Monday, 7 March 2016

Govt disowns ministers’ comments on CJ: Hasina

Star Online Report
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina today expressed dissatisfaction over the comment of two ministers on the chief justice.
The government would not own the remarks, Hasina said at a regular cabinet meeting today.
The premier said she and her party felt discomfort with the behaviour of the two ministers, a minister, who was present at scene, told The Daily Star seeking anonymity.
For twice, Food Minister Qamrul Islam and Liberation War Affairs Minister AKM Mozammel Haque criticised Chief Justice Surendra Kumar Sinha.
Minister Qamrul, also a joint general secretary of the ruling Awami League's Dhaka city unit, alleged that the chief justice was openly speaking in the language of BNP, Jamaat-e-Islami and their lobbyists. The other minister went even further to say that the chief justice should not be delivering the verdict in the appeal of war criminal Mir Quasem Ali.
READ MORE: Diatribes against CJ continue
During the hearing of Mir Quasem’s appeal on February 23, the chief justice expressed dissatisfaction over the poor performance of prosecutors and investigators in dealing with the war crimes cases.
The food minister demanded that the appeal hearing be reheard in a reconstituted Appellate Division bench, keeping the chief justice out of it.
These two ministers were present at the cabinet meeting today when Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina expressed dissatisfaction over their behaviour.
She said she did not like the matter at all. “It is not proper how they spoke,” the minister, who sourced The Daily Star, quoted her as saying.
Some other ministers also said it was not appropriate to comment on a sub-judice matter.
Besides, the cabinet today approved draft of Bus Rapid Transtit Act-2016 keeping provision of fine, jail, punishment for offender and compensation for victims.

Artist Khalid Mahmood Mithu dies in tragic accident

Star Online Report
Renowned artist and national award winning director Khalid Mahmood Mithu, died today in a tragic accident as a tree fell on him at Dhanmondi area in Dhaka.
Mithu, also the husband of artist Kanak Chapa Chakma, was on a rickshaw passing Dhanmondi Road 4 when a tree fell on him around 2:00pm, said Noor-e-Azam, officer-in-charge of Dhanmondi Police Station.
He was rushed to Gonoshastho Nagar hospital where on duty doctors declared him dead due to internal bleeding, the OC said.
Notable director and artist Khalid Mahmood Mithu died as this tree fell on his rickshaw in Dhanmondi area of Dhaka. This photo was taken on March 7, 2016 by Amran Hossain

62 AL candidates get a walkover

UP Elections

Pankag Karmakar
The ruling Awami League's 62 chairman candidates have been elected unopposed in the first phase of union parishad (UP) polls.
No independents or candidates of other parties are running in those UPs, which are mostly in Bagerhat, Khulna, Jhalakathi, Gopalganj, Bhola, Barisal, Brahmanbaria, Barguna, Madaripur, and Satkhira.
Talking to The Daily Star, former election commissioner M Sakhawat Hussain termed the AL men being elected unopposed “unusual”.
"As per my experience, I think the union parishad polls are the most competitive elections at grassroots level. In the past, a huge number of candidates contested the polls," he said.
But now the scenario is different in some UPs, he said, adding that the EC should investigate the matter.
The EC, however, finds nothing wrong.
Chief Election Commissioner Kazi Rakibuddin Ahmad on March 3 told reporters that if people did not file nominations, there was nothing wrong in some people getting elected unopposed.
However, media reports said AL men allegedly obstructed BNP-nominated candidates and AL's rebel aspirants from submitting their nomination papers before the returning officers in many UPs on February 22, the last date for filing nomination for the first phase of polls.
For the first time, elections to UP chairman post will be held on partisan lines. Apart from the first phase, elections to around 650 UPs will be held on March 31 in second phase. The rest of the over 2,800 UPs will go to polls in another four phases until June.
Meanwhile, smaller political parties have showed poor response to the polls. Just nine parties fielded only 89 chairman aspirants in the first phase on March 22, when 732 posts would be up for grabs.

Nazrul Islam Belal, a chairman candidate for the upcoming polls in Khadimpara-4 Union of Sylhet Sadar upazila, running election campaign in Pirer Bazar area on Saturday. Election to 738 UPs will be held on March 22 in the first phase, while the second phase is scheduled for March 31. Photo: Star
Out of 40 registered political parties, 16 expressed their willingess to contest the polls. Finally, 13 fielded candidates while three parties -- Jatiya Samajtantrik Dal (Rob), Bangladesh Islami Front and Bangladesh Kallyan Party -- could not field any candidate.
In the case of small parties, Jatiya Samajtantrik Dal (JSD) nominated 29, Workers' Party of Bangladesh (WPB) 23, Jatiya Party (JP-Manju) 17, Bangladesh Nationalist Front (BNF) 7, Communist Party of Bangladesh (CPB) 4, Bikalpa Dhara Bangladesh (BDB) 4, Bangladesh National Awami Party (NAP) 3, Bangladesh Tariqat Federation 1 and Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam Bangladesh 1.
About this, Sakhawat told The Daily Star it reflects that small political parties could not flourish in Bangladesh. Most of them do not have activities at the grassroots level.
Small political parties should beef up their organisational strength and enhance political activities at the grassroots level for the sake of developing democratic culture in Bangladesh, he viewed.
The BNP has no candidates in 119 UPs. The party could not field candidates in 70 UPs and its nominations of candidates were cancelled by returning officers in 49 UPs, according to the statistics of the Election Commission.
Islami Andolon Bangladesh (IAB), however, fielded chairman aspirants in 227 UPs, while the main opposition Jatiya Party (JP) nominated its candidates in 127 UPs.

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