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8/14/2011


MANIKGANJ CRASH
Primary probe blames drivers


A committee investigating the road accident in Manikganj has initially blamed the 'unskilled' drivers for Saturday's head-on collision that killed five people including filmmaker Tareque Masud and ATN News chief editor Ashfaque (Mishuk) Munier.

"There is a turn near the (accident site). The bus running over the speed limit had been on the right side of the road when it hit the microbus [carrying the victims]," committee chief Arifur Rahman told reporters on Sunday.

"The microbus was also overly speedy. It was running through the middle of the road to overtake another bus," he said.

The Deluxe Paribahan bus was on its way from Dhaka to Chuadanga while the microbus was coming from Manikganj.

Rahman, supervising engineer (Dhaka circle) of the Roads and Highways Department (RHD), is heading the three-member committee.

The team spoke to journalists, witnesses and local residents during its one-hour visit to the scene at Jokha near Ghior in Manikganj.

Ghior police sub-inspector Mohammad Lutfar Rahman filed a case over the accident on Saturday night.

The other deceased in the accident are microbus driver 'Mustafiz', Masud's production manager 'Wasim' and staff 'Kajal'.

Masud's wife Catherine, artist Dhali Al Mamun and his wife Dilara Begum Joly, Masud's production unit assistant Sayeedul Islam were also injured in the accident.

Doctors at Square Hospital said Catherine was out of danger but Mamun, who was critically injured, would take at least weeks to become stable.

5/30/2011

Missions could be more alert: Faruk

Missions could be more alert: Faruk

The parliamentary standing committee on foreign affairs feels the country's missions in the Middle East and North Africa region should have been more alert ahead of the people's upsurge in the 'Arab Spring'.

"That would have helped our government evacuate the large Bangladeshi population residing in the Middle East-North Africa region in good time, but that did not happen," said Mostafa Faruk Mohammad, Awami League lawmaker and senior member of the parliamentary standing committee, on Monday.

"Our people got caught up in the uprisings and the conflict that followed," Mostafa Faruk added.

He is a former High Commissioner to many countries including India.

"Had our missions in that region been more vigilant, we could have planned evacuation strategies well in advance. But the foreign ministry did not have any advance reports from its missions about the public anger building up or the uprisings that followed," Faruk said.

The committee wants the diplomats to be "more vigilant and closely observant" in countries where large Bangladeshi communities have emerged following sustained migration, he told a group of visiting journalists at parliament building in the morning.

He said Bangladesh was considering labour exports to African nations where they can work as sharecroppers for big landowners on a 50-50 crop-sharing.

"That will help these nations tide over food shortages and our people will have a gainful livelihood," Mostafa Faruk said.

In the 1980s, the northeast Indian state of Assam was rocked by a violent nativist movement that led to large-scale killings of mostly settlers of East Bengali origin.

The leaders of that campaign later assumed power by winning an election on the anti-migration plank.

When his attention was drawn to illegal migration of Bangladeshis to other countries in Middle East and Southeast Asia, in which innocent poor people were duped by agents and then heavily harassed by host countries, Mostafa Faruk said these problems will remain "until the world became a global village and people the world over became more
tolerant."

The MP said when host countries apprehend illegal Bangladesh migrants, they should be treated in a humanitarian manner.

"They can be held at decently run camps and allowed consular access but if they are employable and there is a demand for labour, they should be given valid papers and employment.

"They should not be penalised because they have already been fleeced by dubious agents," Mostafa Faruk said.

He argued that Bangladeshis were trying to go to countries where there is a demand for labour and they know that from kins and fellow villagers who have gone before them.

Thailand has been particularly harsh on Bangladeshi, rather Rohingya migrants who have been seized and put on their boats on high seas, after the engines are taken off.

5/27/2011

Hillary arrives in Pakistan amid tense ties

Hillary arrives in Pakistan amid tense ties

 Secretary of State Hillary Clinton arrived in Islamabad on Friday in a surprise visit amid frayed relations with the US nuclear-armed ally after the death of Osama bin Laden.

The discovery of the al Qaeda leader in a garrison town just 50 km (30 miles) away from the capital Islamabad raised fresh doubts about Pakistan being a reliable partner in the US-led war on Islamist militancy.

The Pakistan government welcomed the death of the al Qaeda leader but has criticised the US secret mission in Abbottabad, where bin Laden lived for years, as a breach of its sovereignty.

Many US lawmakers, skeptical that Pakistani officials did not know of bin Laden's presence, want to cut US aid to Pakistan, which the White House views as vital to counter-terrorism and to hopes of stabilising neighboring Afghanistan.

In a sign of deepening distrust, Pakistan has told the United States to halve the number of military trainers stationed in the country.

But just a day before coming to Pakistan, Clinton said working with Pakistan was a strategic necessity for the United States, even as she pressed Islamabad to act more decisively to counter-terrorism.

She praised Pakistan as a "good partner" in global efforts to fight terrorism, though she acknowledged that the two countries have disagreed on how hard to fight al Qaeda, Afghan Taliban fighters and other militants.

"We do have a set of expectations that we are looking for the Pakistani government to meet but I want to underscore, in conclusion, that it is not as though they have been on the sidelines," she told a news conference in Paris on Thursday.

"They have been actively engaged in their own bitter fight with these terrorist extremists."

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.