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Saturday 29 August 2015

Turkish jets attack IS Syria targets

Image caption Turkish jets are attacking IS targets from an air base near Adana
Turkey has carried out its first air strikes as part of the US-led coalition against the Islamic State group.
Turkey's foreign ministry said its jets began attacking IS targets across the border in Syria late on Friday.
Turkey has stepped up its operations against the militant group in recent weeks, granting US jets access to a key air base close to the Syrian border.
The US began operating from Turkey earlier this month with a series of drone strikes from Incirlik airbase.
"Our fighter aircraft together with warplanes belonging to the coalition began as of yesterday evening to jointly carry out air operations against Daesh targets that constitute a threat against the security of our country," the foreign ministry said in a statement, using a pejorative term for IS.
"The fight against the terrorist organization is a priority for Turkey," the statement added.
Turkey's increased involvement in the war on IS began in July in the wake of a suspected IS bomb attack in the Turkish town of Suruc which killed 32 people.
Turkish warplanes attacked IS targets in Syria on 24 July, but not as part of the coalition operation.
Media caption The significance of the Incirlik air base in southern Turkey
The new strikes follow a co-operation agreement between Turkey and the US, which calls for Turkey to be fully integrated into the coalition air campaign.
The precise targets of the new Turkish strikes have not been not revealed.
On Thursday, IS militants seized five villages from rebel groups in northern Syria as they advanced towards the strategic town of Marea near the Turkish border.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and other groups said IS carried out a suicide bombing on the outskirts of Marea amid fierce fighting in the area.
The IS advance was in the northern Aleppo province near where Turkey and the United States have agreed to establish an IS-free safe zone.

Mo Farah wins historic World Championships 5,000m gold


Mo Farah
Farah won Britain's fourth gold medal of the World Championships

World Athletics Championships

Venue: Beijing National Stadium, China Dates: 22-30 August
Coverage: Live on BBC TV, Red Button, Radio 5 live, online, mobiles, tablets and app. Click here for full details.
Mo Farah ran a blistering last lap of 52.6 seconds to sprint away to a brilliant 5,000m gold and become the first man in history to pull off a distance 'triple-double'.
Farah made it three successive world 5,000m titles and has now won golds in both track distance events at the Olympics and two World Championships as he once again found both the perfect tactical response and the form to pull it off.
This time he would not be allowed to lead it out from 500 metres to go, as we have seen so often, with Kenya's Commonwealth champion Caleb Ndiku going to the front before the bell and stretching away down the back straight.
But as the field splintered Farah first hung on and then, coming off the final bend, surged past Ndiku to go away to his seventh global track title in a row.
"It's great to make history," Farah told BBC Sport.
"I didn't feel great, my hammy (hamstring) was playing up a bit, but the medical team helped me through it and to come out here and make a double means so much to me.
"I was kind of getting nervous for the first time in a little while, but thanks to all the medical team. It was amazing to do it."
Farah graphic
Farah's historic 'triple-double'

How the race unfolded

It had been a slow race, and Farah's finishing time of 13 minutes 50.38 seconds was in itself not remarkable, Ndiku 1.37 seconds back in silver and Ethiopia's Hagos Gebrhiwet taking bronze from his compatriot Yomif Kejelcha.
Yet this was about the response to a fresh and dangerous challenge: a final 800 metres of 1:48.6 and a last 400 metres that none of his rivals could possibly match.
With a series of allegations made against his coach Alberto Salazar - all denied by the American, and with no suggestion Farah has done anything wrong - this has been a difficult summer for the man who won the 10,000m and 5,000m double at both the last Worlds in Moscow and the London Olympics.
But in the same Bird's Nest stadium where he failed to make it through the 5,000m heats of the 2008 Olympics, Farah continued his unparalleled sequence of distance victories in wonderful style.
The race was slow to unfold, Britain's Tom Farrell taking them through 2,000 metres in just under six minutes.
Farah was content to sit at the back, going wide to pick up a drink of water from the feeding stations on the back straight early on and dump it over his head.
Only with seven laps to go did he move up through the field, cruising into second behind Ethiopia's Imane Merga before easing to the front with 1,600 metres to go.
Gebrhiwet went to his shoulder with three laps to go and was joined by his two Ethiopian team-mates as the pace finally quickened.
Ndiku then threw in a big effort with 800 metres left and as Farah tried to come past him at the bell held the Briton off and kicked again.
But Farah would not be beaten, the best distance runners left in his wake once again.

'Britain's greatest'

Brendan Foster, Olympic medallist and BBC athletics commentator said: "I would say Mo is the greatest sportsman Britain has ever had.
"Tonight has put him at the top table. When you talk about the greatest distance runners of the world, he has gone alongside them. He is up there with the greats Haile Gebrselassie, Kenenisa Bekele, Emil Zatopek and Lasse Viren.
"Nobody has worked out how to beat him and he's got the Rio Olympics next year and then maybe the Worlds again in London in 2017.
"This guy is still adding to his record books. He is getting better as he gets older."

Australian visa crackdown plan cancelled after outrage

Image caption Demonstrators gathered at Flinders Street station following a furious social media campaign
Australia's border protection agency has sparked outrage with a snap announcement it would carry out visa checks on the streets of Melbourne.
Australian Border Force (ABF) said its officers would be checking for visa fraud as part of a general crime crackdown involving several agencies.
But the move sparked a social media outcry, with fears of harassment and racial profiling.
Victoria Police then said Operation Fortitude had been cancelled.
A scheduled press conference was also cancelled after about 300 people gathered in the heart of Melbourne to protest against the operation, The Age reported.

'Be aware of your visa'

The initial statement from the ABF said a "diverse team of transport and enforcement agencies" would be operating in Melbourne on Friday and Saturday night.
"Officers will be positioned at various locations around the CBD speaking with any individual we cross paths with," said regional commander Don Smith.
"You need to be aware of the conditions of your visa; if you commit visa fraud you should know it's only a matter of time before you're caught out."
Word of the plan spread like wildfire on social media, and there were calls for a snap protest outside the Flinders Street train station.
The ABF later issued a "clarifying statement" on its plans, saying: "[We] will not be 'stopping people at random' in Melbourne to 'check people's papers' as reported in media."
"The ABF does not and will not stop people at random in the streets and does not target on the basis of race, religion, or ethnicity."
Police have since cancelled the entire multi-agency operation.
"Victoria Police has made a decision not to go ahead with this weekend's Operation Fortitude," it said.
"We understand there has been a high level of community interest and concern which has been taken into consideration when making this decision."
The Federal Government spent $10m Australian ($7.7m; £4.6m) in branding the months-old Border Force with a new hardline image, local media this week reported.
It including new military-style uniforms and signs at airports and detention centres.

Friday 28 August 2015

Kazi Zafar’s 1st janaza held in Tongi

UNB, Gazipur
The first namaz-e-janaza of Jatiya Party (Z) chairman and former prime minister Kazi Zafar Ahmed was held at Biswa Ijtema ground in Tongi this morning.
BNP central committee member Hasan Uddin Sarkar, general secretary of JP's Gazipur city unit Asad Siddiqui, leaders of the BNP-led 20-party alliance to which Jafar’s JP faction belongs, among others attended the janaza.
Zafar’s first namaz-e-janaza was held here as per his wish around 8:15 am, sources said.
Earlier, Zafar’s body had been taken to the Biswa Ijtema ground around 7:45 am.
His second namaz-e-janaza will be held later at the South Plaza of Jatiya Sangsad Bhaban on Friday morning.
Later, his body will be taken to Baitul Mukarram National Mosque where the third janaza will be held after Juma prayers.
Kazi Zafar Ahmed, also former presidium member of the Ershad-led Jatiya Party, passed away on Thursday morning. He was 76.
Kazi Zafar, who earned reputation as a leftist student leader in the 1960s, served as commerce minister, deputy prime minister and finally prime minister in the Ershad's government in the 80s.
He was Prime Minister from March 20, 1989 to December 6, 1990.
Born in 1939 in Chauddagram upazila of Comilla, Kazi Zafar obtained MA degree in history from Dhaka University.
Jatiya Party chairman HM Ershad sacked Zafar from his party on November 29, 2013 as he made ‘derogatory’ remarks against the former military ruler following his decision to join the 10th parliamentary elections and the election-time cabinet.
Later, Zafar reconstituted the Jatiya Party committee by removing its chief HM Ershad and claimed he is the chairman of the new committee while Ghulam Moshi its secretary general.
On January 25, 2014, Kazi Zafar-led faction of Jatiya Party joined the BNP-led alliance.

To Soar Without Wings

It's results day!
And what exactly does results day mean?
Did you think it's a day when exam results come out? You are gravely mistaken. 
Results day is the day that proves what kind of a human being you are. Whether you are amiable or insolent, your results will tell us. Whether you are capable of a future or will live on the streets, your results will tell us. Whether you are a man of God, or Satan's spawn, your results will tell us. In Bangladesh, results day is the day you find your worth in the world.
This year, three SSC examinees have committed suicide after the release of their results. Many more have admittedly gone into depression. The pressure becomes unbearable once the results do not match the expectation of society. “From a very young age, students in our country face the 'nothing except an A grade is acceptable' pressure from school and parents. This inflicted pressure causes an excessive release of neurotransmitters in their brains, which change the structures of their cells and neurons. This change in structure is what causes agitation, depression and a severe drop in confidence level,” says Nishat Fatima Rahman, Assistant Professor, Early Childhood Development, BRAC IED. In many families and schools, weak students are prone to becoming a subject of mockery, as they are constantly told off if an A grade is not attained. 
Most routines of school going children involve 8-10 hours of studying, which requires them to be confined in a room with no human interaction. “This creates severe problems in children's mental health. At a young age, they need to go out, explore, interact, in order to grow. But their growth is being stunted the moment they are handed so many text books that they are required to memorise all day long,” says Prof Nishat.
The obsession with results par excellence has lead to more than just depression and suicide. There are students and others across the country forgetting their moral values for good results. Question papers are leaked before every board exam and despite investigation; the Government fails to prevent the heinous act. Facebook now consists of pages called 'Porikkhar ager rater proshno nin' which, if literally translated, means 'Final questions the night before the exam', which proves that question papers are expected to be leaked on a regular basis. Even the page titled 'Bangladesh HSC Board 2014 Suggestions and Questions Help Line/Center' has revealed question papers before the exams. Leading newspapers along with eminent activists and academics around the country, including author Professor Muhammad Zafar Iqbal of Shahjalal University of Science and Technology have compared the leaked papers to the actual papers and found that 95 percent of the questions match.
This trend of leaked question papers has become so popular that it has even seeped through to the innocent minds of PSC examinees, mere 5th graders. Despite complaints though, the Government denies the incident. 
“There is a lot of politics in our education system,” says Professor Shumon. “One's education and knowledge have now been summarised into results. If you actually dig deep into our education system, you will find a lot of flaws. Teaching methods, schooling techniques, all of it needs improvement in our country. But that will need a lot of money to be invested. So what happens then? Grades are given away. At least that way, it will seem like the students are doing well, even though we know they aren't.” The abnormal rate of GPA 5 in SSC and the abnormal rate of failure in HSC every year is evidence enough that there is a major flaw in the system, which is why we see that many who passed with GPA 5 in SSC, fail in their HSC. Or sometimes even those with perfect scores in the board exams do not get admission in any universities. 
The problem primarily starts from a very early age, for students. “From class 1 all the way to Master's, our students are burdened with a massive amount of content. Children of kindergarten carry 5-6 heavy books everyday and get into the habit of memorising,” says Prof Dr Wahiduzzaman, educationist, and Vice Chancellor of Noakhali Science and Technology University. “And you will see, the pressure on children, the happier their parents! Guardians nowadays do not care if their children are mentally and physically healthy, as long as they bring in the results,” he continues. According to him, teaching methods need to change drastically. Wahiduzzaman also believes that the tradition of memorising must be eradicated in order to get children to use their own thoughts to produce answers. “The trend of memorising leaves children clueless about what they are studying. They may write the correct answers, but most of the times, they don't know what they are writing. Many teachers like sticking to old traditions, and force their students to memorise. This must stop. The creative system implemented by the Government in the board exams may finally make a difference in this regard.”

Photo: Palash Khan
On the other hand, a student of Viqarunnissa Noon School and College studying for SSC exams, Asfia Azhar (not her real name), says “it's creative only because they say it is. There is nothing creative about it. We are provided with guide-books for creative questions, and once again, asked to memorise answers.” Along with this added pressure of memorising answers and making sure they are word for word from the books, there is the enforced 'coaching' tradition. “There are compulsory coaching classes that the students of class 5 and 8 are required to take. These classes take place after school for around 2 and half hours, and it almost has no additional effect. It is just extra pressure for us students. There are also teachers who make us fail on purpose if we don't attend their private coaching classes.” This malpractice from teachers is an open secret, says Professor Wahiduzzaman. “I think the best way to eliminate this problem is by increasing teachers' pay, and giving more respect to the position.”
The societal pressure that comes with education is something that is engrained in our culture and traditions. “I have been to many places around the world. And I would say that our race is inherently intelligent, when I compare. If we can give our children the space to be themselves, we could do more good to the world than we hope for. Parents must let their children play, run around, and be involved in extra-curricular activities and give them space to develop their bodies and minds themselves. Teaching our children morals, and letting them explore themselves and their talents, is what will make them strive. Parents need to understand that,” says Prof Wahiduzzaman. 
The cold hard truth is that, no matter how many GPA 5s or Golden A+s are produced every year, until the system changes, we will not see much improvement in the education sector, thinks Prof Shumon. “Education must be readily available for all. In our society it is believed that without a higher education, you are nothing. In other parts of the world, this is not the case. People get good paying jobs with basic education. We need to let our children find their own paths instead of forcing them on the one we think is right for them,” he adds, “parents need to stop investing their whole lives and dreams in their children, and citizens, policy makers, teachers and ministers need to ensure that there is no politics involved in a child's education or future.”
The only way to stop this problem is awareness. “There is an urgent need for parents and teachers to study child development. There is no reason to believe that every child is equal. Comparing one student with the other needs to stop, by parents and teachers both. Mocking young children and mentally abusing them just for results must stop too. This is no way of obtaining good results. Every child needs different individual attention, because growth processes and learning capabilities differ from child to child. We must learn what kind of method to apply on which kind of child. We can't use the same method for all,” says Prof Nishat. “There should be courses available on parenting and child development given by either the Government or NGOs. Most of the times, they don't even know the amount of harm they are inflicting on their children. So without the knowledge of child behaviour and development, our children will always suffer,”
As a child growing up in Bangladesh, the one phrase we are most used to is 'what will society think?' This particular phrase establishes society's role in our life as a body that is meant to scrutinise, criticise and objectify our every move. It is, on the contrary, the job of the adult members of society to understand and support our children, harness moral values, and make them confident enough to reach for the sky on their own. For now, our children are trying to soar without wings. 

Libya boat sinking: 5 Bangladeshis among dead

Star Online Report
Five Bangladeshi nationals were among those killedafter two boats carrying about 500 migrants sank off Libya, confirms a Bangladesh’s embassy official from Tunisia.
At least 200 migrants lost their lives in the accident, United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR) told BBC Bangla.
Mozammel Haque,Charge de Affaires of Bangladesh embassy in Libya, told BBC Bangla from Tunisia that there were 31 Bangladeshis on the two boats that sank after leaving Zuwara.
Two children were among the deceased, he added.
Most of the Bangladeshis could be rescued as they were wearing life-jackets, he also said.
Thirty-one Bangladeshis including four families were trying to go to Italy on a boat from Libya’s Zuwara,BBC Bangla quoted Mozammel Haque as saying.
A six-month-old baby and a six-year-old child died on the spot and four members of two of the families were still missing. The rest remained afloat throughout the night by their life-jackets and were rescued early in the morning, Mozammel added.
Embassy officials from Tunisia have spoken to all the families affected by the accident.
Two families used to reside in Sirat while the other two lived in Tripoli. All the families lived in Libya for a long time and their children were born in that country.
Since Libya’s condition deteriorated due to political turmoil and insurgency, the families were looking for a safer route to Italy by sea, Mozammel added.
The boats sank on Thursday after leaving Zuwara, a major launch pad on the Libyan coast for migrants hoping to reach Italy, added BBC World.
The UN says about 2,400 migrants have died trying to cross the Mediterranean to Europe so far this year.
More than 100,000 others have landed in Italy, whilst another 160,000 have crossed to Greece.
The Libyan coast guard worked overnight on Thursday to search for survivors from the latest tragedy.
But Libya is poorly equipped to carry out rescue operations as the ships available to its coastguard are small, BBC North Africa correspondent Rana Jawad reports from Tunis.
At least 100 bodies were taken to a hospital in Zuwara, west of Tripoli, a resident told the BBC.
The victims included migrants from Syria, Bangladesh and several sub-Saharan African countries, the resident said, but the information could not be independently verified.
A detention facility for illegal migrants in Sabratha, west of Tripoli, received 147 people, an official told Reuters.

10 killed as India, Pakistan trade border fire

AFP . Islamabad | Update:
Kashmir
At least 10 civilians were killed Friday as India and Pakistan traded fire across their disputed border, officials said, less than a week after high-level talks were aborted amid a row over Kashmir.
Six died near the city of Sialkot in Pakistan’s Punjab province and at least four villagers were killed in Indian-administered Kashmir. Officials said more than 50 were wounded.
A meeting between the Indian and Pakistani national security advisors in New Delhi on Sunday was called off at the last minute amid a dispute about whether the agenda should include Kashmir, the Himalayan territory both sides control in part but claim in full.
The two sides regularly fire shells and mortars across the disputed border both in Kashmir and to the south in Punjab, killing civilians.
A senior Pakistani security official told AFP that Indian forces began firing around 3:00 am on Friday (2200 GMT Thursday) and continued intermittently during the morning.
“Six civilians embraced shahadat (martyrdom) and 46 were severely injured including 22 females due to Indian unprovoked firing/shelling on working boundary near Sialkot in Chaprar and Harpal sector,” a statement from the Pakistani military said, adding that they had returned fire.
In Indian-controlled Kashmir, Border Security Force (BSF) official Rakesh Kumar Sharma accused Pakistan of targeting civilians with “unprovoked” mortar fire.
“Four villagers died in the shelling from across the border, three of them were killed early morning and one died of injuries in a hospital later,” Pawan Kotwal, the top administrator of the region told AFP.
Another BSF officer, J.S.Oberio, put the number of injured at 16, saying at least 10 border posts and several villages were targeted by Pakistani troops.
Age-old tensions
Pakistan and India have fought two of their three wars over the Himalayan region since both gained independence in 1947, and it remains a major source of tension.
About a dozen militant groups have been fighting since 1989 for either the independence of the Indian-controlled portion of Kashmir or its merger with Pakistan.
Shelling across the de facto border, known as the Line of Control (LoC) in disputed Kashmir and the “working boundary” in Punjab, has been on the rise this month.
Sunday’s talks had brought hopes of a possible easing of tensions, but these were dashed as the meeting was sunk amid a welter of angry rhetoric on Saturday.
The plan for Sunday’s talks came from a meeting between Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and his Indian counterpart Narendra Modi at a regional summit in Russia last month.
Little of substance was expected but the very fact that the security advisors, Sartaj Aziz for Pakistan and Ajit Doval for India, were to meet at all was seen as progress.
But the plan faltered at familiar obstacles: Aziz’s intention to meet Kashmiri leaders in New Delhi—an issue that scuppered foreign secretary-level talks last year—and India’s insistence the agenda should focus on terrorism.
Pakistan’s failure to hand over or prosecute the alleged masterminds of the 2008 Mumbai attacks has infuriated India, particularly when the suspected ringleader, Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi, was freed on bail.
Islamabad, for its part, insists talks must be wide-ranging and include thorny issues like Kashmir.

Thursday 27 August 2015

Erosion hits Padma bridge site in Bangladesh

Our Correspondent, Munshiganj
Around 80 square metre land of the Padma bridge construction yard was eroded by strong currents in the Padma at Kumarbhog of Munshiganj yesterday. The erosion damaged two jetties and some construction equipment.
It was the second incident of erosion at the bridge construction site in the last four days. The erosion was caused by strong currents and rising water levels in the river, said officials of the Padma bridge project.
Over 10,000 square metre land on the river bank has been wiped out since Sunday night. Two out of three jetties of the project have been damaged. Those were used for transporting construction materials from the shore to the mid river and beyond.
The erosion also devoured the road leading to the jetties, a concrete mixing plant and rails, disrupting construction work, added the officials.
Construction materials devoured, by strong currents. Photo: Anisur Rahman
Seeking anonymity, an executive engineer of the project said they took prompt measures to keep the damage to a minimal. He hoped that they would be able to repair the technical damages in around two weeks.
The project authorities put sandbags and bamboo poles on the bank to contain the erosion. But their attempt proved futile.
A trawler carrying sandbags sunk in the river yesterday. Around a dozen workers, who boarded the vessel, managed to swim ashore safely, but the trawler could not be salvaged, said Yunus, in-charge of Mawa Police Camp.
Talking to The Daily Star last evening, Project Director Shafiqul Islam said he was not aware of the erosion or damage.
Workers, were seen trying to stop the erosion by putting sandbags on the banks, but to little use. The photos were taken yesterday. Photo: Anisur Rahman
FERRY SERVICE DISRUPTED
The ferry service on Shimulia-Kawrakandi route has slowed almost to a halt in the last six days due to poor navigability caused by sedimentation, said sources at Bangladesh Inland Water Transport Corporation.
Witnesses said around 400 vehicles were stranded on both sides of the river at 4:00pm yesterday. Passengers, drivers and staff of the vehicles suffered a lot due to the inordinate delay in service.
The BIWTA and Bangladesh Bridges Authority yesterday deployed a dredger to improve navigability through the route which is considered the gateway to 21 southern districts. The existing dredgers could not be operated smoothly due to strong currents.

Jatiya Party faction leader Kazi Zafar dies

Star Online Report
Former prime minister and now chief of a faction of Jatiya Party, Kazi Zafar Ahmed died at a Dhaka hospital this morning.
BNP Chairperson Khaleda Zia, chief of the now 22-party alliance that includes Kazi Zafar’s faction, expressed shock at his death.
Syrul Kabir Khan, a staff of the BNP chief’s media wing, conveyed The Daily Star of Khaleda Zia’s shock and mourning at the death of the “seasoned politician”.
Zafar, 76, passed away around 7:30am while attending treatments at the United Hospital in Dhaka. He was suffering from several ailments.
He left behind a wife and three daughters who are living abroad. Zafar’s body will be kept at the hospital morgue. His family will decide about burial after they arrive in Dhaka.
The first namaj-e-janaza of Zafar, who was former presidium member of the Ershad-led Jatiya Party, will be held at Dakkhin Plaza at the Jatiya Sangsad Bhaban tomorrow.
After that, his second namaj-e-janaza will be held at the Baitul Mukarram National Mosque in the capital.
He formally joined BNP-led 20-party alliance on January last year.

Monday 17 August 2015

Split order on Maya’s legitimacy as MP

Star Online Report
The High Court today gave split order on Mofazzal Hossain Chowdhury Maya’s legality in holding parliament membership with a conviction in graft case.
The HC bench came up with the differing order after being moved by a writ petition challenging Maya’s legitimacy as a lawmaker and minister.
Justice Moyeenul Islam Chowdhury issued a rule asking Maya’s explanation by two weeks on under what authority he is holding the offices of minister and lawmaker.
Junior judge of the same HC bench Justice Md Ashraful Kamal rejected the writ saying that the Jatiya Sangsad speaker and election commission may decide about any dispute in this regard.
Relief and Disaster Management Minister Maya currently stands convicted in a corruption case of 2007 with 13 years jail and Tk 5 crore fine for amassing illegal wealth.
The writ petition challenging Maya’s legitimacy as MP was filed by Supreme Court lawyer Eunus Ali Akond on July 7. After verdict today, he told The Daily Star now the chief justice will forward the petition to a separate bench for disposal.
The Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) filed the corruption case against him, also ruling Awami League leader, with Sutrapur Police Station in Dhaka on June 13, 2007.
A special court on February 14, 2008, sentenced Maya to 13 years jail and Tk 5 crore in fine for amassing illegal property. Authorities concerned were also directed to confiscate Maya’s property.
Maya appealed to the High Court against the verdict on February 14, 2008. It resulted in his acquittal before the Supreme Court scrapped that verdict on June 14 this year. The HC was told to hold further hearing in Maya’s appeal.
Eunus’ petition says, Maya cannot hold the offices of minister and parliament member as per Article 66 (2)(D) of the constitution as he is convicted in a corruption case following a Supreme Court order that scrapped his acquittal in the graft case.

‘Drinkable books’ provide safe drinking water in Bangladesh


The team is investigating how to combine the filter paper with kolshi water containers (the metal flasks in this photo)



BBC Online
A book with pages that can be torn out to filter drinking water has proved effective in its first field trials.
In trials at 25 contaminated water sources in Bangladesh, South Africa, and Ghana, the paper successfully removed more than 99% of bacteria.
The "drinkable book" combines treated paper with printed information on how and why water should be filtered.
Its pages contain nanoparticles of silver or copper, which kill bacteria in the water as it passes through.
The resulting levels of contamination are similar to US tap water, the researchers say. Tiny amounts of silver or copper also leeched into the water, but these were well below safety limits.
The results were presented at the 250th national meeting of the American Chemical Society in Boston, US.
Dr Teri Dankovich, a postdoctoral researcher at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, developed and tested the technology for the book over several years, working at McGill University in Canada and then at the University of Virginia.
"It's directed towards communities in developing countries," Dr Dankovich said, noting that 663 million people around the world do not have access to clean drinking water.
"All you need to do is tear out a paper, put it in a simple filter holder and pour water into it from rivers, streams, wells etc and out comes clean water - and dead bacteria as well," she told BBC news.
The bugs absorb silver or copper ions - depending on the nanoparticles used - as they percolate through the page.
"Ions come off the surface of the nanoparticles, and those are absorbed by the microbes," Dr Dankovich explained.
According to her tests, one page can clean up to 100 litres of water. A book could filter one person's water supply for four years.
Dr Dankovich had already tested the paper in the lab using artificially contaminated water. Success there led to the field trials which she conducted over the past two years, working with the charities Water is Life and iDE.
Instructions are printed on the book's pages, in English as well as the local language
In these trials, the bacteria count in the water samples plummeted by well over 99% on average - and in most samples, it dropped to zero.
"Greater than 90% of the samples had basically no viable bacteria in them, after we filtered the water through the paper," Dr Dankovich said.
"It's really exciting to see that not only can this paper work in lab models, but it also has shown success with real water sources that people are using."
One location gave the paper a particularly tough challenge.
"There was one site where there was literally raw sewage being dumped into the stream, which had very high levels of bacteria.
"But we were really impressed with the performance of the paper; it was able to kill the bacteria almost completely in those samples. And they were pretty gross to start with, so we thought - if it can do this, it can probably do a lot."
More work to do
Dr Dankovich and her colleagues are hoping to step up production of the paper, which she and her students currently make by hand, and move on to trials in which local residents use the filters themselves.
"We need to get it into people's hands to see more of what the effects are going to be. There's only so much you can do when you're a scientist on your own."
For example, Dr Dankovich's work with iDE in Bangladesh has explored whether a filter, holding one of the book pages, could be fitted into a "kolshi" - the traditional water container used by many Bangladeshis.
Dr Daniele Lantagne, an environmental engineer at Tufts University, said the data from the trials showed promise.
"There's a lot of interest in developing new products for point-of-use water treatment," she told the BBC.
The "drinkable book" has now passed two key stages - showing that it works in the lab, and on real water sources.
Next, Dr Lantagne said, the team will need "a commercialisable, scalable product design" for a device that the pages slot into.
She also said that while the paper appears to kill bacteria successfully, it is unclear whether it would remove other disease-causing micro-organisms.
"I would want to see results for protozoa and viruses," she said.
"This is promising but it's not going to save the world tomorrow. They've completed an important step and there are more to go through."
Dr Kyle Doudrick studies sustainable water treatment at the University of Notre Dame in Indiana. He agreed that the book system would be especially powerful if it could also tackle non-bacterial infections, such as the tiny parasite cryptosporidium which recently caused a health scare in Lancashire.
He also said it would be important to make sure people understood how to use the filters - and how often to change them. But he was encouraged by the trial results.
"Overall, out of all the technologies that are available - ceramic filters, UV sterilisation and so on - this is a promising one, because it's cheap, and it's a catchy idea that people can get hold of and understand."

Thursday 13 August 2015

Janakantha convicted of contempt

Star Online Report
The apex court today found Bangla daily Janakantha guilty of contempt over publishing an article relating to war criminal Salauddin Quader Chowdhury.
The daily’s editor and Publisher Atiqullah Khan Masud and Executive Editor Swadesh Roy were kept confined at court through today’s proceedings and fined Tk 10,000 each.
According to the order, they will have to pay the fine amount to a charitable organisation by seven days – in default of which they will suffer seven days of imprisonment.
A six-member bench of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court, headed by Chief Justice Surendra Kumar Sinha, delivered the verdict around 10:00am this morning.
The court warned the media and its lawyer saying that they cannot make such any criticism or statement that can influence the proceedings of cases and scandalise the court and its judges.
The court said it will give the guidelines in detail in the full verdict on this case.

Opinion: Bangladesh becoming safe haven for MPs!

Shakhawat Liton
Bangladesh appears as a safe haven for MPs.
To enjoy unlimited immunity and freedom, one just needs to be an MP of the ruling party.
Take the latest example of Awami League MP Abdur Rahman Bodi who again beat up a government official on Wednesday in his constituency in Cox's Bazar. He punished Mostofa Minhaz, Ukhia upazila engineer, for not attending an Upazila Parishad meeting.
The AL lawmaker has kept assaulting people in his constituency since 2009 immediately after he became an MP. School teachers, forest and bank officials, a Road and Highway official, a freedom fighter and a lawyer among many others were assaulted by him.
He had faced little trouble for these offences. The only reason is he is an MP of the ruling AL.
Bodi has built his kingdom in Cox's Bazar. He has appeared to be the godfather of Yaba trade. He has been named in the list of Yaba smugglers prepared by the home ministry. His three brothers, brother-in-laws and some other relatives have also been listed as traders of the contraband drugs.
He had just faced trouble for a case filed by Anti-Corruption Commission for amassing wealth illegally and concealing information in his wealth statement. For this he had once landed in jail in October 2014.
Take another latest example. AL lawmaker from Natore-2 Shafiqul Islam Shimul snatched away “a criminal” from Rab custody immediately after his arrest in Natore town on Tuesday night. A number of local AL leaders and journalists witnessed the incident.
They yesterday said Shimul, also general secretary of Natore district AL, and his men got into an altercation with Rab personnel, shouted at them and then took away Redwan Sabbir in handcuffs. Sabbir, who gained notoriety for his criminal activities in Natore, is wanted in at least a dozen cases, according to local police and AL activists.
What Bodi and Shimul have done is no way uphold their image as MPs. Their activities rather undermined the dignity of MPs.
But what they have done is nothing new and surprising at all. Some of their former colleagues in previous years have done these.
Take some more examples. AL MP Golam Maula Rony, a ruling Awami League MP, on July 20, 2013 mercilessly beat up two newsmen of Independent TV.
Kamal Ahmed Majumder, an AL MP of the capital, in 2012 assaulted a woman television journalist at Monipur High School and College at Mirpur in the capital where she had gone to seek his comment on the school authorities’ decision to charge admission fees way beyond the amount fixed by the government. Kamal is chairman of the school’s managing committee.
In Pabna, AL MP Golam Faruk Khandaker Prince openly adopted a stance against the district administration in September 2010 when his alleged demand for recruiting his party men in government service was not met by the then deputy commissioner. Rebuffed, Jubo League and Chhatra League men attacked the administration officials, including a female magistrate, while the recruitment examinations were going on.
There is more. AL lawmaker Nurunnabi Chowdhury Shaon was sued over the killing of party leader Ibrahim Ahmed in the capital in August 2010. Local AL leader Ibrahim was reportedly shot with the MP’s licensed pistol.
Policemen, who have gone to the extent of beating up opposition MPs and journalists, were also assaulted by the ruling AL MPs.
In Dhaka, AL MP Ilias Uddin Mollah assaulted an on-duty policeman on June 30, 2010. The policeman filed a case against Ilias. He was reelected an MP of the current parliament.
Another AL MP, Sheikh Afil Uddin of Jessore, assaulted the officer-in-charge of a police station of his constituency in August 2010. He also became an MP of the current parliament.
And AL MP Captain (retd) Ghyas Uddin Ahmed in May 2012 opened fire on a crowd to thwart an agitation against him in his constituency in Mymensingh.
There are more examples. But no exemplary action has been taken against any of those MPs. Rather, Kamal Ahmed Majumder, Golam Faruk Khandker, Nurunnabi, Sheikh Afil, Ilias Mollah, and Bodi were re-elected as MPs in the January 5 parliamentary elections.
So, AL MPs Bodi and Shimul need not be worried for their unruly behaviour.
Thing is different in UK, the birth place of Westminster model of democracy. An MP there faces little restriction to carry out his parliamentary duties. But s/he faces numerous legal restrictions in carrying out his activities which are not linked to his/her parliamentary jobs. There are laws, rules, code of conduct and conventions imposing bar on MPs from behaving unruly and engaging in dishonest activities.
In Bangladesh, our constitution and political culture however have imposed numerous restrictions on MPs to do their parliamentary jobs. For this the parliament remains dysfunctional. But they are hyperactive outside of parliament and face little restrictions to carry out all those works.
For this they just need to be MPs of the ruling party.

Five birth dates of Khaleda Zia

Star Online Report
Two curious images of BNP chief Khaleda Zia’s passport have been recently floating around facebook.
The first passport that expired on May 2014 mentions Khaleda Zia’s birthday as August 5, 1946. The second passport—a machine readable one—also mentions the same date as her birthday.
If these images are not fake then the total number of Khaleda’s birthday stands at five: August 5, 1944; August 5, 1946; August 19, 1947; September 5, 1946 and August 15, 19—(no mention of the year).
Khaleda Zia had been celebrating August 15 as her birthday since the mid-nineties. Before that, we never heard of her birthday celebration.
But her August 15 birthday “coincides” with Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman’s death anniversary.
In the past, various media reports point to different dates of her birth. One report says in her matriculation examination form, Khaleda had mentioned September 5, 1946 as her birthday.
Her marriage certificate and in the record of her prime ministerial oath, Khaleda had used August 5, 1944 and August 19, 1947 as her birthdays.
When Sheikh Hasina came to power in 1996, she had declared August 15 as a national holiday with the status of a national mourning day. When Khaleda was elected to power in 2001, she scrapped August 15 as the status of the national mourning day and national holiday. This was restored after Hasina again came to power in 2009.
Celebration of her birthday on August 15 has always been controversial as Khaleda had never celebrated this day as her birthday before 1995 or 1996. Most people believe that this was being done to undermine Bangabandu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman—the father of the nation. It’s as if, Instead of condoling on that day, people should be celebrating—because it is Khaleda Zia’s birthday.
The BNP has however defended the celebration saying that it was indeed her birthday. They even question whether people cannot take birth on the day Bangabandhu was slain. Interestingly they never mentioned in which year she was born on August 15.
This week Khaleda Zia is going to London for about a week for medical check up. Her visit coincides with the observation of Bangabandhu’s 40th death anniversary on August 15. May be, after all these years she’s trying to avoid the controversy.  We will know within a couple of days.

Bangladesh’s top court suggests 2 formulas for next two elections

HC suggests in full verdict on Jan 5 elections
Shakhawat Liton and Ashutosh Sarkar
With the political crisis over the mode of a polls-time cabinet still unresolved, the High Court has come up with two formulas for the interim government to assist the Election Commission in holding the next two parliamentary elections.
The first formula allows the incumbent prime minister to lead an election-time cabinet consisting of 50 new ministers from all parties; the second provides the main opposition party with the opportunity to govern the country for the last one year of the five-year tenure of a parliament.
The HC, however, has stressed the need for building up different constitutional and statutory bodies for resolving the dispute over handing over power to the interim government.
"No formula can help the nation in resolving the eternal dispute regarding peaceful handover of power following the completion of the term of an elected government until or unless the political parties are sincere and serious in building up different constitutional and statutory bodies," it observed.
The HC has provided the formulas and observations in its full judgment on uncontested election of 153 MPs in the 10th parliamentary election held on January 5 last year. The full verdict was released at the end of last month. The Daily Star obtained a copy yesterday.
Cancellation of the caretaker government system in 2011 through a constitutional amendment by the then Awami League-led government prompted the BNP-led alliance to boycott the January 5 polls, which recorded an unprecedented number of MPs being elected uncontested.
The legality of the unopposed election was challenged with the HC in a writ petition filed by a Jatiya Party leader.
The HC Division bench of Justice Mirza Hussain Haider and Justice Muhammad Khurshid Alam Sarkar delivered the verdict on June 19, 2014, saying there is no scope to question the legality of those who were elected uncontested in the January 5 polls.
In his petition, JP leader Khondoker Abdus Salam prayed for the restoration of the caretaker government system or direction on an acceptable form of the election-time government.
FORMULA ONE
According to the first formula provided by the HC, a fresh cabinet consisting of 50 new ministers will be formed by the current prime minister ahead of the 11th parliamentary election.
MPs from political parties with representation in the current parliament will be picked as ministers of the election-time cabinet. The ratio of representation of each party will be determined from the percentage of votes that a political party secured in the 10th parliamentary election.
However, the BNP and Jamaat-e-Islami will have no representation in this cabinet as the two parties along with others boycotted the polls.
To ensure their participation, the HC proposed inclusion of five technocrat ministers who will come from the parties that boycotted the last parliamentary election.
This cabinet may be formed 90 days before the completion of the five-year tenure of the current parliament or after dissolution of the parliament given it is dissolved suddenly, according to the formula.
The HC has also spoken about distribution of important portfolios -- home affairs, public administration, finance, law, foreign affairs and defence.
It proposed distribution of these important portfolios among the parties with representation in parliament through lottery to avoid controversy.
The 12th parliamentary election can also be held under this formula, the HC said.
FORMULA TWO
The HC's second formula speaks about sharing of power between the ruling and main opposition parties in parliament.
The majority party, according to the second formula, would govern the country for the first four years, and then the main opposition would take over and run the country for the remaining one year.
The main opposition would be deemed qualified to run the country only if it secured at least half of the aggregated votes secured by the winning party in the last parliamentary election. Then the interim cabinet will be formed by the leader of the majority party in accordance with the first formula.
If the main opposition fails to secure the said amount of votes, the majority party shall govern the country for the full five-year tenure, according to the second formula.
The constitution needs to be amended for implementing the second formula. No amendment is required for the first formula however, said the HC.
OTHER SUGGESTIONS
Alongside the two formulas, the HC also suggested providing the EC with the power to overturn the orders or decisions of any minister and even of the prime minister on a cogent reason with an explanation thereto, which has to be done through a public  notice.
The HC stated, "Arranging a free, fair and impartial national election, be it before the completion of the five-year term or on completion of the tenure, is the most important Constitutional duty of the state, among all other Constitutional functions, as engraved in different provisions of our Constitution as without the national election, no one can conceive democracy or the operation of rule of law in the country.
"Therefore, it is the foremost duty of all the political parties of the country to maintain an election friendly atmosphere immediately before the national election and to continue the same till completion of the election so as to enable the Election Commission to perform its Constitutional duties."
For this, all the political parties are required to abstain from holding any agitation in the streets or from undertaking any violent political programme.
"The above formula may be a way out from the confrontational politics practiced by the political parties of Bangladesh and instead stepping forward towards the road of democracy," it added.
Stressing the need for making functional the various government divisions and departments with a patriotic zeal, the HC said the members of civil service, police, judiciary and the EC should be trained in a proper working environment throughout their service career.
This would urge them to carry out their respective functions and duties during the national elections without being influenced by any political ideology but instead, always being guided by the great spirit and the high ideals of our national independence, the HC continued.
"Otherwise, whatever the best formula for election time Government is devised and incorporated in our Constitution, it would still not work in our country because the interested quarters would eventually be seeking to make the system controversial and dysfunctional on this or that pleas as happened in the case of the Non-Political Caretaker Government, a formula which was invented by all the political parties of this country but failed to get a permanent place in our Constitution as its provisions were misused by the vested quarters and thus the Apex Court gave its consent to annul the system," the HC observed.
The HC has also explained the rationale behind its formulas. It said the judges of this court, being the citizens of this land, cannot overlook the issue which attempts to jeopardise the lives of the public and the national interest in the course of adjudication upon the constitutional issues.
"We, the judges of this Court, are oath-bound to defend the Constitution, the sacred parchment which we have achieved through the great Liberation War," the court asserted.
Contacted, Law Minister Anisul Huq declined to make any comment about the HC formulas.
“I will not make any comment without going through the full judgment,” he told The Daily Star.
A senior BNP leader, who is also a Supreme Court lawyer, also declined to comment on the formulas.
Hassan MS Azim, the writ petitioners' lawyer, told this paper that his client is yet to decide whether he will move an appeal before the Appellate Division of the SC against the HC verdict.
“We will go through the judgment of the High Court and analyse its findings and observations carefully and then we will decide whether we will file an appeal against the verdict or not,” he said.

Tuesday 4 August 2015

Blame it on the rain


Rajon killing: NHRC boss for trial of cops

National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) Chairman Mizanur Rahman today demanded trial for the policemen suspended over Rajon killing.“It is not enough to close or suspend these policemen. They must be brought to trial in criminal court,” he said today. “It should be investigated whether these incidents are taking place due to negligence of the police administration.”The rights body chief was speaking to the family of 13-year-old boy Samiul Alam Rajon, who was tortured to death by a group of brutes nearly a month ago, in Sylhet’s Kandigaon area this morning.Mizanur Rahman termed child torture and killing in Bangladesh “concerning”. He termed this trait as a dire violation of human rights and strongly condemned such actions.Mentioning that policemen are getting involved in different criminal activities day by day, the NHRC chief opined that facilities for the police should be increased alongside ensuring punishment for the corrupt policemen.Meanwhile, he also demanded quick repatriation of Kamrul Islam, the man who was seen most active in beating Rajon in the video that filmed Rajon’s torture, from Saudi Arabia.“If the government takes initiatives, it is possible to bring him back soon.”Moreover, “we are monitoring the Rajon murder case. The culprits will not be spared,” he added.

Jasas top leader sued over plot to kill PM’s son

A top leader of BNP’s cultural wing has been sued over alleged involvement in conspiracy to abduct and kill prime minister’s son Sajeeb Wazed Joy.Detectives filed the case last night against Mohammad Ullah Mamun, vice-president of Jatiyatabadi Samajik Sangskritik Sangstha (Jasas).DB Inspector Md Fazlur Rahman filed the lawsuit with Paltan Police Station around 8:45pm, said Morshed Alam, officer-in-charge of the station.According to the case statement, Joy, also the ICT affairs adviser to the p
remier, posted a Facebook status on March 9 accusing Mamun’s son Rizve Ahmed Caesar to have accepted money from BNP leadersforabducting and killing him.Rizve Ahmed Caesar was promised US $40,000 per month and given the first payment of US $30,000 in cash directly from very senior BNP, Joy said.A former FBI special agent on December 26 last year pleaded guilty before a US court to bribery over revealing confidential information about Joy.The accused, Robert Lustyik, and his co-defendant Johannes Thaler solicited payments of money from Bangladeshi Rizve Ahmed to get the internal information to which the former FBI special agent had access because of his position, according to a news release of the US Department of Justice.Following Joy’s status, a general diary was filed with Ramna Model Police Station on May 31 over this issue to verify his claim, said the case statement.Yesterday, the DB official sued Mamun for his alleged involvement in attempt to abduct and kill Joy.Yesterday, Rapid Action Battalion (Rab) detained a man for allegedly threatening Dhaka North City Corporation Mayor Annisul Huq with death in Dhaka.On July 14, Annisul received a death threat by an unknown caller who introduced himself as “Imam Mohaki”. A general diary was later filed with Gulshan Police Station in this regard.

মেয়ের বয়সী ছেলের সঙ্গে প্রেম!

বিনোদন ডেস্ক
বাংলানিউজটোয়েন্টিফোর.কম

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রাজকুমার রাও ও হেমা মালিনী
রাজকুমার রাও ও হেমা মালিনী
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হেমা মালিনীর বড় মেয়ে এশা দেওলের বয়স ৩২ বছর। মেয়ের চেয়েও দুই বছরের ছোট অভিনেতা রাজকুমার রাওয়ের সঙ্গে প্রেমের অভিনয় করতে যাচ্ছেন ৬৫ বছর বয়সী হেমা মালিনী। তাদের এই প্রেমের গল্প দেখা যাবে ‘সিমলা মির্চি’ নামের একটি ছবিতে। এর মাধ্যমে বহু বছর পর পরিচালনায় ফিরছেন ‘শোলে’খ্যাত রমেশ সিপ্পি।

সেপ্টেম্বরের মাঝামাঝি থেকে ‘সিমলা মির্চি’র পুরো চিত্রায়ন হবে সিমলায়। প্রেম ও হাস্যরসের মিশেলে বানানো হবে ছবিটি। এতে হেমার মেয়ের ভূমিকায় অভিনয় করবেন রাকুল প্রীত সিং। গল্পে মা-মেয়ে উভয়ে একই লোকের (রাজকুমার) প্রেমে পড়বেন।

‘শহীদ’, ‘কাই পো চে’, ‘সিটি লাইটস’ ছবিগুলোর সুবাদে ভিন্নধ‍ারার অভিনেতা হিসেবে সুনাম কুড়িয়েছেন রাজকুমার রাও। হেমা মালিনীর সঙ্গে নিজেকে মানিয়ে নিতে জন্য সাত কিলো ওজন বাড়াতে হচ্ছে তাকে। বলিউডের ড্রিমগার্লের সঙ্গে প্রেমের অভিনয়ের সুযোগ পেয়ে ভারতের জাতীয় পুরস্কারজয়ী এই অভিনেতা বলেছেন, ‘আমি অভিভূত। তার সঙ্গে কাজ করার সুযোগ পাওয়া আমার ছোটবেলার স্বপ্ন সত্যি হওয়ার মতো। গল্পটাও অসাধারণ।’

ভালো স্বামী ও শ্বশুরবাড়ি পেয়েছি : সারিকা

খায়রুল বাসার নির্ঝর, নিউজরুম এডিটর
বাংলানিউজটোয়েন্টিফোর.কম
সারিকা ও মাহিম/ছবি: নূর/বাংলানিউজটোয়েন্টিফোর.কম
সারিকা ও মাহিম/ছবি: নূর/বাংলানিউজটোয়েন্টিফোর.কম
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‘আমরা বিয়ে করেছি গতকাল (১২ আগস্ট) রাতে। ওর নাম মাহিম করিম। পারিবারিক সিদ্ধান্তে বিয়েটা হুট করেই হয়েছে’- সংবাদমাধ্যমের সামনে এসে শুরুতেই বরকে পরিচয় করিয়ে দিলেন সারিকা।

১৩ আগস্ট বিকেলে রাজধানীর বনানীর প্লাটিনাম সুইটস রেস্তোরাঁয় নিজের বিয়ের কথা জানাতে সংবাদমাধ্যমকে আমন্ত্রণ জানান সারিকা। সঙ্গে ছিলেন তার বর মাহিম করিম। আগের দিন উত্তরা চার নম্বর সেক্টরে মাহিমের বাসায় তাদের বিয়ের আনুষ্ঠানিকতা সম্পন্ন হয়।

চুপিসারে বিয়ে কেনো করলেন জানতে চাইলে রসিকতার সুরে সারিকা উত্তর দেন, ‘শুভ কাজ আগে না জানিয়ে পরে জানানোই ভালো!’

আবার অভিনয়ে ফিরবেন কি-না প্রশ্নটি সারিকা তার বরের কাছে পাঠিয়ে দিয়ে বলেন, ‘এর উত্তর তুমি দাও!’ এরপর মাহিম বলেন, ‘ওর অভিনয়ে আমার কোনো আপত্তি নেই। বিনোদন অঙ্গন ভালো লাগে আমার। আমার বউ চাইলে নিয়মিত অভিনয় করতে পারবে। ওর অভিনয় আমার মা-ও পছন্দ করে। এদিক দিয়ে সম্পূর্ণ স্বাধীন থাকবে সারিকা।’

নতুন জীবন প্রসঙ্গে সারিকা বললেন, ‘ভালো স্বামী ও শ্বশুরবাড়ি পেয়েছি। এ ক্ষেত্রে আমি খুব ভাগ্যবতী। সময়-সুযোগ বুঝে অবশ্যই নাটক-টেলিছবিতে কাজ করবো।’

চলতি মাসেই মধুচন্দ্রিমা উদযাপনে দেশের বাইরে যাবেন নবদম্পতি। এ ক্ষেত্রে সারিকার পছন্দ মালদ্বীপ। আর মাহিম যেতে চান মালয়েশিয়া কিংবা শ্রীলংকায়। দেশে ফিরে বিবাহোত্তর সংবর্ধনা অনুষ্ঠান আয়োজন করবেন বলে জানালেন সারিকা।

২০০৭ সালে সারিকাকে প্রথম দেখেন মাহিম করিম। তবে তাদের মধ্যে প্রেমের সম্পর্ক গড়ে ওঠে গত বছর। মাহিমের জন্ম পুরান ঢাকার লক্ষ্মীবাজারে। গত মার্চ থেকে তাদের বিয়ের কথাবার্তা শুরু হয় দুই পরিবারে। তখনই দু’জনে আংটিবদল করে রেখেছিলেন।

                                   সারিকা ও মাহিমকে শুভেচ্ছা জানাতে এসেছিলেন ফেরদৌস।

ন্যান্সির আত্মহত্যার চেষ্টা!

এম. আব্দুল্লাহ আল মামুন খান, স্টাফ করেসপন্ডেন্ট
বাংলানিউজটোয়েন্টিফোর.কম
ছবি: এম. আব্দুল্লাহ আল মামুন খান/বাংলানিউজটোয়েন্টিফোর.কম
ছবি: এম. আব্দুল্লাহ আল মামুন খান/বাংলানিউজটোয়েন্টিফোর.কম
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ময়মনসিংহ: জনপ্রিয় সংগীতশিল্পী ন্যান্সি আত্মহত্যার চেষ্টা করেছেন। প্রতিবেদনটি লেখা পর্যন্ত ময়মনসিংহ মেডিকেল কলেজ হাসপাতালে চিকিৎসাধীন এ শিল্পীর হুঁশ ফিরেছে, তিনি কথাও বলতে পারছেন।

শনিবার রাত ৮টার দিকে খবর ছড়ায়, ন্যান্সি তার নেত্রকোনার বাড়িতে ৬০টি ঘুমের ওষুধ (স্লিপিং পিল) খেয়ে আত্মহত্যার চেষ্টা করেছেন।

তাৎক্ষণিকভাবে ন্যান্সির স্বামী জায়েদের সঙ্গে যোগাযোগ করা হলে তিনি বাংলানিউজের কাছে দাবি করেন, আমিও এ ধরনের খবর শুনেছি। এটা সত্য নয়, গুজব রটেছে। তারপরও আমি খোঁজ খবর নিচ্ছি।

পরে অবশ্য জায়েদের দাবির সত্যতা পাওয়া যায়নি। তার সঙ্গে যোগাযোগের মিনিট পাঁচেক পরই ন্যান্সিকে নেত্রকোনা সদর হাসপাতাল থেকে ‘নেত্রকোনা আইডিয়াল হসপিটাল প্রাইভেট লিমিটেড’র একটি অ্যাম্বুলেন্সে চড়িয়ে ময়মনসিংহ মেডিকেল কলেজ হাসপাতালে নিয়ে আসা হয়।

তবে এখানে নিয়ে আসার সময় জরুরি বিভাগের গেটে সাংবাদিকদের ভিড় দেখে ন্যান্সিকে বহনকারী অ্যাম্বুলেন্সটি গতিপথ পরিবর্তন করে মেডিকেলের কলেজ গেট দিয়ে প্রবেশের চেষ্টা করে। সেই গেটটি বন্ধ দেখে ফের জরুরি বিভাগের গেট দিয়ে প্রবেশ করে।

এ সময় ন্যান্সির কোনো স্বজন বা চিকিৎসক সাংবাদিকদের সঙ্গে কথা বলতে চাননি।

জনপ্রিয় এ সংগীতশিল্পীর আত্মহত্যার চেষ্টার খবরে ময়মনসিংহ মেডিকেলের জরুরি বিভাগের সামনে ভিড় জমান স্থানীয় সাংবাদিক ও উৎসুক জনতা।

কিছুক্ষণ পর হাসপাতালের ইমার্জেন্সি মেডিকেল অফিসার ডা. জাকির হোসেন সাংবাদিকদের জানান, ‘ন্যান্সি তাকে বলেছেন, তিনি দুপুর ১টার দিকে প্রথমে ৪০টি ও এর ঘণ্টাখানেক পর আরও ২০টি ট্যাবলেট খান।’

ন্যান্সির বর্তমান অবস্থা জানতে চাইলে ডাক্তার জানান, এ ধরনের ট্যাবলেটগুলো খাওয়ার তিন ঘণ্টার মধ্যে ওয়াশ করতে হয়। ঝুঁকি থাকে ৪-৫ ঘণ্টা পর্যন্ত। সময় বেশি গড়িয়ে যাওয়ায় ওয়াশও করা হয়নি, আর তিনি যেহেতু এতটা সময় ওভারকাম করে ফেলেছেন সেহেতু আর আপাতত ঝুঁকি নেই।

ডা. জাকির আরও জানান, ন্যান্সির এখন পুরোপুরি জ্ঞান আছে। তিনি কথাও বলতে পারছেন। তবে চোখে একটু ঘুম ঘুম ভাব দেখা যাচ্ছে।

ন্যান্সিকে এখন ময়মনসিংহ মেডিকেলের ২৭ নং ওয়ার্ডে ভর্তি করা হয়েছে এবং ইনডোর ম্যানেজমেন্ট বিভাগ তার দেখাশোনা করবে বলেও জানান ডাক্তার।

এ ব্যাপারে স্বজনদের সঙ্গে তাৎক্ষণিকভাবে যোগাযোগের চেষ্টা করেও কথা বলা যায়নি।