August 21, 2013

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Metro

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Bhadra 6, 1420 Shawwal 13, 1434 Regd. No. DA 6238 Vol 1 No 149

Encroachers occupy Phulbaria footpath

International

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Egypt arrests Brotherhood chief

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21, 2013 | www.dhakatribune.com

Ten Islamist outfits to face ban

Sport

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Sao Paulo will be ready to host World Cup opener: FIFA

16 pages with 8-page business tabloid, plus 8-page Treehouse children’s supplement | Price: Tk10

ENSURE WORKPLACE SAFETY

50 others, some of which reportedly operate from outside the country, are under watch

n Kailash Sarkar In the wake of rising militant activities, the government is set to ban at least 10 Islamist organisations soon. The move comes at a time when five outlawed and seven blacklisted organisations have been operating defying the government ban and vigilance of the law enforcement agencies. Apart from the 10 groups, around 50 others, including some from outside the country, have already been brought under vigilance for their suspected militant activities in different forms. The present government on October 22, 2009 banned Hizb-utTahrir. The same year, seven other organisations – Hizb-ut-Tawhid, Islami Samaj, Ulema Anjuman al Baiyinaat,

‘Decision against some of them is under process considering safety and security of the state and its people’ Islamic Democratic Party, Tawhid Trust, Tamir ud-Deen and Alla’r Dal – were blacklisted for their suspected involvement in militant activities. According to the officials of home ministry, police and Rab, the government is now set to ban all the seven blacklisted organisations and three others – Shahadat-e-Nobuwat, Ansarullah Bangla Team and Al Markajul al Islami. Of the three, the existence of Ansarullah Bangla Team has been uncovered very recently. Earlier, the previous BNP-Jamaat government outlawed Shahadat-e-al Haqima (SAH) on February 9, 2003; Jama’at-ul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB) and Jagrata Muslim Janata Bangladesh (JMJB) on February 23, 2005; and Harkat-ul Jihad al Islami (Huji) on October 17, 2005. But all the banned and listed organ-

isations have been running their activities even after the execution of six top leaders of the JMB on March 29, 2007, and the arrest of several thousand leaders and activists of the banned outfits, mainly Hizb-ut-Tahrir. “We have recently found some organisations involved in militancy. They are under watch. Decision against some of them is under process considering safety and security of the state and its people,” State Minister for Home Shamsul Huq Tuku told the Dhaka Tribune on Sunday. Tuku said he would not mention the number and names of those organisations. “But it is true that the government is working on those organisations,” he added. Recently, several militant groups have been found conducting publicity campaigns through brisk processions, publishing posters and leaflets, and holding secret meetings, say law enforcers. Activists of most of the militant groups believe in sacrificing their lives to establish the rule of Islam. In this view, they target the poor and common Muslims and cash in their beliefs in religion. Over the past few years, law enforcers arrested more than a dozen foreign militant leaders belonging to Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), Harkat-ul Mujahideen, Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF), Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM), Jaish-e-Mostofa and Kashmir-based organisation Asif Reza Commando Force (ARCF) in Bangladesh. The detained militant leaders had reportedly recruited thousands of local youths under the name of different organisations, inspired them with jihadi spirits “to establish Islamic rule” and trained them to operate arms and make bombs and grenade.  PAGE 2 COLUMN 5

A worker is engaged in a hazardous task at a workshop on Tipu Sultan Road in the capital yesterday. Spare parts for mills and factories are produced in different areas of the city, using local technologies, which saves the country a large amount of foreign currencies. But workers of these factories usually work without any proper safety measures. If a secured atmosphere could be ensured for these workers, the sector could become a potential industry SYED ZAKIR HOSSAIN

Amended ICT act may be challenged n Muhammad Zahidul Islam The drafted Information and Communication Technology (Amendment) Ordinance 2013 is likely to be challenged in court by a few NGOs and international agencies as they think the law contradicts people’s human rights. Officials in the ICT industry and legal experts have said there is a huge chance that the law could be misused in the name of preventing cybercrimes. Many have termed it a “black law.” “There is no doubt that this is a black law…Not just ICT people, every citizen should join hands to protect

their rights by preventing execution of the law,” Dr Ananya Raihan, executive director of Dnet, told the Dhaka Tribune yesterday. Raihan is also a member of the high-profile Digital Taskforce, the highest government body in the ICT sector headed by Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina. Raihan said ICT experts were considering a legal challenge against the law. “We are planning to challenge this amended act with the assistance of the TIB [Transparency International Bangladesh]. We will also talk to the BLAST [Bangladesh Legal Aid and Services Trust] about the legal and human rights

aspects of the challenge,” he said. When contacted, ICT Secretary Nazrul Islam Khan, however, said: “We took the previous act as the pillar and proposed amendments to some sections of it. As nobody objected to the existing act there is no scope to challenge this amendment initiative. “People can criticise us, but we did it as a responsibility for the society and the cabinet has approved it. There are lots of scopes to specify some crimes and we will change some sections of the amended act when it is placed in the parliamentary standing committee.”

n Our Correspondent, Chandpur

Sanaul Islam Tipu and n Md Ashif Islam Shaon The fate of the August 21 grenade attack case has become uncertain due to its slow pace with the ruling government nearing the end of its tenure. Those involved in the process fear that if the government changes, the whole process of the case could be overturned, as many opposition bigwigs have been indicted in the case. The trial, which resumed formally after further investigation on April 23 last year against 52 accused, saw only 72 prosecution witnesses out of 491 testifying before court.

Only 12 of them had given their statements following the indictment. BNP senior vice chairperson, Tarique Rahman, and 29 others were mentioned in the supplementary charge sheet submitted on March 18, 2011. The further investigation was ordered during the tenure of the caretaker government, August 3, 2009, based

INSIDE News

3 The Sundarbans Gas Company Limited (SGCL), a concern of the state-run Petrobangla, will begin installing new household gas connections in Bhola city from August 28. However, no new industrial connections will be given out at the moment as the date remains still undecided.

Nation

6 Hundreds of street children in Rajshahi have been getting addicted to an adhesive solution, locally known as ‘Dandi’ — a mixture of leather solvent and glue, as it is cheap and easy to obtain.

International

9 The Guardian newspaper says the British government forced it to destroy files or face a court battle over its publication of US security secrets leaked by Edward Snowden, as the fallout over the arrest of a man linked to the fugitive intensifies.

Business

B1 To achieve its revenue target of Tk1.36tn in the current fiscal year, the National Board of Revenue (NBR) is bringing about some changes in the administrative role of members and officials.

on a prosecution plea. The remaining 60 had testified in between October 29, 2008, when the trial first started, until its postponement on June 9 of that year. Despite the slow process, the prosecution is hopeful that the trial of the sensational cases over the bomb attack  PAGE 2 COLUMN 1

The families of two deceased local Awami League leaders killed in the August 21 grenade attack in the capital struggle to survive after losing their sole breadwinners. The two were Abdul Kuddus and Atique Ullah who hailed from Haimchar and Motlob upazilas respectively – both of them belonging to local Awami League politics. Demand for punishment of the murderers has been reflected through the woebegone expression of the family members. Kuddus’s mother Amena Begum said she still bears a deep scar in her heart over the loss of her own son. While talking to the Dhaka Tribune, she burst into tears and said: “I cannot

n Mohosinul Karim

get my son back. Only those who have lost their own kids can understand my pain.” “Nine years have passed since the attack took place but the killers are yet to be meted out punishment,” she added. Sujana, Kuddus’s niece, also demanded capital punishment to those who carried out the grenade attack on the Awami League rally on August 21. The victim’s elder brother Humayun Kabir said: “My brother lost his life while saving Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina on August 21 in 2004.” “It has been nine years since the grenade attack took place on Bangabandhu Avenue in Dhaka,” he said, demanding that the killers be brought to book within the tenure of the government.

Communications Minister ObaidulQuader yesterday confirmed that three organisations, enlisted as pre-qualified for participating in the Padma Bridge Project’s tender, have so far bought the necessary papers to contest the tender project. The last date for dropping tenders is September 7 while the tender box will be opened on September 9. A technical committee will decide on the constructor and adviser organisations, the minister said. He was talking at a press briefing at the ministry yesterday.The minister said 11 other firms, who intend to work as advisers to the project have also bought the tender papers.He, however, did not mention the names of the organisations which have already bought the tender documents and took part in the pre-tender discussion. The communications ministry had organised the briefing to updateon the steps taken to repair the dilapidated roads in the Chittagong Hill Tracts (CHT). The government on June 26, floated international tender for constructing the main frame of the Padma Bridge. A high-level technical committee, led by Professor Jamilur Reza Chowdhury selected five companies as pre-qualified, and only allowed them to take part in the bid held between July 7 and September 7. Shafiqul Islam, project director of Padma Multipurpose Bridge Project told the Dhaka Tribune, out of the five

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Grenade attack cases facing ‘uncertainty’ Families struggle to survive after breadearners’ demise AU G U S T 2 1 GRENADE AT TAC K

Three firms vie for Padma Bridge work

BNP goes soft on hard programmes n Mohammad Al-Masum Molla With barely two months left before parliament dissolves, BNP has planned to backtrack from its earlier hard-line oust-government campaigns, apparently to retain the public support it has garnered during city corporation polls. Earlier, the senior leaders including party Chief Khaleda Zia threatened to wage vigorous movements after Eid-ulFitr, but the party has decided to give the government more time, namely until Eid-ul-Azha, to resolve the prevailing political standoff. Party insiders said they want to ex-

ercise maximum restraint given Eidul-Azha, Durga Puja and diplomatic concerns. “We are giving some more time to the government. We want to convey a message to the people as well as to diplomats that we do not want violence and confrontation,” said a senior BNP leader. “At the same time, we also know the government will not comply to our demand. By that time, the people and diplomats will have a positive impression about us. After that, if we go for hard programmes people will be with us,” he said on Tuesday.

Talking to a number of senior leaders, it was learned that party leaders believed the government would not accept their demand, and that organisational tours were announced mainly to launch a campaign against the one-party election. Party Chairperson Khaleda Zia will hold rallies on September 8 in Narsingdi, September 15 in Rajshahi, September 16 in Rangpur, September 22 in Khulna, September 28 in Barisal and October 5 in Sylhet. Party senior leaders too will visit the 75 organisational districts. BNP announced these programmes

at a press briefing at the party’s Nayapaltan office on Monday around 12pm. BNP insiders said if the government does not pay heed, Khaleda Zia will call upon her party men to lay siege to the capital, from a Chittagong meeting yet to be scheduled. And before the expiration of the government’s tenure, Khaleda Zia will hold a meeting in the capital, from where she will issue a 24-hour ultimatum to the government, and then sit-in and non-stop movement programmes will be announced, they said.  PAGE 2 COLUMN 5


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