author- ities concerned to send Adilur to jail, added Masud. The HC order, however, said Adilur could be interrogated at the jail gate, if necessary. Plainclothes police arrested Adilur Rahman Khan from near his Gulshan residence on Saturday night for releas- ing an “unsubstantiated” report by Odhikar on the crackdown on Hefaz- at-e-Islam men at city’s Shapla Chattar PAGE 2 COLUMN 6 Jamaat collecting ‘special funds’ n Manik Miazee Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami and its student wing Islami Chhatra Shibir are collecting special funds, aside from regular donations, from the par- ty’s supporters and also the general public to bear the expenses of party activities. The party is collecting the money in the name of providing treatment to the party activists who were allegedly injured during clashes with police, to carry the cost of legal processes for the release of party men now in jail, and saving the senior Jamaat leaders who are facing war crimes charges at the In- ternational Crimes Tribunal. In recent years, the party has spent large sums on these causes. It is alleged that Jamaat has recently initiated the innovative scheme to recover the mon- ey it has spent over the past four years. While collecting such donations, the party is not providing the donors with any receipt or documentation, party sources confirmed. Party leaders say the tradition of fund collection is a continuous process which has been occurring from the day the party was established. Every month party supporters donate a fixed amount of money for party activities. It is referred to as depositing Yanat in Baitul-Mal. Jamaat’s Rokon – the top-level or- ganisers – donate at least 5% from their monthly income each month, and in emergency situations they donate their PAGE 2 COLUMN 4 8 International 44 gunned down in Nigeria mosque

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Transcript of August 14, 2013

News4 Bangladesh has recently seen an increase in mob violence, resulting in 12 deaths on average each month. A lack of trust in law enforcement agencies and a weak criminal justice system are cited as the reasons for people taking law in their own hands.

International9 India’s army accused Pakistan on Tuesday of � ring across the de facto border that divides Kashmir, in the latest confrontation fuelling tensions between the nuclear-armed rivals.

Op-Ed11 The US State Department’s decision to close its mission in Dhaka, along with another 22 of its missions in other countries due to an al-Qaeda terror attack plan came as a surprise to many Bangladeshi citizens.

SpecialWe could have unleashed anarchy: Ahmad Sha�

5

16 pages plus 8-page Treehouse children’s supplement | Price: Tk10

Shraban 30, 1420Shawwal 6, 1434Regd. No. DA 6238Vol 1 No 142 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 2013 | www.dhakatribune.com

7 BusinessMuhith to take stock of big credit scams

INSIDE

Tk4bn government land up for grabs

The Roopnagar canal was wide and � owing in 2007, top left. But grabbers started encroaching upon the water body by � lling it, top right, in 2009; now in 2013, the canal has become a narrow strip � lled with hyacinth, bottom, due to the grabbing SYED ZAKIR HOSSAIN

Roopnagar Canal in city is almost choked, some portions of the encroached land changed hands through fake documentsn Abu Bakar Siddique

A government-owned land of around 19.06 acres located in Roopnagar in the capital’s Mirpur area has been left open for misappropriation, scams and illegal construction.

The property, identi� ed in o� cial records as RS Dag number 2074, has an approximate price of Tk3.81bn. Several land grabbers have already sold di� er-ent portions of the land as their own property and some others are still try-ing to sell the land, including, alleged-ly, the chairman of ATN Bangla. Some portions of the land have even been sold several times. Uno� cially, the price of per decimal land in that area is about Tk2m.

According the land o� ce, RS Dag number 2074 is situated at Digun Mou-ja of Pallabi, Mirpur, beside the Botan-

ical Garden, and consists of 19.06 acres of land. Of this, the government’s Roo-pnagar housing project occupies 16.85 acres of land, 2.08 acres of land is vest-ed property belonging to Dhaka WASA and a 13 decimal land has been given to Eastern Housing, a private developer.

However, the Roopnagar housing project in fact controls only a small portion of the land it has been allocat-ed, with the rest controlled by various grabbers. Md Jahid Hasan, executive engineer of the housing project, ac-knowledged the fact and told the Dha-ka tribune that they still have not oc-cupied the entire land acquired for the project.

ATN Bangla Chairman Mahfuzur Rahman allegedly grabbed a 2.31 acre portion of the land, mainly on the Roo-pnagar canal, and later � lled up the

PAGE 2 COLUMN 3

More questions added toBPL sagan Minhaz Uddin Khan

It had been hoped, if not expected, that the press conference held by the Inter-national Cricket Council (ICC) and the Bangladesh Cricket Board yesterday re-garding � xing allegations from the sec-ond edition of the Bangladesh Premier League would clear up matters after a comprehensive investigation that last-ed more than a 100 days.

Anti-climactically, all it did was raise some eyebrows, trigger speculation and increase suspicion in cricketing circles.

A � ve member ICC team, compris-ing the “high-ups” of the organization arrived in Dhaka for the event a couple of days ago. It was the ICC’s Acsu who had been called in to investigate cer-tain suspicious games from the BPL, so it was appropriate for the ICC to be present at the press conference.

PAGE 2 COLUMN 1

Forex reserve hitsrecord $16bnn Kayes Sohel and Jebun Nesa Alo

Bangladesh’s foreign exchange reserve yesterday crossed $16bn for the � rst time in the country’s history piggy-backing on double-digit export growth, strong remittance � ow and falling im-port payments.

The volume increase pushed Ban-gladesh into becoming the second highest foreign currency reserve hold-er in South Asia, after India.

“A combination of many factors helped us achieve this,” Bangladesh Bank Governor Atiur Rahman told the Dhaka Tribune pointing out that fall in food imports due to higher agricultural output, stable exchange rate and dou-ble-digit export growth all played a role.

“Bangladeshi expatriates are turn-ing more to regular banking system to remit their earnings as the payment system has improved.”

PAGE 2 COLUMN 4

Vandalism, arrests mark � rst day of Jamaat’s hartaln Tribune Report

The � rst day of 48-hour nationwide hartal enforced by the opposition Bang-ladesh Jamaat-e-Islami was marked by stray incidents of vandalism, bomb blasts, clashes and arrests across the country yesterday.

Some 15 vehicles, 16 houses and four shops were damaged, 48 crude bombs blasted and 70 people injured across the country, according to UNB.

The law enforcers also arrested over 60 Jamaat-Shibir men during the � rst day hartal.

The party activists torched and van-dalised around 12 vehicles across the country throughout the day.

Besides, they set o� 27 cocktails till 4pm yesterday from 6am, according to

PAGE 2 COLUMN 1

Adilur’s remand order cancelled n Kailash Sarkar

Soon after getting the copy of a High Court (HC) directive staying remand order against Adilur Rahman Khan, general secretary of the human rights body Odhikar, a Dhaka court on Tues-day instructed authorities concerned to send Adilur to jail.

Masudur Rahman, a deputy com-missioner of Dhaka Metropolitan Po-lice (DMP) told the Dhaka Tribune that Ashraful Islam Khan, an inspector of detective branch of police, who was also the investigative o� cer of the case � led against Adilur, placed the HC or-der before the chief metropolitan mag-istrate’s court around 3:30pm.

Earlier on Tuesday noon, the HC di-

rective staying the remand order pre-viously handed down by a lower court reached police o� cials.

Complying with the HC order, Chief Metropolitan Magistrate Mostafa Sha-riar Khan cancelled the previously passed remand order asking author-ities concerned to send Adilur to jail, added Masud.

The HC order, however, said Adilur could be interrogated at the jail gate, if necessary.

Plainclothes police arrested Adilur Rahman Khan from near his Gulshan residence on Saturday night for releas-ing an “unsubstantiated” report by Odhikar on the crackdown on Hefaz-at-e-Islam men at city’s Shapla Chattar

PAGE 2 COLUMN 6

Jamaat collecting ‘special funds’ n Manik Miazee

Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami and its student wing Islami Chhatra Shibir are collecting special funds, aside from regular donations, from the par-ty’s supporters and also the generalpublic to bear the expenses of partyactivities.

The party is collecting the money in the name of providing treatment to the party activists who were allegedly injured during clashes with police, to carry the cost of legal processes for the release of party men now in jail, and saving the senior Jamaat leaders who are facing war crimes charges at the In-ternational Crimes Tribunal.

In recent years, the party has spent large sums on these causes. It is alleged

that Jamaat has recently initiated the innovative scheme to recover the mon-ey it has spent over the past four years.

While collecting such donations, the party is not providing the donors with any receipt or documentation, party sources con� rmed.

Party leaders say the tradition of fund collection is a continuous process which has been occurring from the day the party was established. Every month party supporters donate a � xed amount of money for party activities. It is referred to as depositing Yanat in Baitul-Mal.

Jamaat’s Rokon – the top-level or-ganisers – donate at least 5% from their monthly income each month, and in emergency situations they donate their

PAGE 2 COLUMN 4

8 International44 gunned down in Nigeria mosque

News2 DHAKA TRIBUNE Wednesday, August 14, 2013

EC rejects 20 applications for party registrationInvestigation into � eld-level activities of seven parties this week n Mohammad Zakaria

The Election Commission (EC) has re-jected registration appeals of 20 aspi-rant political parties for their failure to ful� l the conditions laid down by the commission.

It also decided to run investigations into the � eld-level activities of anoth-er seven parties. The investigations would begin this week.

Sources said, a total of 43 aspirant parties had so far applied to the com-mission for party registration after a mass circular had been issued in this regard in October, 2012. Of them, only three managed to either get the regis-tration or come nearer to getting one.

The rest of the parties – 40 in total – were requested to submit necessary papers and meet all requirements in or-der to be eligible for registration.

At a commission meeting held last week, the EC decided to reject 20 ap-peals deeming the applicants “ineligi-ble” for registration and also decided to check � eld-level eligibility of anoth-er seven.

Moreover, the applications of 13 parties were cancelled as they failed to come up with necessary documents to back up their eligibility claim.

So far, the commission has grant-

ed party registration to only one party – Bangladesh Muslim League (BML) – following a High Court directive in this regard.

Investigation into the � eld-level activities of Bangladesh Nationalist Front (BNF) and Bangladesh Sangskri-tik MuktiJote has almost � nished, the reports of which would be presented at a full-commission meeting soon.

If found “satisfactory”, they would be given registration, EC o� cials said.

The 20 parties whose appeals were rejected include: Bangladesh Jalali Party, Bangladesh People’s Democratic Party, Bangladesh Awami Party (NAP Bhashani), Bangladesh Jatiya League, Muktijoddha Communism Democrat-ic Party, Bangladesh Jatiya Dal, Go-no-Odhikar Party, Bangladesh Probashi Dal, Gonotantrik Islamic Movement, Mukto Rajnoitik Andolon, Jatiya Muk-tijoddha Gonotantrik Oikya Front, Bangladesh Islamic Party, Jomiyot-e Ulamaye Islam and Nezami Islamic Par-ty, Public Party, Matribhumi Dal, Ban-gladesh Samajtantrik Dal, Bangladesh Samyabadi Dal, Bangladesh Red Star Party, Bangladesh Labour Party and Krishak Sramik Party.

The seven parties that face inves-tigations are: Bangladesh People’s League, Bangladesh New Sangsad

League, Bangladesh Gonoseba Ando-lon, Bangladesh Gono-Odhikar Dal, Bangladesh Liberal Democratic Par-ty Bangladesh, Bangladesh Anjuman Al Islah and Bangladesh Gonoshakti Dal.

According to section 90(B) of the Representation of People’s Order (RPO), for getting EC registration an aspirant party must have a central committee, committees in at least 21 districts and 100 upazilas and at least 200 members in each of these com-mittees.

In 2008, the EC made registration mandatory for all political parties will-ing to participate in the then general elections. At that time, a total of 117 parties applied and 38 managed to get registration.

On 23 October 2013, the EC issued a mass circular about ful� lling prelim-inary conditions for parties willing to apply. The main opposition BNP has since urged the commissioners to re-ject the appeal of BNF which, it alleged, had been formed with the assistance of special intelligence agencies.

BNP also accused the aspirant party, which is now in line for getting party registration, of using its logo, portrait of its late founder and his 19-point charter to “gain political leverage.” l

Edexcel A level results tomorrow n Tribune Report

Results for Edexcel Advance Level (A level) examinations for May/June 2013 session will be available tomorrow.

The result for international GCSE for May/June 2013 session will be avail-able on August 22, according to British Council Bangladesh.

Students can visit British Council Bangladesh’s website to get the re-sult. The results can also be accessed through mobile phone using the fol-lowing steps –

Type GCE <space> RESULT <space> type your 4 digit Candidate number <space> type your UCI number and send the SMS to 7464.

The results of Cambridge Interna-tional Examinations for May/June ses-sion were available from 2pm yesterday.

Bangladeshi students who took the O level and A level examinations for May /June 2013 session had to face problems as there were several strikes called by the oppositions. On some oc-casions, students had to take examina-tions at night to avoid strikes. l

Samina made deputy high commissioner in Mumbai n Tribune Report

The government has appointed Samina Naz, a director general of foreign min-istry, as the � rst deputy high commis-sioner of Bangladesh in Mumbai.

The Deputy High Commission will have consular jurisdiction over the states of Maharashtra, Gujarat, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Ker-ala and Goa and Union territories of Puducherry and Daman and Diu.

The decision to open a new Depu-ty High Commission in Mumbai is in pursuance of the agreement reached between the prime ministers of Bangla-desh and India, said a press release of the Indian high Commission. l

Members of Moviana Film Society light candles in front of the portraits of late � lm director Tarek Masud and renowned journalist Mishuk Muneir, killed in a road accident on August 13 two years back, on the National Museum premises yesterday MAHMUD HOSSAIN OPU

Forex reserve hits record $16bn PAGE 1 COLUMN 6Pointing out that the $16.03bn re-serve is enough to meet � ve and a half months of the country’s import payment, he said, “We are in a much more comfortable economic situation than neighbouring India where the ex-change rate is falling.”

He pointed to Pakistan, which holds the third largest reserve in South Asia, “Our reserve is $6bn more than them and their economy is one and a half times bigger than Bangladesh.”

The central bank chief pointed out that the achievement would also boost con� dence of foreign investors and earn the country a positive rating from global rating agencies like Moody’s and S&P’s.

When asked if the reserve can posi-tively impact Padma Bridge � nancing, Atiur said, “If the government provides fund, we can convert it into dollar eas-ily.”

Exports grew 24% to $3bn in July due to higher demand for garment items at competitive prices, according to the Export Promotion Bureau. Cen-tral bank records show in the � rst 11 months of the last � scal, overall import bill payments posted a negative growth of more than 9% to $29.48bn from $32.42bn a year earlier.

“Over the last several months, the reserve broke one record after an-other, which have both negative and positive aspects,” said Mirza Azizul Islam, ex-finance adviser of the last

caretaker government.“Rising foreign exchange reserve

will help keep the exchange rate sta-bilise,” he said. “However, falling im-port of capital machineries and raw materials over the same period is not good news for the economy. As it will impede industrialisation, making the economy slow down.”

Central bank data showed that there was negative growth of more than 3% in settlement of Letters of Credits (LC) for industrial raw materials and 14.23% for

capital machinery during the period.In the last three months, local cur-

rency remained stable at around Tk77 against US dollar. In the � rst 10 months (July-April) of the last � nancial year, expatriates remitted $12.30bn, an in-crease of 15.89% from the same period last year.

The highest ever amount of remit-tance, $144bn, was received in Bangla-desh in the just-ended 2012-13 � scal year, which is 12% more than the � scal before that. l

More questions added to BPL saga PAGE 1 COLUMN 6At the media brie� ng, it was revealed that nine individuals have been charged with various o� ences that are alleged to have been committed under the BCB’s Anti-Corruption Code during the second edition of BPL and the nine individuals had been sent letters de-tailing the charges against them.

However, the names of those charged were withheld.

Both the ICC and BCB emphasised the importance of recognising that all those charged remain innocent until proved guilty and thus the identities were not disclosed. And this is the point which is being considered to have made the situation worse. Wild guesses are now being made. Who are the nine individuals? Who are the cricketers or the officials involved

with the dark side?Suspended national cricketer Mo-

hammed Ashraful topped the list since he has confessed to wrong doings in his very � rst hearing with the Acsu and to the media.

Two of the franchisee owners have also con� rmed receiving the charge letters, but who the other six people are is anyone’s guess.

With the ICC and BCB determined to maintain silent on the matter, wild guesses were being made as to the identities of the accused, resulting in extreme discomfort for many an inno-cent party.

A young cricketer, who is current-ly attending a training camp, told the Dhaka Tribune on condition of ano-nymity his experience in the after-math.

“I was watching the press confer-ence live on television. Once it ended, I started receiving calls. There were journalists, cricketers and many oth-ers who called and answered the same question – did I receive the letter from ICC.

“I was shocked and nervous and could hardly understand what was happening. But two to three hours from then things started cooling down and later I received calls which ensured me I was being mistaken,” he said.

This was just one incident among many that might have happened and the authorities were well aware of it. “I know you all will get to know the names even if we don’t disclose them at the moment,” was one of the com-ments of the BCB president Nazmul Hasan in the press meet. l

Vandalism, arrests mark Jamaat’s 1st day hartal PAGE 1 COLUMN 1o� cials of the Ministry of Home Af-fairs.

At least 10 policemen were injured at Rajnagar in Meherpur while 10 oth-ers injured at Garadora in Gangni in the same district as pro-hartal elements attacked the cops during the hartal hours.

However, there was no report of major violent clashes or casualties ex-cept some sporadic incidents across the country, sources added.

In the capital, there were incidents of chase and counter-chase between police and hartal supporters as Ja-maat-Shibir men brought out proces-sions in the city’s Jatrabari, Kalyan-pur, Gulshan, Dhalpur, Azimpur and Gendaria areas.

Witnesses said around a dozen crude bombs were exploded in di� er-ent parts of the capital during the har-tal that began at 6am.

Police arrested two pickets from Az-impur area around 8:50am.

Meanwhile, � ve suspected Islami Chhatra Shibir men were sentenced to six months’ imprisonment by mobile courts for picketing in the city.

Elsewhere in the city, pickets were hardly seen as additional security per-sonnel, comprised of police and Rab, were deployed at all the key points and intersections to avert any untow-ard incident during the Islamist party’s shutdown.

Rickshaws and auto-rickshaws outnumbered the motorised vehicles

on the city streets. The movement of commuters was less as many people failed to return to their workplaces from their village homes due to the shutdown just after the Eid.

The incidents of bomb blasts were also reported from outside the capital.

In Chittagong, hartal passed o� al-most peacefully with some stray inci-dents in the port city and the district.

Pickets blasted at least � ve cocktails in Halishahar and Kajir Dewri area in the morning attempting to create panic among people, police said.

Outside the city, the hartal support-ers vandalised a private car at Sita-kunda while the driver of the vehicle, Jashim Uddin, was inured due to the vandalism, said Samiul Islam, OC of Sitakunda police station.

Anti-hartal supporters were also seen in di� erent points in the city.

Additional police, Rab and Border Guard Bangladesh personnel were de-ployed at both the port city and the dis-trict to evade any untoward situation.

In the port city, presence of vehicles on the city roads was thin in the morning but it increased gradually over the day.

Train services functioned undis-rupted; however, no buses plied across the inter-district routes.

Most of the shopping malls re-mained closed during the hartal hours while activities of Chittagong port were normal.

In Meherpur, at least 50 people in-cluding an o� cer-in-charge and 25 other police personnel were injured

as Jamat-Shibir activists clashed with cops at several points in the district Tuesday morning, according to our correspondent.

The clash occurred at Garadob un-der Gangni upazila while police were trying to clear the road.

Police, however, arrested two shibir activists from the spot.

BGB had also been deployed at Me-herpur.

Police said at least 10 policemen were injured as Jamat-Shibir activists hurled bricks at them during clash at Rajnagar of the district.

In Rajshahi, activists of Jamaat-e-Is-lami took out whirlwind processions, torched truck and exploded cocktails in the early hours of Tuesday, accord-ing to our correspondent.

The Jamaat-Shibir called the 48-hour strike in protest against the can-cellation of the party registration.

The strike passed loosely and peace-fully in Barisal amid stray incidents, according to our correspondent.

Sporadic incidents of violence were also reported from across the districts of Laxmipur, Gaibandha, Chapain-awabganj, Pirojpur, Khulna, Sylhet, Natore, Satkhira, Bogra Chuadanga, and Jhenidah.

Hours after the High Court declared illegal its registration as a political par-ty, Jamaat on August 1 called the 48-hour countrywide hartal for August 12 and 13.

Later, it deferred the general strike to August 13 and 14. l

Jamaat collecting ‘special funds’ PAGE 1 COLUMN 3full salary to the party fund. Some of the well-o� Rokons donate money equal to two or three months’ income. As part of the tradition, Rokons donate one month salary every three years.

Party supporters and others who return from abroad, especially Saudi Arab and the Middle East, are allegedly being targeted for special donations. People from outside the party, called well-wishers, are usually asked to do-nate money for buying Qur’ans.

There are no speci� c � gures on how much money is collected from the well-wishers. Party sources said re-ports on collections are provided in the party’s monthly meetings.

Former Chhatra Shibir leader and Jamaat’s Rokon from Mirpur, Mizanur Rahman, said the activists always support the party whenever it needs them. “We always support our party

in emergency situations. We are now donating money following the trend,” he added.

Aminul Islam Mukul, president of one of the units at Maghbazar, told the Dhaka Tribune: “Earlier, we donated money for the purchase of land or es-tablishments and treatment of injured party workers. Now, we are donating money for conducting regular party ac-tivities during the Eid.”

Syed Abdullah Md Taher, a central working committee member of the party and former MP, told the Dhaka Tribune: “We collect money on a reg-ular basis. This process is validated by the party constitution. It does not have any connection with bribery.”

He said the party activists and well-wishers donate money willingly to the party fund. “Our organisation runs its activities with the money,” he added. l

Tk4bn government land up for grabs PAGE 1 COLUMN 2canal with sand. The land is now un-der the possession of a developer � rm named Hasan & Associates.

Mahfuz refused to talk to the Dhaka Tribune when he was contacted at his o� ce.

His adviser Mir Mohammad Mota-her Hasan told the Dhaka Tribune that Mahfuz never owned any property in that area. Mahfuz has been trying to sell the grabbed portion of the land, a land broker named Khalilur Rahman, who claimed that he works on his be-half, told this correspondent, who was pretending to be a customer. “He will sell the land for the price of Tk200m with the condition of that the buyer

has to take possession of the land from the present encroacher Hasan & Asso-ciates,” he said. However, the regional land o� ce in Mirpur cancelled his mu-tation on July 03 last year. The muta-tion case number of Mahfuzur Rahman was 1634/10-11.

Mahmudul Hasan, managing direc-tor of Hasan & Associates, claimed that he had bought the land from a lawyer whose name he could not remember and it was under his possession. This correspondent found one advocate, Abdur Rahman, who was also trying to sell a part of the same land. He claimed that he had 40 decimals of land (0.39 acre) now occupied by Hasan & Asso-ciates. “I want to sell my portion for

Tk20m, but Hasan & Associates has grabbed it and the buyer has to take possession by himself,” he said.

Like Mahfuz and Hasan & Associates many others are involved in grabbing the government land. Shahidul Islam, Assistant Land Commissioner of Mo-hammadpur Circle, told the Dhaka Tri-bune that several lawsuits were going on the ownership of this particular location.

Some of these lawsuits are against the government, claiming it had not ac-quired the land through due process, he added. Upon visiting the place, this cor-respondent found several shanties erect-ed in parts of the land. Locals said in� u-ential people in the area have created this slum to rent out to low-income people. l

Adilur’s remand PAGE 1 COLUMN 3in the early hours of May 6 this year.

Earlier, on Sunday, a court granted a � ve-day remand for Adilur Rahman Khan in the case � led under section 57 (1) and (2) of the ICT Act, which is pun-ishable with imprisonment for a term which may extend to 10 years and with a � ne up to Tk 1 crore.

Geneva-based UN High Commission-er for Human Rights yesterday expressed concern over the arrest of Adilur Rah-man and urged the Government of Ban-gladesh to secure his immediate release.

His arrest might be linked to his work as human rights defender, it said.

In a statement, UN body also re-quested Bangladesh government to guarantee his physical and psycholog-ical integrity. l

News 3DHAKA TRIBUNE Wednesday, August 14, 2013

ACC challenges Jasmine’s bail n Nazmus Sakib

The Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) yesterday � led a petition with the High Court challenging the legality of the bail granted by a Dhaka court to Hall-Mark Group Chairman Jasmine Is-lam in a money laundering case.

On August 4, a lower court passed the conditional bail order which Jas-mine accepted.

ACC Counsel Khurshid Alam Khan told the Dhaka Tribune that a petition was � led, and 10 more petitions will be � led today in the other cases challeng-ing the lower court’s bail order.

The ACC lodged 11 cases with Ramna police station accusing Jasmine, the wife of Hall-Mark Managing Director Tanvir Mahmud, for allegedly withdrawing more than Tk30bn from Sonali Bank.

On Monday, Jasmine lodged a peti-tion with the High Court challenging the bail condition of paying Tk1bn ev-ery month. The bench, however, did not pay heed to the prayer. l

My uncle identi� ed Mueen while abducted: Witnessn Udisa Islam

Iftekhar Haider Chowdhury, nephew of martyred intellectual Mofazzal Haid-er Chowdhury, yesterday told the In-ternational Crimes Tribunal 2 how his uncle had been abducted on December 14, 1971.

He said while the men had been taking the victim away “my father scratched o� the mask of one of them. My uncle [Mofazzal Haider Chowdhury] then identi� ed Chowdhury Mueen and asked him, ‘are you Mueen?’ Then the person replied, ‘yes sir, I was your stu-dent once upon a time.’”

Martyred Mofazzal Haider Chow-dhury was a professor at the Bangla department of Dhaka University. He was a gold medallist student and got a masters’ degree from Visva-Bharati University.

After his deposition at the International Crimes Tribunal 2, defence counsel Ab-dus Shukur Khan began his cross-ex-amination. Later, Justice Obaidul Has-san adjourned the proceedings for the day till today for further questioning.

The witness said he was just seven years’ old then but as they stayed at the same house, he witnesses the incident.

In his deposition the witness said: “Channel 4, a UK television channel, made a documentary named ‘War Crimes File’ where my mother Doly Chowdhury gave an interview. She said at the time of abduction of my uncle she and other members of the fami-ly could identify Chowdhury MueenUddin.”

As an exhibit, the prosecution yes-terday displayed the documentary at the tribunal.

The witness claimed that after the liberation, “daily Purbadesh published a report on crimes of Mueen Uddin and Ashrafuzzaman, I saw it then.”

Mueen Uddin had been working at the newspaper during the 1971 Liber-ation War. As per the prosecution, he

was the “operation-in-chief” of para militia force al-Badr, which is accused of abduction, torture and assassination of intellectuals, and Ashrafuzzaman Khan was the “chief executor.”

The tribunal jointly indicted the accused in 11 counts of crimes against humanity. The charges include killing of 18 intellectuals, of whom nine were Dhaka University teachers, six journal-ists and three doctors.

The witness said: “On December 14, 1971, an armed group of al-Badr men came to our house Shantibagh. When they knocked at the door, my father Lutful Haider Chowdhury opened it. Five to six armed persons asked him, ‘where is Mofazzal Haider Chowdhury.’ They were all masked. When my fa-ther denied to tell them about my un-cle, they entered the house forcefully. Then my uncle came forward and said ‘I am Mofazzal Haider Chowdhury.’ Af-ter that they took him away saying that he would be back after interrogation.”

He continued that after the libera-tion on December 16, Luful Haider and another uncle went out in search of his uncle, but failed. At that time, the families of Munier Chowdhury, Dr Alim Chowdhury, Shahidullah Kaiser, Anwar Pasha and Rashedul Hasan were also searching for the bodies. “My family went to many killing grounds including those in Rayerbazar and Mohammad-pur, but they did not � nd my uncle’s body.”

Prosecutor Shahidur Rahman told the tribunal that the elder son of Mo-fazzal Haider Chowdhury, Taslim Su-mon Haider Chowdhury, was listed as a witness in this case.

But he died at 2011 while the wife of the intellectual died at 1990. As Taslim gave statement to the investigation of-� cer, the prosecution placed it before the tribunal under Section 19 (2) of the International Crimes (Tribunals) Act 1973.

The trial is underway in absentia since the accused did not appear at the tribunal.

Since the duo did not respond to the tribunal’s order, it appointed lawyers Abdus Shukur Khan and Salma Hye. The prosecution submitted formal charges against the accused on April 25. l

Prosecution failed to prepare case against SQ Chy properly: Defence n Udisa Islam

Defence lawyer Ahsanul Haque for war crimes suspect Salauddin Quader Chowdhury yesterday claimed that the prosecution failed to prepare case, for which, there were many inconsisten-cies in the depositions of witnesses.

After the defence’s arguments for the sixth day, the International Crimes Tribunal 1 adjourned the proceedings till today when the defence would get one hour to � nish the arguments.

On July 24, the tribunal stopped deposition of defence witnesses as the defence repeatedly failed to produce their � fth and last witness. It set July 28 to July 30 for the prosecution to place their arguments, and July 31 to August 5 for the defence.

But the prosecution took one more day to complete the arguments. So the tribunal gave privilege to defence to end their arguments by August 6. But after that, defence counsel Ahsanul Haque said the defence must be given eight sessions since the prosecution had got eight sessions too.

Earlier, 41 witnesses testi� ed against Salahuddin Quader, a six-time lawmaker from Chittagong. He is fac-ing 23 charges of crimes against hu-manity he allegedly committed in 1971 in Raozan and Rangunia. He is the son of Convention Muslim League leader Fazlul Quader Chowdhury.

Three defence witnesses and Sala-huddin Quader himself gave deposi-tion in the case claiming that he had been in Pakistan since March 29, 1971 to April 20, 1974.

After yesterday’s session, Salahud-din Quader requested for a half-day session. He told: “My humble submis-sion is if you give us one half-day ses-sion for summing up the whole ses-sion.” However, his counsel sought one hour for summing up the arguments.

The accused said: “This is not a mat-ter of ego; this is about my life. What will be the harm if you accept my plea?”

The tribunal chairman then dis-cussed with the two other members and allowed the defence one more hour. The tribunal also told the prosecution to be prepared to begin their conclusion.

During the arguments on charge 3 concerning the murder of Nutan Chan-dra Singha, the defence yesterday said prosecution witness Gouranga Singha told in his deposition that he had seen a Pakistan army van at Kundeshwari while talking to Nutan, the owner of Kundeshwari Oushodhalaya. But later he said he did not see how many vans entered Kundeshwari on that day.

The defence also pointed at the in-consistencies in the statements of pros-ecution witnesses Siru Bangalee and Gopal. Lawyer Ahsanul said when one Bibhuti told Siru Bangalee that Salaud-din Quader had ordered some Pakistan soldiers to kill Nutan, Gopal told the tribunal that during the murder, the accused said: “Father ordered to kill Nutan Singha.”

At that time, tribunal Chairman Jus-tice ATM Fazle Kabir asked the defence counsel whether he was mentioning it as a contradiction. Ahsanul Huq an-swered: “When two di� erent people tell di� erent things about one incident,

then it must be mentioned as a contra-diction.”

He also claimed that Gopal, who is an eye witness in the Nutan Chandra murder, told the tribunal about one Brajahari with whom he had been hid-ing in Kundeshwari during the killing. But according to Profulla Chandra Sing-ha, the son of Nutan Chandra, told the tribunal that the rooms of the house were locked. “Then how could Go-pal hide there with Brajahari.” He also questioned about the identity of Braja-hari saying that nobody said about his relation with Kundeshwari.

Barrister Fakhrul Islam, another de-fence counsel, told the tribunal that every defence witness, in their statement, men-tioned they had met Salauddin Quader in Karachi during May-August 1971.

To prove the claim, Fakhrul placed documents that showed the accused had appeared in BA examination in Au-gust 1971 at Lahore University in politi-cal science department. He also placed academic certi� cates of his SSC, HSC and Dhaka University admission form to prove that Salahuddin Quader had lived in Dhaka and never gone to those places where the crimes took place.

Salauddin Quader often demands himself as a “self-educated” person.

Fakhrul also mentioned about the cross-examination of the accused by the prosecution, who asked Salauddin Quader whether he had returned to Bangladesh in 1974 illegally. By saying so, the defence lawyer claimed that the prosecution had accepted the accused had left the country on March 29, 1971 and returned in 1974. l

MP Rony’s bailrejected againn Md Sanaul Islam Tipu

A Dhaka court yesterday rejected ruling party lawmaker Golam Maula Rony’s bail petition in an attempt-to-murder case.

Acting judge of Dhaka Metropolitan Session’s Court Md Akhtaruzzaman rejected the petition, the second one Rony � led so far.

On July 25, Metropolitan Magistrate SM Ashiqur Rahman ordered Rony jail after rejecting his petition. Police pro-duced him at the court in the case � led for assaulting two TV journalists on July 20 in his o� ce.

Defence lawyer Abdullah Al Mansur Ripon in the hearing yesterday argued that Rony was an MP, who had taken bail before, did not misuse the bail con-ditions and the charges were bailable.

Ripon told reporters they would go to the High Court against the order.

Rony was arrested on July 24 after a Dhaka court the same day issued an arrest warrant. Yunus Ali, assistant manager at Independent Television, on July 21 � led the case accusing Rony and 20-25 unnamed people. The following day Yunus � led a general diary with the same police station alleging that Rony and his people had threatened him and demanded that he withdrew the case.

On the other hand, Rony � led a case with Shahbagh police station on July 20 accusing Independent Televison Chair-man Salman F Rahman and three oth-ers of attacking him, threatening him with death and trying to extort money from him. Later on July 30, police after an investigation said the allegation of Rony was false and suggested action against the MP.

Rony is now in Kashimpur jail. l

BTRC may consider more 3G licencesn Muhammad Zahidul Islam

Bangladesh Telecommunication Reg-ulatory Commission may consider awarding more licences for 3G mobile services if all the 40MHz spectrums over 2,100 band are not sold in the up-coming auction on September 8.

“Spectrums are very costly resourc-es and there is no way to leave them un-used,” BTRC Chairman Sunil Kanti Bose told the Dhaka Tribune on Monday.

“The International Telecommunica-tion Union also recommends not keeping this type of resource unutilised,” he said after � ve mobile phone operators had submitted applications for 3G licences.

The BTRC will auction 40MHz of spectrum over 2110-2150 bands for downlink. Another 40MHz will be allo-cated over 1920-1960 bands for uplink. The regulator already allocated 10MHz in 2150-2160 bands to the state-owned Teletalk for downlink and another 10MHz in 1960-1970 bands for uplink.

Apart from that of the Teletalk, the BTRC will award four more 3G licences for 15 years.

The BTRC chairman said they were trying to make the auction competitive and they were optimistic all spectrums put up for auction would be sold.

“If we cannot sell all the spectrums, only then we will think about the next steps,” he said.

The government recently changed the International Long Distance Tele-communication Services Policy and awarded dozens of licences to a few po-litically backed companies. At the same time, the BTRC recommended chang-ing the Wi-Max guideline to award two more licences.

Sunil Kanti Bose said the government could change any guideline anytime and allocate any spectrum to anyone. “The government can either call a fresh auc-tion or assign spectrums to any operator.”

The watchdog boss informed the Dhaka Tribune that they were also scrutinising legal options to see if spec-trums of closed PSTN operators could be allocated to other operators.

“I am for maximum utilisation of spectrums.”

In reply to a question, Sunil said: “After the auction we will allow the winning operators to take advantage of technological neutrality immediate-ly so they can o� er better services for minimum expenses.”

The BTRC � rst attempted to make a guideline for 3G in 2008 and initially wanted to hold an auction on January 19, 2009.

Sunil acknowledged that they were late in introducing 3G services in the country because of some taxation is-sues, but not much. “I am not sure if the market was prepared back in 2008. Af-fordability might also be a concern then.

“We improved a lot in the past two years and connectivity is also available now…Maybe it is the perfect time to deploy 3G services in the country,” he added.

The BTRC is o� ering a 5MHz slot in 2100 band for 3G services. The � oor price of 1MHz spectrum has been � xed at $20m. An operator can take up to three slots.

According to the guideline, 60% of the total price of allocated spectrum has to be paid in the � rst instalment within 60 days of the auction and the remaining 40% by the next 180 days. l The view of a Mohakhali bus terminal during the � rst day of nationwide shutdown called by Jamaat-e-Islami NASHIRUL ISLAM

Activists of Ganajagaran Manchha take out a procession in the capital on Tuesday denouncing the shutdwon called by Jamaat-e-Islami DHAKA TRIBUNE

‘My family went to many killing grounds including those in Rayerbazar and Mohammadpur, but they did not � nd my uncle’s body’

Cross-examination of Alim deferredn Udisa Islam

The tribunal dealing with crimes against humanity yesterday again de-ferred cross-examination of the inves-tigation o� cer in the case against for-mer BNP state minister Abdul Alim.

Upon a prosecution plea, the Interna-tional Crimes Tribunal 2 led by Justice Obaidul Hassan set August 19 to ques-tion IO ZM Altafur Rahman, who made his deposition on July 24-25. The defence cross examined him for three days. 

Seeking an adjournment, the prose-cution cited sickness of the IO. Prose-cutor Mokhlesur Rahman said Altafur fell sick after visiting his village home in Thakurgaon on August 7.

He is the 35th and the last prosecu-tion witness in the case. Alim was pres-ent at the dock.

Chairman of Joypurhat district Peace Committee during the war, Alim is facing 17 charges of crimes against humanity. He was arrested on March 27, 2011, and has been on conditional bail since March 31 last year. l

News4 DHAKA TRIBUNE Wednesday, August 14, 2013

City High LowDhaka 32.8 26.2Chittagong 29.0 26.0Rajshahi 34.4 26.2Rangpur 33.5 26.4Khulna 34.4 26.5Barisal 32.0 26.0Sylhet 32.2 24.6Cox’s Bazar 30.7 26.5

PRAYER TIMESFajar 4:13am

Sunrise 5:32amZohr 12:03pm

Asr 4:39pmMagrib 6:33pm

Esha 7:53pmSource: IslamicFinder.org

Mob violence kills at least 650 in last four and a half yearsIn most cases, innocent people fall victim to thoughtless mob attacks n Mohammad Jamil Khan

In the past few years, Bangladesh has seen an increase in mob violence, re-sulting in 12 deaths on an average each month.

Lack of trust in law enforcement agencies and a weak criminal justice system are cited as the reasons for people taking law into their own hands and publicly lynching those involved or suspected in crimes like robbery or child lifting.

In most cases, innocent people fall victim to thoughtless mob attacks as callous participants never verify the al-legations or listen to the appeals of the prey.

Studies conducted by the human rights organisation “Odhikar” and Centre for Media Research and Stud-ies show that an alarming number of 650 people have been killed in mob violence, during the last four and half years, averaging in 12 deaths per month.

Of them, 127 people were killed in 2009, 174 in 2010, 161 in 2011, 126 in 2012 and 61 in the � rst six months of the current year.

In the most recent example of mob violence, three persons, suspected of

being involved in a robbery were killed at Kapasia upazila, Gazipur on July 12.

The mob violence is not justi� ed at all times and in some instances, the violence is allegedly used as a smoke-screen to settle past scores. For exam-ple, on May 16 this year, three youths—all from Rangpur – were beaten to death at Yarpur’s Diakhali area in Ashulia, for alleged armed robbery.

Bakul Mia, uncle of one of the vic-tims, Sumon, told the Ashulia police that his nephew was working at a gar-ment factory in the area and his murder was pre-mediated.

However, Badrul Alam, o� cer-in-charge of Ashulia police station justi-� ed the mob violence and told the Dha-ka Tribune: “Those three youths were dacoits and were killed by a mob.”

Sometimes innocent young people fall victim to the senseless mob vio-lence, like the six students who were beaten to death and another one in-jured by a mob in Bardeshi village, Aminbazar, Savar on July 18, 2011. During the course of investigations, it was learnt that all of them were college students and one of them was a merit student.

According to observers, the rising incidence of mob violence is due to

the fact that at times, it seems to be the only way for people to vent their frus-trations.

When the Dhaka Tribune asked the common people as to why they chose violence over peaceful protests, 95% of them said the authorities concerned did not respond to peaceful demon-strations.

Prof Dr Azizul Islam of Dhaka Uni-versity’s psychology department, told the Dhaka Tribune: “Peaceful pro-tests are usually ignored in this coun-try. Those who participate in street violence know that there is hardly any scope for them to get justice. So their vengeance comes out in a di� erent form.”

He added: “Smashing the window of a car is not a re� ection of social break-down, but a symptom of social break-down.” Prof Aziz stressed that change should be brought about with a push towards an “equal and just society.” Otherwise, he added, social inequality would continue to grow, and so would social disorder.

“With waves of protests sweeping the globe over voting rights, labour dis-putes and discontent with economic trends, Bangladesh is hardly immune to them,” experts said.

Advocate Alina Khan, executive di-rector of the Bangladesh Society for the Enforcement of Human Rights, told the Dhaka Tribune that mob violence was the outcome of the dismal state of the law and order situation in the coun-try. The authorities concerned need to tackle the situation through proper ini-tiatives, she added.

People are taking law into their hands, which shows their lack of con-� dence in the country’s administration and judicial system, said Secretary Adi-lur Rahman of “Odhikar”. It was regret-table that extra-judicial killings had become a norm in our society, he said.

Hassan Mahmood Khandker, inspec-tor general of police (IGP), said: “Mob violence does not mean that there is no law and order in the country.” He added that perpetrators of road rage seemed to have forgotten that harming inno-cent people was also injustice.

“What we need is awareness among the general people about the evils of such incidents,” he said.

Prof Borhanuddin Khan of the De-partment of Law, University of Dhaka, told the Dhaka Tribune: “It is a ques-tion of mental attitude and we need to create awareness among the general people.” l

Multipurpose education a must for rapid progress: PMn UNB

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina said mul-tipurpose education is a must for rapid progress of the country, when the mem-bers of Standing Committee of Bangla-desh University Council came to visit at her o� ce, yesterday.

She emphasised the need for educa-tion, terming it as the main tool for pov-erty alleviation.

After the meeting, PM’s press secre-tary Abul Kalam Azad briefed reporters.

Hasina mentioned that her govern-ment was implementing various steps for further development of education as no nation could achieve its desired goals without education.

She said, “Awami League in its previ-ous tenure from 1996 to 2001 had taken initiatives to set up 12 science and tech-nology universities in the country.”

“But the BNP-Jamaat alliance gov-ernment shelved the project out of po-litical vengeance when it had assumed o� ce in 2001,” she added.

After returning to power, Hasina said, the present government had launched 12 universities. She said her previous government for the � rst time allocated Tk 120m for research purposes. “After returning to power this time, the pres-ent government raised the allocation to conduct research in various sectors,” she said.

The prime minister said her govern-ment was providing “free textbooks up

to secondary level and stipends to over 11.9m students”, and had introduced a locally managed midday meal in schools to keep in-check the dropout of students as well as to reduce the burden of their parents.

In order to help the poor and meri-torious students continue their educa-tion, the government constituted the Prime Minister’s Education Trust Fund with Tk 1,000 as seed money.She also mentioned that the present government was setting up multimedia classrooms and providing internet facil-ities to educational institutions across the country for improving the quality of education. The premier urged the teach-ers to maintain a congenial atmosphere on the campus. “It’s your responsibility to groom the students as future leaders of the nation. And the university is for all,” she said.

In response to some demands of the teachers, Sheikh Hasina suggested them to raise funds through alumni associa-tions for the development of respective universities.

She asked them to take part in the de-velopment of the country through pay-ing income tax regularly.

In this connection, she said all the ministers and lawmakers except the president are now paying income tax.

Hasina also highlighted her govern-ment’s “tremendous successes” in the � elds of agriculture, economy, health, ICT and social safety net programmes. l

New VC of Nazrul University appointedn Tribune Report

Former chairman of Chittagong Uni-versity English department Prof Mohit-ul-Alam was appointed as the new vice chancellor of Jatiya Kabi Kazi Nazrul Is-lam University (JKKNIU).

Education Secretary Kamal Abdul Naser Chowdhury yesterday told the re-porters that the ministry issued an order on this. Prof Mohit would be the VC of JKKNIU for the next four years. Before the appointment, Prof Mohit has been working as dean of arts faculty and head of English department at University of Liberal Arts Bangladesh. The vice chan-cellor post of JKKNIU was vacant on June 16 because pf the death of then VC Prof Khondakar Ashraf Hossain. l

LIMON’S CASE AGAINST RAB

Hearing on revision petition deferredn Our Correspondent. Barisal

Hearing on the revision petition lodged by Henoara Begum, mother of Limon Hossain, against six Rab personnel accused of maiming her son deferred for the third time on Tuesday.

Limon, a college student  who used to work in a brick kiln to bear his educational expenses was allegedly maimed  by Rab as they shot him in the leg at Jamaddarhat in Rajapur Upazila of Jhalakathi on March 23, 2011 about a fortnight before his HSC examination.

Henoara Begum at � rst tried to � le an attempt-to-murder case against the elite force with the Rajapur Police Station after the incident.

But the Rajapur Police Station refused to accept the case against Rab

men. Later a court order compelled the police station to register the case on April 10, 2011.

However, police on August 14, 2012 secretly � led the � nal report on the case lodged by Henoara claiming that they found no evidence and witnesses against Rab.

Then complainant of the case and mother of Limon � led no con� dence (naraji) against the � nal report of police on August 30, 2012.

The Jhalokati Senior Judicial Magistrate on February 13, 2013 rejected the no con� dence (naraji) prayer.

The prayer for revision was lodged with the Jhalakathi District and Sessions Judge’s Court against the rejection of the Naraji.

Jhalakathi District Public Prosecutor

Golam Rasul Mannan submitted a time petition saying that the prosecution was not prepared for the hearing.

Shahidullah Baqaul, the district and sessions judge, � xed September 8, 2013 for the next hearing on the revision petition.The Rab on March 23, 2011 � led two cases with the Rajapur Police Station; seven others under the arms act, and one for obstructing the work of law enforcers, attempting to murder and injuring Rab personnel.

Limon’s left leg was amputated from the thigh on March 27 at the Dhaka National Institute for Traumatolgy and Orthopaedic Rehabilitation (NITOR) Hospital as the tissues were totally damaged due to excessive bleeding caused by delay in treatment after the shooting. l

Commuters were compelled to avail train for the lack of inter-district bus service during a nationwide strike enforced by Bangladesh Jamaat Islami yesterday . The photo was taken from Kamalapur Railway Station RAJIB DHAR

Launch, pontoon damaged at Barisal portn Our Correspondent, Barisal

A triple-decker launch and the pontoon of the Barisal port were damaged early yesterday in a collision.

The passengers on the launch and the port authorities, while recounting the incident said MV Suravi-8, plying on the Barisal-Dhaka route hit the backside of the MV Tipu-7, which was already berthed at the port. ,

Fortunately, only around 8-10 people sustained minor injuries with no major casualty reported till now, deputy direc-tor of Bangladesh Inland Water Trans-port Authority (BIWTA) and Barisal Port O� cer Md Shahidullah said, adding that MV Tipu 7 and the pontoon sustained damages following the collision.

Meanwhile, Abdur Razzak, master of  MV Tipu 7, lodged a complaint with the  Barisal  river port  authority,  claim-ing that his vessel had sustained dam-ages worth  Tk1m and  losses in repair-ing costs, loss of revenue from trips and other costs would amount to Tk10m.

He also claimed that his vessel was berthed at the place designated to it by the port authority, when MV Suravi 8, which was trying to change its berthing place, hit it.

Denying such an allegation, Kamal Hossain, master of MV Suravi 8, claimed that MV Tipu 7 was berthed horizontally, instead of vertically, encroaching on the berthing space for other vessels. l

Rana Bahini terrorises several villages in Narsingdin Our Correspondent, Narsingdi

Several thousand people of Atia, Kar-tetail, Khilpara and Gagra villages in Narsingdi’s Polash upazila brought out processions yesterday demanding arrest of wanted criminal Masud Rana and his gang members.

Over 5,000 demonstrators later gath-ered for a rally on the grounds of the Atia mosque.

Talking to members of the Narsingdi Press Club who visited the area yesterday, many a� ected villagers said several cases were � led with police stations at Polash and Narsingdi Sadar against Rana and

his associates. The charges against them included extortion, robbery, arms posses-sion, rape and harassment.

The victims also submitted petitions to the superintendent of police in Narsingdi demanding punishment of the culprits.

Narsingdi SP Khandaker Muhid Uddin said he had ordered Polash police to arrest Rana immediately.

Shahdat Hossain, o� cer-in-charge of Polash police station, said Rana was a wanted criminal, and he was accused in more than a dozen cases � led over the past one year.

“But whenever we raided his known hangouts, he managed to � ee,” Shahdat

said.However, local people claimed that

the law enforcers were not apprehending Rana as he reportedly enjoyed the patron-age of local ruling party activists and po-lice protection.

They alleged that Rana, who comes from Kartetail village, was sheltered by Polash Jubo League president Javed Mia. But Javed denied the allegation, saying Rana was a follower of Iqbal, former vice president of the Awami League’s youth wing. Iqbal could not be reached for com-ment.

Over 20,000 people of Atia, Kartetail, Khilpara and Gagra villages have become

victims of rampant extortion, robbery, snatching, land-grabbing and assault by members of Rana’s gang, known as “Rana Bahini”.

Residents in these areas were patrol-ling their homes at night, fearing attacks by the Rana Bahini, while around 5,000 villagers have sought shelter in Polash, Narsingdi and Dhaka to escape the gang’s wrath. The local people also complained that instead of taking any action against the criminals, police advised them to settle their “problems” with Rana and his gang amicably.

Mintu Mia of Atia said Rana and his men attacked his house after he refused

to pay them protection money. “They de-manded Tk50,000, But when I refused to pay up, they entered my home, damaged furniture and looted cash and gold worth about Tk200,000 on August 5,” he said.

Abdur Razzak, imam of a local mosque, told the journalists that Rana and his men had allegedly raped about 50 women and young girls.

The imam said many parents had sent away their young daughters to relatives’ homes in other places for their safety.

Several villagers also said female workers at the factory of Pran Foods were victims of assaults and rapes by Rana and his men. l

WEATHER

Temperature likely to risen UNB, Dhaka

Light to moderate rain or thundershowers accompanied by temporary gusty wind is likely to occur at many places over Dhaka, Chittagong, Barisal and Sylhet divisions and at a few places over Khulna, Rang-pur and Rajshahi divisions in 24 hours till 6pm today. Moderately heavy falls are also likely at places over the country, Met O� ce said. Day and night temperature may rise slightly over the country.

The sun sets in the capital today at 6:33pm and rises tomorrow at 5:34am.

Country’s highest temperature 34.5 degree Celsius was recorded yesterday at Jessore, Syedpur and Chuadanga, and lowest 24.6 degrees at Sylhet. Highest and lowest temperature and humidity recorded in some major cities and towns yesterday were:

Awami League factions clashin Jessoren Our Correspondent, Jessore

Two factions of the local unit of Awa-mi League clashed over establishing supremacy in Putkhali area, which is known as a smuggling gateway, at Be-napole in Jessore yesterday.

Locals said supporters of the two factions— one led by Fakir Ahmad and another led by Siraj—exchanged scores of gunshots, hurled several crude bombs and chased down members from the opposing factions, through-out the night.

Residents of the Putkhali village under Benapole said they could not sleep during the night as they were dis-turbed by the rival factions that started � ghting in the early hours of yesterday morning and continued clashing till late morning. l

Housewife beaten to death over dowry n Our Correspondent, Narsingdi

A pregnant housewife was beaten to death for dowry by her husband and in-laws at Nilokhiya village under Belabo upazila yesterday night.

The deceased Iti Begum, 21, daughter of Islam Mia of Sarrabad village, mar-ried one Saiful Islam of the same upazila about a year ago.

Although Islam Mia gave a dowry of Tk100,000 to his son-in-law as per the demand, Saiful demanded Tk100,000 more in the name of business about a month ago. Saiful and his mother used to torture Iti for money. A few days back, Iti was sent to her father’s house to bring the amount of money. On the day of in-cident, the housewife returned to her husband’s house without money which infuriated Saiful and his relatives.

The in-laws started beating Iti and at one stage they poured pesticide into her mouth. Locals came to Iti’s rescue hear-ing her cry for help. She was rushed to Narsingdi Zila Hospital where attending doctors declared her dead.

Belabo police arrived at the spot and recovered the body to send it to the hos-pital morgue for autopsy after which the doctors said Iti was six months preg-nant. l

Special 5DHAKA TRIBUNE Wednesday, August 14, 2013

We could have unleashed anarchy across the country: Ahmad Sha�

n Kamran Reza Chowdhury, Tusher Hayat, Md Nashirul Islam and Manik Miazee

Journalists in Chittagong alerted us to the lurking danger of meeting Shah Ahmed Sha� .

Undaunted by the warn-ing, we pressed ahead as we

planned to take an interview of the Hefazat-e-Islam ameer who lived in the Al-Jamiatul Ahliah Darul Uloom Moinul Islam Madrasa in Hathazari.

They cautioned us that the Qwami Madrasa students seriously injured a journalist in 2004 as he went to take a snapshot of the entrance of the ma-drasa on Khagrachhari-Hathazari road.

We reached the madrasa gate at around 12 o’clock. With the reference to Munir Ahmad, the press secretary to Ahmad Sha� , we could enter the madrasa’s rectangular premises forti-� ed by four-storey buildings all around with some more under-construction small structures dotting the premises.

Munir Ahmad took us to the room of Ahmad Sha� on the � rst � oor of a building instructing us not to question him, much to our frustration.

Munir said we could only bid him salam and seek blessings from him.

As we stepped into the room we found Shah Ahmad Sha� sitting on a chair with a table in front. Clad in a white vest and traditional lungi the Hefazat chief took our salam with a careless look at us.

It was obvious from his look that he did not like us as we were sport-ing trousers and shirt. He was looking downward.

Sha� ’s Press Secretary Munir intro-duced us to him who came back from Saudi Arabia the previous day (July 19). It was the press secretary who ini-tiated the discourse telling us: “Huzur is very sick and unable to talk to us.”

Munir told us that Sha� was vexed as hundreds of journalists � ock to the madrasa every day to meet him.

We thought he would not allow us to proceed with a long discussion. We made them feel comfortable and at one stage Munir told us that he would talk on behalf of Moulana Sha� .

DT: We waited for long to see you…

Munir Ahmad butted into half way through the sentence: “Huzur is very sick; he is not in a position to talk to you. He had addressed scores of programmes in Saudi Arabia, Jeddah, Riyadh, and Mecca-Medina. Wherever he went people poured in to see him; the expatriates there wanted him to stay back but he returned for his old-age complications.”

DT: What happened to the proposed Qawmi Madrasa board and the university?

Munir Ahmad (MA): “We have no relation with it (board). The university is state owned. Sha� was made the DG of the government commission on Qwami Madrasa.”

DT: Was Shafi made its chairman?

MA: The government proposed to appoint Huzur as the chairman of the Qwami Commission. Huzur tagged � ve preconditions. He then held a press conference and withdrew his support as the government was resorting to cheating.

DT: You (Hefazat-e-Islam) are on one side and people are on the other end. We the media are in between. What do you think of it?

MA: “You will convey our message to people.”

DT: People have some positive ideas about you (Hefazat-e-Islam)…

MA: Yes, it has been proved. People’s response to 13-point demand of the Hefazat, � oated only two months back without any organisational structure, is unprecedented. This was not pos-sible for any political parties to hold rallies in four to � ve districts and make the long march and Dhaka siege a suc-cess. It was possible only because of Hefazat-e-Islam’s non-political stance. Hefazat’s power originates from Iman (faith) and Akidah (certain belief). Hefazat has neither any political ambi-tion nor fascination for power; we are clear about it. Huzur says we are least bothered about who is going to power. Whoever is in power, they must not hurt people’s Iman and Akidah.

DT: Shafi is authority here. If he speaks something positive we can inform the people in the same light.

MA: Huzur is listening to you.

DT: We think the Hefazat-e-Islam is a non-political platform. But the May 5 Dhaka siege programme raised some political questions about the Hefazat. Some political demands were introduced from the Hefazat. For instance, issuing a deadline to the government for formulating blasphemy law…

MA: Some of the government activities have gone against Iman, Akidah and Is-lam. Our opposition to them has been interpreted as our opposition to the government. The government is pro-moting the atheists and the Shahbaghi. Some political parties are against the government. We do not have a single political issue in our 13-point de-mand. If the government accepts our demands, the Hefazat will keep mum and call o� its programmes.

At this stage of the conversation Ahmad Sha� stepped in.Sha� : Nothing will happen if the gov-ernment accepts Hefazat demands.

DT: We have seen the Hefazat activists campaigning against the Awami League-backed candidates and working in favour of other candidates in the city corporation polls like a political front…

Sha� : Haven’t you noticed it was phoney Hefazat? You have seen fake Hefazat. If there is a fake, there is a genuine too.

DT: Police carried out an operation on May 6. You said scores of people were killed. The government has asked for the list of the people killed in the operation as proof, but…

Sha� : You are learned persons; you tell me why we should publish the list. The government has killed people and it is the government that should provide the � gure.

Is there any instance in the world where people were attacked while in prayer or in sleep? The Prophet (SM) went to the country of Ka� rs (unbe-lievers), but refrained from attacking them at night. He encircled the Ka� rs’ villages equipped with swords and urged them to yield to Islam. When they declined to concede defeat they came under attack after Fazr prayer (in dawn).

As this correspondent was about to ask another question Shafi’s temper flared: “I cannot talk anymore. I am sick.”

MA: The government cut o� power before the genocide. Why did the gov-ernment feel the need for cleaning the streets at dawn?Sha� : Can you tell me what the neces-sity of washing the roads was? MA: So, the government must make public the number of people killed. Huzur has protested the burning of the Holy Quran. The prime minister said those who burnt the Quran would be hunted down through examining the video footage. None has been arrested so far. I am repeatedly asking the gov-ernment to form an inquiry commit-tee. Why don’t they do it?

The DT correspondents again tried to put a question to him but Shafi snapped: “Don’t talk tall.”

Sha� : Why was no probe body formed?MA: Huzur always urged the govern-

ment to constitute an impartial judicial commission. What is the problem with the judicial commission? Where is the barrier? Our people in Bangladesh…they cut trees? You tell me if Hefazat activists have chopped down trees. They had (Hefazat men) nothing excepting chira (� attened rice), muri (pu� ed rice), and water…and prayer beads.

DT: Why did the peaceful programme suddenly turn violent?

Sha� : We organised the long march programme on April 6. Have we vandalised a single car? Was there any arson attack at any place? Please tell me – investigate it … Our blockade programme started at 6am and ended at 9am on May 5. Before that nothing unpleasant happened.MA: The gathering was supposed to end at 6pm. You think, a gathering of 1.5 million to 2 million people …Sha� : How much time they need for exit.

DT: This is ok, but …

Sha� : We were being killed in the street … how can we allow them to leave the venue? If the government allowed us at night, I would go …

I returned after going one and a half miles. Police took me back to Lalbagh Madrasa. No light was there; shooting was going on … I decided to go to the spot at Fazr prayer and return after o� ering prayers.

At this stage he again lost his tem-per and said in a baritone voice: “Why do you disturb me for this? What is the point of vexing me? We are oppressed … tell me.”

DT: Our question is ...

Sha� : You don’t need to say anything. Why have you come here? Who has sent you here?

He then went on to repeat if the cor-respondents went there to meet him on their own or whether the govern-ment had sent them there to extract information from him.

The DT correspondent said it was not what he was thinking.

Sha� then insisted if the govern-ment had sent the correspondents to get his views: “Many people come. You have to tell me who has sent you here?”

DT: This is our newspaper’s decision to talk to you.

Sha� : We have already communicated our views through newspapers. I am 90 years old. You are like my grand-sons … I have been on to the streets for what I believe … I will not say anything … we are not craving for power; we are not for putting someone in power. We do not need to overthrow someone from power. We have been with the madrasa … the government has said nothing. It could have accepted only one of our demands. If they assured

us that they would consider the rest gradually …

MA then intervened: This would su� ce.Sha� : Then nothing would have hap-pened. We do not want anything; we have urged them to accept the words of Allah and his Prophet (SM). They are not accepting … killing us. We will endure torture … we will not � ght back. We are not out to dislodge Hasina. We have no such agenda. We are not of the view that Hasina goes and someone else comes. We are a non-political front … we will place the same demand to whoever comes in Hasina’s place.

MA: We have put our faith in Allah. We are seeking justice from Him for the May 5 incident.Sha� : We have sought justice from Al-lah. We have not turned to anyone for justice … we could have done so. We could have unleashed anarchy across the country.

MA: It was not a big deal to us. We have people’s support, you know. We could have brought the country to a standstill.Sha� : We did not go that way and will not do so. We do not want power … do you know who liberated this country (undivided India)?

MA: The Alems (religious lead-ers) have done it; the Alems had their

contribution to the anti-British move-ments …Sha� : The Deobandhis have done it. Then the Hindustan and Pakistan came into being. Bangladesh was born after the Hindustan-Pakistan. You go through the history to know the con-tribution of the Alems.

MA: Still the Alems are the most vocal against the Indian threat or other threats. Are you clear about Huzur’s position?

DT: We want to get your opinion about the trial of Jamaat leader Ali Ahsan Mohammad Mojaheed and …

Sha� : We have no comment on this is-sue. We have no political stance … we have not made any political slogans. We will not talk politically. Our posi-tion is clear: we are a non-political (front) … You take part in the Iftar.

Ahmad Sha� then paused and of-fered a prayer for Allah’s blessing upon the DT journalists so that they could write in favour of Islam. However, he refused to be photographed after the interview. He then authorised MA to answer the rest of the DT questions.

MA then took the DT team to an-other room.

DT: Shafi denied the involvement of the Hefazat men in the city corporation polls. But we have seen them campaigning against the Awami League-backed candidates in all five city corporation polls. If they were fake Hefazat men, why did you not issue a statement against the use of Hefazat card?

MA: City corporation polls are local polls. Some Hefazat activists might have worked for some local interests … We had no central instruction for this.

He refused to talk after the Juhr prayer call.

“Negative consequences of the crackdown on the Hefazat activists are already visible,” Munir said with a lopsided smile without naming the Awami League, which conceded defeat in the � ve city corporation polls, be-fore bidding us good-bye. l

Hefazat activists came together in a massive gathering at the capital’s Motijheel on May 5 in support of the 13-point demand. A large number of law enforcers were deployed later that night to disperse the activists who were staging a sit-in after daylong violence in and around downtown Motijheel SYED ZAKIR HOSSAIN/DHAKA TRIBUNE

Ahmed Sha� in a press conference in April MAHMUD HOSSAIN OPU/DHAKA TRIBUNE

Dhaka Tribune talks to Ahmad Sha� , the leader of Hefazat-e-Islam, in an exclusive interview

‘We are not out to dislodge Hasina. We have no such agenda. We are not of the view that Hasina goes and someone else comes.We are a non-political front’

BANKABBANK | 2.95 | 32.60 | Vol. 189844 D: 25.30 ⇑ 2.43% | 25.11 | 27.00 / 22.50 C: 25.40 ⇑ 1.60% | 25.31 | 25.50 / 24.00CITYBANK | 1.15 | 25.97 | Vol. 389801 D: 17.70 ⇑ 2.91% | 17.65 | 18.50 / 16.00 C: 17.80 ⇑ 4.09% | 17.72 | 17.80 / 17.60IFIC | 1.10 | 18.34 | Vol. 632654 D: 21.90 ⇑ 0.00% | 22.05 | 23.00 / 19.80 C: 22.20 ⇑ 1.37% | 22.16 | 22.50 / 21.80ISLAMIBANK | 3.78 | 27.16 | Vol. 145920 D: 36.10 ⇑ 0.28% | 36.07 | 37.00 / 33.00 C: 35.90 ⇑ 0.28% | 35.94 | 36.20 / 35.00NBL | 1.05 | 15.76 | Vol. 1127982 D: 11.90 ⇑ 0.00% | 11.96 | 12.60 / 11.00 C: 12.00 ⇑ 0.84% | 11.98 | 12.10 / 11.90PUBALIBANK | 1.92 | 21.18 | Vol. 151940 D: 30.00 ⇓ 0.33% | 30.17 | 31.00 / 27.20 C: 30.50 ⇓ 0.33% | 30.20 | 30.90 / 29.80RUPALIBANK | 6.70 | 64.27 | Vol. 9212 D: 60.10 ⇓ 1.48% | 60.47 | 62.00 / 58.00 C: 61.00 ⇑ 1.33% | 60.17 | 61.00 / 60.00UCBL | 1.90 | 21.72 | Vol. 1746441 D: 19.00 ⇑ 2.70% | 18.97 | 20.00 / 17.50 C: 18.90 ⇑ 3.85% | 18.86 | 19.00 / 18.20UTTARABANK | 3.42 | 26.97 | Vol. 151112 D: 25.70 ⇑ 1.98% | 25.53 | 25.90 / 23.60 C: 25.70 ⇑ 2.39% | 25.53 | 25.90 / 24.50ICBIBANK | -1.60 | -13.03 | Vol. 100000 D: 6.00 ⇑ 0.00% | 6.09 | 6.20 / 6.00EBL | 3.91 | 28.22 | Vol. 1400723 D: 26.20 ⇑ 1.16% | 26.95 | 27.00 / 24.00 C: 26.20 ⇑ 0.00% | 26.41 | 26.50 / 26.20ALARABANK | 2.03 | 14.91 | Vol. 467912 D: 15.00 ⇑ 1.35% | 14.97 | 15.10 / 14.00 C: 15.00 ⇑ 1.35% | 14.99 | 15.00 / 14.50PRIMEBANK | 2.89 | 22.40 | Vol. 1633657 D: 21.50 ⇑ 1.90% | 21.50 | 22.70 / 19.00 C: 21.20 ⇑ 3.41% | 20.87 | 21.20 / 20.60SOUTHEASTB | 1.89 | 22.66 | Vol. 239751 D: 16.40 ⇑ 0.61% | 16.48 | 16.60 / 15.00 C: 16.50 ⇑ 1.23% | 16.47 | 17.00 / 16.00DHAKABANK | 1.46 | 18.08 | Vol. 136402 D: 20.80 ⇑ 0.48% | 20.91 | 21.10 / 19.50 C: 20.70 ⇑ 1.47% | 20.53 | 20.70 / 20.00NCCBANK | 1.90 | 15.88 | Vol. 598049 D: 12.40 ⇑ 1.64% | 12.41 | 12.60 / 11.00 C: 12.50 ⇑ 1.63% | 12.51 | 12.60 / 12.40SIBL | 2.05 | 14.47 | Vol. 345248 D: 12.60 ⇑ 0.80% | 12.57 | 13.00 / 11.30 C: 12.70 ⇑ 1.60% | 12.50 | 12.70 / 11.50DUTCHBANGL | 11.57 | 54.27 | Vol. 16000 D: 99.70 ⇑ 1.32% | 99.73 | 101.8 / 98.10 C: 104.4 ⇑ 0.38% | 103.85 | 105.0 / 102.9MTBL | 1.17 | 17.27 | Vol. 14010 D: 14.70 ⇑ 3.52% | 14.71 | 14.90 / 14.00STANDBANKL | 2.33 | 14.41 | Vol. 233667 D: 13.60 ⇑ 0.74% | 13.58 | 14.00 / 12.30 C: 13.90 ⇑ 0.72% | 13.53 | 14.00 / 12.80ONEBANKLTD | 2.35 | 15.34 | Vol. 1107360 D: 15.40 ⇑ 3.36% | 15.23 | 16.00 / 13.80 C: 15.50 ⇑ 3.33% | 15.37 | 16.00 / 14.00BANKASIA | 1.35 | 20.80 | Vol. 431886 D: 18.50 ⇑ 1.65% | 18.59 | 18.60 / 17.00MERCANBANK | 2.07 | 16.59 | Vol. 563493 D: 12.00 ⇑ 0.00% | 11.99 | 12.50 / 11.00 C: 12.10 ⇑ 0.83% | 11.99 | 12.10 / 11.00EXIMBANK | 1.80 | 14.31 | Vol. 708611 D: 12.10 ⇓ 0.82% | 12.15 | 13.10 / 11.00 C: 12.20 ⇓ 0.81% | 12.13 | 12.30 / 12.00JAMUNABANK | 2.47 | 18.56 | Vol. 187754 D: 14.00 ⇑ 0.72% | 13.99 | 14.20 / 13.00 C: 14.40 ⇑ 0.70% | 14.09 | 14.40 / 13.80BRACBANK | 1.51 | 24.87 | Vol. 205124 D: 28.90 ⇑ 0.35% | 29.10 | 29.50 / 26.00 C: 28.90 ⇓ 2.03% | 28.85 | 29.00 / 28.70SHAHJABANK | 2.61 | 14.47 | Vol. 248967 D: 14.70 ⇑ 0.00% | 14.89 | 15.10 / 13.50 C: 15.00 ⇑ 0.67% | 14.85 | 15.00 / 14.40PREMIERBAN | 1.18 | 13.95 | Vol. 353207 D: 10.40 ⇑ 0.00% | 10.38 | 11.00 / 9.40 C: 10.40 ⇑ 0.97% | 10.42 | 10.50 / 10.00TRUSTBANK | 0.50 | 18.00 | Vol. 42494 D: 18.00 ⇑ 2.27% | 17.95 | 18.20 / 15.90 C: 17.50 ⇑ 0.57% | 17.55 | 17.50 / 17.50FIRSTSBANK | 1.85 | 13.89 | Vol. 155171 D: 12.40 ⇑ 0.81% | 12.47 | 13.00 / 11.30 C: 12.60 ⇑ 0.80% | 12.50 | 12.70 / 12.00

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NHFIL | 0.57 | 12.70 | Vol. 280025 D: 29.40 ⇑ 5.76% | 29.13 | 30.40 / 27.90 C: 28.90 ⇑ 3.58% | 29.13 | 30.00 / 28.90BAYLEASING | 0.72 | 25.55 | Vol. 130444 D: 30.00 ⇑ 3.81% | 29.88 | 30.20 / 28.00 C: 29.90 ⇑ 5.28% | 29.95 | 30.10 / 29.70ICB | 109.65 | 595.98 | Vol. 6719 D: 1863 ⇑ 2.62% | 1864 | 1885 / 1830 C: 1850 ⇑ 0.05% | 1850 | 1850 / 1850GSPFINANCE | 1.63 | 22.23 | Vol. 47035 D: 24.30 ⇑ 2.10% | 24.33 | 25.00 / 22.00 C: 25.00 ⇑ 6.38% | 25.00 | 25.00 / 25.00

INVESTMENT1STICB | 64.70 | 137.05 | Vol. 100 D: 893.2 ⇑ 0.76% | 890.00 | 900.0 / 886.52NDICB | 33.02 | 76.34 | Vol. 250 D: 323.8 ⇑ 0.34% | 324.00 | 325.0 / 323.03RDICB | 24.83 | 58.91 | Vol. 1250 D: 217.5 ⇓ 1.14% | 217.60 | 225.0 / 212.54THICB | 23.40 | 58.63 | Vol. 1100 D: 214.9 ⇑ 8.26% | 214.55 | 216.0 / 214.8

ENGINEERINGAFTABAUTO | 4.29 | 52.65 | Vol. 590727 D: 115.7 ⇑ 5.37% | 113.90 | 120.0 / 99.00 C: 115.8 ⇑ 4.89% | 113.97 | 116.9 / 111.0AZIZPIPES | 0.39 | -42.04 | Vol. 3300 D: 15.60 ⇑ 3.31% | 15.76 | 15.70 / 15.30OLYMPIC | 5.94 | 14.91 | Vol. 891357 D: 236.5 ⇓ 0.50% | 236.25 | 241.0 / 218.0 C: 236.0 ⇓ 0.88% | 236.73 | 243.5 / 233.0BDLAMPS | -5.31 | 37.07 | Vol. 22350 D: 140.2 ⇑ 8.68% | 139.06 | 140.9 / 134.9 C: 138.8 ⇑ 5.15% | 138.80 | 138.8 / 138.8ECABLES | 2.04 | 18.87 | Vol. 5800 D: 58.90 ⇑ 4.25% | 58.57 | 59.00 / 57.80 C: 58.00 ⇑ 5.07% | 58.00 | 58.00 / 58.00SINGERBD | 9.99 | 45.74 | Vol. 144237 D: 195.7 ⇑ 4.93% | 192.84 | 197.0 / 186.5 C: 195.2 ⇑ 4.16% | 192.67 | 197.0 / 190.0ATLASBANG | 11.98 | 207.70 | Vol. 10724 D: 183.3 ⇑ 2.23% | 182.11 | 184.0 / 162.0BDAUTOCA | 0.25 | 6.23 | Vol. 6800 D: 22.20 ⇑ 0.91% | 22.21 | 22.50 / 22.00QSMDRYCELL | 1.65 | 58.49 | Vol. 78400 D: 34.90 ⇑ 2.05% | 34.79 | 35.30 / 33.00 C: 34.30 ⇑ 2.69% | 34.68 | 35.50 / 34.30RENWICKJA | 5.62 | -90.00 | Vol. 28650 D: 170.4 ⇑ 9.72% | 169.70 | 170.8 / 158.5NTLTUBES | -2.52 | 312.10 | Vol. 44300 D: 67.50 ⇑ 5.63% | 66.39 | 68.00 / 65.00BDTHAI | 0.43 | 39.35 | Vol. 129737 D: 19.80 ⇓ 0.50% | 20.02 | 21.00 / 18.00 C: 20.30 ⇓ 0.49% | 20.41 | 20.60 / 20.10ANWARGALV | 0.51 | 8.08 | Vol. 17000 D: 14.40 ⇓ 1.37% | 14.41 | 14.50 / 14.30KAY&QUE | -3.89 | 6.03 | Vol. 8000 D: 13.40 ⇑ 0.75% | 13.50 | 14.00 / 13.10RANFOUNDRY | 2.84 | 18.62 | Vol. 58000 D: 63.00 ⇑ 0.16% | 62.97 | 63.30 / 61.70SALAMCRST | 3.31 | 20.00 | Vol. 135810 D: 39.00 ⇑ 2.09% | 38.91 | 39.50 / 35.00 C: 39.00 ⇑ 5.12% | 39.11 | 39.50 / 38.10GOLDENSON | 3.70 | 28.70 | Vol. 160139 D: 39.20 ⇑ 1.03% | 39.15 | 40.00 / 35.50 C: 39.80 ⇑ 2.05% | 39.42 | 40.00 / 39.00BSRMSTEEL | 3.06 | 19.53 | Vol. 123571 D: 71.20 ⇑ 2.15% | 71.00 | 72.00 / 65.00 C: 71.60 ⇑ 2.29% | 71.30 | 71.80 / 70.70NAVANACNG | 4.09 | 27.04 | Vol. 284734 D: 76.00 ⇑ 8.73% | 73.56 | 76.60 / 69.00 C: 76.10 ⇑ 8.71% | 74.26 | 76.90 / 72.10DESHBANDHU | 1.16 | 12.02 | Vol. 127788 D: 20.00 ⇑ 2.56% | 20.06 | 20.20 / 18.10 C: 20.20 ⇑ 2.54% | 20.45 | 21.00 / 20.00GPHISPAT | 2.94 | 14.51 | Vol. 59700 D: 49.10 ⇑ 1.45% | 48.92 | 49.80 / 48.00 C: 50.00 ⇑ 0.40% | 50.49 | 53.00 / 49.20BENGALWTL | 2.42 | 20.72 | Vol. 109800 D: 43.50 ⇑ 3.08% | 43.22 | 43.70 / 42.20 C: 43.40 ⇑ 2.84% | 43.15 | 43.50 / 42.80NPOLYMAR | 2.01 | 324.37 | Vol. 49269 D: 41.00 ⇑ 1.74% | 40.91 | 41.20 / 39.00 C: 40.90 ⇑ 1.24% | 40.91 | 41.00 / 40.60

FOOD & ALLIEDAPEXFOODS | 2.54 | 90.81 | Vol. 16500 D: 74.00 ⇑ 5.26% | 72.97 | 74.40 / 71.90BANGAS | 7.20 | 50.27 | Vol. 62350 D: 531.4 ⇑ 2.05% | 525.96 | 537.0 / 518.1 C: 540.1 ⇑ 3.65% | 529.28 | 541.0 / 520.0BATBC | 65.69 | 117.22 | Vol. 8650 D: 1386 ⇓ 0.66% | 1376 | 1410 / 1350GEMINISEA | 10.88 | 9.69 | Vol. 1000 D: 136.9 ⇑ 3.71% | 137.00 | 140.0 / 133.0NTC | 29.88 | 110.05 | Vol. 1050 D: 841.3 ⇑ 0.35% | 840.95 | 849.5 / 836.0ZEALBANGLA | -23.01 | -193.09 | Vol. 4400 D: 8.00 ⇑ 3.90% | 7.95 | 8.00 / 7.90CVOPRL | 2.66 | 13.28 | Vol. 63400 D: 481.9 ⇑ 3.97% | 485.69 | 495.0 / 427.0 C: 481.5 ⇑ 6.10% | 487.38 | 491.3 / 470.0AMCL(PRAN) | 6.53 | 53.37 | Vol. 65080 D: 179.5 ⇑ 3.16% | 178.95 | 181.0 / 171.2 C: 179.0 ⇑ 1.94% | 178.98 | 183.0 / 176.0RAHIMAFOOD | 0.62 | 4.46 | Vol. 8000 D: 15.20 ⇑ 0.66% | 15.33 | 15.40 / 15.10 C: 15.40 ⇑ 7.69% | 15.37 | 15.40 / 15.30

FUWANGFOOD | 1.26 | 12.37 | Vol. 254939 D: 23.80 ⇑ 2.59% | 23.55 | 24.00 / 21.00 C: 23.70 ⇑ 3.04% | 23.70 | 23.90 / 23.50MEGHNAPET | -0.58 | -1.02 | Vol. 5500 D: 5.40 ⇑ 0.00% | 5.40 | 5.40 / 5.40MEGCONMILK | -6.68 | -16.22 | Vol. 9000 D: 6.90 ⇑ 0.00% | 6.89 | 7.00 / 6.90BEACHHATCH | 1.01 | 12.48 | Vol. 64528 D: 16.50 ⇑ 1.85% | 16.45 | 17.80 / 14.80 C: 16.50 ⇑ 0.00% | 16.26 | 16.50 / 16.50FINEFOODS | -0.11 | 10.58 | Vol. 21500 D: 16.30 ⇑ 0.00% | 16.37 | 16.70 / 16.20RDFOOD | 0.91 | 16.84 | Vol. 604237 D: 19.80 ⇓ 0.50% | 19.64 | 21.00 / 18.00 C: 19.90 ⇓ 0.50% | 20.08 | 20.50 / 19.70GHAIL | 1.01 | 22.08 | Vol. 597200 D: 43.70 ⇑ 3.31% | 43.47 | 44.20 / 39.00 C: 44.00 ⇑ 4.02% | 43.70 | 44.20 / 40.20

FUEL & POWERLINDEBD | 31.71 | 144.00 | Vol. 6200 D: 600.1 ⇑ 0.23% | 603.39 | 610.0 / 597.2PADMAOIL | 16.38 | 43.67 | Vol. 822108 D: 364.4 ⇑ 6.39% | 359.94 | 365.3 / 335.0 C: 363.6 ⇑ 5.94% | 358.81 | 365.9 / 345.3BDWELDING | 0.33 | 16.82 | Vol. 65802 D: 17.60 ⇑ 1.15% | 17.56 | 17.90 / 15.90 C: 17.60 ⇑ 0.00% | 17.68 | 17.90 / 17.00SUMITPOWER | 3.17 | 19.26 | Vol. 288523 D: 36.10 ⇑ 1.69% | 36.05 | 38.00 / 32.00 C: 36.10 ⇑ 1.69% | 35.99 | 36.20 / 34.00DESCO | 2.80 | 35.25 | Vol. 166145 D: 80.70 ⇑ 1.38% | 80.77 | 81.20 / 75.00 C: 80.00 ⇑ 1.52% | 79.99 | 80.10 / 79.80POWERGRID | 2.56 | 48.08 | Vol. 20826 D: 56.10 ⇑ 1.81% | 56.04 | 56.70 / 51.00 C: 56.10 ⇑ 3.31% | 56.05 | 59.60 / 55.00JAMUNAOIL | 22.78 | 50.24 | Vol. 508136 D: 239.2 ⇑ 4.82% | 237.65 | 240.4 / 220.0 C: 238.3 ⇑ 4.47% | 237.30 | 240.0 / 232.0MPETROLEUM | 16.98 | 40.41 | Vol. 848905 D: 279.2 ⇑ 2.50% | 279.26 | 283.0 / 260.0 C: 278.9 ⇑ 2.80% | 279.06 | 283.0 / 275.0TITASGAS | 9.01 | 36.56 | Vol. 631631 D: 86.30 ⇑ 3.11% | 85.70 | 92.00 / 75.40 C: 86.20 ⇑ 3.48% | 85.12 | 86.50 / 84.20KPCL | 4.73 | 15.86 | Vol. 89740 D: 52.20 ⇑ 1.16% | 52.12 | 52.50 / 49.00 C: 52.40 ⇑ 0.38% | 52.20 | 52.50 / 52.00BEDL | 1.57 | 17.89 | Vol. 642120 D: 34.30 ⇑ 3.31% | 33.92 | 35.00 / 30.00 C: 34.40 ⇑ 3.30% | 34.20 | 34.50 / 33.50

MJLBD | 2.73 | 30.24 | Vol. 50699 D: 72.80 ⇑ 1.96% | 72.44 | 73.20 / 65.00 C: 72.10 ⇑ 2.56% | 71.84 | 72.50 / 70.00GBBPOWER | 1.86 | 22.63 | Vol. 246469 D: 25.60 ⇑ 1.99% | 25.59 | 26.50 / 23.00 C: 25.40 ⇓ 1.93% | 25.45 | 26.00 / 25.30SPPCL | 3.81 | 23.34 | Vol. 661940 D: 58.70 ⇑ 3.71% | 58.30 | 59.00 / 54.00 C: 58.80 ⇑ 3.34% | 58.18 | 59.10 / 57.20

JUTEJUTESPINN | 2.06 | 17.42 | Vol. 950 D: 72.90 ⇑ 4.44% | 72.63 | 74.40 / 72.00SONALIANSH | 5.54 | 218.80 | Vol. 11650 D: 126.4 ⇑ 3.18% | 126.18 | 128.0 / 122.8

TEXTILEAL-HAJTEX | 1.35 | 15.64 | Vol. 5716 D: 55.60 ⇑ 3.15% | 55.42 | 55.80 / 50.00RAHIMTEXT | 0.51 | 73.88 | Vol. 500 D: 194.5 ⇑ 1.14% | 194.00 | 199.9 / 192.2SAIHAMTEX | 2.75 | 29.50 | Vol. 189200 D: 30.60 ⇑ 2.00% | 30.64 | 31.00 / 30.10 C: 30.60 ⇑ 1.32% | 30.79 | 31.00 / 30.50MODERNDYE | 1.09 | 12.93 | Vol. 250 D: 65.60 ⇑ 0.92% | 64.00 | 66.00 / 64.50DSHGARME | 0.72 | 12.00 | Vol. 4800 D: 27.10 ⇑ 2.26% | 27.29 | 27.80 / 26.50DULAMIACOT | -8.46 | -27.78 | Vol. 4600 D: 8.10 ⇑ 0.00% | 8.26 | 8.20 / 8.00TALLUSPIN | 2.56 | 12.06 | Vol. 1427280 D: 35.40 ⇑ 4.42% | 34.94 | 35.90 / 31.00 C: 35.30 ⇑ 4.75% | 34.88 | 35.50 / 33.50APEXSPINN | 2.01 | 49.32 | Vol. 4000 D: 59.00 ⇑ 3.69% | 59.00 | 59.80 / 57.20MITHUNKNIT | 4.54 | 30.39 | Vol. 100024 D: 84.90 ⇑ 1.56% | 84.80 | 85.20 / 78.00 C: 82.80 ⇓ 0.24% | 82.84 | 85.00 / 82.20DELTASPINN | 3.06 | 18.12 | Vol. 144800 D: 32.30 ⇑ 1.89% | 32.09 | 32.50 / 30.20 C: 32.20 ⇑ 0.63% | 32.07 | 32.70 / 31.80

SONARGAON | 0.27 | 34.50 | Vol. 23337 D: 13.30 ⇑ 0.00% | 13.37 | 13.50 / 12.50PRIMETEX | 1.01 | 63.54 | Vol. 656000 D: 24.60 ⇑ 5.13% | 24.49 | 25.20 / 23.60 C: 25.00 ⇑ 7.76% | 24.22 | 25.50 / 21.70ALLTEX | -0.11 | 23.81 | Vol. 77000 D: 7.40 ⇑ 1.37% | 7.47 | 7.50 / 7.40 C: 7.50 ⇑ 0.00% | 7.50 | 7.50 / 7.50ANLIMAYARN | 1.19 | 11.01 | Vol. 171500 D: 30.10 ⇓ 1.95% | 30.31 | 31.20 / 29.80 C: 29.50 ⇓ 1.34% | 29.50 | 29.50 / 29.50HRTEX | 2.08 | 14.92 | Vol. 79632 D: 26.00 ⇑ 2.77% | 26.00 | 26.30 / 25.30 C: 26.60 ⇑ 9.92% | 26.55 | 26.60 / 26.50CMCKAMAL | 1.37 | 19.31 | Vol. 511125 D: 25.60 ⇑ 2.81% | 25.47 | 25.80 / 22.50SAFKOSPINN | 0.95 | 21.78 | Vol. 52837 D: 17.60 ⇑ 4.14% | 17.44 | 17.90 / 16.20 C: 17.50 ⇑ 6.06% | 17.08 | 17.50 / 16.80SQUARETEXT | 4.32 | 31.82 | Vol. 87567 D: 87.50 ⇑ 0.46% | 87.26 | 88.00 / 85.00 C: 86.70 ⇑ 0.46% | 86.70 | 86.70 / 86.70METROSPIN | -1.00 | 19.59 | Vol. 65857 D: 14.50 ⇑ 1.40% | 14.55 | 14.60 / 14.40 C: 14.40 ⇓ 0.69% | 14.40 | 14.70 / 14.20MAKSONSPIN | 0.16 | 20.55 | Vol. 473828 D: 13.40 ⇑ 0.75% | 13.41 | 13.50 / 12.00 C: 13.40 ⇑ 1.52% | 13.37 | 13.60 / 13.00DACCADYE | 1.21 | 31.13 | Vol. 152859 D: 27.30 ⇑ 3.80% | 27.00 | 27.50 / 25.00 C: 26.90 ⇑ 3.86% | 26.86 | 26.90 / 26.80RNSPIN | 2.80 | 16.58 | Vol. 2075599 D: 26.30 ⇑ 0.38% | 26.31 | 26.60 / 24.00 C: 26.30 ⇓ 0.38% | 26.31 | 26.50 / 26.10BXSYNTH | 0.93 | 25.42 | Vol. 223249 D: 14.40 ⇓ 0.69% | 14.49 | 15.00 / 13.20 C: 14.60 ⇓ 0.68% | 14.64 | 14.80 / 14.00MALEKSPIN | -1.44 | 46.87 | Vol. 1027440 D: 27.50 ⇑ 3.77% | 27.03 | 27.80 / 23.90 C: 27.60 ⇑ 3.76% | 27.14 | 27.90 / 26.80ZAHINTEX | 1.91 | 35.25 | Vol. 121200 D: 31.70 ⇑ 1.28% | 31.66 | 32.50 / 30.80SAIHAMCOT | 2.48 | 22.87 | Vol. 858750 D: 28.40 ⇑ 4.41% | 28.14 | 28.60 / 27.50 C: 28.60 ⇑ 4.76% | 28.31 | 30.00 / 27.80GENNEXT | 1.68 | 15.15 | Vol. 1214147 D: 21.70 ⇑ 4.33% | 21.54 | 22.00 / 19.00 C: 21.50 ⇑ 3.37% | 21.31 | 21.80 / 20.90ENVOYTEX | 3.26 | 39.26 | Vol. 329200 D: 51.20 ⇑ 2.81% | 51.01 | 52.00 / 44.90 C: 51.00 ⇑ 3.87% | 50.84 | 51.20 / 50.40

ARGONDENIM | 1.89 | 38.86 | Vol. 2941920 D: 39.90 ⇑ 5.00% | 39.20 | 40.10 / 34.20 C: 39.90 ⇑ 5.84% | 38.98 | 40.00 / 37.80FAMILYTEX | 3.72 | 14.68 | Vol. 470500 D: 30.90 ⇑ 8.80% | 29.60 | 31.20 / 28.40 C: 30.50 ⇑ 7.39% | 29.92 | 31.10 / 28.60Pharmaceutical & ChemicalAMBEEPHA | 3.94 | 26.15 | Vol. 3759 D: 251.3 ⇑ 2.20% | 252.16 | 259.0 / 249.1 C: 249.0 ⇑ 0.28% | 248.14 | 249.0 / 242.0BXPHARMA | 3.77 | 52.55 | Vol. 81303 D: 46.10 ⇑ 0.88% | 46.00 | 47.00 / 42.00 C: 46.10 ⇑ 1.77% | 45.99 | 46.40 / 45.40GLAXOSMITH | 20.25 | 123.32 | Vol. 4600 D: 882.8 ⇑ 1.16% | 893.26 | 909.0 / 865.1ACI | -5.82 | 126.42 | Vol. 6221 D: 147.2 ⇑ 2.72% | 146.92 | 147.9 / 129.0RENATA | 33.57 | 138.83 | Vol. 6587 D: 658.1 ⇑ 0.26% | 660.09 | 681.0 / 650.0RECKITTBEN | 27.16 | 78.89 | Vol. 1150 D: 747.9 ⇑ 3.93% | 747.83 | 760.0 / 740.0PHARMAID | 5.06 | 26.30 | Vol. 40550 D: 185.5 ⇑ 4.98% | 183.77 | 186.6 / 178.0KOHINOOR | 9.52 | 10.49 | Vol. 4500 D: 362.1 ⇓ 1.60% | 362.22 | 364.0 / 359.0IBNSINA | 3.44 | 34.02 | Vol. 2730 D: 83.00 ⇑ 1.22% | 82.93 | 83.50 / 79.90LIBRAINFU | 4.64 | 1565.37 | Vol. 400 D: 233.4 ⇑ 2.82% | 232.50 | 233.9 / 233.0ORIONINFU | 8.72 | 1.73 | Vol. 44000 D: 42.00 ⇑ 5.53% | 41.44 | 42.20 / 40.30 C: 42.00 ⇓ 2.10% | 42.00 | 42.00 / 42.00SQURPHARMA | 9.01 | 50.83 | Vol. 564882 D: 221.3 ⇑ 1.05% | 220.84 | 222.1 / 200.0 C: 221.2 ⇑ 1.56% | 220.52 | 221.9 / 219.5KEYACOSMET | 3.19 | 19.99 | Vol. 385073 D: 28.50 ⇑ 1.79% | 28.43 | 28.70 / 25.20 C: 28.40 ⇑ 1.07% | 28.44 | 28.60 / 28.30BERGERPBL | 32.46 | 100.20 | Vol. 1600 D: 793.3 ⇓ 1.15% | 796.25 | 825.0 / 786.2

ACIFORMULA | 3.33 | 38.08 | Vol. 8025 D: 69.80 ⇑ 2.35% | 69.50 | 70.50 / 69.00 C: 69.00 ⇑ 0.73% | 69.00 | 69.00 / 69.00MARICO | 27.53 | 62.47 | Vol. 24700 D: 628.4 ⇓ 2.09% | 639.19 | 647.0 / 623.5 C: 630.0 ⇓ 1.87% | 639.33 | 648.0 / 630.0BEACONPHAR | 0.33 | 11.97 | Vol. 196350 D: 14.30 ⇑ 0.70% | 14.31 | 14.50 / 13.00 C: 14.40 ⇓ 0.69% | 14.36 | 15.20 / 14.20ACTIVEFINE | 3.23 | 13.89 | Vol. 510310 D: 86.70 ⇑ 3.21% | 85.93 | 87.00 / 80.00 C: 86.80 ⇑ 2.84% | 85.93 | 86.90 / 85.00SALVOCHEM | 0.68 | 10.57 | Vol. 160084 D: 18.30 ⇑ 1.67% | 18.41 | 19.00 / 16.20 C: 18.40 ⇑ 2.22% | 18.50 | 18.70 / 18.30GHCL | 2.14 | 57.31 | Vol. 53750 D: 43.50 ⇑ 1.40% | 43.46 | 43.80 / 43.00 C: 43.20 ⇑ 1.65% | 42.98 | 43.50 / 42.50ORIONPHARM | 5.02 | 68.68 | Vol. 463920 D: 64.90 ⇑ 1.56% | 65.07 | 65.80 / 58.00 C: 65.10 ⇑ 1.88% | 64.91 | 65.90 / 64.00JMISMDL | 1.12 | 12.83 | Vol. 108000 D: 89.60 ⇑ 3.34% | 90.19 | 92.00 / 88.00 C: 88.90 ⇑ 1.48% | 89.23 | 91.00 / 87.60

PAPER & PACKAGINGHAKKANIPUL | 0.64 | 11.02 | Vol. 2500 D: 16.40 ⇑ 5.13% | 16.67 | 16.50 / 16.40 C: 17.10 ⇓ 9.52% | 17.10 | 17.10 / 17.10

SERVICESAPORTL | 1.23 | 38.39 | Vol. 68190 D: 25.60 ⇑ 3.23% | 25.70 | 26.00 / 23.00 C: 25.70 ⇑ 4.47% | 25.58 | 25.90 / 25.20EHL | 2.87 | 18.48 | Vol. 307240 D: 50.80 ⇑ 9.96% | 49.15 | 50.80 / 44.00 C: 51.10 ⇑ 9.89% | 50.03 | 51.10 / 47.00

LEATHERAPEXTANRY | 6.57 | 69.38 | Vol. 109750 D: 98.00 ⇑ 0.82% | 97.75 | 99.50 / 96.10 C: 97.70 ⇓ 1.41% | 98.04 | 99.50 / 97.20BATASHOE | 49.12 | 135.53 | Vol. 5500 D: 618.6 ⇓ 0.18% | 619.27 | 623.1 / 615.3APEXADELFT | 23.01 | 203.26 | Vol. 27400 D: 300.4 ⇑ 0.54% | 301.63 | 311.9 / 298.2 C: 321.0 ⇑ 8.45% | 321.00 | 321.0 / 321.0SAMATALETH | -0.07 | 12.08 | Vol. 1000 D: 10.80 ⇓ 4.42% | 11.00 | 10.90 / 10.70LEGACYFOOT | 0.63 | 17.19 | Vol. 12530 D: 13.60 ⇑ 0.74% | 13.65 | 13.70 / 13.00

CERAMICMONNOCERA | 0.71 | 96.33 | Vol. 3280 D: 26.40 ⇑ 4.76% | 26.45 | 26.80 / 25.50FUWANGCER | 1.43 | 13.25 | Vol. 150069 D: 18.00 ⇑ 1.12% | 18.16 | 18.60 / 17.00 C: 18.30 ⇑ 4.57% | 18.24 | 18.50 / 18.10SPCERAMICS | 0.62 | 30.92 | Vol. 169685 D: 15.40 ⇓ 1.28% | 15.52 | 16.30 / 14.50 C: 15.60 ⇑ 0.00% | 15.63 | 16.10 / 15.50RAKCERAMIC | 1.98 | 16.76 | Vol. 59067 D: 51.80 ⇑ 3.39% | 51.64 | 52.00 / 45.50 C: 51.00 ⇑ 2.20% | 50.97 | 51.00 / 45.00

CEMENTHEIDELBCEM | 22.85 | 111.50 | Vol. 15150 D: 323.2 ⇑ 0.91% | 324.59 | 332.0 / 315.0 C: 320.2 ⇑ 0.06% | 321.75 | 329.0 / 318.1CONFIDCEM | 6.23 | 90.76 | Vol. 315786 D: 131.1 ⇑ 4.55% | 129.17 | 132.0 / 120.0 C: 130.5 ⇑ 3.90% | 128.99 | 131.7 / 127.6MEGHNACEM | 6.28 | 33.81 | Vol. 52600 D: 120.8 ⇑ 2.46% | 118.92 | 122.9 / 117.0 C: 119.8 ⇑ 4.17% | 119.26 | 121.5 / 118.0ARAMITCEM | 3.03 | 14.65 | Vol. 34840 D: 69.40 ⇑ 3.27% | 69.41 | 70.80 / 65.00LAFSURCEML | 1.60 | 7.22 | Vol. 324500 D: 31.80 ⇑ 0.00% | 31.88 | 32.00 / 31.70 C: 31.70 ⇓ 1.55% | 31.76 | 32.00 / 31.60MICEMENT | 4.14 | 40.00 | Vol. 150549 D: 92.50 ⇑ 3.12% | 91.45 | 92.80 / 83.00 C: 92.20 ⇑ 3.02% | 91.59 | 92.60 / 90.00PREMIERCEM | 3.59 | 22.92 | Vol. 690200 D: 128.7 ⇑ 4.63% | 126.74 | 130.7 / 122.9 C: 128.4 ⇑ 3.55% | 127.70 | 130.0 / 126.0

IT IINDUSTRIESISNLTD | 0.28 | 17.31 | Vol. 2090 D: 13.30 ⇑ 0.76% | 13.29 | 13.30 / 13.20 C: 13.40 ⇑ 8.94% | 13.35 | 13.40 / 13.30BDCOM | 1.00 | 14.91 | Vol. 42203 D: 20.60 ⇑ 0.98% | 20.64 | 20.90 / 18.40 C: 20.70 ⇑ 1.47% | 20.65 | 20.90 / 20.50INTECH | 0.94 | 10.08 | Vol. 38730 D: 13.10 ⇑ 0.00% | 13.17 | 13.30 / 12.10 C: 13.20 ⇑ 0.00% | 13.23 | 13.30 / 13.20AGNISYSL | 1.07 | 25.52 | Vol. 65215 D: 21.60 ⇑ 1.41% | 21.60 | 21.80 / 19.90 C: 21.60 ⇑ 1.41% | 21.60 | 21.60 / 21.60DAFODILCOM | 1.12 | 11.14 | Vol. 191000 D: 16.10 ⇓ 0.62% | 16.18 | 16.60 / 16.00 C: 16.10 ⇓ 3.01% | 16.18 | 16.30 / 16.10AAMRATECH | 1.17 | 20.44 | Vol. 391300 D: 37.80 ⇑ 2.44% | 37.86 | 38.30 / 36.90 C: 37.90 ⇑ 3.27% | 37.81 | 38.10 / 37.10

GENERAL INSURANCEBGIC | 1.65 | 20.33 | Vol. 38025 D: 29.60 ⇑ 1.37% | 29.34 | 30.00 / 26.80 C: 29.60 ⇑ 2.07% | 29.48 | 29.80 / 29.30

GREENDELT | 4.05 | 64.44 | Vol. 38424 D: 102.4 ⇓ 0.58% | 104.15 | 110.0 / 98.50UNITEDINS | 2.47 | 21.04 | Vol. 16105 D: 50.90 ⇑ 0.79% | 50.87 | 51.20 / 48.00PEOPLESINS | 2.05 | 20.72 | Vol. 50735 D: 26.40 ⇓ 1.49% | 26.63 | 27.10 / 25.00 C: 26.90 ⇑ 1.51% | 26.87 | 26.90 / 26.80EASTERNINS | 2.22 | 35.88 | Vol. 15822 D: 37.20 ⇑ 2.76% | 37.22 | 38.20 / 36.60JANATAINS | 7.84 | 170.69 | Vol. 2184 D: 220.8 ⇑ 2.44% | 220.93 | 222.0 / 210.0 C: 228.0 ⇑ 1.33% | 228.00 | 228.0 / 228.0PHENIXINS | 2.70 | 20.96 | Vol. 21512 D: 39.60 ⇓ 0.75% | 39.75 | 40.80 / 38.00EASTLAND | 4.06 | 23.29 | Vol. 45737 D: 46.00 ⇓ 1.08% | 45.86 | 49.00 / 42.00 C: 45.10 ⇑ 2.50% | 44.95 | 45.10 / 44.50CENTRALINS | 1.54 | 19.04 | Vol. 3600 D: 28.80 ⇑ 0.70% | 28.89 | 29.20 / 28.50KARNAPHULI | 1.56 | 19.42 | Vol. 52040 D: 22.60 ⇑ 0.89% | 22.69 | 22.70 / 22.00RUPALIINS | 2.76 | 23.38 | Vol. 61860 D: 32.40 ⇓ 0.61% | 32.51 | 32.90 / 29.60FEDERALINS | 1.10 | 10.98 | Vol. 58861 D: 22.30 ⇑ 0.45% | 22.33 | 23.00 / 21.50 C: 22.70 ⇑ 4.13% | 22.57 | 22.80 / 21.80RELIANCINS | 3.93 | 61.52 | Vol. 9000 D: 74.70 ⇑ 5.51% | 74.78 | 77.00 / 72.00PURABIGEN | 1.05 | 18.71 | Vol. 117480 D: 20.60 ⇓ 0.48% | 20.58 | 22.70 / 20.30PRAGATIINS | 2.01 | 50.30 | Vol. 7725 D: 57.80 ⇑ 4.71% | 57.77 | 58.70 / 52.00PRIMEINSUR | 2.14 | 14.14 | Vol. 36250 D: 26.50 ⇑ 0.76% | 26.62 | 27.00 / 26.40PIONEERINS | 3.11 | 23.84 | Vol. 66236 D: 72.80 ⇓ 0.41% | 73.45 | 75.10 / 67.00MERCINS | 1.53 | 14.50 | Vol. 102978 D: 25.50 ⇓ 2.30% | 25.74 | 26.50 / 23.60 C: 26.00 ⇓ 0.38% | 26.00 | 26.00 / 26.00AGRANINS | 1.73 | 14.39 | Vol. 46554 D: 22.90 ⇑ 0.00% | 22.98 | 23.30 / 22.00GLOBALINS | 1.09 | 11.78 | Vol. 11917 D: 29.60 ⇑ 0.00% | 29.62 | 30.00 / 28.00NITOLINS | 2.59 | 15.41 | Vol. 6000 D: 32.00 ⇑ 0.00% | 32.00 | 32.10 / 32.00ASIAPACINS | 1.84 | 13.76 | Vol. 70500 D: 26.40 ⇑ 0.38% | 26.40 | 26.80 / 26.10SONARBAINS | 1.68 | 13.38 | Vol. 15790 D: 22.80 ⇓ 0.87% | 22.80 | 23.20 / 21.50PARAMOUNT | 1.26 | 13.19 | Vol. 10056 D: 21.50 ⇑ 5.39% | 21.48 | 21.90 / 20.00CITYGENINS | 1.65 | 14.26 | Vol. 48604 D: 24.60 ⇑ 1.23% | 24.57 | 25.00 / 23.00 C: 24.50 ⇓ 0.81% | 24.95 | 25.00 / 24.50CONTININS | 1.41 | 15.68 | Vol. 7700 D: 28.30 ⇑ 0.71% | 28.36 | 29.00 / 27.00TAKAFULINS | 2.19 | 15.17 | Vol. 6729 D: 29.80 ⇑ 3.11% | 29.51 | 30.90 / 27.00 C: 27.20 ⇓ 8.42% | 27.36 | 30.00 / 27.20STANDARINS | 2.58 | 13.99 | Vol. 19759 D: 36.60 ⇓ 2.40% | 36.66 | 38.00 / 36.20NORTHRNINS | 1.77 | 11.15 | Vol. 101780 D: 46.30 ⇓ 0.86% | 46.38 | 47.00 / 44.00REPUBLIC | 2.14 | 12.42 | Vol. 49056 D: 53.10 ⇑ 2.91% | 52.76 | 54.20 / 48.00ASIAINS | 1.56 | 17.34 | Vol. 71539 D: 25.90 ⇑ 1.97% | 25.95 | 26.20 / 23.00 C: 25.80 ⇓ 0.77% | 25.78 | 26.50 / 25.30ISLAMIINS | 1.29 | 11.96 | Vol. 1620 D: 26.00 ⇑ 0.00% | 25.93 | 26.00 / 25.00PROVATIINS | 1.90 | 14.30 | Vol. 8572 D: 25.40 ⇑ 0.79% | 25.43 | 25.90 / 23.00DHAKAINS | 2.84 | 18.02 | Vol. 16000 D: 39.90 ⇑ 0.50% | 39.93 | 40.90 / 39.30 C: 40.00 ⇓ 1.23% | 40.00 | 40.00 / 40.00

LIFE INSURANCENATLIFEINS | 12.34 | 80.99 | Vol. 3863 D: 242.5 ⇑ 0.62% | 241.88 | 250.0 / 230.0 C: 244.0 ⇑ 6.09% | 241.50 | 244.0 / 235.0DELTALIFE | 38.53 | 189.40 | Vol. 13100 D: 4741 ⇑ 4.12% | 4740 | 4741 / 4728 C: 4740 ⇓ 7.37% | 4745 | 4750 / 4740SANDHANINS | 2.39 | 28.22 | Vol. 11426 D: 68.90 ⇑ 2.07% | 68.53 | 71.00 / 61.00POPULARLIF | 3.70 | 715.41 | Vol. 2000 D: 144.4 ⇑ 3.51% | 144.50 | 146.0 / 143.9FAREASTLIF | 9.21 | 60.79 | Vol. 18438 D: 107.9 ⇑ 1.60% | 107.57 | 109.1 / 98.00 C: 107.9 ⇑ 4.25% | 107.90 | 107.9 / 107.9MEGHNALIFE | 10.82 | 48.87 | Vol. 24150 D: 90.10 ⇓ 0.22% | 90.23 | 91.40 / 89.90 C: 90.50 ⇑ 0.78% | 90.49 | 90.50 / 90.20PROGRESLIF | 2.30 | 31.45 | Vol. 3160 D: 97.00 ⇓ 1.02% | 96.75 | 97.20 / 92.00PRAGATILIF | 0.60 | 30.15 | Vol. 44500 D: 92.30 ⇓ 0.22% | 92.58 | 93.00 / 92.10

TELECOMGP | 12.96 | 26.26 | Vol. 455911 D: 179.1 ⇑ 0.67% | 180.52 | 182.9 / 165.0 C: 179.3 ⇑ 0.50% | 180.93 | 183.5 / 179.0BSCCL | 7.14 | 23.70 | Vol. 758160 D: 306.6 ⇑ 0.26% | 309.91 | 314.2 / 280.0 C: 306.6 ⇑ 0.33% | 309.22 | 314.9 / 290.5

TRAVEL & LEISUREUNITEDAIR | 1.60 | 15.12 | Vol. 4063213 D: 20.40 ⇑ 2.51% | 20.28 | 20.60 / 18.00 C: 20.40 ⇑ 2.51% | 20.23 | 20.50 / 20.00UNIQUEHRL | 4.02 | 86.29 | Vol. 704283 D: 94.50 ⇑ 4.54% | 93.67 | 95.40 / 85.00 C: 94.60 ⇑ 5.11% | 93.46 | 95.40 / 91.00

MISCELLANEOUSARAMIT | 16.07 | 99.93 | Vol. 6650 D: 228.4 ⇑ 4.77% | 222.27 | 233.8 / 216.0 C: 205.0 ⇑ 0.00% | 205.00 | 205.0 / 205.0BSC | 1.77 | 565.82 | Vol. 136145 D: 542.8 ⇑ 3.43% | 542.04 | 550.0 / 528.5 C: 543.5 ⇑ 3.62% | 542.52 | 550.5 / 530.0GQBALLPEN | 6.55 | 250.45 | Vol. 77334 D: 141.9 ⇑ 2.23% | 142.01 | 145.0 / 127.0 C: 142.1 ⇑ 3.05% | 141.93 | 143.8 / 141.0USMANIAGL | 0.50 | 26.03 | Vol. 48210 D: 120.7 ⇑ 5.23% | 120.71 | 123.6 / 116.1 C: 120.5 ⇑ 9.55% | 120.50 | 121.0 / 118.0SAVAREFR | 0.23 | 12.32 | Vol. 4000 D: 56.70 ⇑ 0.53% | 56.70 | 56.70 / 56.70BEXIMCO | 3.24 | 86.74 | Vol. 673131 D: 34.10 ⇑ 0.89% | 34.17 | 37.00 / 30.50 C: 34.20 ⇑ 0.88% | 34.15 | 34.50 / 33.70SINOBANGLA | 1.75 | 21.01 | Vol. 26000 D: 18.80 ⇓ 0.53% | 18.86 | 19.00 / 18.70 C: 18.50 ⇓ 2.12% | 18.50 | 18.50 / 18.50MIRACLEIND | 0.14 | 14.90 | Vol. 22164 D: 11.60 ⇑ 1.75% | 11.69 | 11.80 / 10.40

BONDIBBLPBOND | 0.00 | 1000.00 | Vol. 20 D: 943.0 ⇓ 0.21% | 950.00 | 945.0 / 940.0ACIZCBOND | 0.00 | 1000.00 | Vol. 4 D: 831.5 ⇓ 1.01% | 750.00 | 833.0 / 830.0

CompanyCode | EPS | BV | Volume Traded (Share)DSE/CSE: ClosePrice ⇓/⇑ Chn % | Avg.Price | Hi / Lo

DSE Broad Index: 3979.35 ⇑ 1.60% Turnover: 3232.13 M.Tk ⇑ 99.15%, PE: 12.42 Turnover 3,471.96 MTk . ⇑ 96.16% Monday, 12 August, 2013 MarketCap. 1,924.87 BTk. ⇑ 1.54% CSE All Share Index: 12372 ⇑ 1.78% Turnover: 239.83 M Tk. ⇑ 63.15%, PE: 12.29

August 13, 2013 Sectotal Index: BANK: 33,909.06 ⇑ 1.02% NBFI: 19,822.68 ⇑ 1.75% INVS: 5,089.47 ⇓ 0.59% ENGG: 6,083.83 ⇑ 2.28% FOOD: 7,498.59 ⇑ 2.98% F&P: 10,965.18 ⇑ 3.11% TEXT: 2,889.95 ⇑ 2.36% PHAR: 16,620.77 ⇑ 1.35% PAPR: 773.39 ⇓ 3.11% SERV: 3,174.24 ⇑ 4.07% LEAT: 4,485.36 ⇑ 2.81% CERA: 481.34 ⇑ 2.06% CMNT: 4,197.54 ⇑ 0.68% INFO: 6,822.94 ⇑ 1.46% GINS: 9,130.92 ⇑ 0.41% LINS: 100,879.22 ⇑ 7.10% TELC: 1,386.55 ⇑ 0.45% MISC: 6,174.60 ⇑ 1.02%

DSE Loser C % A % CP

Samata Leather-Z -4.42 -2.91 10.80

Grameen M F One-A -3.79 -1.51 48.20

Prime Bank 1st MF-A -3.77 -5.99 5.10

Standard Insurance-A -2.40 -2.34 36.60

Mercantile Insur-A -2.30 -1.19 25.50

DSE Gainer C % A % CP

Eastern Housing-A 9.96 7.06 50.80

Renwick Jajneswar-A 9.72 10.55 170.40

Midas Financing-Z 9.62 9.11 31.90

Familytex (BD) Ltd.-N 8.80 6.63 30.90

Navana CNG-A 8.73 5.34 76.00

Combined Turnover Leader Vol. TO M. Tk.

% of TTL Avg. P

Padma Oil Co. -A 822108 295.86 8.52 359.88

Meghna Petroleum -A 848905 237.06 6.83 279.26

BD Submarine Cable-A 758160 234.93 6.77 309.87Olympic Ind. -A 891357 210.60 6.07 236.26

Square Pharma -A 564882 124.74 3.59 220.82

Business6 DHAKA TRIBUNE Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Business 7DHAKA TRIBUNE Wednesday, August 14, 2013

China set to become world’s biggest net oil importern AFP, Beijing

China is set to overtake the United States as the world’s largest net oil im-porter from October, according to US � gures, due to a combination of rising Chinese demand and increased US pro-duction.

Next year, China’s net oil imports will exceed those of the United States on an annual basis and the gap be-tween them will continue to widen, the

US Energy Information Administration (EIA) said.

China is already the biggest energy user in the world and the second-largest oil consumer after the United States.

The shift has been driven by steady growth in Chinese demand, increased oil production in the United States, and stagnant or weakening demand in the US market, the EIA said in a report.

A graph on the EIA’s website shows

China’s net imports steadily rising, with those of the US falling at a faster rate, and says the crossover point comes in two months’ time.

Growing petroleum pro-duction in the US has been largely driven by the in-creasing use of sometimes controversial hydraulic frac-turing, known as fracking.

The technique uses huge amounts of pressurised wa-ter mixed with chemicals to crack open rock and release oil and natural gas, mak-ing the exploitation of vast shale hydrocarbon reserves economically viable.

It is changing the world’s energy market but it has been banned in other coun-tries such as France due to environmental concerns.

US annual oil output is expected to rise 28% be-tween 2011 and 2014 to nearly 13 million barrels per day, while Chinese produc-tion is forecast to grow by six percent over the period, and will stand at just a third of US production in 2014, the EIA said.

Meanwhile, China’s liquid fuel use will increase 13% over the period to more than 11 million barrels per day while US demand hovers close to 18.7

million barrels per day.That is below the United States’ peak

consumption level of 20.8 million bar-rels per day in 2005, the EIA added. l

Hotel Hilton’s ceremony held by Premier Groupn Tribune Business Desk

Premier Group of Company organised a ceremony for the establishment of the hotel Hilton Dhaka on August 7.

Home Minister MK Alamgir, Civil Aviation and Tourism Minister Faruk Khan, US Ambassador Dan W Mozena, and Deputy High Commissioner of In-dia Sandeep Chakravorty were present at the ceremony. l

Radio Foorti launches a reward programmen Tribune Business Desk

Radio Foorti has launched “Foortibaaj Reward Programme” to keep the en-tertainment lovers � lled with exciting privileges, gifts, vouchers and many more, all year round.

These are coupled with the Foor-tibaaj Activation where there are many fun games at some of the prime shop-ping malls of Dhaka.

The registered Foortibaaj will be enti-tled to these privileges. The registration can be done by means of SMS or through the Facebook fan page of Radia Foorti. l

NRB Global Bank Ltd appoints MDn Tribune Business Desk

Md Abdul Quddus has been appointed as Managing Director (MD) of NRB Global Bank Ltd.

Previously he was DMD in First Se-curity Islami Bank Ltd since 2008. l

Push carts remain idle beside the Babu Bazaar Bridge in Dhaka due to the ongoing 48-hour hartal, disrupting commodity supplies from the wholesale market NASHIRUL ISLAM

Transit eats into cement exports to North-East Indian Kayes Sohel

Indian cement manufacturer Star Ce-ment is eyeing to export at least 50,000 tonnes of clinker to Bangladesh every month.

Having no source of cement clinker in the country, Bangladesh is one of the largest importers of clinker and lime-stone in the world by importing annu-ally an estimated 10m to 15m tonnes from India, Vietnam, Malaysia, Thai-land, Indonesia, the Philippines and China. Clinker is the major raw material for manufacturing cement.

Because of raw materials shortage, local cement industries are producing more than 15m tonnes of cement every year, much lower than their total ca-pacity of 22m tonnes, according to the Industries Ministry. Annual demand for cement in Bangladesh is around 15m tonnes.

On Saturday, the Star Cement dis-patched its � rst barge of clinker here via riverine route. With this, the com-pany also achieved the feat of being the � rst cement manufacturing company of India to export clinker to Bangladesh via waterway.

Jyoti Swaroop Agarwal, president (sales and marketing) of Star Cement,

said in the recent past a series of bilat-eral discussion between both the In-dian and Bangladesh governments had paved the way to utilise the potential river route, which according to him was cost e� ective, according to an Indian newspaper.

Exporting clinker to Bangladesh via river route would give an edge to Star Cement to encounter the sti� competi-tion it was likely to face from manufac-turers of South-East Asian countries, said Agarwal.

South-East Asian countries like Vietnam, Thailand, Indonesia, Malay-sia and Korea, presently meet around 99% of the total clinker requirement of Bangladesh.

As a pilot project, Star Cement had started clinker export to Bangladesh last year via roadway, however as that proved not to be cost e� ective; the company had to switch to river route now. “We believe that this mode of lo-gistics will de� nitely be commercially more viable than ever,” Agarwal said.

He said Star Cement had already tied up with many leading cement manu-facturers of Bangladesh to meet their clinker requirements over a long term and many more such deals were in the pipeline. The company has chosen a

port in Karimganj, in south Assam, to export clinkers to Dhaka.

Bangladesh has 123 cement indus-tries at present of which only 64 are fully functional.

World’s largest cement companies, including Lafarge (France), Heidelberg Cement (Germany), Holcim (Switzer-land) and Cemex (Mexico), operate in the country.

However, their combined market share is less than one-third of the total market, which is dominated by local companies.

“We are dependent on imported clinker but have a surplus capacity of production,” said Jahangir Alam, chair-man of MI Cement Factory that makes the Crown brand.

He said Bangladesh’s cement export is fully destined to the north-eastern states of India, but due to allowing transit to India, the demand for Bangladeshi cement fell in thosestates.

Availing transit facility, India is now being able to shift cement at lower costs to the “Seven Sister States” of north-eastern India through Bangladesh, he said. The shipment cost is lower com-pared to importing from Bangladesh, he added. l

Stocks ignore hartal, Eid hangovern Tribune Report

Stocks rallied with improvement in turnover yesterday, shrugging o� po-litical uncertainty and poor earnings result.

The market witnessed modest buying pressure mostly from institutions, helping indices close higher. The trading � oors of the broker houses, however, yet to get life because of ongoing 48-hour strike and holiday hangover.

The benchmark DSEX index rose 63 points or 1.6% to 3,979, extending the gaining streak for the third straight ses-sion. The blue chip index DS30 was up 26 points or 1.8% to 1,508.

The Chittagong Stock Exchange (CSE) Selective Categories Index, CSCX, closed at 7,845 with a rise of 132 points.

“Stronger price performance by top traded companies helped pull the market up further. Ongoing

political uncertainty seems to a� ect the investors very little,” said Lanka Bangla Securities in its daily marketanalysis.

The trading activities increased but still remained poor as the total market turnover stood at Tk3.2bn, which was

almost double the value of previous session’s three-month low.

Gainers outpaced losers as out of 286 issues traded, 228 gained, 36 de-clined and 22 remained unchanged.

“Lucrative prices pumped up de-mand throughout the session and turned market dimension. Resultantly, the bourse retained its position in green

zone for the third consecutive session with the addition of 62.52 points,” said IDLC Investment.

Despite a 99.15% rise in turnover, activity maintained lethargic trend as Q2 declarations passed by and inves-tors were observing political situations ahead of imminent national election, it said.

All the sectors ended in green. Among the major sectors, power gained the most with 2.90%, followed by NBFIs which closed 2.60% higher. Banks and pharmaceuticals rose 0.88% and 0.86% respectively.

Padma Oil, a state-owned oil distri-bution company, was the most traded stock with shares worth Tk281m chang-ing hands.

It was followed by Meghna Petro-leum, Bangladesh Submarine Cable Company Ltd, Olympic Industries, Square Pharmaceuticals, Jamuna Oil, Argon Denim and Premier Cement. l

Central Pharma debuts in stock market todayn Tribune Report

Share trading of Central Pharmaceuti-cals Limited (CPL) begins at the stock exchanges today.

It will be the 24th company in phar-maceuticals and chemicals sector listed in Dhaka Stock Exchange (DSE) and 19th in Chittagong Stock Exchange (CSE), o� cials said.

CPL � oated 14m ordinary shares of Tk10 each to raise Tk140m from the public.

Earlier on March 27, Bangladesh Securities and Exchange Commi-ssion (BSEC) approved the IPO (initial public o� ering) proposal of the com-pany.

The money mobilised through IPO was utilised to pay o� bank loans and to meet the IPO expenses, according to the company prospectus.

The company’s earnings pershare (EPS) Tk1.21 and net assetvalue (NAV) is Tk11.28, accordingto its � nancial statement as of June30, 2012.

Janata Capital and Investment Lim-ited acted as the issue manager to the initial public o� ering of the Central Pharmaceuticals Limited. l

DCCI urges Nigeria to import our productsn Tribune Business Desk

Dhaka Chamber of Commerce & Indus-try (DCCI) yesterday urged Nigeria to import Bangladesh products, reports UNB.

The products include particularly ceramics, chemical products, leather goods, footwear, light engineering and plastic products, ocean-going vessels, pharmaceuticals and cement.

DCCI president M Sabur Khan made the request when Nigerian High Com-missioner to Bangladesh stationed in Delhi Ndubuisi V Amaku met him at the DCCI o� ce.

During the meeting, Sabur Khan mentioned that Nigeria established diplomatic relation with Bangladesh

soon after its independence.The bilateral trade between Bangla-

desh and Nigeria was only about $14m in � scal 2012-13, he said, adding that the present level of bilateral trade is far from satisfactory and still remains at a very low level.

The DCCI president invited the Ni-gerian entrepreneurs to invest in Ban-gladesh and make joint ventures in the tourism sector.

He informed the Nigerian High Commissioner that the DCCI has es-tablished ‘Help Desk’ to facilitate trade and business activities.

Ambassador Ndubuisi V Amaku said the Nigerian government has taken a lot of initiatives to smoothen trade and commerce.

He urged the Bangladeshi entrepre-neurs to invest in agriculture, food-processing, pharmaceuticals, medical equipments, ICT and education sectors of Nigeria.

Amaku stressed exchanging busi-ness delegation and also close contact at the business-to-business and gov-ernment-to-government level.

Defence Adviser of Nigerian High Commission Capt (NN) OB Daji, Admin Attaché Rotimi O Simoyan, DCCI senior vice president Nessar Maksud Khan, vice president Absar Karim Chowdhury and directors KMN Manjurul Hoque, Abul Hossain, M Abu Hurairah, Alhaj Abdus Salam and Shoaib Choudhury were, among others, present in the meeting. l

‘Stronger price performance by top traded companies helped pull the market up further. Ongoing political uncertainty seems to a� ect the investors very little’

Muhith to take stock of big credit scams n Asif Showkat Kallol

Finance Minister AMA Muhith is scheduled to hold meetings with the state-owned commercial banks on Sunday next to review the present status of the big credit scams took place recently.

It is for the � rst time the minister is going to meet the chairmen and managing directors of the banks at the ministry after three big banking industry scandals involving Hall-mark, Bismillah Group and Basic Bank.

Muhith is expected to review the � nancial status of the banks too to understand the damages caused by the credit scams, said a senior o� cial of the Banking and Financial Institutions Division.

“He will ask for detail account of the activities along with the status of the large-scale scams.”

The o� cial said a recent World Bank Mission expressed concern about the � nancial status of the banks, which the meeting would also discuss.

“We’re looking into the issues,” Banking Division Secretary Dr Aslam Alam told the Dhaka Tribune about the concern the World Bank Mission expressed last week.

He said the state-owned commercial banks need recapitalisation to become competitive with the private banks.

In early July, an IMF mission expressed concern over the � nancial condition of six state-owned banks for their failure in mitigating credit scams that plunged them into severe � nancial risks.

“Why have state owned commercial banks given loan to the persons that they failed to recover,” it observed. The banks include Sonali , Janata ,

Agrani , Rupali , BASIC and Bangladesh Development Bank.

Sources in the banking division said a rough estimate of embezzlement of the money and forgeries of loan amounted to around Tk87bn for the three big scams.

In the � rst quarter of 2013, the four state-owned commercial banks, which account for almost half of the banking sector’s total loan defaults, have managed to recover only 16% of their year’s target from their top 20 defaulters , according to Bangladesh Bank .

The central bank report disclosed top 50 defaulters – 18 are of Sonali Bank and this year, the Hall-mark Group, which swindled Tk26bn from Sonali Bank is tipped to top the list. l

US judge changing baby’s name ‘Messiah’ draws reactionA Tennessee judge’s decision to change a baby’s � rst name from Messiah to Martin is drawing strong reactions from people who believe the judge overstepped her powers and those who think parents’ creativity should have some limits. Thousands of peo-ple have commented online about the judge’s order since WBIR-TV published its story over the weekend. Many of them said Child Support Magistrate Lu Ann Ballew went too far, but not all. “I agree 100% that we only have one messiah and that’s Jesus Christ,” said Edith Wood, a resident of Cocke Coun-ty in eastern Tennessee, where the boy lives.

Japan city votes to destroy tsunami ship landmarkA stranded � shing boat that became a symbol of the devastation of Ja-pan’s 2011 tsunami has long divided a north-eastern coastal city — between those who wanted to keep it as a monu-ment of survival and those who wanted a painful reminder gone. Last week, the city announced it would be torn down after a heated debate and citywide vote. The soul-searching over the ship highlights how the aftermath of the tsu-nami disaster continues to torment Ja-pan two years later. The 330 metric ton Kyotokumaru was swept by the tower-ing tsunami from the city’s dock.

Guests saved as US resort building falls into sinkholeDozens of guests at a Florida resort near Walt Disney World were safely evacuat-ed in the middle of the night on Mon-day when a large sinkhole opened on the property, swallowing a three-story

building. “I was hearing popping noises and I was hearing people screaming and glass breaking. The building actually twisted and separated,” Summer Bay Resort security guard Richard Shanley said. “It was like something from a mov-ie.” A spokesman for the Lake County Fire Department said there were no injuries in the collapse and that resort sta� responded quickly to the � rst signs of danger.

Rwanda opposition party to sit out vote after late registrationRwanda’s Democratic Green Party said on Monday it will sit out September’s parliamentary election after the elector-al commission took three years to reg-ister it, � nally doing so just days before the deadline. Analysts said President Paul Kagame had a well-documented record of blocking, threatening or in-� ltrating rival parties to sti� e even na-scent political opposition, and that the belated registration of the Democratic Green Party could hardly be seen as a real opening of the democratic space. Most other parties were allied to Kag-ame’s Rwandan Patriotic Front, which held four in � ve parliamentary seats.

UK bars trash cans from tracking people with Wi-FiO� cials demanded Monday that an advertising � rm stop using a network of high-tech trash cans to track people walking through London’s � nancial dis-trict. The Renew ad � rm has been using technology embedded in the hulking receptacles to measure the Wi-Fi sig-nals emitted by smartphones, and sug-gested that it would apply the concept of “cookies” — tracking � les that follow internet users across the Web — to the physical world.

WORLD WATCH

DHAKA TRIBUNE Wednesday, August 14, 20138 International

44 gunned down in Nigeria mosqueJournalists receive video featuring Boko Haram leader gloating over recent attacks, threatening more, and saying his group now strong enough to go after the USn AP, Maiduguri, Nigeria

Suspected Islamic militants wearing army fatigues gunned down 44 people praying at a mosque in northeast Nige-ria, while another 12 civilians died in an apparently simultaneous attack, secu-rity agents said Monday.

Sunday’s attacks were the latest in a slew of violence blamed on religious extremists in this West African oil pro-ducer, where the radical Boko Haram group, which wants to oust the gov-ernment and impose Islamic law, poses the greatest security threat in years.

It was not immediately clear why the Islamic Boko Haram would have killed worshipping Muslims, but the group has in the past attacked mosques whose clerics have spoken out against religious extremism. Boko Haram also has attacked Christians outside churches and teachers and schoolchil-dren, as well as government and mili-tary targets.

Since 2010, the militants have been blamed for the killings of more than 1,700 people, according to a count con-ducted by The Associated Press.

The news about Sunday’s vio-lence in Borno state, one of three in the northeast under a military state

of emergency, came as journalists re-ceived a video featuring Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau, who gloats over recent attacks, threatens more, and even says his group is now strong enough to go after the United States.

The mosque slayings occurred Sun-day morning in Konduga town, 35km outside Maiduguri, the capital of Nige-ria’s Borno state.

A state security service agent and Usman Musa, a member of a civilian militia that works with the military, said Monday they counted the bodies at the mosque after the attack. Musa said four members of his group — known as the Civilian Joint Task Force —also were killed when they reached Kondu-ga and encountered “� erce resistance from heavily armed terrorists.”

Musa and the security service agent said the attackers wore military cam-ou� age uniforms used by the Nigerian army, which they may have acquired in one of their attacks on military bases.

On their way back from Kondu-ga, the security forces came upon the scene of another attack at Ngom vil-lage, � ve kilometres outside Maidugu-ri, where Musa said he counted 12 bod-ies of civilians.

Twenty-six worshippers at the

mosque were hospitalised with gun-shot wounds, said a security guard at the emergency ward of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital. He and the state security agent both spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not al-lowed to give information to reporters.

Nigeria declared a state of emergen-cy in much of the northeast on May 14 to � ght the onslaught after Boko Haram � ghters took over several northeastern towns and villages in this nation of more than 160 million people, which is divided almost equally between the predominantly Muslim north and the mainly Christian south.

In the video received by journalists Monday, Shekau brushes o� any gains asserted by the security forces.

“You soldiers have claimed that you are powerful, that we have been defeated, that we are mad people,” Shekau says, speaking in the local Hau-sa language. “But how can a mad man successfully coordinate recent attacks in Gamboru, in Malam Fatori, slaugh-ter people in Biu, kill in Gwoza and in Bama, where soldiers � ed under our heavy � re power?

“We have killed countless soldiers and we are going to kill more.”

He further insists the extremists’

“strength and � repower has surpassed that of Nigeria. ... We can now com-fortably confront the United States of America.” Shekau also said Nigeria’s military is “lying to the world” about its casualties. “They lied that they have killed our members, but we are the ones that have killed the soldiers.”

He apparently was referring to Au-gust 4 attacks on a military base at Malam Fatori and a police outpost in Bama, both near the border with Camer-oon. Joint Task Force spokesman Lt Col Sagir Musa told reporters 32 extremists, two soldiers and one police o� cer were killed. But when the Borno state gover-nor called on the head of the task force to commiserate, Maj Gen Jah Ewansiah told him in front of reporters that they lost 12 soldiers and seven policemen. Nigeria’s military regularly lowballs ca-sualty � gures of civilians and military.

Under orders from the military, cell-phone and Internet service has been cut in Borno, making communications di� cult. The military says the extrem-ists were using cellphones to coordinate attacks. But some government o� cials argue that the lack of communication prevents civilians from informing them of suspicious movements and getting help when they are attacked. l

Clashes break out in Cairo between pro-and anti-Morsi factionsn Reuters, Cairo

Clashes broke out in central Cairo on Tuesday when supporters of ousted President Mohammed Morsi came un-der attack as they marched to the Inte-rior Ministry, a Reuters reporter said.

Supporters of the new military-in-stalled government hurled stones at the marchers and threw bottles at them from balconies. Police then � red tear gas at the pro-Morsi protesters.

A few thousand pro-Morsi protesters were taking part in the march when the

trouble erupted. Local residents taunt-ed them, calling them terrorists and saying they were not welcome. They then began throwing stones at them.

The Morsi supporters responded by also hurling rocks.

Women and children marchers � ed the scene in panic. Two men wielding machetes were seen chasing marchers.

The protesters are calling for the reinstatement of Morsi, who was overthrown by the military on July 3 and is now being held at undisclosed location. l

Israel army shoots down rocket near Egypt bordern AP, Jerusalem

The Israeli military shot down a rocket launched toward a Red Sea resort town near the border with Egypt on Tuesday, the army said.

It was the � rst time Israel’s Iron Dome missile defence system success-fully intercepted a rocket attack on the resort of Eilat, the military said. The incident came after days of heightened tension along the Egypt-Israel border.

The army said the rocket was inter-cepted early Tuesday and that there were no injuries. It didn’t provide more details and declined to comment on the origins of the projectile.

An al-Qaeda-inspired militant group based in Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula, Ansar Jerusalem, claimed responsibility for launching the rocket in an email to The Associated Press.

The little known group is hostile to both Israel and Egypt and was behind an attack in August 2011 near Eilat that killed eight people.

In Cairo, Egypt’s state MENA news agency quoted an unnamed security o� cial as saying authorities could not con� rm that the rocket was launched from Sinai. The report said Egyptian forces were investigating.

Most Iron Dome batteries have been deployed along Israel’s border with Gaza, and the missile defence system intercepted rockets during Israel’s � ghting with Gaza militants in 2012. Other batteries have been placed on Is-rael’s border with Lebanon.

Last Thursday, Israel brie� y closed the Eilat airport in response to unspec-i� ed security warnings. l

Hackers attack exiled Tibet government websiten AFP, New Delhi

Hackers have attacked the Tibetan gov-ernment-in-exile’s Chinese-language website with an unidenti� ed virus, making the portal inaccessible, an o� -cial spokesman said Tuesday.

“Our o� ce cannot access the web-site and we are trying to � gure out what kind of virus is responsible for the problem,” Tashi Phuntsok, spokesman for the exiled government based in the north Indian town of Dharamshala, told AFP.

Tibet.net is the o� cial site of the ex-iled government, whose spiritual head is the Dalai Lama. It covers the parlia-ment, cabinet, administrative depart-ments, and public o� ces.

Hackers have taken down the En-glish, Tibetan and Chinese versions of the website several times in the past, according to Phuntsok.

“We are a prominent target for at-tacks by Chinese hackers,” he said.

He could not con� rm when the

hackers had struck or if spying soft-ware had been installed on the com-puters and laptops of users trying to log on to the website.

Kurt Baumgartner, a researcher at Kaspersky Lab, a global manufacturer of antivirus software based in Moscow, detected the attack late Tuesday and said the website had been “strategical-ly compromised” as a result.

Tenzin Taklha, the Dalai Lama’s spokesman, has said that the 78-year-old spiritual leader’s o� cial website www.dalailama.com continued to function normally.

The Dalai Lama � ed Tibet following a failed uprising against Chinese rule in 1959. He later founded the government in exile in Dharamshala after being of-fered refuge by India.

China vilifies the Dalai Lama as a “separatist” who incites violence in Tibet, while the Dalai Lama insists his sole focus is a peaceful campaign for greater autonomy for his homeland. l

Two suspected militants killed in Yemen drone striken Reuters, Aden, Yemen

At least two suspected Islamist mil-itants were killed in a drone missile strike in Yemen’s southern Shabwa province, the latest in a surge since Washington warned of possible attacks by al-Qaeda in the region.

At least 37 people have been killed in just over two weeks in a campaign tar-geting insurgents linked to al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), described by US o� cials as the most dangerous branch of the global jihadi network.

That campaign has been stepped up after intercepted communication between AQAP leader, Nasser al-Wu-hayshi and Ayman al-Zawahri, head of al-Qaeda, along with other intelligence

prompted Washington to close 19 US embassies this month.

“The car was completely obliterated and the two men inside it were killed,” a local o� cial said, adding the strike happened late on Monday. He gave no further details.

Yemen is one of a handful of coun-tries where Washington acknowledg-es using drones, although it does not comment publicly on the practice.

Security in Yemen is of regional and global importance.

AQAP has previously plotted un-successfully to attack international airliners and is seen in Washington as a potential threat to Yemen’s neighbor Saudi Arabia, the world’s top oil ex-porter, and Red Sea oil tankers. l

Nigerian Muslims walk past an uncompleted mosque in Maiduguri, Nigeria. Suspected Islamic militants wearing army fatigues gunned down 44 people praying at a mosque in northeast Nigeria, while another 12 civilians died in an apparently simultaneous attack AP

Exiled Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama poses for a picture with the students of a Tibetan school after inaugurating its auditorium in Indian state of Karnataka REUTERS

A supporter of deposed Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi draws gra� ti on a makeshift barrier built to demarcate their sit-in area around Raba’ al-Adawya mosque REUTERS

Snowden spilled secrets to ‘fearless’ journalists n AFP, Washington

US intelligence leaker Edward Snowden said in an interview released Tuesday he chose to divulge details of a vast US surveillance e� ort to journalists who reported “fearlessly” on controversial subjects.

Snowden, in the interview released by The New York Times, said he chose documentary � lmmaker Laura Poitras and Guardian reporter Glenn Green-wald because they were not cowed by the US government.

“After 9/11, many of the most im-portant news outlets in America ab-dicated their role as a check to power – the journalistic responsibility to chal-lenge the excesses of government – for fear of being seen as unpatriotic and punished in the market during a period of heightened nationalism,” Snowden was quoted as saying in an encrypt-ed conversation with journalist Peter Maass for the Times Sunday magazine.

“Laura and Glenn are among the few who reported fearlessly on controversial topics throughout this period, even in the face of withering personal criticism, and resulted in Laura speci� cally be-coming targeted by the very programs involved in the recent disclosures.”

He said Poitras “demonstrated the courage, personal experience and skill needed to handle what is probably the most dangerous assignment any jour-nalist can be given – reporting on the secret misdeeds of the most powerful government in the world – making her an obvious choice,” adding that Poitras “was more suspicious of me than I was of her, and I’m famously paranoid.” l

InternationalDHAKA TRIBUNE Wednesday, August 14, 2013 9

Rise in attacks on women in Afghanistan n Reuters, Kabul/Ghazni

Taliban � ghters have kidnapped a female parliamentarian who was travelling by car through Afghanistan’s central Ghazni province with her children, a local police commander said on Tuesday, the latest in a string of high-pro� le, violent attacks on women.

Successive, often deadly assaults on women working in state institutions are fuelling concern that hard-won women’s rights promoted by the United States and its allies are eroding as international forces prepare to withdraw next year.

Fariba Ahmadi Kakar’s three daugh-ters were later released, the police commander said, but her kidnappers were demanding four Taliban prisoners in exchange for the parliamentarian.

Kakar, a member of the lower house, was the second female parliamentarian to be attacked in Ghazni in less than a week. Her husband denied the attack had taken place, saying she was travelling abroad, but the Kakar tribe’s elder, Samad Khan, said attempts were under way to reach an agreement with the Taliban.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Muja-hid said he did not know who staged the attack. “We are still investigating,” he said.

Under the Taliban’s 1996-2001 rule, women were obliged to wear the head-to-toe covering burqa, allowed only limited schooling and prevented from leaving home unaccompanied.

Restoring the right to work and

education has been a cornerstone of the Western-backed government of President Hamid Karzai, but patriarchal attitudes have remained entrenched.

Survivors of attacks often say their only hope is to leave Afghanistan, still one of the worst places in the world to be born female.

“I need to go outside the country for my treatment and for my security,” said Muzhgan Masoomi, a former government worker stabbed 14 times last year.

Kakar’s abduction follows the shoot-ing last week of female senator Rooh Gul, police said. The senator and her husband survived, but their eight-year old daugh-ter was killed along with the driver.

Last month, the most senior police-woman in southern Helmand province, Lieutenant Islam Bibi, was shot dead on her way to work in the provincial capital Lashkar Gah. Bibi, touted as a rising star of the Afghan National Police, said she received death threats even from within her own family.

Concerns have also been raised about a rise in Taliban-style edicts in some re-gions not overturned by the government.

In June, clerics in a region of Baghlan province, north of Kabul, barred women from leaving home without a male chap-erone and shut down beauty parlors.

In the same month, female parliamen-tarians discovered that conservative male members had removed a legal provision that women make up a quarter of all pro-vincial elected o� cials. l

India accuses Pakistan of latest � ring in Kashmirn AFP, Srinagar

India’s army accused Pakistan on Tues-day of � ring across the de facto border that divides Kashmir, in the latest con-frontation fuelling tensions between the nuclear-armed rivals.

The army said Pakistani soldiers had violated the cease� re overnight along the heavily militarised Line of Con-trol (LoC) in the disputed Himalayan region.

It said in a statement that Pakistani soldiers started � ring at Indian posts in Mendhar district late on Monday and

about an hour later in the Balakot area of Poonch sector, with the � ring con-tinuing until about 6am.

“Pakistani soldiers used small arms, machine guns and mortars. We gave a calibrated response,” an army o� cer said separately, on condition of ano-nymity.

Tensions have � ared in the Kashmir valley since the ambush and killing last week of � ve Indian soldiers in the Poonch sector, which India blamed on the Pakistani army.

The ambush sparked a series of cross-border skirmishes which

the rival neighbours blamed on each other.

Last week’s ambush was the dead-liest such incident along the LoC since the two countries agreed to a cease� re in 2003. Pakistan denied its soldiers were involved in the attack.

Indian Defence Minister A K Antony last week hinted at stronger military action along the LoC in the wake of the ambush. In comments on Monday, Antony said: “The armed forces have the freedom to respond to a develop-ing situation there (along the LoC) ap-propriately.” l

United Nations chief urges legal drone use in Pakistan during visitn AFP, Islamabad

UN chief Ban Ki-moon waded into the controversy surrounding US drone strikes during a visit to Pakistan Tues-day, insisting they must operate within international law.

The CIA has carried out hundreds of missile strikes on suspected militants in northwest Pakistan since 2004 and the campaign is a major thorn in rela-tions with the US.

Washington views the strikes as an important tool in the � ght against al-Qaeda and Taliban militants, but Islamabad condemns them as a viola-tion of sovereignty and international law.

Ban addressed the controversial weapons in a speech at the National University of Science and Technology in Islamabad, where he opened a new building.

“As I have often and consistent-ly said, the use of armed drones like any other weapon should be subject to long-standing international law, in-cluding international humanitarian law,” he said to applause from an audi-ence mostly made up of soldiers.

“This is a very clear position of the United Nations. Every e� ort should be made to avoid mistakes and civilian ca-sualties.”

The United States insists the drone strikes are legal and in May President Barack Obama laid out strict guidelines for their use.

Britain’s Bureau of Investigative Journalism says the US has carried out nearly 400 drone strikes in Pakistan

since 2004, killing up to 3,500 people, including hundreds of civilians.

Ban arrived in Islamabad for a two-day visit amid high tensions between Pakistan and India over the disputed territory of Kashmir.

He will meet Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif for talks as Pakistan and India trade accusations over clashes along the Line of Control, the de facto border monitored by UN observers that divides the disputed Himalayan territory.

Islamabad on Monday summoned India’s deputy ambassador to protest

against what it called “unprovoked shelling” which killed one civilian.

India’s army accused Pakistan on Tuesday of � ring across the border in Kashmir overnight, but did not report any casualties.

Despite the Kashmir tensions, the UN said Ban’s visit would focus on ed-ucation e� orts and he is due to meet students later on Tuesday.

Nearly half of all children in Pa-kistan and almost three quarters of young girls are not enrolled in primary school, according to UN and govern-ment statistics. l

Indian MPs behaving like anarchists: speaker n AFP, New Delhi

A furious speaker of India’s upper house of parliament accused lawmak-ers Tuesday of behaving like a “feder-ation of anarchists” after more unruly behaviour which has paralysed deci-sion-making in recent years.

The current parliament, which was elected in 2009, is on course to be one of the least productive in post-inde-pendence Indian history with shout-ing, jeering and protests frequently forcing adjournments.

The latest session, which began on August 5, has also been severely dis-rupted with the government unable to pass any major legislation ahead of elections next year due to protests from opposition parties.

“Every single rule in the rule book, every single etiquette is being violated in this house!” the exasperated speak-er of the upper house, Hamid Ansari, shouted above the din on Tuesday.

“If the honourable members wish this house to become a federation of anarchists then it is a di� erent matter,

because there is no order!”His outburst led to criticism from

the main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the government, both of which asked him to retract the re-mark, but it gained sympathy among many on Twitter.

“This is not the way to raise things,” BJP leader Arun Jaitley said afterwards, accusing Ansari of over-reacting.

“To describe the whole house as a federation of anarchists may not be fair and I urge you to reconsider it,” he said. l

Peace talks resume under cloud of Israeli constructionn Agencies

A 10-minute drive from where nego-tiators will sit down on Wednesday to resume long-stalled Middle East peace talks, Israeli bulldozers are busy reshap-ing land that Palestinians want for their future state, Reuters reported.

Settler homes are popping up across East Jerusalem and major roads are being built to burgeoning Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank. Israel has just approved plans for 3,100 new homes on the territory it seized in the 1967 Middle East war.

The non-stop building on the land that is at the heart of the con� ict raises serious doubts about whether the latest round of US-brokered talks can result in a deal to create an independent Palestinian state alongside Israel.

“The two-state solution by now is un-obtainable,” Reuters quoted Dani Dayan,

a former chairman of the settler move-ment, as saying. Dayan further argued that any accord palatable to the Pales-tinians would involve removing so many settlers that it would be impossible to enact.

US Secretary of State John Kerry, the driving force behind the resumption of talks following a three-year hiatus, agrees it is a major problem, but says there is time for a � nal push.

Israel has rejected criticism of its con-struction plans, saying the new homes would be erected in settlements with-in blocs it intends to keep in any future peace deal with the Palestinians.

The settler numbers are imposing. In 2010, when the Palestinians quit nego-tiations over settlement building, some 311,110 Israelis were living in the West Bank. Today, according to Israel’s Army Radio, this has surged to 367,000.

Adding in East Jerusalem, then the

number of Israelis living beyond the 1967 lines rises to nearly 600,000. Few, if any, would willingly quit their homes as part of a peace deal.

However, according to a report by AFP, a senior Palestinian o� cial warned on Tuesday, on the eve of the scheduled re-sumption of the fragile process, that mid-dle east peace talks could “collapse” due to continuing Israeli settlement expansion.

“Settlement expansion goes against the US administration’s pledges and threatens to cause the negotiations’ col-lapse,” AFP quoted Yasser Abed Rabbo as saying.

After an initial round of meetings in Washington at the end of last month, the real discussions start on Wednesday, with Israeli Justice Minister Tzipi Livni facing Palestinian chief negotiator Saeb Erekat in Jerusalem’s King David Hotel.

The negotiations will be moderated by US envoy Martin Indyk, with the next en-

counter already penciled in for later this month in the West Bank city of Jericho.

Bowing to a Palestinian condition to get the talks going, and eager not to an-tagonise an anxious Washington, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has agreed to the staggered release of 104 Palestinian prisoners, many convicted of murder.

The � rst 26 are due to go free early on Wednesday, and political analysts say the recent splurge of settlement moves was a bid by Netanyahu to placate his legion of supporters who reject the so-called two-state solution.

But the sheer quantity of planned new homes has stunned outsiders and led the Palestinians to issue a clear warning. “If the Israeli government believes that ev-ery week they’re going to cross a red line by settlement activity ... what they’re advertising is the unsustainability of the negotiations,” Erekat said on Sunday. l

Indian policemen stand guard on the street during a curfew following riots in Jammu REUTERS

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon (R) smiles as he stands beside Sartaj Aziz, foreign a� airs adviser to Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif in Islamabad REUTERS

An Afghan woman holds her child as she walks on the outskirts of Kabul REUTERS

Syria opposition proposes transition roadmapn AFP, Beirut

Syrian opposition activists, including National Coalition members, have drawn up a transitional roadmap including a call for national reconciliation and justice for “all of Syria’s victims,” a statement said Tuesday.

The roadmap is to be presented in full on Wednesday, in the presence of Nation-al Coalition chief Ahmad Jarba, but has not been o� cially endorsed by the key opposition group.

“National reconciliation will be achieved through a long transitional jus-tice process in which justice is assured for all of Syria’s victims,” said the state-ment.

It comes amid reports of abuses car-ried out by both regime forces and rebels in Syria’s con� ict.

While the country’s uprising began with peaceful anti-government demon-strations in March 2011, it has turned into a bloody war that has left more than 100,000 people dead.

Both sides have been accused of sum-mary executions, sectarian killings and torture.

The proposals also call for restructur-ing Syrian security forces to uproot “cor-rupt o� cials.”

“All armed groups will be disarmed, demobilised and reintegrated into Syrian society,” it adds.

It lays out plans for the country’s po-litical system after the fall of the Syrian regime, calling for a “hybrid presidential/parliamentary system.”

And it proposes using the country’s 1950 constitution as the basis for a new charter, with an elected constitutional assembly mandated to decide on modi-� cations.

The 1950 constitution was the � rst in Syria to be drafted by a constituent as-sembly, but has subsequently been re-placed.

It gave the legislature more power than the executive, and states that the head of state must be a Muslim.

The group behind the proposal, Syrian Expert House, includes some 300 activ-ists, lawyers and members of the Nation-al Coalition and Syrian National Council.

Defected government o� cials and rebel commanders also participated in the drafting process, the group said.

More than 200 pages spell out in often minute detail a plan for how best to man-age a transition in the event the regime of President Bashar al-Assad falls.

It argues for war crimes tribunals to be held in Syria with international experts

providing advice, and pledges that trials will cover all those accused of abuses.

“The goal is not to target a speci� c re-ligious group,” the document says, add-ing “there is no place for the policies of revenge or retaliation.”

“Even members of the armed opposi-tion must be held accountable, and their trials should be conducted according to international standards to avoid any chal-lenges to these trials’ legitimacy,” it adds.

The document is unlikely to sit well with the most extreme of Syria’s rebels, jihadists with the al-Qaeda-a� liated al-Nusra Front and Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.

The groups have made clear their goal is for a greater Islamic nation, and that a pluralistic democracy is not on the table.

The roadmap could even incur the an-ger of more moderate Islamists, includ-ing the Muslim Brotherhood organisa-tion, with its proposal that election laws exclude parties “founded on a religious, racial or doctrinal basis.”

It is being released as � ghting contin-ues in Syria, with � erce battles in eastern Deir Ezzor and coastal Latakia, the latter Assad’s home province.

International e� orts to organise a con-ference on a political solution to the con-� ict have stalled. l

US should hold con� dential direct talks with Iran: think tankn Reuters, Dubai

The United States should hold con-� dential direct talks with Iran over its nuclear programme but the West should not expect Iran’s moderate new president to o� er major conces-sions, a prominent think-tank said on Tuesday.

To try to give the talks a chance, however, Washington and other world powers should hold o� imposing new sanctions on Iran, the International Cri-sis Group (ICG) said in a report.

The United States and other powers suspect the Islamic Republic is covert-ly seeking a nuclear arms capability. Israel has threatened military action to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear bombs. Iran says it seeks only civilian nuclear energy.

The Islamic Republic and six world powers - Britain, China, France, Ger-many, Russia and the United States, collectively dubbed the P5+1 - have held several rounds of talks but have yet to even approach a breakthrough. l

Fighting kills 18 Syria rebels in Haman AFP, Beirut

At least 18 Syrian rebels and a child were killed in violence in the central province of Hama Tuesday, a monitor-ing group said.

In the north, a prominent Alep-po-based activist went missing, and the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said it feared the jihadist Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS) was behind his disappearance.

Near Morek in Hama province, “the number of opposition � ghters killed

(early Tuesday) has risen to 18,” said the Britain-based Observatory.

They were killed in clashes and army shelling on their positions and ammu-nition stockpiles, the group added.

Meanwhile, in the Sahel al-Ghab area of Hama, a 10-year-old child was killed in army shelling, said the Observatory.

The deaths come amid a major reb-el escalation in eastern Hama, which is strategically located in the heart of Syr-ia and links several � ashpoint areas to each other.

Activists say several rebel groups

have joined forces in recent weeks to � ght two simultaneous battles in the area.

Hama is adjacent to Homs, the cen-tre of whose provincial capital remains under rebel control, weeks after the army reclaimed control of the strategic Khaldiyeh district.

In northern Syria, news broke of the disappearance of an anti-Assad activist known for his chants at weekly protests in the city of Aleppo. “It is likely he is being held by ISIS,” said Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman. l

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How to solve Sudoku:Fill in the blank spaces with the numbers 1 – 9. Every row, column and 3 x 3 box must contain all nine digits with no num-ber repeating.

Road safety is every-one’s responsibility

The second anniversary of the untimely death of Tareque Masud, the much-loved � lm director, in a road accident has renewed calls to look at tra� c safety.

Unfortunately, safety is always a timely issue. Over 50 people died in transport accidents over the Eid holiday alone and at least 9 people a day are killed on average on the nation’s roads.

A myriad of reasons are behind the high rate of road accidents in Bangladesh. These include poorly designed, constructed and maintained roads, inadequate laws to address the perpetrators and a culture of callous disregard for personal safety.

Public authorities need to step up enforcement of safety laws for drivers, passengers and pedestrians. Stricter enforcement of existing rules for buses, cars and trucks is needed to stamp out prevalent poor driving practices which exacerbate congestion and are often the cause of accidents.

However, laws are also needed to address some of the real culprits who are not held accountable under current laws. For example, owners of poorly maintained or over-� lled vehicles are just as much to blame for accidents as the drivers who are often coerced to drive these vehicles.

Not only should these callous owners be held accountable, but mandatory insurance schemes should be also implemented to compensate victims of accidents.

Experience from other countries shows that public education can also drastically improve public attitudes towards practices such as riding without seatbelts and drink driving.

Better road safety depends on a multi-faceted approach that includes more comprehensive laws, better enforcement of laws and raising public awareness on precautions that can be taken. Safety is a shared responsibility for all road users.

Restore indigenous land rights

Rights group Amnesty International has called for the restoration of land rights of the indigenous people in CHT. Given that land related disputes are one of the root causes of

ongoing unrest in the region, it is about time that the government addressed this issue.

Amnesty has claimed that about 90,000 people of ethnic minority communities remain internally displaced in CHT. Disputes around land rights also fuels tension with Bangali settlers which frequently leads to violence.

In fact, news stories on violent clashes in CHT have dominated the news media in recent months and the CHT peace process seems to be in serious jeopardy.

While some laws and mechanisms exist on the books to address the issue of land disputes they are poorly implemented.

Amnesty has claimed that the CHT Land Commission, the body charged with resolving land disputes, routinely neglects the indigenous people in its decision-making process and it is perceived to be an organisation that disproportionately favours the ethnic Bangalis. The land commission lacks appropriate resources to carry out its duties as well.

Bangladesh is also currently not ful� lling its obligations under international legal instruments, such the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and the International Labour Organisation Convention on Indigenous and Tribal Peoples, to which it is a signatory.

Urgent action is now needed from the government to not only ensure that we uphold our international legal obligations, but, more importantly, to restore peace and stability in the CHT region by resolving the issue of land rights.

Floating power plant!August 10A very interesting write up, published in a local daily on August 6, could be a viable solution for purchasing power plants available with short lead time. It could be a better solution than rental power plants, and a quick solution for putting it up, from ground up, to power on the grid. As we know, a new power plant usually takes between 4 to 6 years at least. In this case, a sea-going power ship could take only one year. The price given was Euro 1.2m per MW capacity. These novel and innovative powerships can be liquid or gas-fueled, and their � oating liquid fuel can be pumped directly to the powership’s fuel tanks, which we should go for.

These can easily be located in the vicinity of Chittagong or Chalna ports, and are available in capacities ranging between 135MW to around 200MW.

The biggest advantage is that no land is needed, and the lead time from order to delivery can be less than 9 months, with power on the grid within 12 months. The builder, as stated, usually takes around six months to build these powerships.

I am not aware how it compares with the cost per MW of equivalent-sized, land-based power plants, starting from getting land, building, and all infrastructure and fuel facilities, plant import and transport to site, and then installation and commissioning of the plant.

In this case, for a powership, it takes around nine months as stated by the builder, and includes fuel storage and all manning accommodations too.

Our concerned o� cials must seriously study this option. May be, in the long run, it could be cheaper than rental or new land power plants of the same capacity, including transformers and switchgear, which can be built on the deck of the powerships.

Engr SA MansoorDhaka

Editorial10

www.dhakatribune.com

DHAKA TRIBUNE Wednesday, August 14, 2013

LETTER OF THE DAY

CALVIN AND HOBBES

PEANUTS

Letters to the Editor

Adil’s arrest, remand condemnedAugust 12

Efadul Huq What are the charges, do we know?

Banglar Babaji He looks like a typical “right wing” sympathiser.

Lisa Haque He is not a right wing sympathiser! He was arrested at night on the night of Eid, therefore the punjabi.

HC stays remand on Odhikar’s Adilur RahmanAugust 12

Whoever is behind Odhikar please elaborate, so that we can also know. The people of this country should know the facts behind the botched arrest of the secretary of Odhikar. Why was he arrested?

Syed Ziad Rahman

All Adil tried to do was practise his freedom of speech in our beloved country. Well, thanks to the authorities, now he knows his limitations!

Tunazzina Iqbal Sahaly

What is the simple truth?August 7

Absolutely and simply beautiful. I do not mean to trivialise the serious and careful consideration of the human condition, nor do I lightly set aside the complex socio-cultural and political framework of your essay, but there is such beauty in the words laid next to each other. The truth of which you speak capably and clearly shines through.

The remedy proposed for a truth-� lled, heart-led life also applies to every human space but perhaps most needed in places where persons cannot live in their truth.

Perhaps more importantly, in plac-es where persons are not yet able to divine their truth, in their moments of self encounter, in their realisations of beauty.

max collins

Shifting away from BoroAugust 7

I really liked this piece. The problem of food security would have been long solved had we decided to con-sume more of other types of cereals. Like you pointed out, this will be dif-� cult as switching staple food is not an easy social task. After all, there is a reason why we have the old saying, “Machhe bhate Bangali.”

Sha� n Fattah

Odhikar o� ce raidedAugust 11

This is truly sad and shameful. For God’s sake, Odhikar is an organisation working towards giving people fair human rights. And the one who does that work was tak-en away, for what? Doing his job right?

Mariha Q Chowdhury

dhakatribune.com

facebook.com/DhakaTribune

Better road safety depends on a multi-faceted approach that includes more comprehensive laws, better enforcement of laws and raising public awareness on precautions that can be taken

Given that land related disputes are one of the root causes of ongoing unrest in the region, it is about time that the government addressed this issue

Sudoku

Code-Cracker

SUDOKU CODE-CRACKER YESTERDAY’S SOLUTIONS

7 1 5 6 3 9 8 2 48 3 9 2 4 7 1 5 64 2 6 5 1 8 7 3 95 7 2 9 6 3 4 1 81 8 4 7 2 5 6 9 39 6 3 1 8 4 2 7 56 5 8 3 7 1 9 4 23 4 7 8 9 2 5 6 12 9 1 4 5 6 3 8 7

2 7 39 6

1 9 3 47 4 6

8 5 9 43 5 1

2 4 7 93 8

4 9 1

11Op-Ed Wednesday, August 14, 2013DHAKA TRIBUNE

Am I not old now?n Abdul Matin

A young boy once asked his grand-father, “Dadu (Grandpa), at what age does one become old?”

The grandfather replied, “There is no age limit for being old. As you grow old, a time comes when you no longer understand what the young generation says and they do not understand what you say. That is the time you become old.”

I heard this story years ago from a Bangladesh born professor settled in the US. In fact, he himself had put the question to his grandfather when he was a little boy. The professor must be retired by now, and I have not met him recently.

I do not know if he is still young or has become old. I do, however, remember his story every time the editor of Dhaka Tribune requests an article for the young readers of this newspaper. I wonder whether the young generation will understand what I write for them?

Rabindranath Tagore was young all his life even though he died in 1941 at the age of 80. He had no problem communicating with young people of all ages. His novels, poems, stories and songs are admired by young and old alike.

I still wonder how in the poem “Year 1400,” written more than one hundred years ago, he manages to convey with love and delight the early spring morning, the fragrance of a � ower, the melody of a song and the crimson colours around him, to the young readers of today.

Everyone is not Tagore. We can’t all communicate with the young like he did. When we advise them “early to bed and early to rise,” they practice late to bed and late to rise ... while we listen to the romantic melodies of yesterday, they listen to the pop songs

of today. We envy them for earning one hundred times more than what we earned when we were young. They envy us for spending one hundred times less for anything we bought when we were young.

We used to write letters to friends and relatives and wait days for a reply. They tweet to friends and get instant re-plies. While we were thrilled by the ad-ventures of Robinson Crusoe, they get lost in the world of Harry Potter. We had to � nd and struggle through encyclope-dias to � nd out facts; they can google far more information straight away.

Things are so di� erent these days. Boys and girls are shepherded to coaching centres whilst we played on open � elds. We had to sit close to a noisy radio set to get the latest score at the Oval, they can watch the game live on TV. We walked miles to visit friends and relations, they need a car or a rickshaw to cross the street.

Young kids look at me with amusement. When I ask them to stop shouting, they scream. When I ask them to scream, they say, “Are you nuts?”

They � nd faults with everything I do. My dress is lousy. My English is funny and my accent silly. If I try to sing an old tune, they roll their eyes and laugh loudly. If I write a poem, the young say it is yucky!  If I tell a story, it can become funky. If I write an essay, it becomes junky! What can I write for the young readers? Am I not old now? l

Abdul Matin is a former chief engineer of Bangladesh Atomic Energy Commission.

Everyone is not Tagore. We can’t all communicate with the young like he did

As Afghan endgame looms, India-Pakistan rivalry intensi� esn Frank Jack Daniel, Sanjeev Miglani

Pakistan-based militants are preparing to take on India across the subcontinent once Western

troops leave Afghanistan next year, several sources say, raising the risk of a dramatic spike in tensions between nuclear-armed rivals India and Paki-stan.

Intelligence sources in India believe that a botched suicide bombing of an Indian consulate in Afghanistan, which was followed within days, last week, by a lethal cross-border ambush on Indian soldiers in disputed Kashmir, suggest that the new campaign by Islamic mili-tants may already be underway.

Members of the Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), the Pakistani group blamed for the 2008 commando-style raid on Mumbai that killed 166 people, told Reuters they were preparing to take the � ght to India once again, this time across the region.

And a US counter-terrorism o� cial, referring to the attack in Afghanistan, said “LeT has long pursued Indian targets, so it would be natural for the group to plot against them in its own backyard.”

Given the quiet backing - or at least blind eye - that many militant groups enjoy from Pakistan’s shadowy intel-ligence services, tensions from a new militant campaign are bound to spill over. Adding to the volatility, the two nations’ armies are trading mortar and gun� re across the heavily militarised frontier that divides Kashmir, and accusing each other of killing troops.

Hindu-majority India and Islamic Pakistan have fought three wars since independence in 1947 and came close to a fourth in 1999. The tension now

brewing may not escalate into open hostilities, but it could thwart e� orts to forge a lasting peace and open trade between two countries that make up a quarter of the world’s population.

“With the Americans leaving Afghanistan, the restraint on the Paki-stani security/jihadist establishment is going too,” said a former top o� cial

at India’s Research and Analysis Wing (RAW), the external intelligence arm.

“We are concerned about 2014 in ei-ther scenario. If the jihadists (Islamist militants) claim success in Afghani-stan, they could turn their attention to us. Equally, if they fail, they will attack in wrath.”But Pakistan, which has a border with India to the East and with Afghanistan to the West, has concerns of its own. It sees India’s expansive diplomacy in Afghanistan as a ploy to disrupt it from the rear as it battles its own deadly Isla-mist militancy and separatist forces.

Vying for in� uence in a post-2014 Afghanistan, it worries about India’s assistance to the Afghan army, height-ening a sense of encirclement.

“I’m shocked by these allegations. Pakistan has its own insurgency to deal with. It has no appetite for confronta-tions abroad,” said a Pakistani foreign ministry o� cial referring to the Indian charges of stirring trouble in Afghani-stan and on the Kashmir border.

“If anything, we are looking at our mistakes from the past very critically. These accusations are baseless. India needs to act with more maturity and avoid this sort of propaganda.”

Both US Vice-President Joe Biden and Secretary of State John Kerry spoke during visits to India recently of the need for New Delhi and Islamabad to resume their stalled peace process as the region heads into a period of uncertainty.

Full-scale jihadAt the core of that uncertainty is the pullback of militants from Afghanistan as US forces head home.

Ha� z Sayeed, founder of the LeT, has left no doubt thatIndia’s side of Kashmir will become a target, telling an Indian weekly recently: “Full-scale armed jihad (holy war) will begin soon in Kashmir after American forces with-draw from Afghanistan.”

The retreat of Soviet forces from Afghanistan in 1989 brought a wave of guerrillas into Kashmir to � ght India’s rule there.

This time the additional risk will be the rivalry between India and Pakistan over Afghanistan itself, one that threatens to become as toxic as the 60-year dispute in Kashmir. The LeT has said it is � ghting Indian forces in Afghanistan as well.

A senior LeT source in Pakistan told Reuters: “It is correct that the LeT cooperates with the Afghan Taliban (insurgents) when there is a question of attacking Indian interests.”

Tensions between India and Pa-kistan escalated last week after � ve Indian soldiers were killed close to the de facto border in Kashmir. India says Pakistani Special Forces joined

militants to ambush a night patrol, a charge Pakistan denies.

Just days earlier, three men drove an explosives-laden car towards India’s consulate in the Afghan city of Jalalabad, near the border with Paki-stan. The blast missed its target and killed nine civilians, six of them young Islamic scholars in a mosque.

It is too early to say conclusively who was behind these and other attacks, but Indian and Afghan o� cials see in them the handiwork of the LeT and its allies. Such groups have doubled their attempts to cross into Indian-controlled Kashmir this year, according to Indian defence ministry statistics.

The result has been the � rst in-crease in Kashmir militant violence since a 2003 cease� re on the border, which led to a decline in attacks, partly because Pakistan and the jihadist groups were preoccupied with Afghan-istan during this time.

In the � rst eight months of this year, 103 casualties in militant-relat-ed violence were recorded in Indian Kashmir, compared to 57 in the same period of 2012, according to the South Asia Terrorism Portal, a think tank.

$10m bountyLeT was founded in 1990 in eastern Afghanistan by Sayeed, a Pakistani Islamic scholar whom India accuses of masterminding the rampage in Mum-bai. The United States placed a $10m bounty on his head for his alleged role in the attack, but he remains a free man in Pakistan, where he preached to thousands last week.

Although the group has global am-bitions, LeT’s primary aim is to end In-dia’s rule in Muslim-majority Kashmir. India and Pakistan each control a part

L A R G E R T H A N L I F E

Bangladesh: Terror threat for the US?n Ekram Kabir

The US State Department’s decision to close its mission in Dhaka, along with anoth-er 22 of its missions in other countries due to an al-Qae-

da terror attack plan came as a surprise to many Bangladeshi citizens.

Yes, America may have a reason to worry and take precautions on the information the CIA had about the attacks, but branding Bangladesh a potential-terrorist haven was unwel-come.

Although the US embassy in Dhaka was kept closed for just a day, Bang-ladesh’s image was tarnished globally by Washington’s decision.

This has led Bangladeshis to think that the US was equating this country with Iraq, Libya, Algeria, Afghanistan, Sudan, Yemen, and Egypt, and the thought was quite embarrassing for all Bangladeshis in the backdrop where the US envoy, Dan W Mozena, roams around the country freely.

Given that he is the most visible foreign envoy, whose movement is completely unhindered in the country, Bangladeshis didn’t expect to be com-pared to the other countries on the list that are more prone to terror attacks.

What happens in those areas has never happened here. Bangladesh doesn’t have a visible presence of al-Qa-eda. In other countries on the “at risk” list, cars explode, hotels are bombed,

people die in cinema halls and shopping malls. Can anyone think of any such incident of terrorism in this country?

Having said that we must also confess that there was a time when Bangladesh fell prey to Islamist mili-tancy. Terrorist organisations such as Jamiat-ul-Mujahedin, Lashkar-e-Toi-yba did try to turn Bangladesh into a terror haven.

There was a time when Islamist militants serially exploded bombs in 63 districts of the country on the same day. All this happened in this country as, reportedly, a foreign spy agency wanted to make Bangladesh unstable.

Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami is also believed to have links with interna-tional terror organisations.

But the terrorising didn’t last very long. Bangladesh fought them back and successfully rooted out the ter-ror elements. The militant kingpins have also been executed.

However, to America’s mind, that may not mean that terror threats or the presence of transnational terror elements have been successfully eliminated.

After all, this is one of the coun-tries from which some people did go to Afghanistan, Iraq as well as Pal-estine in order to fight against, what they said, are anti-Islamic forces in those countries.

These people had become radicals when they returned and tried to organise radical forces across the country. However, they weren’t very successful, and were easily con-tained.

Presently, Bangladesh doesn’t have the threat of the kind of terror-ism that USA and its allies are � ght-ing against. What Bangladesh has now is an extreme form of violence due to its internal political environ-ment.

The con� icts that emanate from local power-mongering politics can be ex-tremely dangerous; and yes, that may be reason enough to issue an interna-tional travel alert.

Risks of the physical insecurity of all Bangladeshis are exceptionally high as extortion, arson and incidents of abduction are commonplace.

However, these have no connection

with transnational terror groups. The local political groups are responsible for these types of acts of terror.

Coming back to the issue of embas-sy closures, the Obama administration was criticised as “overreacting” on terror attacks, but the US President seemed quite determined to make sure that they don’t have another Benghazi. Americans should proceed with vaca-tions in a “prudent way,” Obama said.

A country has all the rights to ensure national security if there’s any possibility of a terror attack. This is precisely what the US did by closing the embassies in 22 places. However, according to news reports in Bangla-deshi media, they hadn’t informed the government here.

This was surprising. Dhaka is one of Washington’s partners in its war on terror. These two countries have done quite a lot of work to prevent terrorism in Bangladesh and in South Asia.

The US has even helped Bangladesh to formulate its counter-terrorism act. Therefore, keeping Dhaka uninformed about the embassy closure can raise questions.

Having said that, we must reiterate that the kind of terrorism the US fears isn’t the reality in Bangladesh. The Bangladeshi people deserve to know whether their country is a terror threat for America. l

The author is Executive Editor of Natunbarta.

These two countries have done quite a lot of work to prevent terrorism in Bangladesh and in South Asia

Anti-Indian sentiment in Kashmir provides fertile ground for reviving the militancy that roiled the region through the 1990s

This time the additional risk will be the rivalry between India and Pakistan over Afghanistan itself

A man for all ages: Tagore’s appeal transcends age barriers WIKI COMMONS

The US consular mission, Dhaka. The facility remained closed on August 4 following a security threat DHAKA TRIBUNE

‘Fine Jamai’ airs on Channel i“Fine Jamai” directed by Robin Khan will air at 7:50pm today. Amin Khan, Bindu, Farukh Ahmed and many more have acted in the drama. It’s a comedy drama where Bodiul stands in front of his in-laws house and asks them to return his es-tranged wife. With hindsight, he refuses to leave the spot and swears that he will remain in posi-tion until his demands are met with positivity or will wait here till death makes him leave. After a few days however, a rumour is heard across the village that someone poisoned him.

n Entertainment Desk

‘Deyaler Upor Achhe Akash’ airs on Banglavision“Deyaler Upor Achhe Akash” directed by Nuzhat Alvy Ahmed will air at 8:10pm today. Sajal, Aupi Karim and many more have acted in the drama. It’s a story about a writer. In recent times, the writer in focus faces writer’s block and is unable to write anything. While he was facing this dilem-ma and su� ering with frustration, a beautiful lady comes to him with the request of writing her bi-ography.

EntertainmentDHAKA TRIBUNE Wednesday, August 14, 201312

ONTV

MOVIES

COMEDY

DRAMA

NEWS

MISC

3:40pm Fox Movies PremiumSkyfall5:40pm Zee StudioPirates Of The Caribbean: On Stranger Tides6:20pm WBHarry Potter And The Goblet Of Fire7:00pm Star MoviesJohn Carter7:00pm Fox Movies PremiumBig Daddy7:20pm HBOMan On A Ledge9:30pm HBOMission: Impossible Ghost Protocol9:30pm WBTransformers: Revenge Of The Fall11:00pm Zee StudioThe Rock12:00am Star MoviesColombiana

9:30pm FXThe Simpsons11:30pm ColorsMrs Pammi Pyarelal1:30pm Comedy CentralUp All Night3:30pm Star WorldGlee5:30pm Z CafeJust For Laughs7:30pm Sony SABTaarak Mehta Ka Ooltah Chashma8:30pm Big CBS LoveRules Of Engagement10:30pm Comedy CentralHot In Cleveland

9:05am BanglavisionArman Bhai er Honeymooney12:30pm Star GoldHogi Pyar Ki Jeet12:30pm Zee CinemaJudaai2:45pm Star GoldTere Sang3:30pm Zee CaféLost3:30pm Sony MaxGhar Ghar Ki Kahani7:00pm Star WorldOne Tree Hill8:30pm ColorsMadhubala9:00pm SonyAmita Ka Amit9:00pm Zee TvDo dil bandhe ek dori se10:00pm Star PlusYeh Rishta Kya Kehlata Hain

Today’s Eid special TV shows

‘Jasmine o Tar Ek Guchchho Phul’ on NTV Written and directed by Sagor Jahan, tele� lm “Jasmine o Tar Ek Guchcoho Phul” features Opi Karim, Intekhab Dinar, Ahona, Sabiha Jahan, Harun, Ripon and others.

The story is about a popular actress named Mississippi. Mississippi lives alone in an apartment in Dhaka. The actress often sees a small girl following her in her dreams. At one point, she realises where ever she goes the small girl follows her but no one else sees the girl. Mississippi gets traumatised about the incident and shares it with her friend Shurjo who is a poet. He supports her and counsels her with a psychiatrist. But, she still sees the small girl. She becomes mentally lost and � nally, Missisippi faces the small girl in reality. The tele� lm will be aired today at 2:35pm on NTV.

‘Trump Card’ airs on RTV “Trump Card,” a thriller based action tele� lm depicting the rule of underworld will be aired on RTV tonight at 11:45pm. Written and directed by Mizanur Rahman Aryan, the tele� lm features Shatabdi Wadud, Bidya Sinha Meem, Nisho, Monira Mithu and Piyal in the lead roles.

Shatabdi Wadud is seen as an underworld don in the story. His activity has been taken care of by his assistant played by Nisho. All of a sudden Nisho gets attacked by some terrorists and an autistic girl rescues him. Nisho falls for the girl but his dreams become shattered while Bidya Sinha Mim in the role of an underworld terrorist. The story takes a twis at this point. The action packed tele� lm also feaures songs by Limon and Lalon band.

‘Khyati’ airs on ETV“Khyati” directed by Mizanur Rahman Lablu will air at 10pm today. Anisur Rahman Milon, Bidya Sinha Saha Mim and many more acted in the drama. Everyone wants to be popular and it is a common dream shared by people from all walks of life. In the play “Khyati,” the character played by the popular soap actor Anisur Rahman Milon wants to be popular and takes up wrong methods to achieve his dreams. His wife, acted by Bidya Sinha Saha Mim tries to dissuade him from mak-ing the wrong decision.

‘Jamai Dhora’ airs on Maasranga“Jamai Dhora” directed by Sanjay Barua will air at 10:30pm today.

Amin Khan, Mehazabean, Sohan Khan and many more have acted in the drama. The love sto-ry presents Kona and Kabir who are in love with each other. Kona’s mother has a dream about her daughter’s marriage. Her cousin Evan comes to visit the country from USA and he also wants to marry Kona. But Kona does not love her cousin and wants to marry her boy friend. Hence the sto-ry takes a twist.

Iftee showcases ‘Shahabuddin: The Painter, The Fighter’n Afrose Jahan Chaity

A portrait photography exhibition “Shahabuddin: The Painter, The Fighter” by Iftekhar Wahid Iftee will end today at the Zainul Art Gallery of the Fine Arts

Department of Dhaka University. The photographs present some unique moments from the daily life of the famed artist of country, Shahabuddin Ahmed.

The display was inaugurated by Shahabuddin Ahmed on August 8. The exhibition is the outcome

of a seven-year project of Iftee with the aim to docu-ment personal moments of the great artist.

Portrait based photographer Iftekhar Wahid Iftee, by following the footsteps of his idol famous pho-tographer Nasir Ali Mamun, has shown intelligence and commendable aesthetic sense in capturing the displayed photographs. “Photographs are history it-self. It’s hard to � nd portraits of the people who work dedicatedly for our country and consequently be-come legends. So I came up with the idea to capture Salauddin Ahmed with my camera since I believe he is already considered as a legendary artist to many.” Iftee shares with the Dhaka Tribune.

The photographer had shown his liberty in his own language by presenting a photo story of life of Shahabuddin who is on e of the rare painters whose name and works have crossed the national boundary long before, and entered the international domain.

In the photographs, Shahabuddin has been cap-tured in various moods at many locations. Composi-tions of some of the photographs are brilliant which shows the real face of the person behind his grand artworks. Shahabuddin’s artistic self, his passion and expressions have been vividly captured through the lens of Iftee.

The genius of Shahabuddin is known to the world, but this exhibition tells some stories about the cre-ator of those exquisite canvasses.

Iftee is also planning to publish a book on Sha-habuddin very soon. On the other hand, he is prepar-ing for his next exhibition on living legend philoso-pher Sardar Fazlul Karim. l

Six animated summer � lms: What worked and what didn’tn Entertainment Desk

When it comes to computer-animated children’s � lms this summer, there has been no shortage of choices when it comes to going to the movie theaters. The genre once seemed like a sure thing to bring in audiences, but as we’ve seen this summer, there now exists the possibility for the genre to become overly saturated.

But even with all the talk of over-satu-ration in the children’s � lm market, it’s still been a summer of extremes. On one hand, Universal’s “Despicable Me 2” and Disney’s “Monsters University” have steam-rolled the competition. “Despicable Me 2” even led NBCUniversal CEO Steve Burke to say that the � lm would “end up being the single most pro� table � lm in the 100 year history of Universal Studios.”

Other � lms haven’t been so lucky. DreamWorks Animation’s “Turbo” and

recently released “The Smurfs 2,” coming from Sony have both found themselves underperforming. “Planes,” which also came from Disney and just opened this past weekend, seems likely to fall some-where in the middle.

So in a crowded summer for comput-er-animated children’s fare, what sepa-rated the winners from the losers? Here’s a list of the six major animated releases this summer and some reasons why they might have performed the way they did.

At the top of the list is Universal’s “Despicable Me 2,” which currently stands at $338 million domestically and $725 million worldwide. While the � lm is second in total worldwide gross this summer to Disney’s “Iron Man 3,” the much smaller budget of the animated � lm puts it � rmly at the top of the list when it comes to return on investment. Being the “single most pro� table � lm in the 100 year history

of Universal Studios” is no small feat for a studio that once released Jaws in 1975.

So how did this � lm perform so well? One explanation is likely the fact that it’s a sequel to a popular animated � lm. The timing of the � lm’s release also worked out extremely well — coming out only two weeks after “Monsters University,” the � lm could have su� ered from that � lm’s success, but instead seemed to piggyback o� of it. “Despicable Me 2” then had a solid two-week lead on the next animated � lm’s release — DreamWorks Animation’s “Turbo.” So the � lm found itself in good position early in the summer before the market started to get overly saturated. There’s also something to be said about the fact that the � lm was good — it currently holds a 75 percent “Fresh” rating on Rotten Tomatoes, and, despite what executives sometimes seem to think, kids do notice that stu� . l

Lea Michele dedicates award to Cory Monteithn Entertainment Desk

Actress Lea Michele, in her � rst public appearance since the death of her boy-friend and cast mate Cory Monteith, dedicated her Teen Choice Award on Sunday in Los Angeles to the actor who died of an accidental drug and alcohol overdose last month.

With tears in her eyes and her hand on her chest, Michele, 26, thanked fans for the best actress in a TV comedy award for her role as Rachel Berry in the musical series “Glee” and for their sup-port in dealing with Monteith’s death. 

“He was very special to me and we were very lucky to witness his incred-ible talent, his handsome smile and beautiful heart,” she told the audience at the Gibson Amphitheatre.

Monteith, 31, was found dead in a Vancouver hotel room on July 13. The actor, who played high school athlete turned glee club singer Finn Hudson in the Fox musical comedy, had strug-gled with substance abuse and was in rehab in April. His death forced Fox to push back the start of the show’s � fth season, which will address Monteith’s death, by a week to September 26. l

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Visitors at the exhibition IFTEKHAR WAHID IFTEE

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13DHAKA TRIBUNEWednesday, August 14, 2013

SportDid you know?

14 15 Flower hails Cook’s tactical nous 

Reading forward Adam Le Fondre, who netted

eight times as a sub last season (2012-

13), scored the most substitute goals in one premier league season

Italy, Argentina renew rivalry after 12-year gap

EPL set for goal-line technology

Bangladesh’s Omar Faruk Babu (R) � ghts for the ball against BFF XI in a practice match at the BNS yesterday MUMIT M./DHAKA TRIBUNE

National booters’ rusty win in practice matchn Raihan Mahmood

Bangladesh national football team registered a rusty 2-1 win over a BFF XI in a practice match at the Bangabandhu National Stadium yesterday.

Two penalties – one in each half - earned the Sa� Championship bound national team a victory  that was watched by only a few hundred spectators. Apart from the quality of the passing, there was little di� erence between the teams and there was hardly any evidence that the over a month long training camp had improved the side.

After the match, head coach Lodewijk de Kruif, his assistant Rene Koster and even the captain Mamunul Islam declined to face the press. May be frustration took over Lodewijk who arrived yesterday. He was seen talking in a heated way with the players during the interval.

The national team went ahead in the 8th minute o� a penalty when forward Toklis Ahmed was brought down in the penalty box by BFF XI goalkeeper Sultan Ahmed Shakil and winger Zahid Hossain stepped up to send the ball home with Shakil going the wrong way.

However Aminur Rahman Shajib, the substitute forward of the BFF XI restored the parity in the 24th minute with an angular shot after skipper Monaem Khan Raju paved the way for him with a precise through pass.

The goal visibly inspired the BFF XI and they initiated a series of attacks in the next few minutes.  Among them, Sobuj Kumar Biswas’s curving e� ort o� a cut back of Shajib missed the far post by a few inches.

The national team’s best e� ort of the � rst half came in the 41st  minute after Wahed Ahmed stormed past the defence to set Tokils free. Toklis turned around and set Zahid Hasan Emily free, whose grounder missed the sidepost from the top of the box.

The national team continued their ball possession but failed to go past the BFF XI defence that comprised two Nigerians, Gerrad and Yves. It was Yves who paved the way for the national team’s second penalty.

Speedy winger Mobarak sneaked through the left � ank and was moving dangerously ahead before a clumsy tackle of Yves saw him grounded in the middle of the box. It was the turn of defender Waly Faisal, who coolly hit the roof of the net from the spot. l

ICC CEO Dave Richardson (R) and BCB president Najmul Hassan leave the Hotel Radisson premises after concluding the press conference regarding the BPL match � xing yesterday MUMIT M./DHAKA TRIBUNE

Nine including Ash to face charges n Tribune Desk

The International Cricket Council (ICC) and the Bangladesh Cricket Board an-nounced yesterday that following a comprehensive investigation carried out by the ICC’s Anti-Corruption and Security Unit (Acsu), nine individu-als have been charged with various o� ences that are alleged to have been breached the BCB’s Anti-Corruption Code during the Bangladesh Premier League (BPL) 2013.

The charges relate to an alleged con-spiracy within the Dhaka Gladiators franchise to engage in match-� xing and spot-� xing during the BPL 2013, as well as failures by individuals to re-port approaches made to them to be involved in the conspiracy.

Charge letters detailing the allega-tions have been issued to the relevant individuals today. But the ICC and BCB emphasised the importance of recog-nizing that all those charged remain in-nocent until proved guilty. Moreover, in accordance with the BCB’s Anti-Corruption Code, their identities will not be disclosed until the conclusion of the disciplinary proceedings that have now been instituted against them.

Of the nine individuals, seven have been charged for � xing-related of-fences, with two others charged for failing to comply with their obligation to report corrupt approaches that were made to them. Those facing the more serious � xing-related charges have been provisionally suspended and are

immediately barred from participating in all cricket activities organised or rec-ognised by the BCB, the ICC or of the ICC’s Member associations, pending resolution of the disciplinary proceed-ings brought against them.

All those charged now have 14 days

to indicate whether they wish to plead guilty or to defend themselves against the charges brought against them in a full hearing, which would take place before an Anti-Corruption Tribunal convened in accordance with the pro-cesses set out in Article 5 of the BCB’s Anti-Corruption Code.

Those who plead guilty, or who deny the charges but are later found guilty by an Anti-Corruption Tribunal, would be subject to the sanctions man-

dated in Article 6 of the BCB’s Anti-Cor-ruption Code, which include the impo-sitions of a suspension of: (a) between � ve years up and up to a lifetime for the � xing o� ences; and (b) between one to � ve years for any failure to report a cor-rupt approach.

ICC Chief Executive David Rich-ardson, paid tribute to the work of the ACSU: “During its investigation, the Acsu interviewed a large number of people who were involved in BPL 2013 and collected signi� cant evidence from a number of sources that has cul-minated in the charges that have been brought today.

“The continuing � ght against cor-ruption in cricket is not only the re-sponsibility of the authorities like the

ICC and the BCB, but it is increasingly the personal responsibility also of all players and support personnel (includ-ing team owners, administrators, o� -cials and representatives). They must work closely with the authorities and comply with their reporting responsi-bilities at all times, so that the integrity of the sport can be protected for the greater good.”

The BCB President Nazmul Hassan reiterated that the BCB is committed to protecting the integrity and reputa-tion of the sport in Bangladesh and em-phasised his desire that anyone found guilty of breaching the BCB’s Anti-Cor-ruption Code should be severely dealt with in accordance with the sanction-ing principles set out in the Code.

“As the custodians of the sport in Bangladesh, it is the responsibility of the BCB to protect its integrity for all those who engage in any way with the sport of cricket, whether players, spectators, broadcasters, sponsors or otherwise. The BCB is committed to a zero-toler-ance approach towards corruption in the sport and has demonstrated its resolve to deal robustly with such matters by en-gaging the services of the ICC and Acsu.

“The BCB is committed to doing everything possible to defend it from the very small group of people who are willing to compromise the values of the overwhelming majority for person-al greed and, in so doing, bring disgrace upon themselves and their associates, as well as tarnishing the image of the game,” said Nazmul. l

Who are the nine?n Mazhar Uddin

The match � xing scandal from the Ban-gladesh Premier League (BPL) 2013 sea-son saw another twist as the ICC and Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) jointly held a press conference yesterday at a hotel, where the CEO of ICC revealed that there are a total of nine individu-als accused of being involved in � xing.

However, the names of the accused were withheld and this has created plenty of speculation in the cricket-ing community as to who the persons might be.

One person is Mohammed Ashraful, who earlier confessed to his involve-ment and was suspended by the BCB until the investigation was completed.

Ashraful met the ICC o� cials yester-day at the hotel and talked with them. “I have met with them as I am giving them support regarding the match � x-ing scandals from the very beginning and now it’s up to them to decide what punishment they are going to give,” he said.

It had been expected that the ICC would disclose the names of the ac-cused. CEO Dave Richardson ex-plained, “Under the Bangladesh Cricket Board’s anti corruption code

unfortunately we can’t disclose the names until the whole disciplinary process is completed. As the investiga-tion process is still going on we don’t want to disclose any names as they might not be found guilty.”

However the CEO informed that nine of them have been charged with various o� enses, “Nine individuals have been charged with various o� enc-es that are alleged to have been com-mitted under the BCB’s anti corruption code  during the 2013 Bangladesh Pre-mier League,” added Richardson.

Among the names that are specu-lated to be on the list are a few cur-rent and some national team discards. Anamul Hoque, who played for the Dhaka Gladiators, is being said to be on the list.

Others being talked about are fast bowler Mahbubul Alam Robin and left arm spinner Mosharraf Hossain Rubel who played for Dhaka Gladiators and the wicket keeper batsman of Khulna Royal Bengals Mithun Ali.

There are also some former national cricketers such as Mohammed Ra� que and Sanwar Hossain, who were also part of the support sta� of the Dhaka Gladiators team. Shihab Chowdhury, the managing director of the Gladia-

tors is likely on the list and the owner of the franchise, Selim Chowdhury con� rmed that he had received a letter from the ICC about his involvement.

“Yes I have received a letter from the ICC today (yesterday) but I don’t think the ICC has any right to issue any charges against us as the other match � xing scandals earlier happened in other countries. The related boards can take the decision, but not the ICC,” ar-gued Selim. He added that he was in-nocent of any wrong doing and if need-ed, would take legal action to prove it.

Richardson did not answer the question of whether there were any foreign names on the list. “At the mo-ment I can’t say as it’s not in the code and I don’t want to add any more spec-ulations,” said Richardson.

However, it was heard that the coach of Dhaka Gladiators, Ian Pont, was also involved and received the let-ter from the ICC and another foreigner, Darren Stevens, is possibly on the list.

BCB president Nazmul Hasan said that a tribunal would be formed in the next two or three days and it is likely that speculation as to who is under investigation will continue until the board � nally chooses to reveal what they know. l

BD to play Malaysia U-23 on August 23n Raihan Mahmood

Bangladesh national football team will start their Sa� Championship cam-paign virtually from August 20 when they � y to Malaysia to play a practice match against Malaysia U-23 on August 23 at Kuala Lumpur.

Haunted by the lack of match prac-tice against quality teams, Bangladesh Football Federation convinced the Ma-laysian U-23 team to play the practice match, the last one before landing in Nepal. Bangladesh will � y direct to Kathmandu, the Nepali capital on Au-gust 24. The Sa� Championship kicks-o� on August 31 with Bangladesh play-ing Nepal on the opening day.

Meanwhile German based mid-� elder Reasat Khaton’s arrival de-pends upon the consent of head coach Lodewijk de Kruif. Reasat returned to Germany before Eid and will join the team only if de Kruif thinks he is re-quired. l

Michael Jackson to play alongside John Lennon, Mahatma Gandhi!n Reuters

Michael Jackson will join forces with John Lennon and Mahatma Gandhi after signing for Brazilian Serie B club Atletico Goianiense, the club said in a statement.

The 25-year-old’s real name is Carlos Adriano Sousa Cruz but he is usually known by his nickname which he earned for his ec-centric goal celebration where he imitates the late American pop star’s dance.

Also known as Adriano Michael Jack-son, he will line up alongside defender John Lennon, who was baptised John Lennon Silva Santos, and Mahatma, full name Mahatma Gandhi Heber Pio, at the midtable side.

The squad also includes a player known as Rafael Gladiador (Gladiator).

Brazilian footballers can be known ei-ther by their Christian names, surnames, nicknames or a combination of all three,

often leading to exotic results. A forward named Alain Delon, named

after the French actor, is regarded as one of the most successful players to have represented Vitoria, while a Michel Platini, namesake of the former France captain and current UEFA president, plays in mid� eld for Bulgaria’s Ludgorets Razgrad.

Another Michael Jackson, real name Marileia dos Santos, once played for the Brazilian women’s team, taking part in two World Cups and an Olympic Games. l

Mohammad Ashraful, the under investigation cricketer, waits for his transport at the Hotel Radisson after meeting with ICC o� cials yesterday COURTESY

Carlos Adriano Sousa Cruz is usually known by Michael Jackson

SportDHAKA TRIBUNE Wednesday, August 14, 201314

Argentina's Gonzalo Higuain (L) relaxes alongside teammate Lionel Messi during a football training session at Olympic stadium in Rome on Monday. Messi will miss Argentina's friendly against Italy today in honour of Pope Francis, who will receive the two squads at the Vatican on the eve of the match REUTERS

Zagreb fans involved in three racist incidentsn Reuters, Berne

Supporters of Croatian champions Dinamo Zagreb were involved in three episodes of discriminatory and racist behaviour in July, the European sup-porters’ group FARE said yesterday.

Fans of Hungarian club Gyor were reported over anti-Semitic behaviour when their team faced Israeli opposi-tion, while Honved supporters, also from Hungary, repeatedly targeted a Cameroonian player with monkey chants in another game, FARE said.

FARE said that a total of 14 incidents of “racism, xenophobia, extreme na-tionalism or homophobia”, almost all involving Eastern European fans, were reported to them through eye-witness or media accounts.

“This list is only likely to re� ect a pro-portion of the incidents that occurred,” it said, adding that the incidents at matches in European club competition

had been reported to UEFA.Dinamo Zagreb fan group ‘the Bad

Blue Boys’ were reported over “homo-phobic and racist” chanting during a domestic match against Osijek, a Cham-pions League quali� er against Fola Esch and another against Sheri� Tiraspol.

Some of the chanting targeted club director Zdravko Mamic and the Croa-tian Football Federation, FARE said.

UEFA later � ned the club 25,000 euros ($33,200) and ordered a partial closure of the east stand for their next European match following the incident against Luxemburg’s Fola.

Gyor fans “targeted the opposition players and supporters with anti-Semit-ic chants” at their Champions League quali� er at home to Maccabi Tel Aviv on July 17, FARE reported.

The Europa League match the fol-lowing day between Serbia’s Vojvodina and Honved was marred by behaviour of the visiting Hungarian fans. l

Downing leaves Liverpool for West Ham n AFP, London

West Ham United on Tuesday an-nounced the signing of England inter-national winger Stewart Downing from Premier League rivals Liverpool for an undisclosed fee.

Downing, 29, has signed a four-year contract with the east London club and follows striker Andy Carroll in moving from Liverpool to Upton Park.

“I’m very excited. It’s a great op-portunity for me being here, it’s a great club and I’m really excited to get going,” Downing told the club’s o� cial website.

“I’m ready and I’m � t for the � rst game against Cardi� City (on Saturday). I’ve played a decent few games for Liv-erpool in pre-season, so there will be no problems on that front.”

The left-footed wide player becomes West Ham manager Sam Allardyce’s � fth new signing of the close season, after Carroll, Rat, Adrian and Whitehead. l

England have identity crisis, says Ferdinand n AFP, London

Former England defender Rio Ferdi-nand claims that the current national side have lost their identity and has called for an overhaul of the national coaching strategy.

The Manchester United centre-back, 34, played at three World Cups but never went beyond the quarter-� nals, and he believes the reason England are continually eclipsed by teams like Spain and Italy is because they have no coherent playing style.

“What is our identity?” said Ferdi-nand, who retired from international football in May.

“I’ve said that on Twitter I don’t know how many times and people come back and say, ‘What are you talk-ing about?’ But what is our identity?

“We started to see something when Glenn Hoddle was in charge (1996-1999), a bit of an identity then, free-� owing football, and you would say we were starting to get an idea of the pat-tern of what he wanted to implement in the team.

“Since then I don’t think we’ve actu-

ally really seen an identity, where you could say, ‘That’s an England team’, where you look at the under-21s and go, ‘That’s an England team’.”

He added: “You could put an un-der-16 lad into the senior Spanish team or Italian team. He might not have the attributes in terms of physique and speed to be able to deal with it but po-sitionally I’m sure he’d know what to do because that’s what they’re taught, day in, day out.

“I just don’t think you see that con-nection between our (senior) team and the under-21s, or the under-17s and the under-20s team and the senior team, and I think that doesn’t bode well for the England team.”

England won the World Cup on home soil in 1966 but since then they have reached the semi-� nals of a major tournament on just two occasions -- at the 1990 World Cup and the 1996 Euro-pean Championship.

Ahead of the friendly with Scot-land on Wednesday, Ferdinand says England must be prepared to sacri� ce short-term success in favour of a more long-term approach. l

EPL set for goal-line technologyn AFP, London

At some point during the 2013-14 Pre-mier League season, football history will be made when technology is used to settle a contentious goal-line deci-sion for the � rst time.

The system has already been de-ployed at last year’s FIFA Club World Cup in Japan and this year’s Confed-erations Cup in Brazil, but both tourna-ments passed o� without any contro-versial goal-mouth incidents.

That is almost certain to change when the � rst of this season’s 380 Pre-mier League games kick o� on Satur-day, after the English top � ight became the � rst national championship to sanction the use of the technology.

Its arrival will mark the biggest change in the English game since the back-pass rule was introduced in 1992, preventing goalkeepers from picking up passes from team-mates and slow-ing the game down.

British-based � rm Hawk-Eye was chosen over German company Goal-Control to supply the ground-breaking technology at a meeting of Premier League club chairmen in April.

During the close season, ball-track-

ing cameras have been installed at all 20 Premier League grounds, from Old Tra� ord, home of reigning champions Manchester United, to newly-promot-ed Hull City’s KC Stadium.

Hawk-Eye’s system uses 14 elevated cameras (seven per goal) to track the

movement of the ball around the pitch, with computer software scrutinising data from the cameras to detect wheth-er or not the ball has crossed one of the two goal-lines.

When a goal is scored, a signal will be sent to the match o� cials’ wrist-watches within a second.

Hawk-Eye, which provides similar technology for use in cricket and ten-nis, says the system is “millimetre accurate”. Former head of Premier League referees Keith Hackett calls it a

“brilliant system”.Spectators will be unaware if a goal

has been awarded until the referee signals, but Hawk-Eye replays will be displayed on in-stadium video screens, where available, and shown to fans watching on television.

The Premier League has long been an advocate of the technology, having conducted initial tests with Hawk-Eye as long ago as 2006.

However, it was not until world governing body FIFA reconsidered its opposition to the concept in July 2012, after nine months of testing, that the path was cleared for it to be introduced.

England manager Roy Hodgson says the system will eliminate the “gross in-justices” that occur when o� cials fail to notice that the ball has crossed the goal-line during matches.

One memorable example occurred at the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, when England mid� elder Frank Lam-pard was denied a goal in his side’s last-16 loss to Germany despite his shot clearly bouncing behind the line after hitting the crossbar.

In the Premier League, at least, such incidents should now be a thing of the past. l

Italy, Argentina renew rivalry after 12-year gapMessi to miss friendly due to muscle painn Retures

Italy forward Pablo Osvaldo could face the country of his birth in today’s friend-ly against Argentina as the two old rivals meet for the � rst time in 12 years.

World Cup hosts Brazil will attempt to keep the momentum going after their Confederations Cup win in June as they visit Switzerland in another of the near-ly 50 friendlies being played on the � rst international date of the season.

There are several neighbourly clash-es with England meeting Scotland at Wembley, Belgium hosting France in Brussels and Sweden entertaining Nor-way in Stockholm.

Other teams will be travelling much further, including world and European champions Spain, who face an exhaust-ing round trip to steamy Guayaquil to play Ecuador, and Uruguay, who travel half way around the world to visit Japan.

Uruguay’s trip will at least give striker Luis Suarez a break from his troubles at Liverpool, where he has been told he must apologise to his team mates before he will be welcomed back into the squad following a failed bid to move away.

Victor Genes will make his debut as Paraguay’s fourth coach in only two years as the South Americans visit Ger-many in Kaiserslautern.

The former under-20 coach replaced Gerardo Pelusso who quit in June after a 2-1 home defeat to Chile kept the 2010 World Cup quarter-� nalists bottom of the South American qualifying group for the 2014 � nals in Brazil.

Beleaguered Mexico coach Jose Man-uel de la Torre badly needs a win against Ivory Coast in New York following his side’s disappointing CONCACAF Gold Cup exit against Panama while the Unit-ed States, who won the tournament, visit Bosnia in Sarajevo.

European clubs frequently

complain about the August date, which is played before many domestic leagues have kicked o� , and Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, president of the European Clubs’ Association, once described the games as “nonsense matches.”

Rummenigge is Bayern Munich’s CEO and is hardly likely to be pleased that two of his club’s players, Thiago Alcantara and Javi Martinez, have been included in an experimental Spanish squad for the trip to South America.

Italy’s meeting with Argentina in Rome is the pick of the crop.

The two teams met in four succes-sive World Cups between 1978 and 1990, the last of those games ending in a heart-breaking semi-� nal defeat for hosts Italy with a Diego Maradona-in-spired Argentina winning on penalties after a 1-1 draw.

Their only meeting since then was Argentina’s 2-1 win in Rome in 2001 when Osvaldo was still a teenager liv-ing in Buenos Aires.

Osvaldo, who has scored three goals in eight appearances, has been recalled by Italy for the match, having previ-ously fallen foul of coach Cesare Pran-delli’s code of ethics.

The 27-year-old was dropped from the Confederations Cup squad after getting into a public row with AS Roma interim coach Aurelio Andreazzoli dur-ing the Italian Cup � nal against Lazio in May.

Born in Buenos Aires, Osvaldo was raised at Huracan where he made his professional debut and moved to Italy as a 20-year-old to join Atalanta.

He quali� ed to play for Italy through his great grandfather and became the latest in the long line of oriundi, as foreign-born national team players are known, when he made his debut in 2011. l

Pope torn over who to support for Italy-Argentina friendlyn AFP, Vatican City

Pope Francis joked with Italy and Ar-gentina players on the eve of a friendly football match in Rome on Tuesday, saying he was torn over who to sup-port.

“It’s going to be di� cult for me, it’s lucky it’s a friendly match! And let’s make sure it is one,” the Argentine ponti� said in a private meeting, which journalists listened to over the speakers in the Vatican’s press room.

The players, along with Italian coach Cesare Prandelli and Argen-tine coach Alejandro Sabella, met the 76-year-old at the Vatican before Wednesday’s game at Rome’s Stadio Olimpico.

The ponti� , a lifelong fan of Argen-

tine club San Lorenzo, called on the teams to make sure they used their popularity to give a good example to their fans.

“You, dear players, are very popu-lar. People follow your example, o� the pitch as well as on. You have a so-cial responsibility,” he said.

Among those present was AC Milan striker Mario Balotelli, who is often in the headlines for his behaviour on and o� the pitch.

The players presented Francis with a personalised shirt from each team with his name on it, as well as a silver vase from the Argentinians and an ol-ive tree from the Italians.

“Please pray for me, so that I too, on the ‘pitch’ God has placed me on, can play an honest and courageous game for the good of everyone,” the pope said at the end of the meeting. l

Key Friendlies Sweden v Norway Portugal v Netherlands Germany v Paraguay Italy v Argentina Poland v Denmark Switzerland v Brazil Wales v Ireland Belgium v France England v Scotland Ecuador v Spain

Bollywood actor John Abraham and former Indian football team captain Baichung Bhutia during a IMG-Reliance training camp in Mumbai yesterday AP

Portugal's players - forward Cristiano Ronaldo (2L), defender Fabio Coentrao (2R), defender Pepe (C) - and head coach Paulo Bento (R) practice during a training session at the Jamor Stadium in Oeiras in the Lisbon periphery yesterday. Portugal will play a friendly football match against Netherlands today AFP

You, dear players, are very popular. People follow your example, o� the pitch as well as on. You have a social responsibility

Sport 15DHAKA TRIBUNE Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Zia out of tournamentZiaur Rahman con� rmed his exit from the Fide World Cup Chess Champion-ship 2013 after earning a draw against Israeli Grandmaster Boris Gelfand in the second game of the 1st round in Tromso, Norway on Monday. The Bangladeshi Grandmaster needed to win the game in order to remain in the tourney, but his brave display led to a draw and saw him fail to qualify for the 2nd round. Zia played with black pieces against the Israeli, who is rated 2773 in Fide rankings (11). It took Gelfand 103 moves to obtain the draw which he needed move to the second round as he had previously won the � rst game of the same round. With the draw, Zia (rating 2470) increased his rating by 2. Zia is expected to return home today.

- SH

Monaco points deduction overturned An appeals committee at the French Football Federation (FFF) yesterday cancelled a two-point deduction imposed on Monaco but upheld a ruling to play one match behind closed doors. The FFF said it had overturned the points deduction given after a Ligue 2 match against Le Mans on May 17, when fans set o� � ares and invaded the pitch. One fan also attacked the referee in the incident, which came after Monaco secured promotion back to the top � ight. Monaco had said they should be treated like any other club, criticising the sanction — which also includes a suspended one point deduction — as unduly harsh and dis-proportionate. Monaco opened their Ligue 1 account on Saturday with a 2-0 win against Bordeaux.

– AFP

West Brom sign Vydra on season-long loanWest Bromwich Albion have signed Czech striker Matej Vydra on a season-long loan from Udinese, the Premier League club announced yesterday. Vydra spent last season on loan at Watford, where he scored 22 goals and was named Championship Player of the Year. “He had a really good year with Watford and we believe he’s got the qualities to score goals at a higher level. Hopefully, he’ll show that this year with us,” West Brom manager Steve Clarke told the club’s o� cial website (www.wba.co.uk). “We had Matej watched throughout last sea-son. As well as some excellent scout-ing reports, we had some really good feedback from within Watford about Matej as both a player and person.

– Reuters

Arsenal � op Chamakh joins Palace Morocco striker Marouane Chamakh ended his disappointing three-year spell at Arsenal on Monday after join-ing newly-promoted Crystal Palace. Chamakh, 29, signed a one-year contract with Ian Holloway’s team and is likely to make his debut against Tottenham at Selhurst Park on Sunday. “Crystal Palace are delighted to con-� rm the signing of Morocco interna-tional striker Marouane Chamakh on a one-year deal,” a statement on the club’s website con� rmed. “The former Arsenal forward has joined the Eagles on a permanent deal after competing a medical in SE25, and will wear the number 29 shirt.”

– AFP

Stosur slams Kuznetsova in Cincinnati opener Samantha Stosur continued the rehabilitation of her hardcourt game with a 6-1, 7-5 � rst-round defeat of fellow Grand Slam winner Svetlana Kuznetsova at the Cincinnati WTA and ATP Masters on Monday. Stosur, who won the US Open in 2011, had seen a dip in form that dropped her out of the top 10 in the WTA world rankings. The 29-year-old, who also � nished runner-up in 2010 at the French Open, had fallen in the third rounds of both Roland Garros and Wimbledon.

– AFP

Quick BytesEngland 1st Innings 238 (A Cook 51; N Lyon 4-42)Australia 1st Innings 270 (C Rogers 110, S Watson 68; S Broad 5-71)England 2nd Innings(overnight: 234-5)A Cook c Haddin b Harris 22J Root b Harris 2J Trott c Haddin b Harris 23K Pietersen c Rogers b Lyon 44I Bell b Harris 113J Bairstow c Haddin b Lyon 28T Bresnan c and b Harris 45M Prior b Harris 0S Broad c Smith b Harris 13G Swann not out 30J Anderson c Haddin b Lyon 0Extras (b4, lb5, w1) 10Total (all out, 95.1 overs) 330

BowlingHarris 28-2-117-7; Bird 20.3-6-67-0; Watson 6.3-1-22-0; Siddle 17-4-59-0 (1w); Lyon 22.1-3-55-3Australia 2nd Innings (target: 299)C Rogers c Trott b Swann 49D Warner c Prior b Bresnan 71U Khawaja lbw b Swann 21M Clarke b Broad 21S Smith b Broad 2S Watson lbw b Bresnan 2B Haddin lbw b Broad 4P Siddle c Anderson b Broad 23R Harris lbw b Broad 11N Lyon b Broad 8J Bird not out 1Extras (b6, lb5) 11Total (all out, 68.3 overs) 224

BowlingAnderson 16-1-73-0; Broad 18.3-3-50-6; Bresnan 13-2-36-2; Swann 18-6-53-2; Root 3-2-1-0;Result: England won by 74 runsMan-of-the-match: Stuart Broad (ENG)Series: England lead � ve-match series 3-0

Score Card

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Day’s Watch

Australia media slam ‘shameful’ batting collapsen AFP, Sydney

Australia’s media yesterday labelled as “humiliating” the dramatic batting col-lapse that cost the country’s cricketers a chance to win the fourth Ashes Test against England.

Set 299 to win on Monday’s fourth day at Chester-le-Street in Durham, Aus-tralia were well-placed at 168 for two but crashed to 224 all out, with paceman Stu-art Broad ripping through the middle or-der on his way to taking six wickets for 50.

“No-one does shameful collapses quite like Australia and Michael Clarke’s side conjured up one to remember, or rather to forget, at Durham to hand the Ashes series to England,” said The Aus-

tralian’s cricket writer Wayne Smith.“Not since it was beaten in 1953, 1955

and 1956 has Australia lost three Ashes series in succession but rarely, with so much on the line and with victory so clearly in sight, has a team succumbed so meekly.” Australia were scenting vic-tory after a solid century opening stand between David Warner and fellow left-hander Chris Rogers but Rogers was out for 49 and his partner (71) was the third batsmen dismissed as eight wickets fell for just 56 runs.

“Australia had already conceded the Ashes but a humiliating batting collapse at Durham has rubbed salt into their wounds,” said the Sydney Morning Her-ald’s Chris Barrett. l

Broad bowls England to Ashes series winn AFP, Chester-Le-Street

Stuart Broad bowled England to a stun-ning 74-run fourth Test win over Austra-lia with more than a day to spare as they took an unbeatable 3-0 lead in the � ve-match Ashes series.

Australia, set 299 to win on Monday’s fourth day at Chester-le-Street, were well-placed at 168 for two but slumped to 224 all out as paceman Broad took six wickets for 50 runs for a Test-best match haul of 11 for 121.

The victory meant England, who had already retained the Ashes, had won

three successive Test series against Aus-tralia for the � rst time since the 1950s.

Australia, looking for their � rst win in eight Tests, lost � ve wickets for 13 runs as 168 for two was transformed into 181 for seven.

Man-of-the-match Broad, who had taken � ve � rst-innings wickets, enjoyed a purple patch of six wickets for 20 runs in 45 balls, with Tim Bresnan taking two for eight in 24. At tea, Australia were 120 for one before nine wickets fell in a sen-sational � nal session.

“I was glad I could contribute,” said Broad at the presentation ceremony.

“The wicket suited my style of bowl-ing and I found a slightly fuller length,” added Broad, the son of Ashes-winning former England batsman Chris.

England captain Alastair Cook was stunned by the turn of events.

“At tea we still had a lot of wickets to get. I didn’t expect us to be stood here at 8pm (1900GMT) having won the Ashes.”

A bowler who can blow hot and cold, Broad at his best is as tough to face as anyone currently in world cricket and Cook added: “Stuart Broad was incredi-ble — he bowled some ja� as (unplayable deliveries) out there. l

Flower hails Cook’s tactical nous n AFP, Chester-Le-Street

Andy Flower said on Tuesday that Eng-land captain Alastair Cook deserved credit for his tactics after leading the side to an Ashes series win over Aus-tralia, despite criticism of his � eld plac-ings and declarations.

Cook has enjoyed some notable tri-umphs as England captain since taking over from his now retired former open-ing partner Andrew Strauss, including a series win in India last year and now steering the side to an unbeatable 3-0 lead over Australia with a Test to spare.

The 28-year-old Cook has, however, been criticised by former players, no-tably Australia greats Ian Chappell and Shane Warne, for being an excessively cautious captain when it comes to dec-larations and for a lack of imagination in his � eld placings.

The Essex left-hander’s style has

been contrasted unfavourably with the bold approach of Australia captain Mi-chael Clarke.

England paceman Stuart Broad in-evitably hogged most of Tuesday’s headlines after a stunning spell of six wickets for 20 runs in 45 balls on Mon-

day saw him to Test-best match � gures of 11 for 121.

But England coach Flower high-lighted Cook’s role in bringing back Tim Bresnan on Monday’s fourth after-

noon, with the Yorkshire seamer taking the key wicket of well-set opener David Warner soon afterwards.

“It was nice being part of that after-noon session where Broad and Cook turned things around for us,” said Flower.

“Cook’s captaincy has been excel-lent: strong in the dressing room and out in the � eld.

“He made some decisions that turned the game... bringing on Bresnan, who got Warner straight away.

“He’s been maligned in some areas, I’ve heard. I’m not sure what is said o� the � eld but we judge ourselves by our own standards,” the former Zimbabwe batsman added.

“As a Test captain he is still a young man but he has led the side brilliantly. He’s a strong leader and he’s made some really good decisions in this Test series.” l

Murray says US Open defence a new challengen AFP, Cincinnati

Andy Murray admitted Monday he doesn’t know how he’ll perform in his US Open title defence, but he hopes a solid showing in Cincinnati this week will help him prepare.

The world number two from Scot-land, who ended Britain’s 77-year wait for a Wimbledon men’s champion last month, said that despite winning two Grand Slams he faces a new challenge when defending the American title.

“A lot of the pressure comes from yourself, how much you want to keep doing and how much you want to keep working,” Murray said.

“I hope there’s still pressure there and I hope there’s still some expecta-tion. There will be nerves and stu� .

“It’s going to be a new experience for

me, though, at the US Open. I’ve never defended a Grand Slam title before, and hopefully I’ll deal with that OK.”

The US Open begins on August 26. Murray meanwhile has another prac-tice day in Cincinnati as he waits to face Mikhail Youzhny or Ernests Gulbis --the Latvian who beat him last week in the second round of the Montreal Masters.

In � rst-round matches of the com-bined WTA and ATP Masters tourna-ment in Cincinnati on Monday, German Philipp Kohlschreiber defeated former � nalist Mardy Fish to set up a Tuesday night second-round match with � ve-time champion Roger Federer.

Federer, who will be playing on hard-courts for the � rst time since March, said he is over the back injury which both-ered him on clay last month and is ready to bid for another Cincinnati crown. l

England's Stuart Broad celebrates after taking the last wicket to win the fourth Ashes cricket Test match against Australia at the Durham cricket ground in Durham, north-east England, on Monday. England won the fourth Test by 74 runs with more than a day to spare to take an unbeatable 3-0 lead in the � ve-match series AP

India gears up for new million-dollar eventn AFP, New Delhi

Badminton takes a leap into the un-known on Wednesday, when a new fran-chise-based team event with innovative rules aimed at drawing bigger crowds opens in India.

The million-dollar Indian Badminton League (IBL), trumpeted as the sport’s richest event, will be played over a fort-night between six city teams, using a more attacking style of play designed to excite the fans. But the event has suf-fered several blows even before the � rst shuttle has been hit, with Malaysian su-perstar Lee Chong Wei, the league’s top draw and the world number one, under an injury cloud.

The standard two-point gap to win a game has been abandoned in favour of a

race to 21 points for the � rst two games and 11 points for the decider, if needed.

There will also be a minute’s com-mercial break after the seventh and 14th points in the � rst two games and after the sixth point in the decider.

“The IBL is de� nitely the best thing to happen to Indian badminton,” Indian great Prakash Padukone said.

“Badminton has not seen this kind of money before,” the former All-Eng-land champion said. “It will add to the popularity of the sport, besides bring-ing in more money for the players. A lot would, however, depend on the success of the inaugural event.”

The success of popular franchised-based T20 competitions around the world have also inspired copy-cat events in hockey, golf, football and tennis. l

India's Jwala Gutta of Delhi Smashers (L), India's Saina Nehwal of Hyderabad Hotshots (2L), Germany's Mark Zweibler of Mumbai Masters (C), Denmark's Carsten Mogensen of Banga Beats (2R) and India's Ashwini Ponappa of Pune Pistons (R) pose with the IBL Trophy during a press conference in New Delhi yesterday AFP

16 Back PageDHAKA TRIBUNE Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Delay doubles tannery relocation costEcnec approves Tk22.04bn ‘Ashrayan 2’ project aiming to alleviate poverty through providing housesn Tribune Report

The government yesterday approved the second revised proposal for re-locating hazardous tanneries fromthe capital’s Hazaribagh to Savar,increasing the original project cost by nearly 98%.

The approval of the project “Tan-nery Industrial Estate, Dhaka (2nd re-vised)” came at the Executive Commit-tee of the National Economic Council’s (Ecnec) meeting with its Chairperson and Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina in the chair.

The project cost now stands at Tk10.79bn, a sharp increase from the � rst revised project proposal worth more than Tk5.5bn taken in October 2007.

“The project will ensure the estab-lishment of industrial plots with ade-quate infrastructural facilities at the Sa-var tannery industrial park for private entrepreneurs. Hazaribagh tanneries will be relocated there,” Planning Divi-sion Secretary Bhuiyan Sha� qul Islam said after the meeting.

Modern central e� uent treatm ent plants and dumping yards will be es-tablished at the park to ensure quality waste management. The park will cre-ate nearly 100,000 direct jobs.

The tannery relocation project was one of the nine development projects costing Tk108.9bn approved at the meeting.

“Of the total outlay, Tk56.58bn will come from the national exchequer while the remaining Tk5.3bn will come from project assistance,” said Sha� qul.

The revised “Ashrayan 2” project aim-ing to alleviate poverty through provid-ing residential facilities and jobs for land-less people also got the nod from Ecnec. The project cost stands at Tk22.04bn, up by more than 88% from the � rst revised project cost of Tk11.69bn.

Under the project, some 36,000 more landless families will be rehabil-itated. Multi-storeyed buildings will be

constructed for landless people along with specially designed houses for small ethnic groups.

Besides, multi-storeyed buildings will be constructed at the divisional headquarters, city corporations, dis-trict towns, upazilas and municipali-

ties. Houseless land owners would be provided with houses on their lands.

At the same time, the bene� ciaries will be provided with training and loan facilities for self-employment. The construction of multi-storeyed build-ings for the rehabilitation of the fam-

ilies who were a� ected by land acqui-sition process in expanding the Cox’s Bazar Airport project has also been in-cluded in this project.

The Ashrayan 2 project is based on the success of a project called “Ashrayan” taken in 1997 and a subse-

quent project called “Abasan” imple-mented between July 2002 and Decem-ber 2010.

The � rst revised project had the pe-riod of July 2010 to June 2014. Till date, 14,000 families have been rehabilitated against the target of 50,000 families. l

Varun Gandhi supports Teesta deal, LBAn Triune Desk

Varun Gandhi, a member of Lok Sabha, India’s lower house of parliament, from the opposition BJP party, has come out strongly in support of the Land Bound-ary Agreement (LBA) and the proposed Teesta water-sharing deal with Bangla-desh that Manmohan Singh’s govern-ment had to back o� from.

The land treaty, signed in 1974 be-tween the two neighbours, needs to be rati� ed by India through a constitu-tional amendment. But the process has been stalled for almost four decades.

India’s Congress-led United Progres-sive Alliance government is ready to introduce an amendment bill in parlia-ment, but it does not have the required majority to pass it without BJP support. On the other hand, the BJP top brass does not appear willing to allow the bill to pass, primarily due to major reserva-tions by the party’s unit in Assam.

Varun Gandhi, however, expressed support for the LBA and Teesta deals, bdnews24.com reports quoting his ar-ticle published in The Times of India newspaper yesterday.

Varun is the only child of Indira

Gandhi’s younger son, Sanjay. His cous-in, Rahul Gandhi is the general secre-tary of the Congress party.

In his article, Varun echoes Sinha, re� ecting deep divisions within the BJP on the contentious issues.

“Despite being birthed through Indi-an midwifery, Bangladesh’s growing an-ti-India Islamic tilt and illegal migration to our northeast remain irritants. With a pro-India government coming to power, we squandered an opportunity to im-prove relations,” Varun says in his article.

Without commenting on his par-ty’s opposition to the LBA, he contin-ues: “Instead of operationalising the Land Boundary Protocol, dating back to the 1974 Mujib-Indira Land Bound-ary Agreement which resolves 6.4km of undemarcated border, and building trust, we resorted to legal hokum.

“We need to ink the Teesta wa-ter-sharing treaty, which gives Bangla-desh 25% of its waters despite 40% of the river � owing through it, as well as � nalise a strategic transit pact regulat-ing access to our northeast,” he adds.

Many would imagine his dig at “le-gal hokum” is aimed at his own party-men, who strongly oppose the LBA. l

Indigenous languages facing negligence, risk of extinction n Muktasree Chakma Sathi

The government is yet to take concrete measures to preserve the country’s en-dangered languages, especially those spoken by the indigenous people, and protect the rights of linguistic minorities.

The problem persists despite the fact that there is a government institu-tion with the particular responsibility to take care of endangered and near-ex-tinct languages. The International Mother Language Institute (IMLI) was launched on March 15, 2001 and the la-bel “international” meant that its area of work and research would include languages and linguistic heritages of other countries as well.

According to sources, other than the Bangalees, there are at least 45 groups of people indigenous to the country, with an approximate number of 30 languages spoken. Experts say many of these lan-guages have no standard written forms, meaning the history, tradition, wisdom and knowledge of these communities

are passed on orally. The lack of pres-ervation initiatives may expedite the process of their extinction, but equally importantly – as pointed out by Sanjeeb Drong, general secretary of Bangladesh Indigenous Peoples Forum – would also stand opposed to the linguistic rights enshrined within the constitution.

The Article 23(a) of the constitution says: “The state shall take steps to pro-tect and develop the unique local cul-ture and tradition of the tribes, minor races, ethnic sects and communities.”

Sanjeeb said: “The government is denying indigenous children their right to have a primary education in their own (mother) languages – a right also stressed upon in the National Education Policy of 2010.”

Shourav Sikder, a professor of lin-guistics at the University of Dhaka, told the Dhaka Tribune that the 30 or so lan-guages that exist in the country have been in practice for centuries among the indigenous communities. “The number of these peoples would be over 1.6 million, according to the 2011 pop-

ulation survey. I think the government should take strong measures to protect indigenous languages, or else we may have to risk losing them at some point or another soon,” he said.

He further said a lack of government initiatives sometimes a� ects adversely school enrolments of the indigenous children. “While the overall school en-rolment in the country is 97-99%, ac-cording to a survey conducted by the UNDP, enrolment of indigenous chil-dren is only 67%.”

“The reason behind this is obvious: these children are not feeling comfort-able in schools due to language barri-ers.” Rights activist Tandra Chakma, referring to another survey on primary education in the Chittagong Hill Tracts, conducted by Manusher Jonno Foun-dation, said a signi� cant number of these enrolees leave early from educa-tion. “They drop out of school almost as quickly as they enrol,” she said.

Director General of IMLI Jinat Imtiaz Ali, however, told the Dhaka Tribune that they would soon launch an eth-

no-linguistic survey that would pave the way for providing education in indigenous languages. “The survey is intended to � nd the exact number of languages available in the country and their current condition. Once we are through with that, we will take mea-sures that would help appropriately preserve these languages.”

“Usually, an ethno-linguistic survey takes 10-15 years to � nish, but in our case, it will take less. However, we are currently considering launching a one-year pilot project at a cost of Tk40m. Based on its � ndings, we will revive near-extinct languages and develop grammar for languages that don’t have one – to be used in textbooks and liter-ature,” Ali added.

The ruling party in its election mani-festo had pledged to ensure the cultur-al and linguistic rights of indigenous people. The Chittagong Hill Tracts Peace Accord, signed by the same par-ty in 1997, also highlighted the impor-tance of protection and preservation of languages. l

Wildlife project stuck in red tapen Abu Bakar Siddique

The implementation of the project on Strengthening Regional Co-opera-tion for Wildlife Protection goes on atsnail’s pace due to bureaucratic com-plexity.

Two years have elapsed since the government undertook the $36m worth � ve-year project on July 1, 2011, but only a few components of the de-velopment programme have been com-pleted.

Establishing a wildlife centre, which will facilitate training and research on wildlife is one of the major components of the project. Moreover, the WB-fund-ed project was taken to improve the regional cooperation on wildlife pro-tection among the South Asian coun-tries of Bangladesh, India, Nepal and Bhutan.

However, the forest minister, the forest department o� cials and World Bank are in an argument over selecting the location of the centre.

Minister Hasan Mahmud desires Rangunia of Chittagong district as the location while the forest o� cials and the global lender wants the Botanical Garden in Dhaka and Gazipur respectively.

The di� erence of opinion to select the location was a bar to implementing the project properly, said a forest o� -cial source.

The minister, however, denied the allegation, saying they had already decided to set up the wildlife centre in Chittagong in consultation with the World Bank.

“As the Chittagong region including Chittagong Hill Tracts contains 11% of the total forest of Bangladesh and Bangladesh Forest Research Institute is also located in the region, we have decided to establish the wildlife cen-tre there, he added while talking to the Dhaka tribune.

Just one year after the project start-ed, following an objection from the World Bank, the ministry replaced its � rst project director Tapan Kumar Dey, conservator of forest (wildlife), with Aparup Chowdhury, additional secre-tary to the ministry as the project di-rector.

Tapan was allegedly involved in wildlife tra� cking, according to the news published by di� erent media on June 2012.

Chief Conservator of Forest Yunus Ali said the project had establisheda Wildlife Crime Control Unitwhich was another component of the project.

Under this particular wing, only a database of wildlife criminals and a ho-tline had so far been prepared.

Apparently, establishing the crime control unit is the only visible work that has been done by the authorities, said Prof Monirul H Khan of Zoology Department of Jahangirnagar Univer-sity.

Regarding the slow pace of imple-menting the project, Aparup Chowd-hury, incumbent project director, said they had already broken the bureau-cratic red tape.

He claimed that the project was im-plemented properly. l

Scientists grow human heart tissue n AFP, Paris

Scientists said Tuesday they had used stem cells to grow human heart tissue that contracted spontaneously in a pe-tri dish – marking progress in the quest to manufacture transplant organs.

A team from the University of Pitts-burgh, Pennsylvania, used induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells generated from human skin cells to create precur-sor heart cells called MCPs.

iPS cells are mature human cells “reprogrammed” into a versatile, primitive state from which they can be prompted to develop into any kind of cell of the body.

The primitive heart cells created in this way were attached to a mouse heart “sca� old” from which the re-searchers had removed all mouse heart cells, they wrote in the journal Nature Communications.

The sca� old is a network of non-liv-ing tissue composed of proteins and carbohydrates to which cells adhere and grow on.

Placed on the 3D sca� old, the pre-cursor cells grew and developed into heart muscle, and after 20 days of

blood supply the reconstructed mouse organ “began contracting again at the rate of 40 to 50 beats per minute,” said a University of Pittsburgh statement.

“It is still far from making a whole human heart,” added senior researcher Lei Yang.

Ways have to be found to make the heart contract strongly enough to pump blood e� ectively and torebuild the heart’s electrical conduc-tion system.

“However, we provide a novel re-source of cells – iPS cell-derived MCPs – for future heart tissue engineering,” Yang told AFP by email.

“We hope our study would be used in the future to replace a piece of tissue damaged by a heart attack, or perhaps an entire organ, in patients with heart disease.”

According to the World Health Or-ganisation, an estimated 17m people die of cardiovascular ailments every year, most of them from heart disease.

Due to a shortage of donor organs, “end-stage heart failure is irreversible,” said the study.

More than half of patients with heart disease do not bene� t from drugs. l

A worker nails small pieces of leather at Hazaribagh to dry them in the sun. The processed leather will be used to make wallets and shoes MAHMUD HOSSAIN OPU

EC postpones 10 municipality polls n Mohammad Zakaria

The Election Commission (EC) yester-day, at an emergency commission meet-ing, postponed the upcoming 10 munic-ipality elections upon the instruction of the local government and rural develop-ment (LGRD) ministry. The LGRD minis-try had so far sent three letters to the EC to postpone the elections.

The municipalities to which elec-tions were postponed include Noahata of Rajshahi, Dupchacia of Bogra and Shripur of Gazipur. On July 31, the EC set September 8 as the scheduled date for elections at these municipalities.

The EC was also supposed to an-nounce the poll schedules of Fulbaria of Mymensingh, Chandpur Dhakkhin, Golapganj of Sylhet, Sitakundo of Chit-tagong municipalities this week.

Earlier, the LRGD ministry request-ed the EC to postpone the elections to the Chuadhanga Sadar, Shariatpur Sa-dar and Manikganj Sadar municipali-ties citing the same reason.

On August 7, the LGRD ministry in a letter signed by Deputy Secretary of the LRGD Rehana Yesmin asked the EC to postpone the elections on the ground that the ministry would re-demarcate the wards. l

CorrigendumDhaka Tribune on August 13 ran a report ti-tled “Chinese medical ship due on August 19,” where it was wrongly mentioned in that the ship “would be stationed in China.” Actu-ally, the ship will anchor at Patenga beach in Chittagong from August 19 to 27.

Editor: Zafar Sobhan, Published and Printed by Kazi Anis Ahmed at Romask Limited, 184, Tejgaon Industrial Area, Dhaka-1215. Editorial, News & Commercial O� ce: FR Tower, 8/C Panthapath, Shukrabad, Dhaka 1207.Phone: 9132093-94, Advertising: 9132155, Circulation: 9132282, Fax: News-9132192, e-mail: [email protected], [email protected], Website: www.dhakatribune.com