Prothom
Alo, Bhorer Kagoj to contest contempt case
The
High Court fixed December 11 for the next hearing of a contempt case
against two leading Bangla dailies for running reports on an additional
HC judge's alleged tampering with the results of his LLB examinations.
All
the seven respondents of the case appeared at the HC bench of justices
MA Matin and AFM Abdur Rahman on the first day of hearing of the contempt
petition. The court had asked the seven respondents to appear before
it for hearing after Additional HC Judge Justice Faisal Mahmud Faizee's
father Mohammed Faiz filed the contempt petition on November 8. Justice
Matin, however, warned the lawyers of the consequences of contesting
the contempt rule issued on the respondents. "The case is no longer
confined to the contempt petitioner. The reports led to such a situation
happened never before. That's why the judges felt aggrieved and the
rule was issued…now we're the prosecutors," he told them.The lawyer
argued that since the complainant is the father of a judge and the case
involves a judge and has to do with the freedom of press, it should
be dealt carefully.-The Daily
Star, November 25.
Charge-framing
hearing against Tarique
A Dhaka court fixed January 10 for hearing on charge-framing
against Tarique Rahman, son of former president Ziaur Rahman and director
of Dandy Dyeing Limited and four others in a graft case. Judge Mohammad
Rezaul Karim Khan of the Special Court for Dhaka Division adjourned
the hearing scheduled to be held, following a time petition by the lawyers
of the accused Tarique Rahman.
The
Bureau of Anti-Corruption (Bac) filed a case with Motijheel Police Station
accusing Tarique Rahman and four others on September 14, 1996 and the
investigation officer pressed charges against them on May 22, 1997.
In the case, it was alleged that in the name of M/s Dandy Dyeing Ltd.
the accused sought loan of Tk 15.30 crore for setting up a textile dyeing
factory on February 15, 1993. But the equity was fixed at Tk 1 crore
only instead of Tk 5.60 crore, the amount proportionate to the loan,
in collusion with the bank authorities. Moreover, the value of the mortgaged
land was shown to be worth Tk 18 lakh, whereas the real value is Tk
1 lakh and 20 thousand only. The
Daily Star, November 24.
Commission
against graft
The newly formed Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) vows to start
a 'jihad' against the all-pervading graft and bring about significant
improvements in the country's grim corruption scenario in a month. The
Commission, however, believes corruption cannot be eliminated from the
country. "It would not be possible to root out corruption totally,
but it can be reduced to a great extent," ACC Chairman Justice
Sultan Hossain Khan said.
"And you will
see significant changes in the combat against corruption within a month,"
the former High Court judge said in an interview with The Daily Star
at his residence, half an hour before the Commission officially started
functioning. The ACC chairman, however, did not elaborate on the three-member
Commission's strategy to make such remarkable changes in such a short
period of time. Denying flatly their political affiliation with the
BNP-led ruling coalition, the Commission members said they would prove
their neutrality through their work.
"We'll
remove our bad reputation as the most corrupt country," he said
mentioning that corruption blocks foreign grants and other facilities.
"We'll bring changes like that brought by Rab (Rapid Action Battalion),"
former Bac director (Admin) Lt Col (Retd) MA Hannan Mridha, said. -
The Daily star, November 24.
Murder
accused assaults Barisal judge
A judge was assaulted during trial by an accused in a murder and abduction
case in Patuakhali.
Ershad Ali, a ferry
boatman of Galachipa upazila, hurled his shoe at Judge Md Abdul Majid
of the Women and Children Repression Prevention Tribunal, Patuakhali.
He was accused of murdering a woman and kidnapping a child. Judge Majid
immediately gave him four month's rigorous imprisonment and fined Tk
1,000 on charge of contempt of court. He will have to serve one more
month of RI if he failed to pay the fine.
Witnesses
and court sources said Ershad had obtained bail in the case from another
court and appeared before the tribunal to confirm it. But the judge
cancelled the bail and sent him to jail. Enraged, Ershad hurled a shoe
at the judge that hit in his chest. The judge adjourned the court, filed
a case against the accused and gave the verdict on the spot after a
brief summary trial. Ershad confessed to his misdeed and said he lost
temper after cancellation of his bail, fearing his family would starve
since he is the only earning member. - The
Daily star, November 23.
Anticorruption
body formed
The government formed a three-member Anti-Corruption Commission with
Justice Sultan Hossain Khan, a former High Court judge, as its chairman.
With the formation of the much-awaited independent antigraft watchdog,
an election pledge of the three-year-old BNP-led coalition, the government
also dissolved the Bureau of Anti Corruption (Bac) under the Anti-Corruption
Commission Act, 2004.
The
abolishment of Bac has brought uncertainty over the job of some 950
Bac employees. The Commission has the mandate to absorb some of the
Bac staff into the newly formed body while it will be left to the government
to decide whether the remaining employees will be assimilated into other
departments.
Justice
Sultan, now nearly 80 years old, is also a former chief election commissioner
(CEC). He served as chairman of Bangladesh Press Council for six years.
Sultan also headed a probe body to investigate the 2002 Mymensingh cinema
blasts and filed an investigation report that triggered controversy.
The
Commission will also be able to ask any person to furnish with any information
relating to investigation or inquiry and the person concerned will be
bound to give that information. - Daily
Ittefaq, November 22.