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5/18/2011

Libya Offers Controlled Tour of NATO Bombing Sites in Tripoli


Libya Offers Controlled Tour of NATO Bombing Sites in Tripoli


NATO, Libyan officials said, had dropped one of three bombs that struck the compound in the early hours of Thursday within 150 feet of a children’s playground in a parkland corner of the sprawling Bab al-Aziziya compound. Two other bombs, they said, had fallen randomly deeper into the compound, damaging roadways and administrative buildings of no military significance.

As if to make the point more starkly, reporters arrived at the playground site to find children swirling about enthusiastically on a fairground carousel no more than a stone’s throw from the main crater left by the bomb. Some of the children were waving portraits of Colonel Qaddafi.

Not more than 100 yards away, reporters were led past a tented camp for refugees, including men, women and children from sub-Saharan Africa, many of them gathered, with the encouragement of accompanying government minders, to chant the praises of Colonel Qaddafi as a background chorus to the reporters’ visit.

Officials said 3 people were killed and 27 others were wounded in the bombings of the leadership compound in southern Tripoli, all of them civilians. They named the dead as two Libyan reporters and a guide who was accompanying them to “celebrations” of an unspecified nature that were being held in the park at the time.

That people should have been in the area at 3:30 a.m., when huge blasts from the bombings shook the otherwise deserted districts of central Tripoli, was not unusual, the officials said, since Libyans were a nocturnal people who often gathered at that hour.

Moussa Ibrahim, the Qaddafi government’s chief spokesman, called the attacks a further example of NATO spending “billions of dollars on death,” in the latest instance “in front of a children’s playground.”

“People are being killed every day, every night, and nobody is reporting this,” he said. “NATO is enjoying a conspiracy of silence.”

But acting as a sort of truth squad in weighing the authenticity of the Qaddafi government’s accounts of the bombings is an essential part of the job description for foreign journalists, and the notion of reporters lingering in a children’s playground in the pre-dawn hours was not the only element in the official story of the compound bombing that raised serious doubts.

There was, too, the fact that the three huge water-filled bomb craters shown to the reporters, and other features close by, appeared to point to the real target of the bombings as being a vast network of underground bunkers running for a half a mile or more beneath the compound — a network that is believed to have been well known, for years, to Western intelligence agencies tracking the largely clandestine life of Colonel Qaddafi.

The other features that pointed to an attack on the compound’s subterranean tunnels and bunkers included bomb fragments strewn around the craters that indicated that they came from bunker-busting, 2,000-pound bombs that were used by American aircraft in the attack on Baghdad in 2003, according to a Western security adviser accompanying one of the television crews who said he was familiar with the bombs.

Also, smaller craters at the bomb sites were tangled with what appeared to be the punctured wreckage of massive concrete and steel structures reaching deep underground, and at least one large aboveground ventilation shaft. Close to the children’s playground, there was a concrete stairway descending to a steel door, flanked by green-painted steel railings.

An official determination to disguise the stairway’s presence was betrayed by what appeared to have be a carefully marshaled gathering of a crowd of protesters around the stairway, and a frenzied push forward by the protesters whenever a reporter or a camera crew approached to get a closer view.

$415mn Japan credit secured

$415mn Japan credit secured

After signing a loan deal with the World Bank, the government has inked another agreement with Japan to get $415 million for the construction of the country's longest Padma bridge.

Economic Relations Division (ERD) secretary M Musharraf Hossain Bhuiyan and JICA chief representative Takao Toda put pen to paper at the NEC Bhaban on Wednesday.

Japan also signed another agreement with the government under which it will give Bangladesh $215 million in two more projects — one worth $55 million on SMEs development and another worth $160 million on water treatment plant in Khulna.

On Apr 28, the World Bank (WB) confirmed funding of $1.2 billion for building Padma bridge under a loan agreement with the government. The loan is 41.38 percent of the total estimated cost of $2.9 billion for the bridge project.

The proposal for $415 million aid to Bangladesh for the bridge construction was approved by Japanese cabinet on Tuesday.

The Japanese government committed $400 million worth of yen for Padma bridge but it went up by $15 million due to appreciation of the Japanese currency, said Bhuiyan after signing the deal.

The credit bears interest of 0.01 per cent with 10 years grace period and 40 years' repayment period.

Apart from the WB and JICA, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) and the Islamic Development Bank (IDB) will fund $750 million for the bridge project. The government will spend the rest of the money from its coffers.

Communications minister Syed Abul Hossain, who was present at the signing ceremony, said tenders for Padma bridge and river management would be floated after getting the concurrence from the World Bank.

"If we get the concurrence tomorrow, we will float the tenders that day," he said.

The government will invite the Japanese prime minister and heads of the WB, ADB and IDB for the foundation laying ceremony of Padma Bridge, the minister added.

The ERD secretary said the government was scheduled to sign agreement with the IDB on May 24 and with the ADB in June.

"The date of ADB loan agreement signing ceremony is yet to be fixed," he said.

Japanese ambassador Tamotsu Shinotsuka hoped the credit money would be implemented effectively and efficiently for the betterment of the people of Bangladesh.

"Japan has donated over $10 billion since independence of Bangladesh," he said.

The 10-kilometre bridge will be the longest in Asia, project director of the bridge Rafiqul Islam earlier said.

Six kilometres of the bridge will be built over the river while four kilometres on the land to link the country's central part with the South.

The government hopes to complete the construction of the bridge by Jan 2014, before the end of its tenure.

5/17/2011

Ministries ablaze after Tripoli strikes

Ministries ablaze after Tripoli strikes

NATO airstrikes hit a security services building and an anti-corruption compound, government officials said.

A security services building and the headquarters of Libya's anti-corruption agency in Tripoli have been set ablaze after being hit by apparent NATO air strikes.

The two buildings on Al-Jumhuriya Avenue are close to the residence of leader Muammar GaddafMinistries ablaze after Tripoli strikesi, in an area where two explosions were heard at around 5:30am on Tuesday (1:30am local time), reports Al Jazeera.

By 3am, firefighters were battling to control flames that were tearing through the two facing buildings.

The head of Libya's Ministry for Inspection and Popular Control, the anti-corruption agency, was at the scene and said that some ministry employees had been injured, but provided no further details.

Government spokesman Mussa Ibrahim later said that the rebel National Transitional Council (NTC), based in eastern city of Benghazi, had directed NATO to attack the agency in a bid to destroy files related to former regime officials who have joined the rebellion.

"We believe that NATO has been misled to destroy files on their corruption cases," he told reporters.

Three explosions had also been heard earlier in the same area.

Parts of Tripoli have been targeted almost daily by NATO-led strikes carried out since a March 19 UN resolution called for the protection of civilians from Gaddafi's regime.

The assertion that Gaddafi is authorising the killing of civilians in a crackdown on anti-government rebels has prompted the International Criminal Court (ICC) to seek arrest warrants on Monday for the Libyan leader, his son and the country's intelligence chief.

ARREST WARRANT

Gaddafi's government denied the allegations.

The call for the inquest was the first such action in the Netherlands-based court linked to the Arab uprisings.

The international warrants could further isolate Gaddafi and his inner circle and potentially complicate the options for a negotiated settlement.

But they could also harden his resolve to stand and fight, since the legal action has been seen in Libya as giving NATO more justification to go after him.

Because the United Nations Security Council ordered the ICC investigation, UN member states would be obliged to arrest him if he ventured into their territory.

Prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo said he was seeking warrants against Gaddafi, his son, Saif al-Islam, and intelligence chief Abdullah al-Sanoussi for ordering, planning and participating in illegal attacks.

Moreno-Ocampo said he had evidence that Gaddafi's forces attacked civilians in their homes, shot at demonstrators with live ammunition, shelled funeral processions and deployed snipers to kill people leaving mosques.

Judges must now evaluate the evidence before deciding whether to confirm the charges and issue international arrest warrants.

Still, an earlier case where the ICC did step in at the request of the UN did not result in the desired arrest.

Although Sudanese president Omar al-Bashir has been indicted for crimes including genocide in the Darfur region of Sudan, at least three countries have allowed him to visit without detaining him.

Libyan spokesman Moussa Ibrahim told reporters in Tripoli that the government would pay no attention to the arrest warrants, saying the prosecutor had relied on faulty media reports and reached "incoherent conclusions".

In the eastern city of Benghazi, headquarters for the opposition movement, rebel spokesman Abdel-Hafidh Ghoga said the rebels welcomed the ICC case.

"It is these three individuals who are primarily running the campaign for genocide of the Libyan people and the criminal activities that have taken place so far," he said at a news conference.

He said, however, that the opposition would like to see Gaddafi tried first in Libya, then before the world body.

During Gaddafi's more than four decades in power, the regime had "committed many crimes against the Libyan people, and the Libyan people want to see him punished for that,'' Ghoga said.

In Brussels, NATO said Moreno-Ocampo's announcement was "further proof that the international isolation of the Gadhafi regime is growing every day".

5/15/2011

Top News Of Bangladesn.Khaleda meets Tarique in London

Khaleda meets Tarique in London


BNP chairperson Khaleda Zia has met her elder son Tarique Rahman, now in London for medical treatment, after over two and a half years.

Tarique, along with his wife Zubaida Rahman, stepped out of Grosvenor House at Park Lane of London as soon as Khaleda reached the hotel around 10pm local time on Saturday.

They welcomed her at the entrance where Khaleda first embraced her son and then the daughter-in-law in an emotional scene.

Journalist Shafique Rehman, businessman Abdul Awal Mintoo and BNP leaders of the United Kingdom unit witnessed their 'reunion'.

BNP senior vice-chairman Tarique, who was arrested during the military-controlled caretaker regime, went to London along with his family for his medical treatment on Sep 11, 2008 after being released on parole.

Khaleda and Tarique, accused in over a dozen of cases, had last met that day and since then he has been staying in London.

The opposition chief reached London on Saturday on a one-week UK tour.

UK BNP leaders and activists welcomed Khaleda as she arrived at Heathrow Airport in London around 8:30pm local time by an Emirates flight.

UK BNP's acting president Mia Monirul Alam, general secretary Abdus Salam and former ambassador Sabih Uddin Ahmed were among those who welcomed Khaleda at the VIP lounge of the airport.

Khaleda exchanged pleasantries with the leaders and activists waiting there to receive her.

UK Awami League leaders and activists, staying outside the airport with placards and black flags, chanted slogans protesting Khaleda's UK tour.

At one stage, the two groups locked into a clash after Khaleda had left the airport.

Police arrested two activists of Juba Dal, BNP's associate youth body.

UK BNP vice-chairman Toimus Ali held Awami League supporters responsible for the chaos.

He told bdnews24.com, "Their [Awami League leaders and activists] endeavour to create anarchy proves that they are afraid of BNP's popularity."

UK Awami League general secretary Syed Faruk denied the allegation, saying, "BNP UK unit has a number of factions and the rival factions have clashed outside the airport."

The opposition chief is due to stay in London until May 21. She will attend a meeting of UK BNP at the hotel at 4pm (local time) on Sunday.


Ershad's military rule illegal: SC

Ershad's military rule illegal: SC


The Supreme Court has upheld the High Court order declaring illegal the Seventh Amendment to the constitution that had legimatised the autocratic regime of military strongman Hussein Muhammad Ershad.

A six-strong Appellate Division bench, headed by outgoing chief justice A B M Khairul Haque, on Sunday also cancelled the military court's punishment of Siddique Ahmed, a resident of Chittagong upon whose petition the High Court order came on Aug 26 last year.

Ahmed was convicted of murder during Ershad's martial law regime.

The top court gave the orders after Ahmed challenged part of the High Court order in a petition on Apr 11. The chamber judge later sent it to the Appellate Division.

Syed Amirul Islam, counsel for the petitioner, told journalists the military regime of Ershad had become illegal following the court order.

Ahmed's another lawyer S M Azim told reporters as the High Court in its verdict had asked Siddique to surrender before a judicial court, he appeared before a Chittagong court on Apr 4.

"Since then he [Ahmed] has been behind bars," he added.

Following Ahmed's petition challenging part of the HC judgement, the highest appeals court selected four senior lawyers as amici curiae to assist it in hearing the appeal.

Of them, Rafique-ul Haque, Mahmudul Islam and Mohammad Amir-Ul Islam gave their opinions to the court, but Ajmalul Hossain could not as he was abroad.

The High Court verdict said the military rule imposed by Ershad on Mar 24, 1982, all the military ordinances passed since then to Nov 11, 1986, chief military law administrator's orders, martial law order and directions were illegal.

It also had declared illegal the regimes of Khondker Moshtaq Ahmed, Abu Sa'adat Mohammad Sayem and Ziaur Rahman between Aug 15, 1975 and 1979.

The court, though, pardoned the activities of Ershad that may come under the verdict on the Fifth Amendment to avoid chaos.

It, however, let off those decisions that were taken in people's interest. The verdict added that, in the future, parliament can fix the punishment for the power usurpers.

The BNP-led coalition government had appealed for a stay order on the verdict, but the ruling Awami League-led government withdrew the appeal.

On Feb 2 last year, the Appellate Division also dismissed an appeal challenging the Aug 29, 2005 High Court verdict that had declared the Fifth Amendment illegal.