Print Edition: January 27, 2014
Print Edition: January 27, 2014
Print Edition: January 27, 2014
said a standing committee member of BNP on condition of anonymity. Just like last years city corporation elections, in which the BNP-backed candidates presented a nearly clean sweep, no political party can directly nominate candidates for the upazila parishad elections. But the parties can give support to certain candidates, which have historically played crucial roles in the results of such local body elections.
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First phase of Ijtema ends with prayer for world peace n Mohammad Jamil Khan
The first phase of Bishwa Ijtema concluded yesterday with lakhs of devotees joining in a Final Prayer (Akheri Munajat) to seek world peace and stability and divine blessings for humankind. Indian religious scholar Maulana Zobayerul Hassan led the 20-minute prayer. As he started off around 12:55pm, the whole ground became a triumph of kneeling figures with heads lowered and hands held high into the sky the only sounds audible outside his supplications were that of Ameen uttered in agreement by the devotees. Those who arrived at the venue only for the prayer started coming since early morning, braving chilly weather and acute transport crisis. Many walked to the ground from their homes, some
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People lodge complaints but we cannot solve them due to absence of a broadcast policy,
notes, important announcements and national programmes. Talking to this correspondents, the information minister said the commission would be considered as a regulatory body of the broadcasting stations. The commission will monitor their activities and bring them under discipline, the minister said. Steps will be taken against those who violates the rules involving anti-state activities. The government will take steps as per the recommendation of the commission. The policy reads the authorities should not broadcast a news item that goes against the state and public interest. But it is not explained in the policy who to decide it and what type of contents will be considered as anti-state and conflicting with public interest. l
During the hectic rush to return home after the Akheri Munajat of Biswa Ijtema yesterday, a man jumps from one train to another; risking his own life and those of his fellow passengers SYED ZAKIR HOSSAIN
Muhith hints at user tax Egypt calls early presidential election to boost revenue as violence spreads killing 49
n Tribune Report
The Finance Minister AMA Muhith yesterday hinted at imposing user tax on the people who would avail different government facilities as a possible measure to boost revenue collection. He said the government had been emphasising on reducing customs duty to help local industries expand in the world market and strengthen the local market. We will probably not observe any such day like the international customs day; rather we will discover a new source of tax in the future, to be called user tax. People, who avail different facilities, will have to pay such taxes, he said. The finance minister said such taxation was already in place in a number of sectors including water services and education, but the system needed improvement. The minister was addressing a programme organised by the National Board of Revenue to mark the International Customs Day 2014. A total of 179 countries, affiliated with World Customs Organisation (WCO), observed the day with the slogan Communication: Sharing Information for Better Cooperation. Muhith also said the country had witnessed a record revenue collection during the last five years. Since 1980, no government has witnessed such record collection as we did in the last five years. Earlier, a major part of the revenue used to be generated from the customs. That has come down significantly and continue to do so in the coming days, he said. Regarding modernising the Customs Act 1969, the minister said public opinion would be sought and the draft would not be turned into an act without discussion with stakeholders. Emphasising on enhancing public relations and communication with the mass, he said: We will look to minimising the difficulties that the taxpayers face and be more bent on effectively using technologies. At the programme, various stakeholders proposed including a private sector representative, along with two
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n Reuters
Egypt will hold a presidential vote before parliamentary polls, President Adly Mansour said yesterday, in a change to a political roadmap that could pave the way for the swift election of army chief General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi. Parliamentary elections were supposed to be held first under the timetable drawn up after the army overthrew President Mohamed Mursi of the Muslim Brotherhood in July following mass protests against his rule. The decision to revise the order of elections is likely to deepen tensions in Egypt, which is struggling to cope with waves of political violence. Forty-nine people were killed in anti-government marches on Saturday, the third anniversary of the popular uprising that toppled autocrat Hosni Mubarak. I have taken my decision to amend the roadmap for the future in that we will start by holding presidential elections first followed by the parliamentary elections, interim leader Mansour said in a televised speech.
Critics have campaigned for a change of the roadmap, saying the country needs an elected leader to direct government at a time of economic and political crisis and to forge a political alliance before potentially divisive parliamentary elections. Sisi is expected to announce his can-
didacy for the presidency within days and win by a landslide. His supporters see him as a strong, decisive figure able to stabilise Egypt. The Brotherhood accuses him of masterminding a coup and holds him responsible for widespread human
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Clarification
On January 25, Dhaka Tribune ran a front page story entitled Hasina snubs nephew for JS whip post. The first paragraph of the article makes clear that the nephew it is referring to is Noor-E Alam Chowdhury, a prominent member of parliament. However, the prime ministers nephew, Radwan Siddiq, has pointed out the scope for confusion and requested that we print a clarification lest any reader be misled into believing that the article refers to him. Accordingly, we acknowledge that the prime minister has explicitly stated that her only nephew, as she defines the term, is Radwan Siddiq, the only son of her only living sibling, and, in case there is any confusion, we would like to clarify that we do not intend to implicate Radwan, and that the article does not refer to him in any way whatsoever.
Excavators are seen in front of the Cairo Security Directorate, which was damaged by a car bomb attack on Friday, in downtown Cairo yesterday REUTERS
INSIDE
News
3 Lack of an accurate data on Rana Plaza victims is one of the main reasons why many of the family members of them are still deprived of adequate financial support, the Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD) researchers said yesterday. 5 The suffering of BRTC commuters is its peak; authorities have reduced the number of vehicles available for women and school students in the capital. Burimari land port area in Patgram upazila in Lalmonirhat.
International
9 A Thai anti-government protest leader was shot and killed in Bangkok on Sunday when violence erupted as demonstrators blocked early voting in many areas of the capital ahead of a disputed election next week.
Op-Ed
Nation
6 Over a thousand limestone factory workers have been risking their lives with direct exposure to silica dust, as they have no other means of making a living at
11 Leaders of Ganajagaran Mancha had called for a week of boycotting all sorts of Pakistani goods since police stormed the procession of Shahbagh Ganajagaran Mancha before the Pakistan High Commission at Gulshan.
DHAKA TRIBUNE
News
Three sub-inspectors and three constables also hurt in Satkhira and Jhenaidah cused neared the house of Ziaur Rah- naidah Jamaat leader was accused in a 10 cases, including a murder case. n Tribune Report Tarek Biswas, officer-in-charge man, alias Zia, an Afghanistan war vet- number of cases filed in connection with
recent violence staged by the Jamaat-Shibir men in Kotchandpur upazila. Police said he was one of the main people accused of attacking police and snatching their arms, on February 2013, immediately after the International Crimes Tribunal sentenced Jamaat leader Delwar Hossain Sayedee to die in a war crimes case. Police said Enamul was also involved in cutting down government trees, blocking roads and torching polling centers during the polls on January 5. The Jhenaidah gunfight took place at Nawdagram Secondary School grounds in Kotchandpur upazila. The police officer said, acting on a tip-off, joint forces came to know that some criminals were holding a secret
meeting, and went to conduct a raid around 2am. He added: Sensing our presence, Jamaat-Shibir men fired 10 bullets and hurled three bombs. The forces fired back, creating a 20-minute gunfight. Enamul Haque, who was in the meeting, led the attack. He was hit by a bullet, he said. Sub-inspectors Mijanur Rahman, Moktar Hossain, and constable Joydev sustained injuries during the gunfight, added the officer. Police recovered a shuttered gun and two bombs from the scene, after the attackers had fled. Kotchandpur upazila ameer of Jamaat, Tajul Islam, said police arrested Haque while he was returning home from his Nirbahi upazila office around 4pm on Saturday. l
Scores of devotees who came for the Akheri Munajat of Biswa Ijtema yesterday gather at Tongi Railway Station, waiting for a train to take them to their destinations SYED ZAKIR HOSSAIN
came by rickshaws while some by whatever means they could afford. I have been attending the Akheri Munajat for the past three years. I only come on the final day since womens participation in the congregation is restricted, said Josna, who came to attend the prayer from Savar. Many, failing to get through the thick crowds on the 160-acre venue, attended the prayer from the roofs of vehicles and boats and buildings surrounding the area. Those who could not get near the venue had also the opportunity to listen to the supplications in their cell
phones and electronic devices. The president and the prime minister also participated in the prayer, from the Bangabhaban and Gano Bhaban respectively. BNP chief Khaleda Zia joined the prayer sitting on the roof of a nearby factory. The garment factories in Tongi and Gazipur areas remained closed on the day in order for the thousands of workers to join the prayer. Besides, many private organisations, schools and colleges also remained shut for the same reason, said Nurul Islam, district commissioner of Gazipur. Prior to the inception of the prayer,
A number of policymakers and local leaders of the party have said they are confident that they will be able to convince the local BNP leaders to not run against each other; but they are not so sure about the local leaders of Jamaat-e-Islami, the second largest ally of the 19-party combine. In the first phase of elections, which is going to cover 102 upazilas out of a total of 487, Jamaat leaders are contesting BNP leaders in at least 30, sources said. February 3 is the last date for withdrawing nomination papers for the upazila polls. A total of 55 candidates have submitted nomination papers for the elections in three upazilas of Pabna. In Sathia, four from BNP and one
from Jamaat are contesting the elections. In Atgharia, three local leaders one each the Awami League, BNP and Jamaat have submitted nominations. In Sujanagar, two BNP leaders are contesting the polls and there is no Jamaat leader in the run. Jahurul Islam, office secretary of the Pabna district BNP, said: We are yet to decide whether we will contest the polls jointly or individually. That is why our leaders submitted the nomination papers individually. However, Pabna district Jamaat Nayeb-e-Ameer Jahrul Islam said: We are trying to reach a consensus with the BNP over finalising candidates. It is reflected in the fact that none from Jamaat is contesting the polls in Sujanagar upazila. We are also discussing the two other upazilas so that we can
back one candidate as an alliance. However, a BNP leader said it would not be possible to ensure one single candidate in every upazila because there is no official party presence in these elections. Anyone can contest the polls. But we are trying our level best to make sure that does not happen. In a meeting on Saturday night, BNP Chairperson Khaleda Zia asked the alliance leaders to finalise the candidates they were going to back in consultation with their alliance partners. A central committee has already been formed to coordinate the elections in 225 upazilas, to be held in two phases on February 19 and 27. The committee comprise BNPs acting secretary general Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir, Vice-Chairman Abdullah
Al Noman and BNP chairpersons adviser Osman Farruk among others. As there is no scope of contesting the elections using the party banner, local leaders will contest the polls and we will just coordinate. We have already begun talking to the local leaders to finalise the candidates, Osman Farruk told the Dhaka Tribune. Local level leaders will finalise the candidates in consultation with their fellow alliance contenders. They will decide on one single candidate for each of the upazilas, Amir Khosru Mahmud Chowdhury, adviser to the BNP chairperson, told the Dhaka Tribune yesterday. Khosru also said since there was still time for withdrawal of candidature, contenders could pull out to ensure one single candidate in each of the upazilas. l
A senior leader said Khaleda Zia whined about the role of those leaders saying that they have to shoulder the responsibility for failure to build up resistance in the capital. She said she did not ask all the leaders to go into hiding and those who did so without her instruction the BNP chief was very unhappy with them. A joint secretary general, who was an MP from Chittagong division, of the party phoned Khaleda but he was told off. A few days back a standing committee member, who came to limelight as BNPs youth front leader, also had to face the same fate as he phoned her, said party insiders. The joint secretary general said, it was the responsibility of the city BNP to wage movement in the capital and that is why it was the failure of the city BNP. He also alleged that the Dhaka city unit BNP Convener Sadeque Hossain Khoka convinced Khaleda to split the capital into eight zones and requested her to assign eight senior leaders
to wage movement in their respective areas. It was his (Khoka) trick to put the responsibility on other leaders, he said. Party insiders said a few days back a joint secretary general made a phone call to Khaleda Zia but she called him worthless. In reply the leader said: We were not the leaders of the capital and even we were not assigned to coordinate the movement in the capital. He also blamed the city unit leaders for not cooperating them during shutdowns and blockades. The BNP-led 18-party has been spearheading street movement since October 27 and since then more or less all the senior leaders especially the Dhaka city unit leaders have remained holed up fearing arrest. The blockade apparently isolated the capital from the rest of the country but no strong campaign was visible in Dhaka as none of the senior leaders were seen anywhere during the movement. l
rights abuses in a crackdown against the movement which has killed up to 1,000 Islamists and put top leaders behind bars. While tough measures against the Brotherhood have nearly crippled it, security forces have failed to contain an Islamist insurgency. Militant attacks have raised fears for the stability of Egypt, of great strategic importance because of its peace treaty with Israel and control over the Suez Canal.
Expected move
A new constitution voted in earlier this month cleared the way for a change in the order of the elections by leaving open the question of which should come first. It was an expected move amid the growing signs that Sisi is being groomed to become the next president, said Khaled Dawoud, a well-known liberal activist. Mansour did not announce a date for the presidential vote. The constitution says steps towards holding the first of the elections should be begin no lat-
er than 90 days from the ratification of the document in mid-January. Insurgents based in the Sinai Peninsula have stepped up attacks, killing hundreds since army chief Sisi ousted Mursi, Egypts first democratically-elected president. Gunmen killed three Egyptian soldiers in an attack on a bus in the Sinai yesterday, the military said, prompting a warning from the army that it would eliminate the Brotherhood, which it blames for much of Egypts political violence. Anti-government demonstrations in Cairo on Saturday were attacked by supporters of the new political order and security forces, witnesses said. Of the 49 people killed, 22 Brotherhood supporters were shot dead with live rounds in one district of northern Cairo, security sources said. The violence highlighted deep divisions that have flared often since the 2011 uprising that toppled Mubarak and raised hopes of a stable democracy. In another attack in the lawless Sinai, five soldiers were killed on Saturday when an army helicopter
crashed in the north of the peninsula in an operation against militants. Security sources said it was a missile attack, without giving further details. The army has not commented on the cause of the crash. Militant group Ansar Bayt al-Maqdis (Supporters of Jerusalem) claimed responsibility for a rocket attack on a helicopter in a statement posted on the internet. Egyptian authorities make no distinction between militant groups operating in the Sinai and the Brotherhood, which renounced violence in the 1970s but has been declared a terrorist group by the Egyptian government. In a statement about the bus attack posted on Facebook, the army said: We assure the Egyptian people of the great determination of its men to fight black terrorism and the complete elimination of the advocates of oppression and sedition and blasphemy from followers of the Muslim Brotherhood. The soldiers were killed on their way back home from holiday when gunmen
opened fire with automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades, security sources said. Mansour suggested that Egypt, criticised by human rights groups for its hardline tactics against both Islamist and liberal opponents, was about to resort to tougher measures. He said authorities would act swiftly to prosecute insurgents. I have asked the President of the Appeals Court to expand judicial capacity in order to officiate speedy trials of terrorist cases, said Mansour, adding this should not violate the fundamental rights of citizens. Such moves are likely to reinforce the view of government opponents that Egypt is returning to Mubaraks iron-fisted rule, or worse. Mocking what has become known as Sisi mania - everything from T-shirts to posters to chocolates honour the general - the April 6 movement, which played a prominent role in igniting the revolt against Mubarak, criticised the change to the roadmap. It used a play on words to describe it in a tweet: PresSisi-dential elections. l
487 upazilas in two phases. The first phase of the election will be held on February 19, and the second phase on February 27. Besides, the upazila polls will be held in three other phases to complete. In recent political changeover, the BNP-led alliance that boycotted the January 5 polls declared its interest in contesting the upcoming upazila poll. The ruling Awami League has decided to back any single candidate for this election to clinch its win. The premier warned the Awami League central leaders at the central committee meeting on January 18 that the rebel candidates might be bar to the party victory in the election. Sources said Awami League General Secretary Syed Ashraful Islam, also LGRD minister, had been tasked with co-ordination of the upazila election. Awami League would vie for the election individually, he said. Wishing not to be named, a northern district unit AL secretary said the central committee gave them directions, but they only knew how tough it was to carry out those instructions at field level. Advocate Golam Mohiuddin, president of AL Manikganj district unit, told the Dhaka Tribune it was really a tough job to select a single candidate. Our efforts to choose a single candidate will continue till the last date of withdrawal of nominations, Mohiudin said, adding that in the local body election, most candidates do not want to follow the party high-ups order. Advocate Sajedur Rahman Khan,
president of Natore district unit AL, echoed the same as Mohiuddin. We held a secret vote to pick up a single candidate, but after that, the defeated group refused the voting result, said Sajedur. He added that they were yet to get any instruction in writing till yesterday from the central committee to take any organisational action against the rebel candidates. Sirajganj district unit secretary KM Hossain Ali said they were trying to choose a single candidate, but called it a tough job. Nobody at grass roots level wanted to comply with the party decision, he added. Awami League Joint Secretary Mahbub-Ul-Alam Hanif told the Dhaka Tribune the Awami League decided to back a single candidate in every upazila election. Our district unit leaders at their joint meetings have already started picking up single candidate to vie for the polls. We hope that there would be no more problem in choosing a single candidate in every upazila, Hanif said. l
Muhith hints at
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NBR officials, at the courts to make sure that there was no disparity. They said Bangladesh did not have risk management tools of international standards. That must be introduced to ensure transparency and for achieving revenue targets. The NBR honoured 17 of its officials, including two posthumously, and five others from different offices for their contribution in realising duties. l
DHAKA TRIBUNE
News
A rescue worker of Rana Plaza Tragedy speaks in a discussion meeting organised by the CPD in the capitals BRAC Centre auditorium yesterday
NASHIRUL ISLAM
Party sources said there were differences of opinions between Ershad and Rawshan about choosing the women MPs
Meanwhile, many aspirants alleged that the party was selecting candidates on the basis of financial benefits. Refuting the allegation, Secretary General ABM Ruhul Amin Howlader told the Dhaka Tribune that they were selecting the dedicated leaders of the party. Of the aspirants, 10 are forerunners are Ershads sister Marina Ershad; his brother GM Quaders wife Sharifa Quader; Presidium member Morshad Murad Ibrahims wife Mahjabin Morshad; Ershads Press And Political Secretary
Sunil Shubho Roys wife Kanika Roy; Brig (retd) Giasuddin Chowdhurys wife Mahmuda Chowdhury; Ershads friend and businessmen Md Shahjahans wife Sanjida Nahida Idris Nur; Saydabad Pirs daughter Shahida Rahman; and partys women affiliate President Nazma Akther. On the other hand, Kazi Zafar led Jatiya Partys Secretary General Golam Mochi is likely to joint as a Rawshans political secretary. Sources said Mochi recently told Kazi Zafar that he wanted to leave the party. Mochi and Rawshan jointly have many businesses. JaPa Presidium member Ahsan Habib Linkan on Saturday joined the Kazi Zafar-led faction. He yesterday sent the resignation letter to Ershad. In the letter, he wrote: The Jatiya Party is clearly divided over two factions as HM Ershad changes his mind frequently. One of factions is led by Kazi Zafar, while another by Rawshan Ershad. In this situation, he thinks that the Kazi Zafar-led by faction can uphold the partys ideology. l
DHAKA TRIBUNE
News
Chhatra League men beat up alleged Shibir activist n Our Correspondent, Barisal
Bangladesh Chhatra League activists allegedly beat a Shibir man at Barisal University yesterday. The victim Abdul Hye was a third year student of Mathematics department of the university. Witnesses said Chhatra league men attacked the youth while he was carrying a number of copies of a magazine named Alakto around 2:20pm. Then Abdul Hye ran to the vicechancellors office and took shelter there, where the VC and other teachers controlled the situation. Jasimuddin, a leader of the Chhatra League, said they nabbed Abdul Hye while he was distributing leaflets in favour of Jamaat-Shibir. But Abdul Hye denied the allegation and said he was a little-magazine activist and he was carrying the magazine that he worked for. l Visitors take pictures of paintings exhibited at the Sufia Kamal Auditorium of the National Museum yesterday. The exhibition was of the paintings that won in an art competition organised last year marking the 38th death anniversary of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman RAJIB DHAR
WEATHER
BNP leader arrested, bailed out Petition of accused disposed in idol vandalism case n
AUGUST 21 GRENADE ATTACK CASE
Tribune Report
The High Court yesterday disposed of a plea of an accused in August 21 grenade attack cases, Pakistani national Abdul Majed, about the testimony of his former wife as prosecution witness. The bench of Justice M Enayetur Rahim and Justice Mohammad Ullah passed the order on the petition seeking cancellation of the deposition of Nahid Laila, a Bangladeshi citizen, against him, Assistant Attorney General Gazi Mamunur Rashid told the Dhaka Tribune. Laila gave her deposition as the 73rd prosecution witness on September 15 last year. The HC said the trial court could not record the portion of the testimony she had heard from Majed during their marriage life. The trial court could consider only the part of the testimony which she had heard from other persons, in line with section 122 of the Evidence Act, 1872, said Mamunur. The case filed over a grenade attack launched on an Awami League rally on August 21, 2004 is underway at the Dhakas Speedy Trial Tribunal 1. At least 23 people including Ivy Rahman were killed in the attack. Then opposition leader Sheikh Hasina received ear injury. l
A BNP leader was granted bail in a case of idol vandalism within hours of his detention in Barisal on Sunday. However, the members of local Hindu community criticised the indictment and said it was done by police to harass him since he had not been accused in the case filed by the complainant. The case was filed after unidentified miscreants on January 23 damaged four idols of a temple at the Maddhya Rajarchar area of Charmonai union in Barisal Sadar upazila, about eight kilometres off the divisional city.
Police lodged a general diary following the incident while Bijoy Krishna Haldar, president of Maddhya Rajarchar Durga-Kali Mandir, lodged a case without accusing anyone in particular. In his case file, Bijoy Krishna only mentioned that he found the idols partially damaged when he entered the temple on Thursday. However, police on Saturday night arrested Abdus Salam Rari, president of Charmonai-BNP unit and a former UP chairman, from his home and pressed against him charges of idol vandalism. He was produced before the chief metropolitan magistrates court on
Sunday morning and subsequently granted bail upon his prayer. In a statement read out before the court, the complainant said he did not mention any name in the case and had therefore no objection to Raris being bailed out. Later, prominent members of the Hindu community at a press conference criticised polices bringing charges against Rari and observed that it was done intentionally to harass him. In this regard, Shakhawat Hossain, officer in charge of Kotwali police station, told the Dhaka Tribune that Rari had been arrested as a suspect. l
PRAYER TIMES
Fajar Sunrise Zohr Asr Magrib Esha 5:23am 6:41am 12:11am 4:06pm 5:41pm 7:00pm
Source: IslamicFinder.org
Australian Deputy High Commissioner Tim Bolotnikoff cuts a ribbon to inaugurate Study in Australia DHAKA TRIBUNE
DHAKA TRIBUNE
News
DHAKA TRIBUNE
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina soothes a child during a vaccination campaign at Ganabhaban yesterday. The premier inaugurated the measles-rubella vaccination campaign and the 21st National Vaccination Day PMO
BNP leader held for assaulting LGED staff n Our Correspondent, Munshiganj
Police on Saturday night arrested Abul Kalam Kanon, joint secretary of district BNP, for allegedly assaulting a LGED staff at Sreenagar upazila in Munshiganj. The BNP leader was arrested after the victim, LGED Supervisor Mahmud Mia, filed a case against him and two others with Sreenagar police station. According to the case, a quarrel erupted between the two when the official accused Kanon, also a local contractor, of using sub-standard materials in repairing a road at the Vanga area of the district town. Later, Kanon and few of his associates assaulted the LGED staff. l
DHAKA TRIBUNE
Nation
A worker grinds limestone at a factory in Burimari land port area in Lalmonirhaat yesterday. Most workers are now facing health hazards due to the exposure to silica dust at the factories DHAKA TRIBUNE
Police could not find out who were responsible for the double murder even after nine days had passed after the killing
The villagers said at least 53 shallow machines, more than 150 cows and other belongings had been looted from five villages under Fursundi union in last nine days after the clash. Residents of Tikary village Saidul Islam, Nasir Biswas, Altaf Hossain, Ab-
The Bangladesh Water Devolopment Board has started dredging the Jamuna River recently
DHAKA TRIBUNE
and Sirajganj town. The dredging was done from Shoilabari to Bangabandhu Bridge during last two years spending Tk 4,00crore. But the steps failed as a large shoal emerged close to the dam at the eastern side of the city. Later, the authorities started dredging across one kilometre of the river. Tofayel Ahmed, chief of WDB taskforce said, unplanned dredging of the river brought no results. He added it was important to remove sands nearby Sirajganj town protection embankment rather than digging near the cross dam. The embankment collapsed due to floods. Ataur Rahman, consultant of the project said although the project failed during last two years, the work started for the third time costing Tk 100 crore. l
A government lawyer recently fired for corruption is allegedly forging documents to help in land grab
But the fact is, my great grandfather died in 1926. As far as I know, a lawyer of the Narail Judges Court is helping them by faking documents. This is the same lawyer who lost his government job for taking bribe a
few years ago, Anil said. Kishor Roy, 43, of Kachubaria village, alleged that retired policeman Jaber Hossain had tried to seize his five-acre land by producing fake documents. Pramal Hore of Erenda village made similar allegations and said: The victims of such attempts have to endure hassles and spend a lot of money to retain ownership of what is rightfully theirs. When contacted, Sheikh Hafizur Rahman, the newly elected Member of Parliament from Narail 2 constituency, promised an investigation into the allegations and vowed to drive the culprits away by forming an alliance of secular and pro-liberation people. Those responsible will be brought to justice shortly, he said. l
Hundreds of students brought out a procession in Kurigram town yesterday where they demonstrated and blocked roads demanding justice over the murder of 13-year-old Rayhan. At least 200 protesters along with students, teachers and guardians met at Kurigram College Square and blocked Shahid Minar square for half an hour. The protesters also submitted a memorandum to police super and deputy commissioner. They demanded the arrest of the murderers and exemplary punishment for the criminals. The slain Rayhan, a student of class VIII in Kurigram Government Boys High School, was kidnapped on January 18 by the tenant of Rayhans house. Later, the gang demanded Tk5,000,000 lakhs as ransom, but finally they compromised to free Rayhan for Tk450,000 lakhs. Rayhans father Ershadul Haque handed over the money to them but they did not return the boy. Later, police recovered the body at Moghol Haat Char in Lalmonirhat district on January 22. A police officer at Kurigram police station seeking anonymity said they had learned that the tenant Nazrul, his wife Jhorna, and their son Sagor the accused murders had rented the house to operate there kidnapping gang. He also added that Nazrul and Jhorna were not husband and wife, and Sagor was not there son in real life. They had used a fake identity to rent the house. And Nazrul never came back to his alleged wife and son again after renting the house. l
DHAKA TRIBUNE
Long Form
Historically, states founded by guns tend to give armed men some (if not all) power
DHAKA TRIBUNE
n Jyoti Rahman
magical realist masterpiece, Salman Rushdies Midnights Children has weird and improbable events and people juxtaposed against the history of the 20th century South Asia up to the late 1970s. One such improbable fact was that at the time of writing, and thus the storys culmination, military rulers of the erstwhile two wings of Pakistan had the same first name. This is not the only parallel between the political history of Bangladesh and post-1971 Pakistan. Both successor states of United Pakistan started with larger-than-life charismatic leaders, whose rules ended in tragic denouement inconceivable in 1972. Both giants found governance to be much harder than populist rhetoric, both resorted to un-democracy, and both ended up meeting
discourse around Pakistan is so full of vitriolic jingoism that any suggestion of learning something from the Pakistani experience is likely to be met with scorn. But even outside Bangladesh, there is not much by way of comparative studies of Bangladesh and Pakistan. William Milams Bangladesh and Pakistan: Flirting with failure in South Asia is a rare exception. This slender 276 pages including reference and index volume begins with a brief history of the erstwhile united Pakistan, and then tracks the military-civilian back-and-forth in the two countries up to 2008. The author, a former American ambassador to both countries, can bring unique perspective to the subject matter. And the books conclusion the tipping points between real democracy and more of the same in Bangladesh and Pakistan are yet to be reached is something one can hardly quibble with.
And things will remain as they are unless we choose democratic politics. Make no mistake, thats hard work. But thats what it comes down to. A bird cannot fly with broken wings
cruel ends at the hand of their trusted guards. Both countries succumbed to dictatorships in the 1980s, although the extent and mechanism varied. In both countries democratic opposition developed. In both countries, some form of democratic politics came into practice by the 1990s. But democracy has failed to take root in either, with military interventions or threats thereof, remaining a constant feature. In both countries, electoral democracy has meant two mutually antagonistic parties/coalitions who differ little on policy, but much on personality and the thirst for power over patronage and privilege. Both countries have experienced increasing religious extremism. More recently, in both countries, judiciary and media are experimenting with new found powers, not always to the best effect. Throw in the political economy of NGO-led development in Bangladesh, or the misfortune of being next to a theatre of the Great Game for Pakistan, and its easier to see why democracy may have had such a hard time in these countries. Indeed, with increasing NGO activities in Pakistan and the Great Game coming to Myanmar a theatre closer to Bangladesh both countries have much to learn from each others misfortunes. Of course, in Bangladesh, the
One does not read a retired career diplomat for facts and figures. And this book is not full of facts and figures. However, one might expect a lot of interesting anecdotes from someone who served in Bangladesh as the Ershad regime ended, and in Pakistan when the Musharraf regime started. Sadly, Milam does not give us such titbits. Instead, he opens up a range of questions that could be, ought to be, explored in depth. Truth be told, its a tad disappointing that Milam does not push any of these issues further. But then again, at least Milam has written a book. Surely there are others who can add to the literature. Let me pick up the issue of military involvement, and withdrawal, from politics in the two countries. What are these questions? One is about the role of India in the two countrys politics. Another is Islam. I am going to skirt over these two, not because they are unimportant, but because these are fairly well trodden grounds. From the vantage point of December 1971, one might have expected some form of military involvement in Bangladeshi politics. The nucleus of the Bangladesh army was the victorious Mukti Bahini, and its commanders like Ziaur Rahman might have expected some say in the new countrys
affairs historically, states founded by guns tend to give armed men some (if not all) power. However, it should have been a different matter in what was left of Pakistan. If there was a state where the army rule, directly or otherwise, should have been thoroughly repudiated, it should have been Pakistan after December 1971. Army rule had lost half the country. A quarter of the army itself was taken prisoner-of-war by the hated enemy. The country was bankrupt, with its major port severely damaged. The idea that generals could save Pakistan, should have died in the swamps of Bengal. Of course, it didnt. ZA Bhutto used the army to silence legitimate dissent in Balochistan. And then, in 1977, he tried to rig an election that he might have won anyway, resulting in months of street violence and political gridlock, which paved the way for Gen Zia-ul-Huqs grim rule. Thats the most straightforward reading of things. Writers as diverse as Tariq Ali or Anatol Lieven agree that Mr Bhutto deserves to be blamed, if not solely or in whole measure, then at least substantially, for the remilitarisation in Pakistan. So, the question then is, was Pakistan just unlucky to have Bhutto, or was there something about Pakistan that made his power grabs more likely? Lets look at the issue from a different perspective. Milam ends his book with the observation that the prospect of democracy, indeed the very survival of the state, was bleaker in Pakistan than Bangladesh. As of 2008, Bangladesh army not formally in charge in the first place was in the process of handing over power to a democratically elected government. In Pakistan, on the other hand, there was a shaky coalition facing jihadist violence, with everyone assuming that it was the clean-shaved general and not the moustached civilian who had the ultimate power. As of 2008, hardly anyone doubted that the incoming Awami League government would finish its five-year term. After all, three previous elected governments had finished their full terms, something no elected government (with possible exception of Mr Bhutto, depends on how one sees things) in Pakistan had done until then. In Pakistan, at the time, hardly anyone expected Asif Ali Zardari to finish his term peacefully and hold an election in five years time. As it happens, the Awami League did finish its five year term, and has just elected itself not sure how else to put it politely for another five years. But surprising everyone, Mr Zardari also lasted five years in office, as did the Pakistani parliament that was elected in 2008. For the first time in Pakistans history, a democratically elected civilian government handed over power to another such government last year.
So, did Pakistan get lucky with Zardari (or Nawaz Sharif, or Gen Ashfaq Kayani)? Or did something about Pakistan change between the 1970s, or even the 1990s, to now? Bangladesh army has shown little interest in running the country in recent years. Had it wanted to, there were many occasions in the past year where the army could have toppled the government, with a large section of the civil society and opinion-making class fully cheering on any coup. But, by all accounts, the army has chosen to remain out of politics. Even its 2007 not-quite-formally-a-coup was at best a half-hearted affair, with full insistence of constitutional fig leaves, no matter how muslin-thin the leaves might have been. What had changed about Bangladesh army from its coup-prone past? Why do armies intervene, or not intervene? Lets go through a few conjectures. At the simplest level, perhaps its all about the base, corporate interest. Pay them well, and the armies will be happily in the barracks? This may well be a major story in Bangladesh. After all, dal-bhaat grievances were a major (though by no means the only) factor in soldiers mutinies of 1975 and 2009. However, considering the lavishes spent on the forces by the current government, money should not matter for any would be Bangladeshi coup-maker. And to the extent that no one not even Bhutto le pere tried to clip the armys economic interests in Pakistan, its hard to argue that this has been a deciding factor there. Perhaps the story is a bit more highbrow? As is widely accepted, Pakistan army sees itself as the ultimate arbiter of that countrys foreign and defence policies, particularly when it comes to relations with India. As long as these domains are untouched, perhaps the generals are content to let the civilians govern. In that respect, perhaps Pakistan army is similar to the guardian armies of Turkey or various Arab republics or Thailand, where the army decides, for whatever historical reasons, that certain areas are no-go for civilian politicians, and they enforce the no-go-zones through coups if necessary. Does Bangladesh army see itself in such a guardian role? When a crisis hits, does it see its role as the national saviour? In the blood-soaked 1970s, individual officers saw themselves as potential national heroes call it the curse of the majors. But from the 1980s onwards, as a collective, perhaps Bangladesh army waits for orders rather than marching to their own bit? After all, in February 2009, the entire brass held fire, and waited for orders that never came. Of course, this is exactly how it should be. Armies are meant to be guards, not guardians. On the balance, its a good thing that the army has not
Had it wanted to, there were many occasions in the past year where the army could have toppled the government, with a large section of the civil society and opinion-making class fully cheering on any coup
intervened during Bangladeshs latest political drama. But can that remain the case indefinitely? After all, it was Bhuttos hubris that allowed Zias power grab in 1977. Could something like that happen yet again? Even if it doesnt, its important to understand that military rule is not the only obstacle to democracy in Bangladesh and Pakistan a theme that runs through Milams book, and one that needs to be explored further. After all, it was Mr Bhutto who opened the door for the generals to march back in. So, the question again, was Pakistan unlucky with Mr Bhutto, or was there something about Pakistan? And more recently, did it get lucky with Messrs Zardari and Sharif, or has something changed there? Here is another conjecture for all their personal genius, foibles and shortcomings, it wasnt the individuals, rather, something did change in Pakistan between the time of Bhutto and Zardari. In the intervening years, multiple centres of power not just the army-bureaucracy and a towering politician, but also political parties representing different provinces and ethnicities and constituencies, as well as media, judiciary and other civil society organisations developed in Pakistan. While this fragmentation of authority may hamper its policy deliberations, it probably has driven home to Pakistani politicians the need to coexist and tolerate each other. Papa-Bhutto stood above everyone, and couldnt countenance anyone elses existence. Sharif brothers had learnt to live with others. Perhaps thats what has saved Pakistan, at least for now. What about Bangladesh? This is what Milam says in the penultimate page: Perhaps there is more hope that a real, sustainable democratic culture can develop in Bangladesh, but old habits die hard. And thus we come to todays Bangladesh, on which, Milam observes: a government which, because of the perverted institutions of the state, is in a position to eliminate the opposition as a force to be reckoned with, and move towards a one-party state. This election, instead of deja vu all over again, could be the tipping point to something entirely new on the subcontinent. Bangladesh may well have come a full circle in the past four and half dec-
ades. At the beginning of the 1970s, with the left fractious and the right discredited for its role in the countrys freedom struggle, Awami League was the only major organised political force in Bangladesh. Whatever we have, its not democracy. And, Sheikh la fille may well prove to be more successful than her father. Again, over to Milam: But politics aside, it is 2014 in Bangladesh. The chronic instability and near-anarchy, as well as the abject poverty that prevailed in 1975, have long since disappeared. Bangladesh, while still poor and in the stage of economic development where gains can easily be reversed, is now wired into the global economy with its vibrant garment and other export industries. Growth has been strong for most of the past two decades, and the country as a whole is much more prosperous. More importantly, it has a much more literate and healthy population because of the strides that have been made in mass education and in reducing gender disparity. In Shame, his novel on not-quite-Pakistan, Rushdie calls the country Peccavistan. Peccavi in Latin means I have sinned. This is the message Sinds English conqueror sent back to the John Company after he took the country by deception and rascality. Pakistan used to be governed by deception and rascality, hence the name Peccavistan. When the results of Pakistans first general election became known 37 years ago, a western journalist quipped that Pakistan would soon be replaced by Mujibdesh and Bhuttostan. As things stand, we should rename our country East Peccavistan. And things will remain as they are unless we choose democratic politics. Make no mistake, thats hard work. But thats what it comes down to. A bird cannot fly with broken wings. Our democracy is broken. People governing the country are doing so not with democratic mandate. Choosing democracy means opposing this deception and rascality. Only by joining and fixing the opposition, so that when the table turns it lives and lets live, can we end East Peccavistan. Dear reader, the choice is yours, will you choose Bangladesh? l This article was first published by Alal o Dulal.
DHAKA TRIBUNE
International
held in government jails and thousands kidnapped by armed groups including Islamist militias. It has described conditions in government prisons as "horrific", with overcrowding, supply shortages and outbreaks of disease. A UN-mandated probe last month said Syrian government forces were waging a campaign of enforced disappearances to terrorise the population, amounting to a crime against humanity. The harsh treatment of Syrian prisoners was thrown into the spotlight again when former international prosecutors released a report this month alleging the "industrial-scale" torture and killing of 11,000 detainees by the regime. Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Muallem said before the Geneva talks that the regime was "ready to exchange lists and develop the necessary mechanism" for prisoner swaps with the rebels. Brahimi said he also hopes a deal can be reached on sending aid convoys on Sunday or Monday to Homs, where hundreds of families in the Old City are living under siege with near-daily shelling and the barest of supplies. l
Syrian senior presidential advisor Buthaina Shaaban speaks to a Syrian TV reporter at the United Nations Offices in Geneva AFP children and the most vulnerable will be the priority," he said. Syrian Information Minister Omran al-Zohbi said the issue of prisoners needed to be discussed "without discrimination", with the focus also on people held by rebel forces. "We must be precise on the issue of prisoners. There are also thousands of people who have been kidnapped, some who have been missing without a trace for two-and-ahalf years," he told reporters here. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a key watchdog, estimates that some 17,000 people have gone missing in the war, tens of thousands are being
Ukraine not an East-West Police, protesters clash after Ukraines battle: Britains Hague president offers foes posts
n AFP, London
The unrest in Ukraine should not be seen as a battle between the East and the West, British Foreign Secretary William Hague said Sunday. Calling for a change in the narrative Hague said free trade between Ukraine and the European Union would benefit Russia too, as he urged restraint from government forces in the face of pro-EU protests. The protests first erupted when Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych refused to sign a key deal with the EU in November, opting for closer ties with former master Russia instead. They have since snowballed into wider anti-government unrest, and clashes between demonstrators and police in the capital Kiev have left at least three people dead. Were very worried about the situation in Ukraine, Hague told BBC television. I dont think it need be seen as an East-West struggle. If Ukraine entered into the agreements with the EU that weve put forward, to have free trade with the European Union, that would benefit the people of Ukraine; it would also benefit the people of Russia. It would benefit that entire region so we have to change the narrative about this. He said he spoke to his Ukrainian counterpart on Friday to urge restraint in the face of violence and that repressive laws about freedom of expression and civil society should be changed, should be repealed. l
n Reuters, Kiev
Police clashed with protesters who blockaded a building in central Kiev on Sunday and the fate of Ukraines government was up in the air after embattled President Viktor Yanukovich offered opposition leaders key posts. One of the presidents main foes called his offer a poisoned attempt to kill off a protest movement in a country plunged into political unrest by Yanukovichs U-turn away from the European Union and toward Russia. In the latest violence, a few thousand protesters tried to storm an ornate cultural centre where hundreds of security forces were gathered in central Kiev, a few hundred metres from the hub of weeks of opposition protests on Independence Square. Demonstrators threw stones and smoke bombs while police fired stun grenades and sprayed water into the crowd. The police and security forces later left the building, its windows shattered, and streamed out through a corridor created by the crowd after an opposition leader, Vitaly Klitschko, arrived at the scene and helped negotiate a solution. The two-hour, pre-dawn confrontation came after Yanukovich made his biggest concession yet in a two-monthold standoff that has cast Ukraine into crisis, killed at least three people and deepened tension between Russia and the West. Yanukovich abruptly abandoned plans to sign political association and free trade deals with the European Union in November, pledging instead to improve ties with former Soviet master Russia and angering mil-
An anti-government protester carries tyres at a barricade at the site of clashes with riot police in Kiev lions who dream of being in Europe. Hoping to end protests that threaten to bring the country to a standstill, Yanukovich on Saturday offered former economy minister Arseny Yatsenyuk the post of prime minister. Klitschko, a former international boxing champion, was offered the post of deputy prime minister responsible for humanitarian issues, a statement on the presidential website said. The presidency linked its offer to the opposition reining in violent protesters. Though the protest movement is largely peaceful, a hard core of radicals have been fighting pitched battles with police away from Independence Square. Opposition leaders, whose power base is among protesters massing in the square whose name evokes the independence Ukraine gained in 1991, continued to press for concessions in-
REUTERS
cluding early elections and the repeal of an anti-protest law. We are ready to take on this responsibility and take the country into the European Union, Yatsenyuk was quoted as telling crowds on Independence Square after emerging from talks with Yanukovich. But he added this would entail the freeing of former prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko, who was jailed in 2011. l
Moroccans sew mouths shut in fresh protest at Italy detention n AFP, Rome
Thirteen Moroccan immigrants held in a migrant centre on the outskirts of Rome have sewn their lips together in the second such protest at their lengthy detention, Italian media reported Sunday. The men, aged between 20 and 30, had already stitched their mouths shut in a week-long protest in December over their long stay in a supposedly short-term detention facility. They had only ended that protest at the Ponte Galeria facility south of Rome after assurance that their cases would be speedily dealt with. It is clear that time in politics moves more slowly than it does for these people, who have gone from the drama of a difficult immigration journey to places of little dignity such as the detention centres, said Angiolo Marroni, a state official charged with protecting prisoners welfare in the Lazio region. I hope that parliament keeps its word and quickly approves the necessary regulations to put an end to this shame, he said. The heavily guarded detention centre, located near Romes Fiumicino airport to facilitate deportations, houses around 100 illegal migrants. l
The Central African Republics new prime minister Andre Nzapayeke clear actions the government is going to tackle starting this week, he said. Nzapayeke, a former secretary general of the African Development Bank and vice president of the Development Bank of Central African States, said the country would seek help from its friends in the international community to end the crisis. Violence between the Christian majority and Muslim minority erupted after mostly Muslim rebel group Sele-
AFP
ka overthrew the government in March last year and installed its leader, Michel Djotodia, as president. Djotodia failed to rein in a wave of killing, raping and looting by his former fighters, leading to the emergence of Christian vigilante groups known as anti-balaka (anti-machetes) that are accused of committing atrocities of their own against Muslims, including civilian massacres. l
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International
second-largest economy. The conflict broadly pits Bangkoks middle class and elite, and followers in the south, against mainly poor rural backers of Yingluck and her brother, ousted former premier Thaksin Shinawatra, in the populous north and northeast. The protests mark the biggest demonstrations since deadly political unrest in April-May 2010, when Thaksins red-shirt supporters paralysed Bangkok to remove a government led by the Democrat Party, now in opposition. More than 90 people were killed and more than 2,000 were injured in that unrest. The protesters, led by firebrand former premier Suthep Thaugsuban, accuse Yingluck of being Thaksins puppet and want an unelected peoples council to oversee reform before any future election is held. On Saturday, a government minister said Yingluck was prepared to discuss cancelling the February 2 election if the activists ended their protests. Foreign Minister Surapong Tovichakchaikul, also a deputy prime minister, said in a televised address the blocking of advance voting was a serious offence and said protesters had used force to prevent people voting.
A Bangkok district officer stands inside the compound of a polling station in central Bangkok Yinglucks government had already warned anyone who tried to stop voting would be jailed or fined. City officials said they had begun negotiating with the protesters. We have to negotiate with them and let them know that blocking the election is illegal, said Luckana Rojjanawong, a Bangkok district official said. The election was already in doubt
REUTERS
after a Constitutional Court ruling on Friday that opened the possibility of a delay. The Election Commission is seeking the delay, arguing that the current environment is too unsettled. l
Indian school children in tiger costumes dance during the Republic Day parade in New Delhi, India
AP
Philippines, rebels Uighur academic accused see final peace deal of separatist activities in weeks his mostly Muslim Uighur minority. The n AFP, Manila n AFP, Beijing academic and his mother were taken on
The Philippine government and the countrys main Muslim rebel group said Sunday they hoped to sign within weeks a final peace deal to end decades of deadly insurgency after clearing the last hurdle in 18 years of negotiations. A comprehensive agreement with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) should be signed in February or March, Manilas chief negotiator Miriam Coronel-Ferrer told AFP, following a breakthrough announced on Saturday. We have just been discussing the next steps and our goal is to be able to get a good schedule for that, she said from the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur where the last round of talks was held. We have set a time frame of between February and March, she added. The talks that began in 1996 with the 12,000-strong MILF are aimed at ending an insurgency in the countrys south that has left an estimated 150,000 people dead since the 1970s. On Saturday, both sides agreed on a normalisation deal detailing how the rebels will hand over their weapons and the creation of a security force to police what will be a self-ruled Muslim region. l Police in Chinas western Xinjiang region have accused a prominent Uighur academic detained since last week of being involved in separatist activities, state media reported Sunday. Ilham Tohti, an economist who teaches at the Central University for Nationalities in Beijing, has vocally criticised the Chinese governments policy towards
n AFP, Taipei
Wednesday 15 to an unknown location by several dozen police who seized their mobile phones and computers, his wife Guzaili Nuer previously told AFP. The mother was released the following day. Early on Sunday the official Xinhua news agency reported that police authorities in Xinjiang said Tohti formed a separatist group. l
Taiwanese authorities Sunday strengthened barriers around the presidential office after a truck was rammed into the tightly guarded premises in an attempted suicide attack. More military police with automatic rifles were deployed and a line of huge granite blocks was lifted into place to reinforce existing barriers outside the building, televised images showed. The incident, described by police as an attempted suicide attack, was the worst of its type on the building. It happened around 5:00 am Saturday when Chang Teh-cheng drove a 35-ton truck through several sets of barricades, police said. At high speed, the vehicle ascended a set of steps before being stopped by a bullet-proof screen and becoming stuck in the gate leading to the offices main building, they said. Chang, 41, was severely injured and taken to hospital. No one else was hurt but the attack prompted an investigation and an immediate tightening of security. Local media speculated that damage and casualties could have been serious had Chang been driving an oil tanker. President Ma Ying-jeou was away on a state visit to Sao Tome and Principe in Africa. He has been notified of the incident, his spokeswoman said. l
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Editorial
LETTER OF THE DAY
Letters to
the Editor
January 26 I am feeling very curious about the mental state of the members of the newly-formed government. How are they adjusting to their roles of prime minister, ministers, and MPs, which they became without the mandate of the people, of whom 90% wanted the election to be held under CTG, and in the one-sided election only 5% of total voters cast their votes? But by showing disdain towards the peoples demands and hope, the government went ahead, said it was bound by the constitution, that the 11th parliamentary election will be held soon and include every party. But now they are saying ,as they have been elected for five years, they will finish the term. In the past, when I went abroad, I would feel homesick. Now, everything has changed, and Bangladesh seems an unknown place, and the country is immersed in anarchy. Everyday, news of horrible and unjust acts reach us, dead bodies are recovered regularly and destruction takes place anytime and anywhere. We never thought our beloved country would become so nightmarish. Nur Jahan
The political disputes which gave rise to violence must be resolved urgently
Lloyd Wonderful! I hope it goes well and congratulations for taking a step forward towards becoming a more tolerant Bangladesh! DP This is rubbish. Hijras are born with it, and hence they cant do anything about it. However, when it comes to homosexuality, I really dont support it. In my perception, homosexuality is an extreme case of sexual desirability, and its controllable like any other form of extreme emotion (eg anger, depression etc). If being Gay is natural, then why cant they produce babies naturally? If any openminded + non-judgemental person has an answer to this, then please do inform me. rationalist DP: Homosexuality like heterosexuality is sexual orientation. People are born with it and they cannot change it, just like a heterosexual person cannot change his/her likeness for a person of the opposite gender.
Ibtisam Ahmed Not perfect there is still a clear threat to the organisers and there seems to be a male tilt according to the article - but excellent news nonetheless! And the support for the group has been immense. :D
Rajshahi Simla Govt Primary School students hold classes under makeshift tin-shed
recent news report draws attention to the fact that public universities outside Dhaka are struggling due to a lack of experienced and qualified teachers, since most teachers want to remain in the capital. The over centralisation of expertise within Dhaka is an endemic problem not only for universities, but across the whole public sector of Bangladesh. It creates a myriad of problems. People outside the capital are deprived of good quality public services, which hampers the spread of economic growth. The concentration of coveted opportunities in Dhaka increases migratory pressure towards the capital, which reduces the quality of life in the city. It also gives rise to corruption and lobbying in the job allocation process, undermining the integrity of the bureaucratic apparatus. A comprehensive approach is required to incentivise more public servants to take up posts outside of Dhaka. Staying in Dhaka is lucrative from the perspective of career advancement because of networking opportunities and the possibility of taking on consultancy jobs. In order to offset this, more key offices should be relocated out of the capital and salary incentives provided to public servants willing to relocate. Investment also needs to be made to infrastructure and facilities, such as education and healthcare, in order to improve the quality of life in cities outside of Dhaka. Decentralisation will help the whole country benefit from economic growth. It is incumbent upon the government to urgently address this issue.
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Be Heard
January 19 Unfortunately, it seems as if education is only for the elite. Nazia Jabeen
January 21 Where are the human rights activists now? Why are they silent? Hossain Sajjad
A comprehensive approach is required to incentivise more public servants to take up posts outside of Dhaka
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RAJIB DHAR
n Audity Falguni
eaders of Ganajagaran Mancha had called for a week of boycotting all sorts of Pakistani goods since police stormed the procession of Shahbagh Ganajagaran Mancha before the Pakistan High Commission at Gulshan. Ganajagaran Mancha had held the demonstration to protest the adoption of a resolution in the National Assembly of Pakistan expressing concern over the hanging of notorious war criminal Quader Molla. The resolution in the Pak National Assembly grieved for the execution of this Butcher of Mirpur, who alone slaughtered around 350 human beings in 1971, and mourned over his loyalty to Pakistan. Imran Khan, noted cricketer-cum-nephew of General Niazi, the commander-in-chief of the Pak invader army in 1971, too termed Quader Molla to be innocent. The response of Pakistan on the issue of our war criminals trial is frustrating. But is it not more shocking that the police of our own independent and sovereign state could trample the protesters of Shahbagh under their boots, irrespective of gender, and hurl abuses like Malaun er bachcha (Children of Hindus) or Nastik er bachcha (Children of atheists)? So, the non-violent movement of Shahbagh started to protest again. They were sad and angry. A calm but enraged Shahbagh held a demonstration meeting on December 20 where Shammi Haque, a female student of Daffodil International University, Ganajagaran Mancha leader Bappadit-
ya Basu, theatre activist Nasir Uddin Yousuf Bachchu, and popular writer Muhammad Zafar Iqbal condemned police action and swearing on peaceful demonstrators. Didnt our Liberation War of 1971 pledge to establish a state free of all sorts of discrimination on the basis of religion-caste-creed-sex? Its not a crime to be a non-Muslim under the auspices of our Constitution of 1972, neither is it a crime to be an agnostic or atheist per Article 39 of our Constitution which endorses freedom of conscience and expression.
many stories of Swadeshi movement and boycotting of luxurious foreign goods during the anti-British Imperialist movement in this sub-continent from my parents and grandparents, read many a classic novel of Bengali literature on this theme, and even saw scores of Bengali and Hindi period movies on Swadeshi movement. This calm, but determined stance of youth in Bangladesh ultimately slaps on the buying of Western lobbyists by Jamaat-e-Islami, who are now shedding crocodile tears against capital punishment to safeguard the
The government should understand the sentiment of the youth in Shahbagh, who are reviving the war cry of 1971, Joy Bangla
The whole world should witness how the non-violent movement of Shahbagh is following the trails of doctrines of non-violence practised by exemplary leaders like Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King Jr, and Nelson Mandela. As a young writer and activist, I considered myself blessed when Maruf Rassul, one of the pioneering organisers of Ganajagaran Mancha, declared the Pak Commodities Boycott Week on December 20 evening. An injured Imran H Sarker, convener of Ganajagaran Mancha, was standing silently on the stage. To me, it was a history-making moment. I had heard
notorious war criminals lives. With all respect to UN Human Rights Commissioner Navi Pillai, or UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon, the youth of Bangladesh wishes to ask: Where were their tears for capital punishment when Saddam Hussain was hanged on Eid, or when drone attacks killed millions of children in Iraq and Afghanistan? Can the UN return the three million civilians slaughtered in 1971? Can it give back the honour of 200,000 to 400,000 raped women? To answer the argument of advocates for war criminals like Dr Asif Nazrul or David Bergman, that standards have not been
maintained, we do humbly remind them that our ICT trial maintained much more legal procedure than the Nuremberg trial. The USA has awarded capital punishment to 39 criminals this year. Can the EU, the UN, and the USA bring back the innocent people killed at the hands of extremist Jamaat-e-Islami cadres in the past months? What about the hundreds of Hindu temples torched, the thousands of trees chopped down, and the killing of a number of police and grassroots Awami League activists by Jamaat cadres? Obviously, I do not endorse a one-party election. Since the caretaker government of 2006-2008, the ruling party seems at unease with the very concept of a caretaker government. But the invitation for joining the all party government for the election was made to the main opposition BNP. Did this government not allow free and fair polls in five city corporations, and accept its defeat gracefully, despite the playing of the religion card by the opposition? On the other hand, the government should understand the sentiment of the youth in Shahbagh, who are reviving the war cry of 1971, Joy Bangla, without any expectation from the ruling party. Not all of them are AL supporters. The Shahbagh movement took a Swadeshi stance for a proud but developing nation in todays open market and highly globalised world. As Mukunda Das sang: Cherish the coarse cloth offered by your motherland/ Your poor mom can offer no more! l Audity Falguni is a writer and development activist.
he garments industry of Bangladesh is in turmoil. The breakdown of the industry would mean the loss of the sole breadwinning source for many, causing them to get back on their bare feet in search of a decent job in a deprived society, already crammed with innumerable unemployed citizens. The workers are belligerent about the nasty working conditions, the minimum wage level etc. However their tetchy attitude towards the so-called profit-making industry has fallen on deaf ears, and drowned out in the ever competitive world of global business. The continuous and constant pressure by the foreign buyers to meet the standards and sort out all human rights issues requires an increase in their own cost level. However these illustrious, goodwill-generating companies do not realise, or probably do not want to realise, that if they are not willing to pay more for the added value, where will the extra money come from? These companies are constantly putting pressure on the third world countries to reduce cost, while maintaining all the protocol that amplifies costs. They want to allow their consumers to cosy up wearing a soft blue sweater in winter, without paying an extra dollar for the knitters in third world countries who are unable to wear sweaters themselves.
own up to the tribulations. Instead they label them as the responsibility of the factory owners, often sub-contracted parties in third world countries.
If they are not willing to pay more, where will the extra money come from?
I am sure the civilized society is aware of the atrocities here and they are willing to pay more for their products, but the companies are mysteriously unwilling to charge higher despite their support towards maintaining quality of life. The manufacturers, often reputed companies of the first world, do not
Bangladesh caught the worlds attention once again when the Rana Plaza disaster happened on April 24, 2013. This happened during a time when the Bangladesh government made the promise to raise wages for the garment workers and provide more leniency in labour laws related to the formation of trade unions. After the major disaster, a few companies came forward to prove a point and show direction, namely the Swedish retailer H&M, Spanish giant Inditex, British retailers Tesco and Primark, and US giants Calvin Klein, Tommy Hilfiger, and Izod. They promised to pay a substantial amount to endorse factory safety and quality improvements as a part of their entire plan. This sort of assistance would definitely clear their conscience regarding the blood products they were procuring, and complement their long term CSR visions. All these attempts are surely admirable, but they are slightly late with many people already dead from disaster. The blood has already stained the giants hands and these attempts can only hope to rinse out the stains over time. What about others? There are many still objecting to the idea of any such agreement, denying outright responsibility. A reputed company also claimed to have hired an inspector and pledged to pay a substantial amount in loans for improvement within the factories. How righteous is the idea of loans to companies already suffering from financial turmoil? I leave it to the readers to ponder over. l Mehrin Afroze Chowdhury is a freelance contributor.
n Towheed Feroze
he news spread fast the lawyer in the area had just bought a new car. By the way, the word new back in the mid 80s meant reconditioned, not brand new. It has an air-conditioner, marveled those who went to see the white Toyota. Material possessions always separate the few from the masses, and the lawyer was basking in becoming a member of the privileged few. Owning a car was indeed a massive social boost back then. Well, things havent changed that much. But now, no one will go to look in amazement at an Asian car. A BMW from the earlier series is often looked at with disdain. So, unless one has something exotic to show off, the public wont flock to appreciate. No worries though, there are Jaguars and the latest Land Rovers in the market. The price tag can be the entire life savings of a very lucky middle class man, or it can be the negligible money to burn of a top wealthy dog. Dhaka has changed! Sitting in one of the many trendy lounges of the city, while going through the cosmopolitan menu featuring iced coffee and a variety of cheese cakes, this writer remembered
the indigenous burger of the past which were sold in confectioneries. Bet most of the modern readers dont know what a typical Dhaka confectionery looked like. Amidst the ultra-stylish fast food hangouts, the shops that sold soft butter buns, pastries, and burgers in plastic packets garnished with large green chillies seem so back-dated. At high school, the boy wearing the Casio black plastic belt watch was the cool, fashionable person. The same went for those who managed to buy a pair of Hara jeans or Nike trainers. Honestly speaking, the best place to buy denim was the Gulistan secondhand market, better known as the Nixon market, changing its name with the new guy at the White House. So, in the 80s it was known as the Reagan market where all sorts of denim like Edwin, Lee, and Wrangler were available. Buying something second-hand was nothing shameful if someone was lucky, a foreign note could be found in a jacket or a trouser. The possibility of a serendipitous find superseded feelings of hesitation. Back then, entertainment meant watching BTV and getting the West Bengal channel Durdarshan. Someone
started receiving Durdarshan by putting a metal plate on his roof and voila, a race began to buy all sorts of stainless steel cooking utensils to put on top of the roofs to get the foreign channel. Very few had VCRs because it cost more than a lakh. The house in any area that had a VCR was open to the public. Usually, a movie had two screenings one for the household people and the other for the people of the area. One favourite pastime was to listen to dialogue tapes of Sholay and other Amitabh films! This was also the era of the Middle East employment boom, and those coming back brought video players and large silver coloured cassette players (called changers). Soon, the market got flooded with VCPs much cheaper than VCRs and the brands Funai and JVC still come to mind. A well-organised commercial VCR screening operation began in old Dhakas Thataribazar, where, for Tk10, a person could watch one general movie plus an adult film or blue (pronounced bulu) movie, as it was called then. Porn is now a recognised industry, though in the 80s everything related
to it was hush hush. Cinema halls did brisk business as Bangla films almost always had a full house. Tickets for movies usually sold on the black market, while theatre halls proudly wrote shitatop niyontrito (air-conditioned) to attract cinema goers.
local Chinese restaurant and ordering the same stuff over and over again: Corn soup, beef with chillies, fried chicken, and beef with vegetables.No one heard of sushi or wasabi! Politics was obviously a hot topic, though unlike now, politicians hardly put making a quick buck as the top
The fact of life is that nothing remains static maybe if we were taken back to the 80s now, we would feel out of place
No one heard of dotted condoms let alone flavoured ones Raja, the local brand, ruled until Panther came to the market. Advertising was discreet as parents became uneasy when birth control commercials came on TV. I still remember that a student in my class was punished severely because he was copying a rather suggestive line from a contraceptive commercial called Joy foam tablet. Going out to eat meant dining at the
priority. A politician was someone who was sunburnt, wore ordinary clothes, hung out at the tea stalls, was a brilliant orator, and spoke flawless Bangla and impressive English. Young student politicians spent their free time reading, not ogling at scantily dressed women gyrating to Nagin nagin at a five star hotel. Libation was always local hooch; single malt was a dream in a James Hadley Chase novel!
Summer holidays meant going to the village to eat mangoes and jackfruits. Winter evenings were spent at fairs or going to the stadium to watch international football matches of the Presidents Cup. Those of us who grew up in Bangladesh as her generation 71, often become nostalgic thinking of the past. But the fact of life is that nothing remains static maybe if we were taken back to the 80s now, we would feel out of place. Though life back then had its share of imperfections, the money factor was not the most important issue human relations were not formed by cold-hearted calculations, and in judging a person, social status was not the sole deciding factor. The laidback, leisurely life of the 80s is gone. With all the changes to make our lives more comfortable, we have only opened a Pandoras Box. Theres indeed truth in the saying: Days gone by always seem better! Close your eyes and visualise:Tiger masks, Bonalim chocolates, white BATA school sneakers, walkmans, Hiramon, Jodi Kichu Mone Na Koren, and Pilu Momtaz. l Towheed Feroze is a journalist currently working in the development sector.
12
DHAKA TRIBUNE
Entertainment
n Entertainment Desk
The star-studded 59th Idea Filmfare Awards 2013 awards ceremony was held at YashRaj Studio in Andheri Friday evening. Bhaag Milkha Bhaag, the incredibly realistic biopic of legendary Indian sprinter Milkha Singh dominates 59th Idea Filmfare Awards 2013. The film scored three out of the top four awards including best actor, best director and best film. The picture won a total of seven prizes. Milkha Singh became Indias icon in the 50s and 60s and his revival in 2013 got extremely lucky as well. He was away in his hometown Chandigarh hence was unable to attend the awards ceremony. The much deserving, Farhan Akhtar won the Best Actor for Bhaag Milkha Bhaag. He said: Im so happy my mom is here. She used to tell me that I hung around Bandra wearing no shoes and what am I doing in my life. Mom, see what all that barefoot running got me. Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra gained winning position as best director for the same film. While announcing Deepika Padukones name for the Best Actor (Female) award for her performance in Ramleela, Rekha said, This is one woman I wouldnt mind losing my man to. While handing over the Lifetime Achievement award to Tanuja, Amitabh Bachchan said, She was my first leading lady. She was a glorious star, and I was a struggling newcomer. I am honoured to be presenting this award to her. Leading the list of nominations were films that pleased the box office in 2013, even if not all of them made it to the Rs 100-crore club, Chennai Express shared space with Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani, Ramleela and Raanjhanaa. The jury also acknowledged the
Shooting of Mustafa Kamal Rajs upcoming film Tarkata starts from January 25 at Dhaka. Three leading stars of Dhallywood, Moushumi, Arefin Shuvo and Bidya Sinha Mim share screen space together for the first time. Moushumi will be seen as Shuvos sister and Mim as his girlfriend
Farhan Akhtar (L) and Deepika Padukone win Best Actor and Best Actress awards respectively popularity of Kai Po Che, Aashiqui 2, Lootera, Krrish 3, and the little nugget, The Lunchbox. Dhanush, whose performance in Raanjhanaa won him the best debut award, and Vaani Kapoor won the best debut award (female) for Shuddh Desi Romance. The RD Burman Award went to Sidharth Mahadevan, dedicated his award for best singer to his mother while lyricist Prasoon Joshi, was adjudged best lyricist for Zinda in Bhaag Milkha Bhaag. Jeet Ganguly, Mithoon and Ankit Tiwari won the Best Music award for Aashiqui 2, while Arijit Singh who made the nation groove to his voice wins Best Playback Singer (Male) for Tum hi ho - Aashiqui 2. Monali Thakur won Best Playback Singer (Female) Sawaar loon for Lootera. Best Debut Director Award went to Ritesh Batra for the most delicious film, The Lunchbox which who won Filmfare Award for Best Film (Critics). Shilpa Shukla wins Best Actress (Critics) for her bold performance in BA Pass. Sony Trendsetter of the Year Award went to Chennai Express. The talent supreme Nawazuddin Siddiqui won Best Actor in a Supporting Role for The Lunchbox while Supriya Pathak Kapur won Best Actress in a Supporting Role for Goliyon Ki Raasleela, Ramleela. l
TODAY IN DHAKA
Film
The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug Thor: The Dark World Pacific Rim in 3D Time: 10am 10pm Star Cineplex, Bashundhara City
Exhibition
Ways of Seeing Time: 12pm 8pm Bengal Art Lounge, 60 Gulshan Avenue Gulshan 1 Gravity-Free World By Artist A Rahman Time: 12pm 8pm Bengal Gallery of Fine Arts, House 42, Road 16 (New) / 27 (old), Dhanmondi Life and Struggle of Padma By Sumon Yusuf Time: 3pm 9pm La Galerie, Alliance Francaise de Dhaka, Dhanmond
ON TV
MOVIE
6:41pmWB
Flyboys
11:00pmZee Studio
Real Steel
DRAMA
9: 00pm Star Jalsha 11:00pm Sony TV
Bojhena Shey Bojhena Bade Achhe Lagte Hain
Sport
DHAKA TRIBUNE
13
0 4 8
DAYS TO GO
14 Wawrinka stuns
15 Australia edge
Bangladesh and Sri Lankan players enjoy their training session at the Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium yesterday on the eve of their todays first Test
Shamsur excited
n Mazhar Uddin
Hard hitting opening batsman Shamsur Rahman, who has had a dream run over the last twelve months, is set to make his Test debut in the first Test in the series against Sri Lanka as the 71st Test cricketer for Bangladesh at the Mirpur Sher-e-Bangla National Stadium today. The 25-year old gets his reward after he had a terrific time in the Bangladesh Cricket League where he smashed a brilliant double century for Walton Central Zone, which earned him a place in the Test squad against Sri Lanka. Shamsur, who had to wait sometime before finally making his T20 debut against Sri Lanka earlier last year, smashed his maiden half century in his second T20 match against Zimbabwe. Later Shamsur made his ODI debut with a bang against New Zealand, missing a century by only four runs. The dashing opener still rated Test cricket above everything else and informed that it would be a dream come true if he gets his Test cap today, It was always my dream to play Test for Bangladesh. I think Test cricket is something that every cricketer wished to play and if I get the chance it will be
MUMIT M
BD v SL: BROADCASTERS
Broadcaster Maasranga TV Rupavahini (Terrestrial) Dialog (DTH, Mobile) OSN Pehla Zee Network Willow TV Sommet Sports Territory Bangladesh Sri Lanka Sri Lanka Middle East & North Africa UK & Europe USA & Canada New Zealand
Sri Lanka meanwhile will be looking to the experienced duo of Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene, along with relative newcomers Dinesh Chandimal and skipper Angelo Matthews who performed credibly recently against Pakistan in the UAE to give their side the edge.
Tamim Iqbal, Shamsur Rahman/Imrul Kayes, Marshall Ayub, Mominul Haque, Mushfiqur Rahim (capt & wk), Shakib al Hasan, Nasir Hossain, Sohag Gazi, Rubel Hossain, Robiul Islam, Abdur Razzak.
Shamsur Rahman and Imrul Kayes, being contenders. Shamsur has been successful in ODIs and T20s as well as at the domestic level, while Imrul has forced his way back into the nation squad after two years by scoring heavily at the first class level.
Kaushal Silva,Dimuth Karunaratne, Kumar Sangakkara, Mahela Jayawardene, Dinesh Chandimal, Angelo Mathews (capt), Prasanna Jayawardene (wk), Dilruwan Perera/Nuwan Pradeep, Shaminda Eranga, Rangana Herath, Suranga Lakmal. l
the best thing happened in my life, Shamsur told the Dhaka Tribune. However the hard hitting opener informed that he will play his natural game whatever format and will give his hundred percent to try to score runs for Bangladesh, I will play my natural game as I always try to play whatever format I play but Test cricket is something where your temperament and technique is very important and I will try to give my hundred percent to score runs for my country. The right hander was close to making Test debut in 2010 against England but was excluded from the final eleven. Shamsur thinks that he has developed since then and is a more mature player. I never regret that and think what happened was good for me, as I am much more mature now and I know the game much better and have gained experience of international cricket, said Shamsur. Shamsur made his first class debut in 2005 and since then, he has been a regular performer on the domestic circuit, with almost 4,000 runs, 25 fifties and six hundreds. Most recently, he struck a double hundred to catch the selectors eye. l
ICC acting against MSC draw with Russell n its own vision?
Shishir Hoque
n Raihan Mahmood
Former ICC presidents Malcom Gray and Ehsan Mani categorically stated that the ICCs Big 3 proposal clearly goes against the globalization of cricket yesterday. A letter signed by, Ehsan Mani, (President ICC 2003-2006), Malcolm Gray, (President ICC 2000-2003), Malcolm Speed, Former ICC Chief Executive Officer, Clive Lloyd, Former Captain of West Indies and Former Chairman of ICC Cricket Committee, Shaharyar Khan, Past President Pakistan Cricket
Under the proposal, associate and affiliate members would lose more than US$312m in projected revenue
Board, Lt Gen. (retd) Tauqir Zia, Past President Pakistan Cricket Board and Saber Hossain Chowdhury, former president of Bangladesh Cricket Board, urged the ICC to withdraw the proposal made by the ICC F&CA Committee. They also urged that the ICC directors and management, its members and other stakeholders are, as a matter of urgency, to review and comment on the Governance Report by Lord Woolf and PWC, published in 2012, with a view to implementing its recommendations and improving ICCs Governance structure, in keeping with contemporary best practice. Under the proposal, associate and affiliate members would lose more than US$312m in projected revenue, an amount that would instead be redistributed largely to the boards of India,
Australia and England. Manis report said, The biggest gainers are BCCI, ECB and CA. In addition, ICC events for the period 20152023 will be held only in India, England and Australia. These boards will receive hosting fees for the events in addition to the ICC distributions they propose. A point that also needs to be addressed is; why does BCCI need more money at the expense of other countries? The domestic and international media fees that BCCI receives from playing with other members are massive and underpin BCCIs financial position. It is the richest cricket board in the world. If cricket is to grow and develop around the world, more investment is required in the associate & affiliate countries, not less. The associate & affiliate countries represent some of the biggest economies in the world. If cricket could be established properly in the United States of America and China and become an Olympic sport, the ICC could double its revenues in real terms over the next 10-15 years. This requires vision and a less parochial approach. The ICC in its official website says Our Vision of Success - As a leading global sport, cricket will captivate and inspire people of every age, gender, background and ability while building bridges between continents, countries and communities. Its Strategic Direction will be a bigger, better, global game targeting more players, more fans, more competitive teams. Our long-term success will be judged on growth in participation and public interest and the competitiveness of teams participating in mens and womens international cricket. The latest proposals categorically opposes the vision and mission. l
Mohammedan Sporting Club Limited registered their fourth draw in six Bangladesh Premier League games as they played out a 1-1 draw with defending champions Sheikh Russell KC at the Bangabandhu National Stadium yesterday. Mohammedan centre-back Mintu Sk made another blunder which caused the Black and Whites conceding the opening goal. Jamaican midfielder Ricardo Cousins was the scorer but Zahid Hasan Emily netted a controversial goal in the second half to restore the parity. The draw did not change Russells position in the points table as they remained in third place with 10 points from six matches, while Mohammedan moved two steps up to fourth with seven points. Mohammedan coach Rui Jose Batista made two changes in his squad, bringing in Emon Mahmud and Mosta-
fa Seddik for the suspended Bayebeck and Jahid Hossain. Maruful Hoque suffered his first blow when he was forced to make an early substitution, replacing injured inform forward Mithun Chowdhury with Md Robin at the quarter hour mark. Mohammedans defensive errors in the league continued as Russell took the lead in the 29th minute after a silly blunder by Mintu. Ricardo snatched a ball from Mintu just outside the box, eased into the penalty area and slotted the ball into the net after rounding off Mohammedan keeper Titu. The Motijheel outfits had their first chance in the 34th minute when Emily headed over the crosspiece from a Mostafa Seddik cross. Russell almost doubled the lead at the stroke of half-time when their Moroccan forward Youness Rouxs shot at an open goal fell wide of the target. Mohammedan brought in Wahed Ahmed and Tapu Barman at the start of the second half to bolster their attack.
Two minutes into the resumption, Nigerian midfielder Demian Chigozie volleyed over the crosspiece from the middle of the box after a headed pass from Emily. Emily restored the parity just seven minutes into the second half, when he headed in a cross from Wahed Ahmed to level the margin. The buildup of the equalizing goal, however, created severe criticism about Mohammedan operating outside fair play codes. During a Russell attack, Francisco Usucar intentionally sent the ball outside the field after seeing Mohammedans Demian Chigozie fall down a few yards outside the box. Instead of throwing the ball to Russell, Nahidul Islam set up Wahed to run free through the left flank and the play resulted in a goal. Titu made two brilliant saves to save Mohammedan from conceding moreone by tipping away Francisco Usucars free kick and another by punching away Ricardos powerful strike. l
Mohammedan players gather around Sheikh Russells Moroccan forward Youness Roux (C) during their Bangladesh Premier League match at the BNS yesterday. The incident took place after Zahid Hasan scored the equaliser in the 52nd minute MUMIT M
14
Dont boo Nadal, Wawrinka tells fans n AFP, Melbourne
Stanislas Wawrinka took Australian Open fans to task on Sunday after sections of the crowd booed Rafael Nadal for taking a medical timeout during the dramatic mens singles final. The newly crowned champion said it was not that nice that fans booed the Spanish world number one, who was in clear discomfort with a back injury during the second set. I think it was not that nice, especially Rafa. We all know that hes a great guy, a great player, Wawrinka said. Hes always a really fair player. He always tries his best. He is always fighting. The Swiss added: Yeah, was quite strange that the crowd started to boo him. Wawrinka also had a long argument with the chair umpire when Nadal left the court for treatment, insisting he should be told the nature of his opponents injury. I just wanted to know what was the problem of Rafa. Because before he asked for the physio, he was checking his feet. I didnt know really what was the problem, he said. Normally when the physio is coming on the court, the umpire always tells the opponent why hes coming. He didnt want to tell me, so I got (annoyed). Wawrinka eventually won the match in four sets to claim his maiden Grand Slam title, in his first major final. He said he still planned to play Switzerlands Davis Cup tie with Serbia, starting on Friday providing he survives his raucous celebrations. Davis Cup, its really important for me. Im really proud. Its a big honour to play for my country. So for sure Im still thinking to go there, he said. l
DHAKA TRIBUNE
Sport
n AFP, Melbourne
Rafael Nadal of Spain, right, shakes hands with former World No 1 Pete Sampras after his loss to Stanislas Wawrinka of Switzerland at the Australian Open yesterday AP
Wawrinka
19 2 53 49 5/15 116
MATCH STATS
6 3, 6 2, 3 6, 6 3
Nadal
1 3 19 32 2/6 88
Aces Double Faults Winners Unforced Errors BP Conversions Total Points Won Time: 2hr 21mins
Stanislas Wawrinka of Switzerland walks around the court, with the trophy after defeating Rafael Nadal of Spain in the men's singles final at the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne yesterday AP
Mirza will try for more FACTS & STATS Despite losing to Stanislas Wawrinka, Slams with Tecau
n AFP, Melbourne
Indias Sania Mirza said shell try for more Grand Slam mixed doubles titles with Romanian Horia Tecau after the pair missed out in the Australian Open final on Sunday. Mirza, 27, said she had made a great start to the year despite the loss to Canadian-French pair Daniel Nestor and Kristina Mladenovic, who won 6-3, 6-2. Mirza also reached the womens doubles quarter-finals with partner Cara Black, where they went out in three sets to eventual champions Sara Errani and Roberta Vinci of Italy. Ive had a decent week and we had a really good week in mixed and were looking forward to the rest of the year. Its a good start to the year. l
Rafael Nadal will today has the highest ever #ATP ranking points at 14,330 Stanislas Wawrinka is the first man ever to beat both Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic in the same Grand Slam tournament Stanislas Wawrinka will be No3 in rankings today after winning his first ever grand slam title at his 36th try The last time a seed as low as 8 won the Australian Open was in 2002 when Thomas Johansson won the title Before yesterdays final, the head2head was Rafael Nadal v Stanislas Wawrinka 26 0 In the last 35 Grand Slams (mens), Del Potro was the only title winner outside the Big 4 before Stanislas Wawrinka yesterday
'Wow'rinka in dreamland
n AFP, Melbourne
Stanislas Wawrinka admitted he was surprised he won the Australian Open and wondered if he was dreaming after his surprise victory over an injury-hit Rafael Nadal on Sunday. The Swiss, who also upset threetime defending champion Novak Djokovic in the quarter-finals, capped a magnificent fortnight with his 6-3, 6-2, 3-6, 6-3 win over Nadal for his first major title. I still think that Im dreaming. Its a strange feeling, he said. Ive seen so many finals. I always try to watch the final of Grand Slams because thats where the best players are playing. Before today for me, it wasnt (even) a dream. I never expected to play a final. I never expected to win a Grand Slam. And right now I just did it. He added: To beat Rafa, even if he was injured, I think I played my best first set during the match. I was ready to play four hours or five to beat Novak in the quarters, to beat Tomas Berdych in the semis. Wawrinka became the first player since Sergi Bruguera at the 1993 French Open to beat the two top seeds, Nadal and Djokovic. He said he spoke with his Swedish coach Magnus Norman about playing in a Grand Slam final, and he was surprised how calm he was at the start of the match. The Swiss got off to a brilliant start, taking his first ever set off Nadal in 12 matches and going a break up in the second before the Spaniards back problem became apparent. He went two sets up but lost the third as Nadal threatened a comeback, before stepping up to take the fourth set and the championship. Magnus told me it was important not to think about the result but think about the way you want to play, the way you want to win every point, he said. I was surprised how well I started the match. In the beginning, he was good, he was fit, he wasnt injured. And I was playing amazing tennis. l
RESULTS
Verona
Hallfredsson 49
13 12
AS Roma
Cagliari
Sau 28
AC Milan
00 31 10 11 10 11 11
Catania
Berardi 28 P
Sassuolo
Parma
Amauri 35 Gabbiadini 61
Udinese Bologna
Sampdoria
Diamanti 90 P
Torino
Cerci 60 P
Atalanta
Saturday
Napoli Lazio
Albiol 88 Candreva 27 P Sardo 18 Llorente 60
Juventus goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon leaves the field after he received a red card during their Italian Serie A match against Lazio at the Olympic stadium in Rome on Saturday REUTERS
Chievo
Juventus
Oviedo in World Cup doubt after double leg break n AFP, London
Everton midfielder Bryan Oviedo suffered a double fracture of his left leg in Saturdays 4-0 FA Cup win at Stevenage, an injury which will almost certainly rule him out of the World Cup. Roberto Martinezs team were leading 1-0 when the 23-year-old Costa Rica international collapsed in agony after a first half challenge on Stevenages Simon Heslop. He needed lengthy treatment from medical staff before eventually being stretchered off. Everton team-mates Leighton Baines and Kevin Mirallas were visibly distressed after going over to check on Oviedo. Bryan was trying to win the ball but unfortunately I think he has picked up a double fracture, the tibia and the fibula, said Everton boss Martinez. l
RESULTS
Guingamp Ajaccio
Andre 8 Yatabare 84
11 11 31 00 11
PSG
Sochaux Nice
Montpellier
Nantes Valenciennes
Pujol 52
Reims
Ciss 39-og
Lorient
Everton's Phil Jagielka (R) holds the broken leg of team mate Bryan Oviedo as he lies during their English FA Cup match against Stevenage at Broadhall Way on Saturday REUTERS
DHAKA TRIBUNE
Sport
n Minhaz Uddin Khan
15
Oscar stunner puts Chelsea through n AFP, London
Oscar helped Chelsea draw a line beneath Juan Matas departure with a fine free-kick in a 1-0 win over Stoke City in the FA Cup fourth round on Sunday. The Brazilian had dislodged Mata from his position as Chelseas main playmaker, prompting the Spaniard to join Manchester United, and the quality of his goal demonstrated why manager Jose Mourinho rates him so highly.
QUICK BYTES
Matthews confident
n Minhaz Uddin Khan
The visiting Sri Lanka side will focus on the whole Bangladesh line-up instead of any particular player when they lock horn with the home side in the first Test at the Sher-e-Bangla National Stadium (SBNS) today. Angelo Mathews, the Lankan skipper, also said that his players familiarity with the wicket at Mirpur would be an advantage. Even I played a few games at Mirpur recently (in Dhaka Premier League) and that was a good experience for us to see how the wickets are behaving. It was a good experience for all of us to try and get used to the conditions, Mathews told the media at the pre-match conference at SBNS yesterday. At least 38 cricketers from the Island played in the Dhaka Premier League in the 2013 13 season last November. The last time Sri Lanka played a Test against the Tigers in Mirpur was in 2008 and they won the game. We do not have anything in particular to watch out for. When you take on Bangladesh, they have got good batsman and they are a very good fielding unit. We know that they have got a few match-winners, so we need to stay on our guards and also put pressure on them all the time. A few of the boys have played here before. Our support staff have also been here for quite a while and they know the conditions, so we get a lot of information, said the all-rounder. The Lankans reached Bangladesh from UAE, where they had recently faced Pakistan. All the three games of that series lasted five days. Mathews said Sri Lanka had been cautious in foiling fatigue in the approach to the Tests with Bangladesh. We are actually closely monitoring all the work loads of the bowlers, especially the fast bowlers because they have done a lot of hard work in the UAE, they bowled a lot of overs. As far as they are concerned, they are bowling pretty well. They will be good to go. The schedule is tight for us. Weve been playing continuous cricket and we will be playing continuous cricket for the next few months. Its going to be demanding as far as the body is concerned, but its about managing yourself, said the 26-year old captain. l
and the batsmen. Our batting is getting consistent, and for them too, batting strength is much heavier than their bowling, said Mushfiq. The challenge will be for our pace bowlers, who are yet to play to their full potential. I hope they keep on improving as they have in the last 12 months. They have to take wickets but at the same time, create consistent pressure. I hope they deliver this time. I am sure we can take 20 wickets. We should take the most help from the wicket, grab the chances that come our way. If the pace bowlers give us a good start, then our spinners can come together and bowl them out twice, he said. The Test against the Lankans will be Mushfiqs first since scoring Bangladeshs first double century in Galle last March. Despite not scoring a hundred since then, Mushfiq has played a vital role in the Test win against Zimbabwe in April 2013 and against New Zealand at home in the ODIs. I want to bat consistently. This is the first Test of the year so I hope that whenever I get set, I should get a big score. I want to make as big a contribution for the team as possible, he declared. l
RESULTS
Chelsea Oscar 27 Sheffield United Porter 31
10 11
The Blues failed to add to Oscars first-half effort despite hitting the woodwork twice, although it was a largely comfortable victory, with Stoke rarely threatening to score an equaliser and force a replay. Chelseas reward is a mouthwatering fifth-round trip to Premier League rivals Manchester City. Fulham survived an FA Cup scare against third-tier Sheffield United on Sunday by battling back to secure a 1-1 draw at a mud-caked Bramall Lane in the fourth round. The home side had captain Michael Doyle sent off for an off-the-ball incident early in the second period and Hugo Rodallega equalised with 15 minutes remaining to send the tie to a replay. l
SCORECARD
Australia A. Finch b Broad S. Marsh c Cook b Stokes S. Watson c Buttler b Broad M. Clarke b Bresnan G. Bailey c Broad b Stokes G. Maxwell c Buttler b Stokes M. Wade b Broad J. Faulkner c Morgan b Jordan N. Coulter-Nile lbw Jordan C. McKay not out X. Doherty not out Extras (w4, lb9) Total (for 9 wickets, 50 overs) Bowling Broad 10 2 31 3, Jordan 10 0 37 2, Bresnan 10 0 51 1, Tredwell 7 0 28 Stokes 10 0 43 3, Bopara 3 0 18 0 England A. Cook c Bailey b Coulter-Nile I. Bell c Finch b Coulter-Nile B. Stokes c Marsh b McKay J. Root c Doherty b Faulkner E. Morgan c Watson b Faulkner R. Bopara st Wade b McKay J. Buttler c McKay b Coulter-Nile T. Bresnan run out (Maxwell) S. Broad b McKay C. Jordan not out J. Tredwell c Wade b Watson Extras (w6, 1b4, b1) Total (10 wickets, 49.4 overs) 7 36 0 8 56 22 31 27 15 1 1 13 217
0,
Australia players celebrate their 4 1 series win against England after their 5th ODI in Adelaide yesterday Earlier, Stuart Broad and Ben Stokes shared six wickets as Australia struggled for momentum after captain Michael Clarke won the toss and opted to bat. Broad struck early for England as Australia lost four wickets inside the first 20 overs and were forced to consolidate on a sluggish Adelaide Oval pitch. Clarke (eight) and Shane Watson (zero), rested during the one-day series for their Ashes workload, returned to the team on Sunday but had a forgettable outing with the bat. It was left to Bailey to resurrect the innings for Australia and he did the repair job first with a 48-run stand with
INTERNET
39 14 0 55 39 25 5 13 7 4 0 11 212
Captain Alastair Cook will sit out of Englands limited-overs tour of West Indies as the team prepare for the Twenty20 World Cup in Bangladesh in March. Cook, who does not play the T20 format for England, will not be part of the squad to the Caribbean during which the visitors will play three ODIs and three T20 matches, starting Feb. 28. Asked if he would be captain against the West Indies, Cook told Sky Sports: No I wont be. The Twenty20 guys have got their World Cup in Bangladesh and I think we see it as a great six weeks for them to start building the team. Reuters
Glenn Maxwell (22) for the fifth wicket and then added 55 for the sixth with Matthew Wade (31). Bailey fell trying to clear Stokes over the infield. Fast bowling partners James Faulkner (27) and Nathan Coulter-Nile (15) added some quick runs towards the end to take Australia past 200. l
Bowling McKay 10 1 36 3, Coulter-Nile 10 134 3, Faulkner 10 0 37 2, Doherty 10 1 40 0, Watson 6.4 0 35 1, Maxwell 3 0 25 0 Man of the Match: Faulkner Man of the series: Finch Result Australia win by five runs and take series 4 1
DAYS WATCH
Maasranga TV 9:30AM Bangladesh v Sri Lanka 1st Test, Day 1 Sony Six NBA 2013 14 5:30AM Boston v Brooklyn 8:00AM Golden State v Portland 1:45AM Scottish League 2014 Dundee United v St Johnstone Star Sports HD1 8:40AM Big Bash T20 Melbourne Stars v Perth Scorchers 8:30AM Hockey India League Star Sports 4 3:00AM La Liga Real Sociedad v Elche CF
RESULTS
Dortmund
S Bender 6, Sahin 66
22 12 13 40 32 10
Augsburg
VfB Stuttgart
Abdellaoue 11
Mainz 05
Wolfsburg
Olic 35
Hanover 96
Nuremberg
Hoffenheim
Freiburg
Leverkusen
L Bender 5, Rolfes 36
Frankfurt
Meier 36
Hertha Berlin
Walton Director AFM Iqbal bin Anwar Dawn hands over the cheque to Kite Federation secretary Shahjahan Mridha Benu at the NSC auditorium yesterday COURTESY
16
DHAKA TRIBUNE
Back Page
170 180 230 265 270 300+ <38% 38%-43% 44%-65%
Bangla Academy almost set to hold Boi Mela n Syeda Samira Sadeque
Preparation for holding the Amar Ekushey Grantha Mela is going on in full swing at the Bangla Academy premises. Though traditionally the fair has been held at the Bangla Academy, this year Suhrawardy Udyan would also hold the fair. We have been holding the fair on the Bangla Academy premises for a long time. This year we have extended it to Suhrawardy Udyan to accommodate an increased number of publishers, Murshid Anwar, deputy director of Bangla Academy told the Dhaka Tribune. Suhrawardy Udyan will hold the regular publishers, while Bangla Academy will hold government, non-government organisations, and the media centre. The latter will also hold several cultural programmes, and discussions, he said. Although we are not worried we have tightened security measures, said Anwar. l
er plants in different phases at Maheshkhaliupazila in Coxs Bazar. Chairman of PDB Md Abduhu Ruhullah told the Dhaka Tribune. For that the PDB has sought Expressions of Interest (EOI) from international firms. The last date of submission is February 6. At the same site, PDB will also go for constructing 3,000MW LNG-based combined cycle power plants, and the PDB sought EOIs on the same date. The plants are supposed to be in operation by 2025. Ultra supercritical is a thermody-
namic expression (pressure above 270 bar and temperature above 580 degree Celsius) where water is directly converted to steam in boiler. A PDB official seeking anonymity said, PDB did not finish works of some ongoing power plants of Supercritical Technology and they are going for new technology. I think it is a highly ambitious project. The fuel envisaged is imported coal and LNG. Five thousand acres of land is in the process of acquisition to implement these power plant projects, PDB Chairman AbduhuRuhullah said.
The country is suffering from a shortage of primary fuels like gas and coal, which are cheaper modes of generating power. On January 29, 2012, the government struck a deal with India for installing a coal-based power plant with a capacity of 1,320MW at Rampal in Bagherhat near the Sundarbans and in private sector several plants are going to be built of Supercritical Technology. At present Barapukuria Thermal Power Plant in Dinajpur has a power plant of 250MW of Subcritical Technology. We have already invited expressions of interest from reputed engineering consultancy firms with local associates having relevant overseas experience in rendering engineering consultancy services for at least 500MW coal based supercritical or ultra super-
critical thermal power plant project, MdNazrul Islam, the chief engineer of PDB and project director, told the Dhaka Tribune yesterday. PDB intends to prepare a short-list for consultancy firms having requisite eligibility and experience in executing works of similar nature, after getting the EOI, he said. Separate Requests for Proposal (RFP) shall be issued according to the short list, he added. Ultra supercritical coal based thermal power plant unit size will be 600-1,000MW. The five thousand acresof land will be divided into different blocks to implement power plant projects in Maheshkhali area, he said. At present under phase1, PDB intends to implement ultra supercritical coal based thermal power plant project in one block, he said. l
A group of youths bring out a procession in the citys Shahbagh yesterday, protesting India, Australia and England cricket boards proposal to create a 2nd tier in Test Cricket
RAJIB DHAR
Prof Anisuzzaman KIBRIA MURDER gets Indias Padma Bhushan award n Udisa Islam Anisuzzaman, Professor Emeritus n Ashif Islam Shaon at the University of Dhaka, has been
selected for Indias Padma Bhushan award this year for his lifelong contribution to Bangla literature. Prof Anisuzzaman will be the first Bangladeshi to receive the award, the third highest civilian honour in India. He is among 25 personalities to have been selected for this years award. A press release issued by the Indian High Commission in Dhaka yesterday stated that the eminent Bangladeshi scholar and writer was conferred the Padma Bhushan for Literature and Education on the occasion of Indias 65thRepublic Day. In an immediate reaction, Anisuzzaman told the Dhaka Tribune that hewas very happy to have been selected for the award, and thanked the Indian government. He also admitted that he was a little bit surprised as he had no idea that he was in the running for the award. It is a great achievement for our country, Anisuzzaman said, as he was busy receiving greetings from colleagues, admirers and family friends yesterday. This award is for all of my friends, family and countrymen. I feel honoured. The professor also said he was working for the people to establish a secular and non-communal Bangladesh. Anisuzzaman earlier received the Bangla Academy Award, the Ananda Purashkar, for his work. In 2011, he got the Pandit Iswarchandra Vidyasagar Gold Plaque from the Asiatic Society of Kolkata. Anisuzzaman was born in 1937 at Basirhaat village of 24Parganain West Bengal. He received his doctorate degree from the University of Chicago and taught at universities in Dhaka and Chittagong. He was also involved with the 1952 Language Movement. The Padma Bhushan is the third highest civilian award after the Bharat Ratna and Padma Vibhushan. The award is traditionally presented by the president of India in a formal ceremony at the Rashtrapati Bhavan in New Delhi. l
Looking back
Mazid filed two cases a day after the attack with Habiganj sadar police station and the home ministry assigned CIDs Munshi Atiqur Rahman as the investigation officer of the cases. In April 2005, a government-formed high-powered committee submitted its report accusing 10 people including some grassroots BNP leaders and activists of the murders. The Sylhet Divisional Speedy Trial Tribunal started the trial through framing of charges against the accused. But following an appeal for further investigation by the complainant, the High Court stayed the proceedings. A further investigation was launched during the past caretaker government rule. The CID on June 20, 2011 pressed the charges against 14 more people, including former state minister for home Lutfozzaman Babar and Harkat-ul-Jihad (Huji) leader Mufti Abdul Hannan. Asma Kibria filed another no-confidence petition and a court ordered further investigation on January 5, 2012 which is under process. l
Editor: Zafar Sobhan, Published and Printed by Kazi Anis Ahmed on behalf of 2A Media Limited at Dainik Shakaler Khabar Publications Limited, 153/7, Tejgaon Industrial Area, Dhaka-1208. Editorial, News & Commercial Office: FR Tower, 8/C Panthapath, Shukrabad, Dhaka 1207. Phone: 9132093 94, Advertising: 9132155, Circulation: 9132282, Fax: News-9132192, e-mail: news@dhakatribune.com, info@dhakatribune.com, Website: www.dhakatribune.com
Business
Bangladesh Bank sees risk in maintaining the BoP position for the next fiscal year because of slower remittance growth
adverse impact on the BoP in the next fiscal year. The MPS would also slightly increase the credit growth target for the second half of the current fiscal year
from its earlier target of 16.5% as the growth was much short of the target for December 2013. We have changed the credit growth target slightly as there is little chance
to extend it considering the existing achievement, Zaman said. The MPS would also forecast the economic growth to range between 5.8% and 6.1%. l
Now they (the operators) can try to add new 2 crore (of users) every year as there is a market of another 40 50 crore
formance (in adding new subscribers) is satisfactory, a high BTRC official told the Dhaka Tribune. Now they (the operators) can try to add new 2 crore (of users) every year as there is a market of another 40-50 crore. Currently, Grameenphone is leading
The state-owned Teletalk achieved 71% growth during the year by the help of 3G launch before other operators. The operator added 16.50 lakh new subscribers, taking the total number to 28.22 lakh. But Citycell witnessed a fall in subscribers by 2.85 lakh to 13.65 lakh. l
Commerce Minister Tofail Ahmed speaks to a delegation of Dhaka Chamber of Commerce and Industry at his office in Dhaka yesterday shun the paths of destructive political programmes such as arson attack and vandalism, which had paralysed the country before polls. Regarding the GSP restoration efforts, he said: We are quite hopeful to regain the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) in the US market as the government has made a remarkable progress in the condition imposed for the restoration of GSP and rest of the work would be accomplished by April. Tofail was talking to the reporters after the meeting with the DCCI delegation. Businessmen are the driving forces of our countrys economy and they have already proved their skillfulness, by pushing up our export growth by 3% against a strategic target in the first half of the current fiscal, he added. Emphasising on regional connectivity for further enhancing trade and commerce in South Asia, Tofail said, An initiative has already been taken to from such a regional alliance among Bangladesh China India and Myanmar (BCIM) and if it is done we would be the most beneficiary, out of it. In a bid to expand trade volume, the government will put more focus on products diversification and exploration of new markets in the coming days, he added. The DCCI delegation earlier placed a 10-point demands to the minister, which include restoring investors confidence, diversification of products and exploring new markets for exporting products, augmenting Export Development Fund (EDF), exploring Bali Package, reinstating GSP, taking comprehensive action plan including short
B2
Banks drive DSEX to rally for 4th session
n Tribune Report
DHAKA TRIBUNE
Stock
DSE GAINERS Company
Closing (% change) 9.73 8.65 8.32 7.75 7.02 6.99 6.99 6.78 6.61 6.43
Stocks rallied for the fourth consecutive session in a row yesterday, driven by heavyweight banks that gained more than 3%. The benchmark DSEX rose over 55 points or 1% to settle at 4,758, which is a new high since its introduction on January 27 last year with a base point of 4,000. The Shariah-based index DSES gained more than 10 points or 1% to 987. The blue chip comprising index DS30 was up by 8 points or 0.6% to 1,672. The Chittagong Stock Exchange Selective Category Index, CSCX, closed at 9,359 with a rise of over 125 points. Turnover continued to remain buoyant as it stood at Tk859 crore, which is highest since July 17 last year and 3% higher over the previous session. Lanka Bangla Securities said on the day before the announcement of monetary stance for the second half of the current fiscal year, though analysts are eyeing near term slowdown in economic growth indicators, investors remained buoyant over stimulus measures for private sector for escalating economic activities. IDLC Investment said replicating previous few sessions pattern, market rose sharply in first few minutes and sustained at that point for the rest of the day. At the end of the day, stocks with high dividend yield attracted investors. The heavyweight banks rose highest by more than 3%, as its dividend declaration season approached. The sector was main driver behind such steep gain in the benchmark index. Non-life insurance emerged second rising over 2%, followed by telecommunications over 1% and power 0.2%. Among other sectors, non-banking financial institutions and pharmaceuticals closed almost flat on price correction. The market breadth remained positive as out of 294 issues traded, 161 closed higher, 114 lower and 19 remained unchanged. Activities centered on bank and power, both capturing 14% of total turnover. Square Pharmaceuticals was the most traded stocks, followed by Olympic Industries, Padma Oil, Orion Pharmaceuticals, Meghna Petroleum, United Commercial Bank, Grameenphone, Lafarge Surma Cement and Lanka Bangla Finance. l
Rupali Bank - A Saiham Tex.A Phoenix Insur -A National Bank - B Premier Bank -A 6th ICB M F A 8th ICB M F A ICB AMCL3rd NRB MF A Northern G Insur-A Shahjalal Islami -A CSE GAINERS Company Saiham Tex.A Rupali Bank - A Premier Bank -A Phoenix Insur -A Central Insur -A AB Bank - A MutualTrust Bank-A CVO PetroChem RL Z Prime Insur -A National Bank - B
Average (% change) 9.97 6.47 6.77 4.77 4.65 7.04 5.82 6.64 3.19 4.58 Average (% change) 7.60 9.87 5.98 6.77 7.92 7.28 5.69 7.41 5.35 4.46
Closing average 85.68 33.23 49.97 13.61 11.94 64.02 65.08 6.26 52.05 17.82
Closing 85.70 33.90 50.80 13.90 12.20 64.30 65.80 6.30 53.20 18.20
Daily high 85.90 34.10 51.50 14.00 12.30 66.00 67.00 6.40 54.00 18.30
Daily low 75.00 31.70 44.90 11.70 10.30 62.00 63.00 6.00 45.00 15.90
Turnover in million 40.559 122.096 23.973 73.179 17.395 2.721 2.050 10.761 94.700 70.065
Latest EPS 5.89 2.48 3.81 -3.63 -2.95 15.60 3.48 0.60 3.04 1.67
Latest PE 14.5 13.4 13.1 -ve -ve 4.1 18.7 10.4 17.1 10.7
Closing (% change) 9.97 9.87 8.77 8.41 8.09 7.75 7.47 7.25 7.04 6.92
Closing average 33.43 84.61 12.06 49.53 33.39 30.21 18.38 736.50 37.40 13.59
Closing 34.20 84.60 12.40 50.30 33.40 30.60 18.70 750.00 38.00 13.90
Daily high 34.20 84.70 12.50 51.00 33.40 30.80 18.80 750.00 38.00 13.90
Daily low 31.90 84.50 11.50 49.00 33.30 29.10 18.00 750.00 33.00 13.10
Turnover in million 8.352 1.083 6.460 0.475 0.053 9.073 0.882 0.088 0.011 18.886
Latest EPS 2.48 5.89 -2.95 3.81 2.49 1.65 -0.52 -6.76 2.36 -3.63
Latest PE 13.5 14.4 -ve 13.0 13.4 18.3 -ve -ve 15.8 -ve
The heavyweight banks rose highest by more than 3%, as its dividend declaration season approached. The sector was main driver behind such steep gain in the benchmark index
of rights share: 16.01.2014. BRACBANK: Subscription 20.04.2014 to 15.05.2014. Record date for entitlement of rights share: 10.02.2014. IPO Subscription: Matin Spinning Mills Limited subscription date 26 30 January 2014, NRB upto 08 Feburay 2014. @ Tk. 37/-, face value taka 10 and market lot 200. Hwa Well Textiles (BD) Limited subscription date 17 23 February 2014, NRB upto 04 March 2014. At per, face value taka 10 and market lot 500.
(+) 1.18% (+) 0.52% (+) 1.47% (+) 1.39% (+) 1.36%
Unchanged Issue (Avg. Price Basis) Market Capital Equity (Billion. Tk.) Market Capital Equity (Billion US$)
Turnover in million 0.211 0.016 7.071 13.088 22.625 0.168 6.350 2.034 9.682 239.811 Latest EPS 28.52 0.40 2.24 1.32 2.26 -0.52 0.76 0.44 4.95 27.28
Dividend/AGM
Average (% change) -6.25 -4.61 -1.11 -0.82 -6.13 -4.41 2.08 -3.81 1.54 -2.66 Average (% change) -3.90 -2.60 -1.60 -5.36 -4.41 -1.78 -2.61 -4.09 -0.83 -4.87
Closing average 844.00 63.10 98.41 7.26 104.70 7.81 6.38 32.54 128.84 344.21
Closing 845.20 63.10 96.50 7.00 101.60 7.70 6.20 31.80 123.90 340.50
Daily high 850.00 63.10 105.00 7.70 109.70 8.00 6.90 34.00 133.00 356.80
Daily low 841.00 63.10 92.00 7.00 101.00 7.70 6.20 31.20 118.00 338.40
Latest PE 29.6 157.8 43.9 5.5 46.3 -ve 8.4 74.0 26.0 12.6
MICEMENT: (H/Y): As per un-audited half yearly accounts as on 31.12.2013 (July'13 to Dec'13), the Company has reported net profit after tax of Tk. 335.59 million with EPS of Tk. 2.26 as against Tk. 288.12 million and Tk. 1.94 respectively for the same period of the previous year. Whereas net profit after tax was Tk. 169.62 million with EPS of Tk. 1.14 for the period of 3 months, (Oct'13 to Dec'13) ended on 31.12.2013 as against Tk. 131.72 million and Tk. 0.89 respectively for the same period of the previous year. MALEKSPIN: The Company has informed
GSPFINANCE: 12% stock, AGM: 20.02.2014, RD: 03.02.2014. ECABLES: 10% cash, AGM: 01.03.2014, RD: 29.12.2013. USMANIAGL: 11% Cash & 10% Stock, AGM: postponed, RD: 07.11.2013. SAVAREFR: No dividend, AGM: 30.01.2014, RD: 19.12.2013. PADMAOIL: 90% Cash, 10% Stock, AGM: 15.02.2014, RD: 23.12.2013.
Closing average 9.36 21.72 7.40 212.62 26.00 108.18 344.24 820.00 7.21 34.77
Closing 9.00 21.80 7.30 211.10 26.00 107.10 340.60 820.00 7.10 34.70
Daily high 9.20 22.00 7.50 222.80 26.00 117.00 357.00 820.00 7.50 35.50
Daily low 10.40 21.30 7.30 210.50 26.00 106.20 336.60 820.00 7.00 34.60
Turnover in million 0.084 0.028 0.141 1.063 0.026 0.708 15.215 0.164 0.404 0.080
Latest EPS -2.20 0.59 0.52 5.08 -0.08 4.60 27.28 21.79 1.32 0.38
Latest PE -ve 36.8 14.2 41.9 -ve 23.5 12.6 37.6 5.5 91.5
ANALYST
At the end of the day, stocks with high dividend yield attracted investors
DSE TURNOVER LEADERS Company Square Pharma -A Olympic Ind. -A Padma Oil Co. -A Orion Pharma-N Meghna Petroleum -A UCBL - A Grameenphone-A LafargeS Cement-Z LankaBangla Fin. -A Titas Gas TDCLA
DSE Million Taka 1206.21 617.98 401.05 1063.65 193.29 1196.25 1.48 916.47 974.39 2.03 56.31 111.83 43.10 468.77 81.10 409.44 330.12 219.46 169.74 127.08 0.33
% change 14.04 7.19 4.67 12.38 2.25 13.93 0.02 10.67 11.34 0.02 0.66 1.30 0.50 5.46 0.94 4.77 3.84 2.55 1.98 1.48 0.00
Million Taka 153.93 62.86 20.40 88.48 26.90 71.20 98.30 61.40 0.29 9.58 6.25 5.55 29.15 13.03 10.94 19.74 26.93 21.41 22.31 0.01
CSE
% change 20.56 8.40 2.73 11.82 3.59 9.51 0.00 13.13 8.20 0.04 1.28 0.83 0.74 3.89 1.74 1.46 2.64 3.60 2.86 2.98 0.00
Million Taka 1360.14 680.84 421.45 1152.13 220.19 1267.45 1.48 1014.77 1035.80 2.33 65.88 118.07 48.65 497.92 94.13 420.38 349.86 246.39 191.15 149.39 0.34
Total
% change 14.56 7.29 4.51 12.34 2.36 13.57 0.02 10.87 11.09 0.02 0.71 1.26 0.52 5.33 1.01 4.50 3.75 2.64 2.05 1.60 0.00
Bengal Windsor-A Golden Son -A Saiham Tex.A Summit Power -A Appollo Ispat CL -N UNITED AIR A
Volume shares 1,754,524 1,479,642 696,708 2,982,380 736,750 5,739,583 809,200 3,858,500 1,975,384 1,787,108
Value in million 412.17 260.38 239.81 198.77 190.76 181.11 175.28 170.45 158.07 151.23
% of total turnover 4.80 3.03 2.79 2.31 2.22 2.11 2.04 1.98 1.84 1.76
Daily closing 237.10 179.40 340.50 66.20 255.60 31.70 215.30 43.90 78.80 85.20
Price change 0.51 3.70 -4.11 0.30 -1.92 4.97 1.51 4.52 -2.60 1.07
Daily opening 235.90 173.00 355.10 66.00 260.60 30.20 212.10 42.00 80.90 84.30
Daily high 242.00 181.90 356.80 67.80 264.30 33.00 218.70 45.50 82.00 85.50
Daily low 220.00 156.00 338.40 59.50 248.00 27.20 214.00 42.00 72.90 76.00
Daily average 234.92 175.98 344.21 66.65 258.92 31.55 216.61 44.18 80.02 84.62
CSE TURNOVER LEADERS Company UCBL - A Appollo Ispat CL -N Grameenphone-A Orion Pharma-N National Bank - B LafargeS Cement-Z UNITED AIR A Padma Oil Co. -A Bengal Windsor-A Mozaffar H.Spinning-N
Prepared exclusively for Dhaka Tribune by Business Information Automation Service Line (BIASL), on the basis of information collected from daily stock quotations and audited reports of the listed companies. High level of caution has been taken to collect and present the above information and data. The publisher will not take any responsibility if any body uses this information and data for his/her investment decision. For any query please email to biasl@bol-online.com or call 01552153562 or go to www.biasl.net
Volume shares 775,344 667,200 105,000 303,600 1,389,258 383,500 950,583 44,200 206,080 348,500
Value in million 24.53 24.48 22.76 20.30 18.89 16.92 16.83 15.22 15.03 14.67
% of total turnover 3.28 3.27 3.04 2.71 2.53 2.26 2.25 2.03 2.01 1.96
Daily closing 31.90 36.50 215.30 66.30 13.90 44.00 17.60 340.60 73.60 41.30
Price change 5.28 -1.08 1.56 0.45 6.92 4.27 0.57 -4.19 5.14 0.00
Daily opening 30.30 36.90 212.00 66.00 13.00 42.20 17.50 355.50 70.00 41.30
Daily high 32.10 37.10 219.90 67.90 13.90 45.30 18.00 357.00 75.00 43.70
Daily low 31.00 36.50 214.50 66.00 13.10 42.90 16.00 336.60 69.50 41.10
Daily average 31.64 36.69 216.73 66.86 13.59 44.11 17.70 344.24 72.95 42.10
DHAKA TRIBUNE
Business
n Tahmidur Rahman
Square Pharmaceuticals Limited, the countrys largest pharmaceutical company, emerged as the most traded company at the Dhaka Stock Exchange yesterday. Shares of the heavyweight worth more than Tk36.5 crore were exchanged hands, making up over 4% of the total turnover. In the last one month, its stocks prices increased by 24.79% despite any recent corporate disclosure in recent days. On the day, its share prices rose 0.5% to Tk237.1 a share after moving between Tk233.5 and Tk240 during the trading session. The companys strong fundamentals and recent growth in profits have driven up the price of the stock, ac-
B3
Complacency risk
Yet advanced economies also have work to do to put their houses in order. Complacency is both the positive and the negative of Davos this year, said John Studzinski, global head of Blackstone Advisory Partners. On the one hand, were not looking at the break-up of the euro zone anymore and people are more relaxed. On the other hand, people are not paying attention to things they need to, like the education reform that is needed to resolve mismatches in the workforce, particularly in Europe and the United States. Even as headline growth numbers improve, few citizens are feeling the recovery. A survey by consulting group Alix Partners of 6,000 adults in six European countries conducted in mid-January showed 71% of those questioned saw the economy staying the same or getting worse over the next year. Christine Lagarde, managing director of the International Monetary Fund, warned policymakers of some of the old risks that have not yet been completely fixed, added to which is the threat of deflation in Europe. A case in point is a European Union plan to curb banks ability to take market bets with their own money, which Germany and France have attacked, warning in a paper seen by Reuters that it could jeopardise a delicate revival. In some cases, European policymakers cannot even agree on the problems they should be tackling. German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble publicly disagreed with EU Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehns view that prolonged low inflation in the euro zone would make necessary economic rebalancing harder. Schaeuble called that view nonsense. Both Rehn and French Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici said the European Parliament could still improve a complex system for winding up failed banks agreed by the EU last month. Schaeuble said there was little scope for change without breaching EU treaties. Joe Jimenez, chief executive of Swiss drugmaker Novartis, said the conversation at Davos had shifted from five years of angst over financial crisis to talk of economic recovery, but companies were still hesitant about the levels of investment which could drive lasting growth. If we had the certainty I think you would see more and more companies around the world leaning forward in terms of investment, he said. l
A worker inspects solar panels at a solar farm in Dunhuang, 950km (590 miles) northwest of Lanzhou, Gansu Province
REUTERS
could open the door to expanding duties on some imported solar panels. In October 2012, the US set steep duties on billions of dollars of solar products from China, but turned down pleas to expand the scope of its order to include Chinese panels made with non-Chinese solar cells. In response, many Chinese module producers simply began sourcing cells from Taiwan. The ITC is to make a preliminary ruling on whether there is a reasonable indication that imports from China or Taiwan materially injure, or threaten to injure, the local industry by February 14. A negative finding would stop the investigations. If the ITC determines that the imports could be hurting the domestic industry, the Commerce department is to make preliminary determinations about subsidies in March and dumping in June. l
Global shift
The year ahead will witness a marked shift in the balance among the worlds main growth engines, with the United States and other developed economies contributing more and emerging markets somewhat less than before. Reduced Fed bond buying will reverse the liquidity that has flooded into higher-yielding emerging markets assets. We expected this year to be a volatile year for EM as the Fed tapers, Mexican Finance Minister Luis Videgaray said, adding that volatility will happen throughout the year as tapering goes on. Despite particular worries in countries like Argentina and Turkey, CEOs are still determined to tap into the growing middle classes of the new mega-cities of Asia, Latin America and Africa. But they are
Prime Bank Limited on Friday opened a medical camp for the devotees of Biswa Ijtema at Ijtema premises, the second largest religious congregation as a part of its corporate social responsibility. Managing director and CEO of the bank Md Ehsan Khasru inaugurated the camp
NCC Bank Ltd held a two-day long annual conference for its executives and branch managers at Hotel Sonargaon in Dhaka last Thursday. The chairperson of the bank, Md Nurun Newaz Salim, inaugurated the conference as chief guest while Mohammed Nurul Amin, managing director and CEO presided over the conference
Mutual Trust Bank Ltd (MTB) held its Annual Business Conference 2014 on Saturday at a local hotel in Dhaka. The programme was attended by the founding chairperson Syed Manzur Elahi, vice chairperson Rashed Ahmed Chowdhury and other directors of the bank
Pubali Bank Limited held its first conference for regional and corporate branch managers at the banks head office on Saturday. Hafiz Ahmed Mazumder, chairperson on the board of directors of the bank was present at the conference as chief guest while managing director Helal Ahmed Chowdhury presided over the meeting
Shahjalal Islami Bank Limited yesterday held its 563rd meeting of the bank's executive committee at its head office. The meeting was presided over by Alhaj Mohammad Younus, chairperson of the the committee
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Oil executives normally travel the world to win big contracts - but rarely do government officials travel the other way. This week inDavos, however, some of the most powerful oil CEOs gathered on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum and were presented with an embarrassment of riches. While the appearance of Iran's new president and oil minister in front of the heads of BP, ENI, Total and Lukoil made most headlines, the executives also heard presentations by officials from Canada, Mozambique and Mexico. The head of BP Bob Dudley drew a simple conclusion: "It just shows how big the shifts are in the industry." Oil prices peaked at $147 a barrel in 2008 amid growing fears that the world was running out of oil. Five years on, oil is considered plentiful thanks to the US shale oil revolution and the discovery of massive oil and gas fields elsewhere. Some executives are beginning to talk about an easing of resource nationalism, one of the hottest topics in the industry over the past decade as countries such as Russia and Kazakhstan became increasingly assertive about developing their reserves themselves. "Today a number of countries which have huge reserves of oil and gas begin to say that they need investments to develop them," said the head of Lukoil Vagit Alekperov. "It is not only Iran. It is Mexico, East Africa. We have seen a period of national protectionism when unfortunately we could not access some countries because it was all run by national companies. Today the situation changes," he said.
DHAKA TRIBUNE
Business
Christophe de Margerie, chariman and chief executive of Total attends a session at the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos
REUTERS
NEWS IN BRIEF
Ahluwalia sees growth of up to 8% over 2 3 years
India can achieve economic growth of up to 8% over a two- to three-year horizon, Montek Singh Ahluwalia, deputy chairman of the planning commission in India, said on Saturday. Personally, I think India can get back to 7.5 to 8% growth, he told the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. - Reuters
Cars ahead
The exception is the car industry which benefited from an upturn in demand well before other sectors and saw more than 2.5bn pounds ($4.16bn) of new investment in 2013. Britons bought 2.265 million new cars in 2013, the highest number since 2007 and an 11% rise on the year that bucked the trend in Germany, where car sales fell 4%, and France, where they dropped by 9%. One big factor in Britain was probably compensation payments by banks to consumers for mis-sold insurance which were often big enough to be used as a deposit on a new car. Cheap finance deals and record-low rates helped fund the rest. It helped drive Britain to produce 1.510 million cars in 2013, the highest number since 2007, according to the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders. Britain is a hub for automakers including Nissan, Toyota, Honda, BMW,
But British manufacturers and the country's trade deficit may benefit from the trend in the automotive industry for car makers to source more parts locally, avoiding the risks of long international supply chains and hedging on currencies. This drove Toyota's decision to buy fuel pipes from the UK factories of Japanese parts maker Futaba Industrial. "Toyota were quite insistent on producing it in the UK. A lot of large businesses want to localise production back into the UK to mitigate currency risk," Paul Heard, Futaba's UK managing director, said. Only a third of the parts in a British-built cars are made in Britain, compared with half elsewhere. Improving this could add 3 billion pounds to economic output, making attracting foreign parts makers a government priority. l
European banks have 84bn euro capital shortfall, OECD estimates: report
European banks have a combined capital shortfall of about 84bn euros ($115bn), German weekly WirtschaftsWoche reported, citing a new study by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). Reuters
With the recent economic recession, politicians and government may... have been reluctant to venture into such new, large-scale endeavours that have not been tested before
Energy is harvested from the Sun and wind, and hot air is trapped between the building "wings" to provide heating in winter. In summer, cooling is achieved through natural ventilation and transpiration from the abundant plant growth. Plants grow on the exterior shell to filter
rain water, which is captured and mixed with liquid waste from the towers, treated organically and used as fertiliser. And at the base of the colossus: A floating market on the East River for the inhabitants to sell their organic produce. "They made fun of me. They said I created a piece of science fiction," Callebaut says of his detractors. But as awareness has grown of the plight of our planet, overpopulation and climate change, his ideas have gained traction, and the Dragonfly design has been exhibited at an international fair in China. No buyers, but rising interest Callebaut has also drafted a concept for a floating city resembling a lily pad that will house refugees forced from their homes by climate change. And he hopes to sell a design for a "farmscraper" in Shenzhen, China that will include housing, offices, leisure space and food gardens. As yet, Callebaut has found no buyers for these big projects. "With the recent economic recession, politicians and government may... have been reluctant to venture into such new,
large-scale endeavours that have not been tested before," Emilia Plotka, a sustainability expert at the Royal Institute of Royal Architects, told AFP of Dragonfly and similar projects. But she pointed out the concept has inspired other, smaller projects. "Instead of majestically tall bionic towers plonked in riverbeds, vertical farms have been rather more modestly integrated into existing buildings, derelict industrial sites and floating barges," said Plotka. One example is the Pasona Urban Farm - a nine-storey office building in Tokyo that allows employees to grow their own food in specially reserved green spaces at work. "Whilst the buy-in may not be as noticeable at the moment, it certainly is widespread and growing," said Plotka of the "vertical farm" movement. "I suspect most other new vertical farms will remain hidden in disused urban spaces or existing business and domestic blocks, which is not bad at all as they will use fewer resources to be set up and enhance their surrounding environments and communities." l
Wall St Week Ahead - US stocks may fall again as Fed stays course
Wall Street managed to avoid major selloffs in 2013, but bears look ready - and anxious - to take command. US stocks could be set for another selloff next week as the Federal Reserve is expected to announce it will keep withdrawing its economic stimulus, further pressuring equities already roiled by a flight from emerging markets. Reuters
Exclusive - Bank of America's trading practices have been probed, filing shows
The US Department of Justice and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission have both held investigations into whether Bank of America engaged in improper trading by doing its own futures trades ahead of executing large orders for clients, according to a regulatory filing. Reuters