Monthly Archives: January 2008

E-Bangladesh

Posted on 31 January 2008 by E-Bangladesh

Bangladesh military tilts at windmills

[Update: Sunday, February 3.]

– Mehedi Hasan has been released, a WRC spokesperson confirmed:

… Mehedi Hasan was released Sunday afternoon, Dhaka time. We have confirmed it directly with Mehedi himself. We also understand that the pending charges against him have been dropped, this is what the police have told Mehedi’s lawyer. Documents confirming this have not yet been received, however. We hope to know more soon about the government’s official position on the case and their intentions going forward.

Mehedi Hasan

[Mashuqur Rahman, USA.]

The newspapers in Bangladesh fed us the party line. They declared that a “foreign body” had been provoking labor unrest in Bangladesh’s garment industry. Never mind that rising food prices and unpaid back wages have driven those who already live on the edge over the edge. The military government, faced with the fruits of its incompetence, has found the convenient foreign bogey man. The Daily Star tells us about this foreign hand:

Law enforcement agencies have confirmed that a foreign organisation and leaders of a section of garment workers were involved in provoking the recent unrest in garment factories in the city’s Mirpur area.

After investigation, an intelligence agency arrested Mehedi Hasan, Bangladesh representative of the Washington-based Workers Rights Consortium (WRC), at the Zia International Airport prior to his departure for Bangkok on January 24.

Court sources said Mehedi reportedly confessed to interrogators that he used to collect information about workers’ problems and send it by email to the WRC headquarters in Washington DC in the USA. He was also learnt to have disclosed that he incited garment workers to press for their demands and held several secret meetings with the leaders of a section of garment workers.

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bdg

Posted on 29 January 2008 by Dr. Bhaskar Dasgupta

Is money the only difference between journalists and bloggers?

[Dr. Bhaskar Dasgupta, UK.]

There is this issue which I keep on stumbling over and which seems to be agitating so many people who are in the publishing business. There seem to be two camps, the first camp is the journalist camp and the second seems to be the bloggers camp. And boyo, do these two camps fight or do they? They fight over who is right and who is wrong, who is going to survive and who is going to die. But for what it’s worth, here is my take on this rather interesting debate in one corner of the world.

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E-Bangladesh

Posted on 29 January 2008 by E-Bangladesh

VOIP, scapegoats and protection of grey operators

[An E-Bangladesh commentary.]

Bangladeshi investors were irked by the news that Grameen Phone, the largest cellular company in Bangladesh was fined another $25 million, twice in four month. Grameen Phone is scheduled to initiate a public offering in the capital market next June and the proposed stock offering will be the biggest ever in Bangladesh. However the investors’ hopes will probably be shattered as renewed charges were made that GP let an ISP operator AccessTel involved in illegal VoIP business.

From bdnews24.com:

GP, the country’s largest cell phone operator, and Malaysian mobile phone operator DiGi Telecommunications have been also accused of “conniving” with Bangladeshi internet service provider (ISP) AccessTel in the “punishable crime.” Norwegian state-owned telecoms heavyweight Telenor owns major stakes in both GP and DiGi.

Sub-inspector Manzur Ali Khan of Gulshan Police Station has confirmed that Zian Shah Kabir, assistant director of Legal and Licensing Division of Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission (BTRC), filed the case (No. 46) on Jan 16. The former GP officials accused in the case are CEOs Eric Aas and Ola Ree, Technical Director Thor Randhaug, Chief Technical Officer Yogesh Sanjeev Malik, and Sales and Marketing Director Mehboob Chowdhury.

This time they have sued employees of the organization which will have a huge impact among the foreign investors in the country. The telecom operators sell their telecom services to all providers. How can they be made 100% responsible for something illegal done with their service which they have little control of? Especially in this case BTRC is silent and is unable to do anything against the illegal (as per BTRC’s terms) operators who used the service. Its interesting they even implicated a foreign company and hope they have proper reason and evidence behind it otherwise it may lead to diplomatic issues between the countries.

The use of VOIP technology in Bangladesh’s telecom Sector was not new. BTTB has been using VOIP since 2003 through its 012 access code. BTRC has been allowing the BTTB to use VoIP calls without any license. However because of cheap setup costs and simple technology hundreds of private VOIP operators sprung up tapping a huge market.

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E-Bangladesh

Posted on 23 January 2008 by E-Bangladesh

Teachers freed, students still behind bars

[Update.]

  • Eight imprisoned students were released Wednesday, January 23.
  • [Photo/Banglar Chokh.]

    [Dhaka Correspondent, E-Bangladesh.]

    Three Dhaka University teachers charged with breaching the Emergency Powers Rules during the August 2007 campus protests were freed from jail Tuesday on a presidential clemency. No application was filed for the mercy. DUTA president Sadrul Amin, general secretary Anwar Hossain, Social Sciences dean Harun-or-Rashid, were released after the president suo moto remitted the sentences they were given hours before. Applied Physics and Electronics department chair, Neem Chandra Bhowmick, was released after being acquitted of the charges in two cases over the campus protests of August 21 and 22, 2007. Eleven students, one of whom is still detained in jail, were also acquitted of the charges. Eight students, detained in jail, however, were not released Tuesday although they were either acquitted of the charges along with the teachers or the cases they faced were supposed to be withdrawn.

    Dhaka University teachers and students have rejected the verdicts: one that jailed three teachers for two years Tuesday in a case concerning the protests of August 22, 2007 and one that jailed four students for two years Monday in a case concerning the protests of August 21. They vowed to continue with their protests until the withdrawal of all the cases filed across the country over the campus protests and subsequent flare-up and the unconditional release of all the students detained in this connection.

    Dhaka University teachers will hold a solidarity rally Wednesday on the campus. Students have called for a boycott of classes for an hour in all educational institutions across the country for Wednesday. Released teachers also rejected the verdicts and said they would continue with protests until the withdrawal of all related cases and unconditional release of the detained students. After their release, they told newsmen that they had told the jail authorities they would not come out of the jail leaving any of their students in jail. They came out of the jail after the authorities assured them that the students could not be released because of some administrative problems and they would be released by Wednesday.

    Education adviser, Hossain Zillur Rahman, at a news briefing Tuesday said, “Thirteen cases filed under the Emergency Powers Rules over the campus protests will be withdrawn. But the cases lodged in connection with violence will continue.” The police submitted the final report in the case lodged with the Shahbagh police on August 23, 2007 for the assault of army personnel and recommended relief of the seven detained students — Kazi Zahidul Islam Biplob, Manabendra Dev, Deen Islam Angel, Rafiqul Islam Sujan, Deen Islam, Asaduzzaman and Liton Mahmud — of the charge. Shahbagh police OC, Shahidul Islam, told newsmen that they had submitted the final report of the case to the CMM court and the court accepted the report and ordered the release of the students.

    The government Tuesday decided not to prosecute ten other cases related to the campus protests. The education adviser said the government already asked the public prosecutors concerned to take appropriate steps for the withdrawal of the cases. Cases to be withdrawn are Chittagong Hathazari police case filed against 10 on August 26, 2007, Sylhet Kotwali police case filed against a Shahjahalal University of Science and Technology student on August 24, Ashulia police case filed against four on August 21, Ashulia police case filed against 10 on August 21, Savar police case filed against two on August 23, Savar police case lodged against two on August 23, Dhaka Mirpur police case filed against four on August 22, Mirpur police case lodged against four on August 22, Dhaka Kotwali police case lodged against two Jagannath University students on August 22 and Mymensingh Kotwali police case lodged against 15 students on August 23.

    The government Monday asked public prosecutors concerned to withdraw three cases, one partially. Two cases to be withdrawn in full are the one lodged with the Shahbagh police in Dhaka on August 24, 2007 for vandalism on the campus and the other filed by the Rajshahi University authorities with the Motihar police on August 22, 2007 against 10 students for vandalism on the campus during the protests. The government decided not to prosecute 18 out of the 25 students named on the charge sheet in the case filed with the Shahbagh police on August 23 for setting fire to a military vehicle during the August 21 demonstrations at Shahbagh in Dhaka.

    According to the handout, released Monday, the government will continue with the prosecution of seven other students in the case — mass communications second-year student Deen Islam Angel, Muhsin Hall resident Rafiqul Islam Sujan, master’s student of mathematics Asaduzzaman, also resident of Ekushey Hall, Kazi Zahidul Islam Biplob, Deen Islam, Rashedul Habib and Abdul Hasan. Of them, Biplob, Angel, Deen Islam, Sujan, and Asaduzzaman are now detained in jail.

    Yet 39 more cases lodged with different police stations across the country, mostly in Dhaka, in connection with the campus protests are still pending and no decision on the withdrawal of the cases has yet been made. The education adviser said the cases filed on allegation of violence would continue.

    The August campus protests flared off the assault of some students by some army men at the university playground during a football match between two departments on August 20, 2007. Two teachers of the university, who went to the place to tackle the situation, were also assaulted by army men from the temporary camp housed at the gymnasium. Students then went out on demonstrations demanding withdrawal of the camp from the campus. The police then attacked the demonstrators in which a number of students and teachers, including then acting vice-chancellor, were injured. The protests flared up elsewhere, including major educational institutions in Dhaka and across the country.

    Police filed at least 53 cases against the students and four Dhaka University teachers. Many other cases were filed across the country in connection with the protests in other educational institutions and surroundings.

    A Rajshahi court on December 4, 2007 sentenced four Rajshahi University teachers — Professor Moloy Kumar Bhowmik of management, and Professor Selim Reza Newton, Professor Dulal Chandra Biswas and Professor Abdullah Al Mamun of mass communications — to two years’ rigorous imprisonment on charge of violating the Emergency Powers Rule. The speedy trial tribunal in Rajshahi on December 12, 2007 jailed ten Rajshahi University students and an employee for three years each in the case of setting a military vehicle on fire during campus protests. The Rajshahi University teachers were released from jail on December 10, 2007 and the ten students and an employee on January 21 on a presidential clemency although none of them sought for the mercy.

    A Dhaka court Monday jailed four Dhaka University students for two years each and acquitted four teachers and 11 students of the charges in the case relating to August 21 campus protests. The president the same day remitted their sentences.

    The Dhaka speedy trial court judge, Golam Rabbani, Tuesday convicted the three Dhaka University teachers for two years each and acquitted all the 15 students of the charges in the case concerning the August 22 campus protests against the 19. The convicted teachers, who were acquitted of the charges in a case day before rejected the verdict saying that their acquittal had proved that the case was not based on evidences and the four students should not have been sentenced.

    E-Bangladesh

    Posted on 22 January 2008 by E-Bangladesh

    A message from Anwar Hossain

    [Update 1.]

    – Thousands of Dhaka University students have come out on the streets. Peaceful protest has brought the campus to halt, E-Bangladesh correspondents on the ground report.

    – Unconfirmed reports from sources close to the Bangladesh Home Ministry: Convicted teachers will get presidential pardon in the evening. Related file is now on the desk of President Iajuddin Ahmed for his signature.

    [Prisoners of Conscience]

    [Professors Sadrul Amin, Anwar Hossain, Harun-or-Rashid.]

    [An E-Bangladesh report.]

    BDNEWS24 is reporting,

    Three DU teachers jailed for two years, one acquitted

    A Dhaka court Tuesday sentenced three Dhaka University teachers to two years’ imprisonment. One DU teacher and 15 students were cleared of the charges. The convicted teachers are Dhaka University Teachers Association president Professor Sadrul Amin, general secretary Professor Anwar Hossain and social sciences faculty dean Professor Harun-or-Rashid. The court acquitted applied physics and electronics department chairman Professor Nimchandra Bhowmik.

    After the verdict, Prof Anwar Hossain told reporters that the judgement went against the “conscience of the nation.” Additional chief metropolitan magistrate M Golam Rabbani took only one minute to read out the summary of the 36-page verdict. The four teachers of Dhaka University were taken to court at 10:40 AM amid tight security.

    Prof Akhteruzzaman, former general secretary of DUTA, said: “Everything was stage-managed. Our protests will continue.” In an instant reaction, defence counsel Adv Masud Talukder, said: “It’s a mysterious judgement. There were no lawyers for the state in court.” Additional public prosecutor Kabir Hossain said: “The teachers had violated emergency rule. In the trial procedure, there was no intervention by the government as the judiciary is free.”

    E-Bangladesh has received an email from Sanjeeb Hossain, son of Professor Anwar Hossain, Prisoner of Conscience at the hands of the military government in Bangladesh. Sanjeeb Hossain carries a message that his father wants the world to know.

    In 1976, Brigadier Yusuf Haider, Chairman of the Special Tribunal that tried Colonel Taher and others failed to come out of the evil axis of the DGFI. Colonel Taher in his historic testimony pointed this out by saying that the verdict of the case was already decided and people like Yusuf Haider were merely pawns following others orders.

    It is shame that history has repeated itself again in 2008. The Judge Golam Rabbani failed to come out of DGFI’s evil axis. And yet again, this was pointed out by my father in his historic court testimony. He stated that the verdict of the case was already written from the DGFI headquarters. What a shame for this country.

    My father has told me to convey the following message to everyone:

    “This verdict is not directed against the teachers… it is directed against the Dhaka University as an institution… it is directed against the conscience of our country… I will not come out of jail unless and until all students of the Dhaka University are released from prison. Come what may.”

    [Developing story.]