15 Aug, 2014

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Shraban 31, 1421 Shawal 18, 1435 Regd. No. DA 6238 Vol 2, No 133

FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 2014 | www.dhakatribune.com | SECOND EDITION

WEEKEND

20 pages plus 24-page weekend supplement | Price: Tk12

9 | WORLD ANTI GOVT PROTESTERS MARCH TOWARDS ISLAMABAD

CALL IN THE GREEN TEAM

11 | OP-ED

14 | SPORT

GREAT MEN NEVER DIE

THE WIZARD WHO FAILED TO GET FRANCE TO FLY

Censorship in the true sense It was the beginning of a decades-long era of distorting country’s historical facts n Julfikar Ali Manik The killing of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and his family on August 15, 1975 might be the most gruesome political bloodshed in the country’s history, but the following day’s editions of the national dailies did not have any reflection of that whatsoever. In fact, not just the following day, but for many years to come, publishing reports on the murders was nothing but a taboo for the newspapers. It was not until 20 years later that the brutal murders started getting wide media coverage in the mainstream newspapers. The killing was the end result of a conspiracy hatched by some army officers and politicians, including senior Awami League leader Khandker Mushtaque Ahmed, who became the country’s president after the murders. There were only four national newspapers in operation when the father of the nation and his family were killed. They dailies were: state-owned Dainik Bangla and the Bangladesh Times; and privately owned and later nationalised Ittefaq and the Bangladesh Observer. Out of these four, only Ittefaq exists today – the other three have all been closed over the last three decades. When analysed, the lead stories of all those four newspapers on their August 16, 1975 editions give the idea that it was just another murder from the  PAGE 2 COLUMN 1

P3 HOW HIS DAY COULD BE The Dhaka Tribune has talked to a number of protesters from those dark hours of the country’s history who risked their lives to speak up against the brutal killing, defying the martial law. Some of the first protests were mostly concentrated outside Dhaka – in Kishoreganj, Barguna and Bagerhat districts to be specific. The protesters were mainly from the Communist Party of Bangladesh (CPB), its student wing Bangladesh Chhatra Union and the National Awami Party (NAP). Some 19 young men from Kishoreganj led by former Chhatra Union leader Bhupendra Voumik Dolon brought out a procession in the district down. It was quite natural for them to expect a massive gathering, especially participated

Newspaper clippings from a few days immediately after the killing of Bangabandhu show how the media was muzzled

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Monsoon shows its real colours in Dhaka

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yesterday as the poor drainage network of the Dhaka Water Supply and Sewerage Authority failed to route storm water out of the city. Daily commuters, mostly office goers and students, were affected greatly as most areas of the capital went under knee-deep water. According to the meteorological department, 23mm rainfall was recorded in the capital yesterday morning. Akhtaruzzaman, an office executive who was seen waiting in front of the main gate of his home at Purana Paltan for a rickshaw, said: “Rain water had clogged all the roads in the area. Not only me,but other offices goers and students could not get to their destinations on time.” He further claimed that waterlogging had become a regular sight during the monsoon and residents of his area continue to face the hardship every year. Shamima Sultana, a resident of  PAGE 2 COLUMN 4

an investigation of account documents, including a cheque book for an account at Islami Bank, found at the house in Sylhet where JMB leader Shayakh Abdur Rahman had been arrested. The cable sent by then envoy Patricia A Butenis was published by WikiLeaks in August 2011 under the title “Bangladesh Bank fines Islami Bank Bangladesh for JMB related AML violations.” The Islami Bank was previously  PAGE 3 COLUMN 2

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Incessant drizzle and ankle-high logged water make life difficult for students in the capital’s Mogbazar yesterday

MEHEDI HASAN

Shariah banks, insurance WikiLeaks: Islami Bank firms to come under watch was fined thrice n Mohosinul Karim In the wake of allegations of militant financing against Shariah-based banks and insurance firms, the government has decided to monitor their expenditures of profits and corporate social responsibility (CSR) funds. The national committee on militancy resistance and prevention under the Home Ministry made the decision at its meeting yesterday at the secretariat

chaired by State Minister for Home Asaduzzaman Khan Kamal. According to the committee, the major portion of the money spent on militant financing in the country comes from profits and CSR funds of banks and insurance companies operating under Shariah rules. Asaduzzaman told reporters after the meeting that the committee had also asked the central bank to ensure  PAGE 2 COLUMN 5

n Tribune Report Islami Bank was fined Tk1 lakh by the central bank on April 5, 2006 for violation of the Anti-Money Laundering Law in connection with an account linked to Jama’at-ul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB), a radical Islamist group banned on February 13, 2005. According to the whistleblower website WikiLeaks, a US embassy cable dated April 6, 2006 says the fine followed

3 | News

5 | News

4 | News

Police yesterday and on Wednesday night arrested five persons in separate drives from different areas of Chittagong and seized 15,000 Yaba pills, 30 kilogrammes of marijuana and 30 litres of liquor from their possession.

The Bangladesh Medical and Dental Council is set to recommend updates to the existing BMDC act, suggesting new provisions including the power to secure support from law enforcement agencies to conduct mobile court drives.

The construction of a refueling station at Sylhet airport is still incomplete, making Hajj flights uncertain. It was said in March that international flights would start in June. ***

8 | World

Artillery shells hit close to the centre of Ukraine’s separatist-held city of Donetsk for the first time on Thursday, killing at least one person.

12 | Entertainment

Michael Jackson’s posthumous album ‘Xscape’ featured ‘A Place With No Name’ – Jackson’s rewrite of America’s ‘A Horse With No Name.’

BNP’s Mosharraf charged with money laundering n Adil Sakhawat The Anti Corruption Commission (ACC) yesterday filed charge sheet against BNP standing committee member Khandaker Mosharraf Hossain for allegedly siphoning off Tk9.54cr to England. ACC director Nasim Anwar, who is also the case investigation officer, filed the charge sheet at the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate Court, the ACC’s public relations officer, Pranab Kumar Bhattacharya, confirmed to the Dhaka Tribune. The charge sheet will be placed before the magistrate on Monday, following the weekend and government holidays, court sources said. The commission, on August 7, approved the filing of a charge sheet against Mosharraf, who is a former health minister, after investigations into his assets by the anti-graft body revealed irregularities. Although the ACC interrogated the BNP leader’s wife, Bilkis Akhter Hossain, she was not charge-sheeted because she was not found to be involved. “During interrogation, Mosharraf confessed that he transferred the sum to his wife’s account but that his wife was not involved with the laundering, so she was spared from the charge sheet,” ACC director Nasim Anwar told the Dhaka Tribune. According to the charge sheet, Mosharraf concealed information about illegally amassing over £800,000, roughly equivalent to Tk95,395,380, by abusing his power as health minister during the 2001-2006 BNP government. The amount was deposited in a joint fixed-term deposit account of Lloyds TSB Offshore Private Banking in the

INSIDE The BNP has snubbed ruling party calls not to observe BNP chairperson Khaleda Zia’s 69th birthday on August 15, going ahead with plans to celebrate her birthday on National Mourning Day.

n Emran Hossain Shaikh After the murder of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and most of his family members, the killers and the plotters made everything sure for keeping people away from protesting the most heinous crime in the country’s history. Unexpectedly, the first protests, mostly sporadic and disorganised in nature, came from the activists of some left-leaning political, instead of those from Bangabandhu’s own party the Awami League.

Hasina, Modi meet in New York in September n Abu Hayat Mahmud Residents in the capital suffered yet n Sheikh Shahariar Zaman again from unbearable waterlogging Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and her Indian counterpart Narendra Modi will have a meeting on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in September. “There will be a meeting. The headquarters are working on it,” AK Abdul Momen, Bangladesh permanent representative to the UN, told the Dhaka Tribune yesterday. Hasina had always had meetings with Manmohan Singh, former Indian prime minister, when he went to New York to attend the UNGA, Momen said. “This will be their first meeting. We do not expect substantive discussion but from our side, it is expected that we will raise our long-pending issues, including Teesta water sharing and ratification of the land boundary agreement,” said an official of the Foreign Ministry. Bangladesh and India were supposed to sign the Teesta agreement in 2011 during the visit of Manmohan Singh to Dhaka, but due to a strong opposition from West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, New Delhi backtracked on its decision. Both the countries signed the Land Boundary Agreement in 1974 and Bangladesh ratified it in the same year, but India is yet to ratify it. Modi after assuming power stressed on having good relations with neighbours and visited Bhutan and Nepal in the last two months. He also sent his Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj to Dhaka. During her visit, Sushma said New Delhi wanted to have good relations with its neighbours, including Bangladesh. The Indian prime minister invited all heads of states and governments of all South Asian countries to attend

Leftists did some of the first protests

B1 | Business

Economists divided over Bangladesh Bank allowing private sector to borrow cheap foreign loans. The division surfaced during a discussion on monetary policy.


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