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Monday, October 31, 2011

I�m my win safe: Shamim

Ruling party supported mayoral candidate AKM Shamim Osman expressed its firm confidence in the polls to win.

?I am one hundred percent sure that I win the election battle, ? Shamim Sun daily said Saturday.

He claimed that the majority of people in the city loved him and wanted to, that it to be the Mayor.

Shamim Osman, who was the legislator Narayanganj-3 constituency from 1996 to 2001, said that most of the development work in Narayanganj during his term as MP took place.

Shamim Osman, a member of the most influential Narayanganj, became a symbol in the race with ?wall Clock? elections.

He is the former Secretary General of the Department city Awami League.


Source: daily-sun.com


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BNP moves N�ganj race

Ansar members take electronic voting machines (EVMs) of Shaheed Zia Hall of different polling stations on Saturday about the much-touted Virgin Narayanganj City Corporation election. (Small photo) Rab members check vehicles for security reasons. all eyes are fixed on Narayanganj City Corporation that goes polls today amid high tension on her maiden voyage as BNP finishes supported opposition candidate after cooperation deploy army due to the Government?s the failure of the election of Commission?s.

Bangladesh nationalist party known in the early morning hours of today, that their candidate Mayor Taimur Alam Khandker withdrew it from the election campaign, one of the three leaders in the polls.

?The decision, resulting from the surveys race is fallen, because staff of the army not free and fair vote, ? BNP Deputy Abdullah Al-Noman told reporters in BNP Chairperson?s Gulshan Office provided.

Two other formidable candidate is ? ruling of Awami League backed AKM Shamim Osman and a seemingly dissident, Narayanganj municipality Mayor Dr. Selina Hayat Ivy ? now are vying for the first mayor of the NCC after its establishment in June of this year.

A total 403.189 voters of ? 203.344 men and women are 200.845 in the ? entitled practice their right to vote in 163 retrieve centers choose their elected candidates according to the Commission.

The query is expected from 20: 00 to 16: 00 without break place.

A holiday is declared Narayanganj today. The campaign for votes in the city ended on Friday midnight.

NCC survey is the last for the current election Commission, which under the leadership of Chief Election Commissioner Dr ATM Shamsul Huda, the Office during the army-backed transitional Government approved and oversaw the parliamentary 2008 surveys.

EC-some 600-700-media creating and 200 poll observers, including the foreigners who crowded city on the polls, said public relations Asaduzzam Arzu.

Three other mayoral candidates are Bangladesh Shashantantra to Dolan of based Atikur Rahman Nannu MUNSHI, Atikul Islam Jibon and Mohammad Sharif.

Total 56 reserved (women) member of the candidate is the election to nine posts competition, while 250 General City Council are competing candidates for 27 posts.

The Election Commission has meanwhile completed the preparation of and were all elections brought materials including 450 electronic voting machines for the same number of polling booths and 58 additional machines, conduct the surveys in the city.

The survey materials were distributed from Shaheed Zia Hall of Town?s Chashara area and at the polling centres on Saturday.

Organiser Biswas Lutfur Rahman told reporters, ?100 percent preparation has been done. The law enforcement authorities continue to ? their patrol to safety of voters.

?Army staff not placed, but some 8500 security men, including police, rapid action battalion (RAB), coast guards and Ansar member provides security, ? he added.

Strict measures against offenders be taken during the polling, Biswas Lutfur warned.

Electronic voting Club (EVM) will be used in the polls despite opposition from two candidate countries ? Taimur Alam Khandkar and Dr. Selina Hayat Ivy.

Use of EVM in one or two query based demanded the two candidates.

The duo claimed that EVM floodgate of electoral fraud to open AL-backed candidate Shamim Osman.

EVM is used (ku) 27 boroughs in nine departments of City?s.

1, 48.629 Voters are caste their vote over 450 Ward EVMs in 58 centres for the retrieve, No 7, 8, 9, 16, 17, 18, 22, 23 and 24.

The Commission has already used choice in the June 2010 EVM in a district of Chittagong City Corporation on an experimental basis.

The Commission has a plan for the introduction of EVM in the next general election with strong opposition from the main opposition BNP.

Centres poling of 163 were 131 by the Commission as listed per the allegations of various candidates as endangered.

Furthermore, polling installs CCTV in 20 centres to monitor the polling.

163 Presiding officials, 1217 Deputy Chairman officers and 2434 surveys are set with the elections.

Three liaison officers have in three ? of the Narayanganj SADAR Thana, Bandar Kadam Rasul and Siddhirganj ? as coordinators be laid.

The Commission has 36 judges including nine judicial prosecutors for the mobile courts lead to curb poll violence and anomalies.

Twenty-two security men, including six members of the police are each to protect call center and vulnerable centre ensures safety in each of 26 security guards.

Some 8,500 police officers, including 1400 Rab members, will be more than 400 policemen and 2,500 Ansars on the day of the election have been set.

In a press conference at the Chashara Shaheed Minar commanding officer from Rab-11 Col Mostafa Kamal said, ?A - total 1400 Rab staff be set on election day. Voters have no reason to fear. Rab members will play ? a neutral role..

Police and RAB have installed check posts at different strategic points of the city.


Source: daily-sun.com


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Pirates rob 50 trawlers, kidnap 75 Fischer

Server is temporarily unavailable

United news of Bangladesh. Barguna

Pirates committed robbery in over 85 fishing trawlers and abducted 75 Fiord along with 10 trawlers in the Bay off Barguna and Bagerhat coasts early Tuesday and Wednesday.

Patharghata shortly Matsyajibi Samity leaders, quoting the victims who returned to Patharghata escaping from the captivity of the pirates, said members of infamous pirates' gang 'Raju Bahini' attacked 25 trawlers which, 15 kilometres south of fairway Boya in Patharghata.

The bandits looted money, fish, fishing nets, mobile phone sets, radio and other valuables at gun point and left the area abducting 75 fishermen for ransom along with 10 fishing trawlers early Tuesday.

In a separate incident, pirates swooped on 50 fishing trawlers which were fishing near coasts of Bedarhali and Nishan Baria areas of Rayenda upazila in Bagerhat on Wednesday night and committed robbery in the trawlers.

They also kidnapped several Fiord at gun point from the trawlers.

Barguna trawlers Workers Union President Abdul Mannan Majhi said pirates of Raju, Motaleb and Al Amin 'bahini' committed robbery in over 85 trawlers from early Tuesday to early Wednesday and kidnapped 75 fishermen and took them along with 10 fishing trawlers to their hideouts for ransom.


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| Source: newagebd.com

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Sunday, October 30, 2011

High transit fees will put off Indians

New Delhi will accept the fees Dhaka fixes for providing transit but Indian businessmen may feel discouraged if the rate is too high, said outgoing Indian High Commi-ssioner Rajeet Mitter on Friday.

He also told a select group of journalists that the agreement on sharing Teesta waters should be fair, equitable and acceptable to all stakeholders in the two countries.


?Progress in India cannot be separated from progress in Bangladesh. The two neighbours must progress together,? Mitter said, reiterating the focus of Indian foreign policy on Bangladesh.


The career diplomat, who is set to retire on completion of his Dhaka assignment since December 2009, appreciated the role of Awami League government in bringing a thaw in Indo-Bangladesh relations in the past two years but insisted that the relations must continue beyond any regime.


Dwelling on the contentious issue of transit, Mitter pointed out that nothing would be sustainable unless it is beneficial to both the parties.


?India will be benefited from connectivity and new business opportunities like transport services will also open for Bangladesh,? he said, adding that northeast India would remain a hinterland of Bangladesh.


The high commissioner emphasised that Bangladesh?s unique geographical location has made it the focal point of transit to neighbouring countries including Bhutan, Nepal and China.


?We are ready to pay transit fees and we are already paying for water transit. As it is the businessmen who will use the facilities at the end of the day, I think the rate should not be too high and its structure should be consistent,? he said.


The diplomat explained that the water transit remained operational in line with inland water trade and transit protocol of 1972 and that the recent shipment of Indian consignments through Ashuganj in Bangladesh was an addition to the earlier deal.


Asked about the barriers to a possible deal on Teesta water sharing, Mitter said there are a number of factors and the two governments are trying to sort them out before signing an agreement which should be ?fair, equitable and acceptable to all stakeholders?.


He declined to comment on Paschimbanga Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee?s comments on the confusions reported by the press centring her role in Teesta talks.


But he said the issue should not overshadow the progress made during Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh?s recent visit to Dhaka.


The high commissioner mentioned that Bangladesh?s exports to India increased 68 percent in the past financial year and it would grow further after Manmohan?s announcement allowing duty-free access of goods from Bangladesh to the Indian market.


Asked if Delhi would seek extradition of insurgent leader Anup Chetia, who is now in custody of Bangladesh government, Mitter did not go into individual case but said the two countries joined hands in combating terrorism along the border and such efforts would continue.


In his last appearance before the Bangladesh media, the high commissioner touched on a wide range of bilateral issues from cooperation in power trade to progress in India?s $1 billion credit line for Bangladesh, to scholarship for Bangladeshi students and exchange of programmes in cultural arena.


Asked how he tackled the nightmarish situation after Manmohan Singh?s statement that 25 percent Bangladeshis are anti-Indians, Mitter remained evasive, saying the issue is over.


?India and Bangladesh must work together,? he said, appreciating the generosity and warm hospitality and beauty of rural Bangladesh as Sonar Bangla.


Source: daily-sun.com


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Hasina flays Khaleda for backing war criminals

 Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina on Friday said it is unfortunate that opposition leader Khaleda Zia ?stands against the trial of the war criminals.?

?In line with the aspiration of the mass people, process is underway to try the war criminals of the Liberation War. But unfortunately, our opposition leader has opposed the trial. Not only this, she is trying to protect the war criminals by launching movement,? she said.


Hasina made the remarks to Bangladeshi media personnel after paying tributes to the memory of WAS Ouderland, the lone foreigner-recipient of gallantry award Bir Pratik for his historic contribution as a freedom fighter during the 1971 War of Liberation.


Hasina placed a wreath at Ouderland?s memorial and stood in solemn silence for a while to show respect.


Ouderland, a Dutch citizen, was posted as the CEO of Bata operations in the


then East Pakistan on the eve of the liberation war. Brutal oppression and occupation of unarmed Bangladeshis by the Pakistani occupation forces reminded him of the similar brutalities perpetrated by the Nazis in occupied Europe.


He felt the acute need to make the world aware of the extent of genocide. As he was able to move freely as a foreigner, Ouderland took photographs of the atrocities committed by the Pakistani army and their local agents, and then passed the photographs to the world press.


As the war progressed, Ouderland who had fought in the World War II as a Sergeant in the Dutch Royal Signals Corps, secretly began to train and assist local youths around the Tongi industrial area to acquire the skill of guerrilla resistance.


Ouderland lived in Bangladesh till 1978 before he was transferred to Australia. He later settled in Australia and died after prolonged illness at the age of 84 and laid to eternal rest in Perth.


The prime minister said none can stop the government from trying the war criminals.


?Trial of the war criminals is the demand of the people including the youths. The war criminals would certainly be tried,?? she said.


?Until the war criminals are tried, peace won?t be established and stability won?t come to Bangladesh,? she added.


Replying to a question about dilly-dally in trying the war criminals, Hasina said the criminals would surely be tried.


She said: ?We came to power in 1996 after 21 years. The war criminals and their patrons had been in power since the killing of Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman on August 15, 1975. Trial process has started and the war criminals would be tried.?


The Prime Minister recalled the great contribution of Ouderland to Bangladesh?s independence. ?The way a foreign national had fought for the liberation of our motherland is a great event to know by the young generation of Bangladesh,? she said. ?UNB


Source: daily-sun.com


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Flurry of pledges mark last minute campaign

Flurry of pledges mark last minute campaign? M Syfullah, Masum Molla and Maksud Joarder from NarayanganjA flurry of pledges by the mayoral candidates dominated the last-minute campaign on Friday for wooing votes in the election to the newly formed Narayanganj City Corporation.

The last day campaign was also marked by allegations and


counter-allegations by the mayoral hopefuls, particularly the three frontrunners ? Shamim Osman, Selina Hayat Ivy and Taimur Alam Khandkar.


The promises the mayoral candidates made are to improve road condition, ease water logging and traffic congestion, check pollution of Shitalakhaya River water, ensure smooth power supply, improve law and order situation and provide better civic amenities.


All the candidates passed busy hours with door-to-door visit to different areas of the city as the 20-day poll campaign will end at midnight last night on the eve of the election.


The city has worn a festive look with a large number of posters and banners enveloping the whole city and campaigners seeking votes for their respective candidates.


Ruling Awami League-backed Shamim Osman, former mayor of the now-defunct Narayanganj municipality Selina Hayat Ivy and BNP-supported Taimur Alam visited different places and begged people for votes.


Shamim, also a former AL lawmaker, visited different places including Adamjee Bihari Camp, Charshimul Para and Burma Stand in Siddhirganj and Jalkuri area of the city for poll campaign.


Ivy conducted poll campaign in different areas of the city and sought votes. While visiting the city?s Khanpur area, she alleged that a candidate has created panic among the people as part of his ill-motive.


Taimur, also president of the BNP district unit, made door-to-door visit in Matdair Bazar, Kunripar, Galachipam Bangabandhu Road, Kasibazar and DIT mosque for seeking votes.


In the morning, Taimur met returning officer Biswas Lutfur Rahman and expressed grave concern over canceling the decision to deploy army for the city corporation election.


Many voters while talking to daily sun said they would cast their votes for the candidate who they think will address their sufferings.


They wanted to get respite from water logging, traffic congestion, nagging power and gas crises, worsening law and order, dilapidated road condition and steps to check pollution of the Shitalkhaya water.


The voters? demand include a park, university and a better link between Narayanganj city and the capital.


Shamim promised voters that he would turn Narayangaj into a ?sky-city? and take steps to end water logging, traffic jam, check pollution of Shitalakya water and improve communication with the capital.


He also promised to set up a public university, a medical university, an amusement park and a central effluent treatment plant in the city.


?If elected as a mayor, I will work to remove water logging and traffic congestion, set up a public university, a public medical college and a parkl,? Shamim said.


?I will also introduce private train service under public-private partnership (PPP),? he added.


His two rivals Taimur Alam and Selina Hayat Ivy also made similar promises during the 20-day polls campaign.


Taimur Alam Khandkar said, ?Residents of the city are suffering a lot for nagging power and gas crisis. Poor condition of the road between Dhaka and Narayanganj is poor.?


?I want to serve my people and remove all sorts of problems they are facing,? Taimur added.


Ivy during her poll campaign said if elected, she will take all necessary steps to upgrade Narayanganj to a modern city.


Ivy and Taimur alleged that Shamim created panic among the voters to serve his ill-motive so that he may bring the poll results in his favour by manipulating the election.


They also alleged that Shamim distributed black money during the poll campaign to influence voters but the Election Commission failed to take action in this regard.


Both the candidates also criticized the Election Commission for not taking prompt action against violation of poll code by Shamim.


Meanwhile, Shamim Osman brought allegation of use of black money against Taimur.


The former AL lawmaker said workers of Ivy and Taimur at a meeting hatched a conspiracy against him to spread a rumour that that he distributed black money among voters.


Source: daily-sun.com


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Saturday, October 29, 2011

Gaddafi vows fight as rebels celebrate takeover

imageRebels gather connection in Tripoli on Wednesday to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi Bab al-Aziziya, forces when fighting is raging in the area a day after it was captured opposition with loyalist troops a chase and the strongman with, that he went wa

Agence France-Presse. Tripoli

Fighting raged Wednesday as Muammar al-Gaddafi again when his composite Tripoli a day fought troops after he was captured and one rebel reward of $1.7 million for the difficult strongman alive or dead.

In the meantime were international backers of the rebels move to release billions of dollars in frozen assets for them.

Thick smoke hung over the Bab al-Aziziya complex, where the rebels and Gaddafi forces heavy machine guns fought in the afternoon with small arms, rocket propelled grenades and mortars, said an AFP reporter.

Fighting continued on Abu-slim close, where Loyalists were to attack, in contrast to Tuesday fight to Bab al-Aziziya when they fled as the rebels violated the gates.

Rebel commanders said, however, that they were determined, the loyalist troops area push out houses the Rixos Hotel.

Many streets were empty, with commanders, who say that dozens of Pro-Gaddafi had taken up sniper positions.

"There are snipers on and around the perimeter of the Bab al-Aziziya;" There are dozens of them, but we do not know where they are,' a rebel chief said Nuri Mohammed.

Thought two powerful blasts which rocked by an air attack the capital early Wednesday as a NATO-warp-Gasse flew overhead.

A military rebel spokesman in an interview with Al-Jazeera TV said "Libyan territory is 90-95 percent under the control of the rebellion."

Colonel Abdullah Abu AFRA said, 'The case of the Bab al-Aziziyah the end of the Gaddafi regime in Tripoli and Libya marks.'

The fate of Gaddafi and his family a secret, but the former Colonel remains a message in which he said that his resignation from the Bab al-Aziziya is a tactical retreat.

Rebels said that she had found no trace of Gaddafi, when she swarmed through his marriage on Tuesday.

In a speech, carried out the early Wednesday from the site of a TV station, which under the leadership of his son Seif al-Islam, he said Gaddafi his composite 'tactical retreat' abandoned after it was destroyed by NATO planes.

"Bab al-Aziziya was nothing more than a pile of rubble after it was the target of 64 NATO missiles, and we moved for tactical reasons," he said.

In a later audio message in the Syria-based Arrai Oruba television boasted Gaddafi that he on the streets of Tripoli had taken over, without is recognized.

' I went incognito, without having someone to see me, and I saw young people ready to defend their city ' he said without specifying when he did his tour.

He also called for "The people who go tribes, older people in the streets... and cleaning of Tripoli of rats" - on the rebels.

Where it has like, be the rebel Transitional National Council want him dead or alive, and a price of $1.7 million (EUR 1.2 million) on the head.

"The NTC supports the initiative of business people, dead or alive, offering 2 million dinars for the capture of Muammar al-Gaddafi,", said NTC Chief Mustafa Abdel Jalil in Benghazi.

Abdel Jalil also Amnesty offered "members (Gaddafi) close circle, which kill or catch it."

Gaddafi spokesman Mussa Ibrahim said Arrai Oruba more than 6,500 'voluntary' arrived in Tripoli for the regime had to fight and more called for.

Insurgents, nervous but jubelnden and armed with assault rifles, the streets of the capital combed Wednesday for remains of the regime.

"We are the Champions." We have for 42 years was die and now we are to live, "said Sharif Sohail, 34-year-old dentist, the arms of the city center."

Rebels, who the Tripoli airport on Sunday secured, it said the way out of town, fighter, with snipers still attacked sporadically by Gaddafi and that a rocket a plane on the runway was damaged on Tuesday.

Airport Manager Arabi Mustafa said, that if would be security, the problems are solved and restored water and electricity, the airport reopened.

Elsewhere, Jawad said rebels who bin advancing Sirte Wednesday in the city blocked a stiff resistance an insurgent Commander as loyalists held.

After the capture of Ras Lanuf, 150 kilometres west of Sirte, were the rebels had up to Jawad bin advanced, but rebel commander Fawzi Bukatif of artillery fire, said.

' Forces are Gaddafi still struggling, we are surprised. We thought they would do with the fall of Tripoli, "Bukatif said in the nearby coast of the Zuwaytina."

"Perhaps is something or someone behind them,", he said, "maybe" add, if you asked whether he was referring to Gaddafi or his sons.

In other developments, the United Kingdom and France, said that they are blocked at the United Nations to the Libyan assets Security Council sanctions unfreezing work.

'We, in the United Nations and elsewhere are, pave the way for the fixation of assets, Diplomaticaly' the Foreign Secretary, William Hague, said in London, shortly after France confirmed it was trying to do a UN resolution.

A British official said that the resolution would include release of assets, to help rebels set up a Government and urgent humanitarian needs.

It came a day after the United States said that it release worked through the UN to $1.5 billion in frozen Libyan assets for the coffers rebels.

In Moscow, President Dmitry Medvedev said that the Libyan rebels would recognise Russia, if they ' country combine with the warning that Gaddafi, the Kremlin age of ally, continue to influence persisted.

"Despite the successes of the rebels of Gaddafi and his supporters have still have some influence and military potential." We want them to sit at the negotiating table and agreements on the future peace ' Medvedev said.


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| Source: newagebd.com

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C�wealth fights to preserve its relevance in new age

 Britain's Queen Elizabeth II (2nd L) is joined by Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina (L), Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard (2nd R) and Trinidad and Tobago Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar (R) for the official female heads of state photo at the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Perth on Friday. afp photoPerth: Queen Elizabeth II urged ?enduring results? from the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting Friday to keep it relevant as changes to succession rules for the British throne were approved.

Amid heavy security, the monarch officially opened the three-day summit Friday, saying she expected a ?meeting that promises to bring new vibrancy to the Commonwealth?.


?I wish heads of government well in agreeing to further reforms that respond boldly to the aspirations of today and that keep the Commonwealth fresh and fit for tomorrow,? she said.


Now 85, the queen said she had attended many such meetings that had looked to the future with a sense of vision and practical action.


?The results of this meeting may be global in impact or simply touch a single individual even imperceptibly. But in every respect I trust the results will be positive and enduring,? she said.


The queen is head of state in 16 Commonwealth nations and in an historic move leaders of those countries agreed to scrap ancient laws barring first-born daughters or anyone married to a Roman Catholic from inheriting the throne.


British Prime Minister David Cameron said the agreement, which will have to be formally approved by the affected nations, would sweep aside outdated rules that ?just don?t make sense to us any more?.


Cameron has the political support to make the changes in London but required the backing of the other Commonwealth realms, including Canada, Australia, New Zealand and smaller nations in the Caribbean and the Pacific.


The debate was intensified by the April wedding of William, the second in line to the throne. The changes mean that if he and wife Kate Middleton have a girl as their first born then she would one day be queen.


Composed mainly of former British colonies and embracing two billion citizens, the Commonwealth?s relevance in the 21st century will be a key focus for the summit.


Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard, the host, told the opening gathering that it was vital for the organisation to move with the times.


?The world has changed, and a wise institution changes too,? she said.


?So as the Commonwealth journeys towards its centenary, it is time for renewal.?


Most Commonwealth leaders are attending the summit, although Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh pulled out without giving a reason and New Zealand?s John Key is absent.


Commonwealth Secretary General Kamalesh Sharma said the meeting would consider a series of proposals, including establishing an independent commissioner to monitor human rights.


In one step that Sharma hailed as progress, the Commonwealth agreed on Friday to procedures that would allow the bloc to intervene or engage earlier with governments in danger of violating human rights and the rule of law.


Other issues set to be discussed are the laws in many Commonwealth countries that criminalise homosexual sex and the prevalence of forced marriages of young girls.


The summit is being held amid heavy security with the centre of Perth in virtual lockdown to deter potential terrorist threats and limit any protests by those wanting to emulate the global ?Occupy? movement.


About 1,500 people marched in solidarity with the Occupy movement against corporate greed and the growing rich-poor divide, but it passed off peacefully.


Police have been given special powers to deal with any protests and can search people at will and ban known activists from entering special zones. ?AFP


Source: daily-sun.com


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Army kept out of NCC polls

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota
A road in Kalibazar, Narayanganj, is awash with posters of different candidates. Campaigning for the maiden Narayanganj City Corporation election concluded at midnight ahead of polling on Sunday. syed zakir hosainElection Commission is yet to deploy army personnel in Narayanganj City Corporation elections much to the frustration of Awami League rebel candidate Dr Selina Hayat Ivy and BNP-backed Taimur Alam Khandkar.

Chief Election Commissioner ATM Shamshul Huda has already said the commission failed to deploy the army due to non-cooperation from the government.

Meanwhile, the main opposition BNP at an emergency press briefing on Friday demanded resignation of the election commissioners for their failure to deploy army in the polls.

The party even hinted at withdrawal of its candidate from the polls race.

?The government is hatching a conspiracy to ensure victory for AL-backed candidate Shamim Osman through vote rigging,? Abdullah Al Noman, vice-chairmen of BNP told reporters at the party?s Naya Paltan headquarters.

?The government didn?t pay heed to our request,? the CEC told waiting journalists at his secretariat in the city after an emergency meeting on Friday evening.

Four companies of the army were supposed to be posted in the election areas for five days from 6:00am on Friday to midnight of 1 November, according to the commission?s earlier decision.

Former Narayanganj municipality mayor Dr Selina Hayat Ivy and opposition BNP-backed Taimur Alam Khandkar expressed their deep concern over non-deployment of the army and feared vote rigging and even direct manipulation of election results.

They feared that the army had not been deployed only to help ruling AL-backed AKM Shamim Osman win the electoral race.

The commission, in a letter, requested the government to deploy the army during the polls. ?As the government has not yet replied, it is clear that army would not be deployed,? said Huda.

In her reaction to the EC?s announcement, Dr Selina Hayat Ivy told reporters at his residence that the army had not been deployed to rig the election.

?It is high time the EC took stern measures to prove its neutrality,? she said reminding the EC about its earlier assurance that it will deploy the army.

In view of the situation, the CEC told the media that the commission has two options now ? it can either suspend the elections or take help from other law enforcing agencies to hold the voting.

He, however, said that the commission would have to hold the NCC elections within 180 days as per law and that is why there is no alternative to holding the elections in due time.

He said they requested the director general of Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) to deploy at least 100 Rab personnel to keep order during the elections.

?But we still do not know if we will get additional Rab personnel,? Huda added.

When asked if the government violated the constitution by ignoring the EC demand, the CEC said as per the constitution ?it does mean so?.

The commission is supposed to receive from the government all necessary cooperation inclusive of deployment of members of different law enforcing agencies to ensure free, fair and impartial elections, he said.

He, however, still hopeful that people of Narayanganj could exercise their franchise as still a congenial atmosphere is prevailing in the city ahead of the elections.

Asked whether she would contest the poll in absence of the army, Ivy said: ?People will act as my ?army?. I will not leave the battlefield.?

Sammolita Nagorik Parishad, a platform of common people formed to back Ivy a few days ago, urged the government to deploy the army in the polls.

At a press briefing held at Ivy?s residence parishad member and president of the AL town unit Anwar Hossain said that they believe EC will take necessary steps to deploy army. If it fails to do so its role will be questioned.

In the evening, Taimur told daily sun, ?The government scrapped the decision of the army deployment as it wants to hold the election as per the government blueprint. But I won?t quit.?

In a press release Taimur asked the voters not to pay heed to rumour that he pulled himself out of the race.

?No one, except death, can pull me out of the poll race,? he said.

Earlier, Taimur called on Returning Officer Biswas Lutfar Rahman at 12.30pm and expressed his concern over non-deployment of army. ?Without the army a fair election is impossible,? Taimur told journalists emerging out of the returning officer?s room.

Talking to daily sun many voters said they feared poll violence and vote rigging without deployment of the army.

Meanwhile, Narayanganj unit of Jatiyatabadi Chhatra Dal (JCD) brought out a procession from Number- 2 Railgate area demanding immediate resignation of the chief election commissioner following its decision not to deploy the army but law enforcers dispersed the procession.


Source: daily-sun.com


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Thursday, October 27, 2011

Temperature probably fall

United States news of Bangladesh. Dhaka

Light to moderate rain or Thundershowers accompanied by temporary gusty winds is probably in most places, through the divisions of Barisal, Chittagong, Dhaka and Sylhet, and in many places on the Khulna, Rajshahi and Rangpur divisions until 18: 00 today.

Expected to moderately-severe, severe cases at locations across the country, said Meteorology Office in a forecast on Wednesday.

Daytime fall slightly over the country.

The Sun is in Dhaka today at 18: 23 and rises tomorrow at 05: 38.

The country recorded maximum temperature that 33.2 ° C, and on Wednesday in Khulna and the lowest 24.0 ° C, in Rangamati.


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| Source: newagebd.com

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279 dead in Turkey and counting

 Relatives of victims mourn near their house as rescuers search for survivors in a collapsed building after an earthquake in the Ercis province of Van, in eastern Turkey, on Monday. afp photoErcis: Rescuers scrambled through the rubble in a desperate search on Monday for survivors of an earthquake that killed at least 265 people in Turkey as residents fled the scenes of carnage.

People living in eastern Van province issued cries for help on Twitter, giving out the addresses of collapsed buildings and the number of people trapped under the debris, as hundreds of rescuers worked round the clock.


Two children were plucked alive from the wreckage of a collapsed building in the town of Ercis but it was a rare slice of good news in an otherwise grim task for the rescue teams.


Many students were believed to be buried in Ercis, the town which felt the full brunt of the quake, after a dormitory collapsed and several student houses crumbled.


A total of 265 people were confirmed to have been killed by the 7.2 magnitude earthquake which struck around lunchtime on Sunday, according to Idris Naim Sener, the country?s interior minister.


The government said that a total of 970 buildings had collapsed as a result of the quake and aftershocks.


One resident of Ercis recounted the moment when disaster struck and how many had been forced to sleep outside overnight in freezing temperatures.


?We couldn?t understand what was going on ? all of a sudden there was dust everywhere, our eyes were full of dust, and we were thrown against the walls and furniture. It lasted 20 seconds,? said 23-year-old Yunus Ozmen. ?We spent the night outside in the street and made a fire to keep warm.?


His neighbour Abdul Hadi Isik said that his aunt and her children were buried under the rubble.


?There is no hope left,? he added.


AFP journalists in Ercis reported that the rescue effort was being hampered by a lack of electricity and water.


Many of the town?s residents were fleeing the town while police and soldiers kept watching around crumbled buildings to prevent looting.


While scores of multi-storey buildings had collapsed, most single-storey houses remained intact.


?As the number of storeys increase, the performance of buildings decrease, combined with lack of quality in materials and construction skills,? Professor Ahmet Yakut told NTV.


In the province?s main city of Van, authorities shut down Yuzunci Yil University and sent more than 4,000 students back to their home towns, the Anatolia news agency said.


Some 200 inmates fled the province?s main prison when the building was damaged in the quake, media reports said, adding that 50 of them returned to prison later after seeing their families.


Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan rushed on Sunday to Van, a mainly Kurdish-populated region.


Turkey mobilised some 2,400 search and rescue teams from 45 cities as well as 108 ambulances, including sefven air ambulances to speed to the aid of the victims, the emergency unit of the prime ministry said.


A search and rescue team of around 650 people was working in Ercis, while another 300 people were in Van city center, Anatolia said.


The military said six battalions were also involved in search and rescue efforts.


Six helicopters, including four helicopter ambulances, as well as C-130 military cargo planes were dispatched to the area carrying tents, food and medicine.


Officials distributed water, biscuits and milk to Ercis survivors, who spent the night outside collapsed houses where many of their relatives remained trapped.


The Turkish Red Crescent sent some 7,500 tents, more than 22,000 blankets, almost 4,000 heaters and 1,000 body bags to the region, Anatolia said.


A mobile bakery and 21 mobile kitchens were also sent to Van, it added. Officials started to erect a tent city in Ercis stadium, the organisation said on its website.


US President Barack Obama said he had been following reports of the disaster ?with great concern? and offered his condolences and help to the victims.


The quake was also felt across the border in northwestern Iran, causing some panic in major cities, Iranian media reported. They did not report any deaths or serious damage.


Iran has sent 20 rescuers, 20 ambulances, a field hospital, food supplies and 50 tents for emergency shelter to Van, which lies just over the border with Iran,


In 1999, two strong quakes in northwest Turkey?s heavily populated and industrialised regions left some 20,000 dead. A powerful earthquake in the town of Caldiran in Van province killed 3,840 people in 1976. ?AFP


Source: daily-sun.com


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Bosses on the run but crime empires intact

Bosses on the run but crime empires intactExchanging criminals? lists is a ritual which serves little purpose? Sontosh MondolTop mafia bosses who fled to India during the army-backed caretaker government are running crime syndicates in Dhaka and elsewhere with the help of trusted lieutenants, say officials monitoring Bangladesh?s most wanted men.

As many as 56 out of 78 fugitives are based either in Kolkata or along the Indo-Bangladesh border from where they direct accomplices engaged in extortion, kidnapping and protection rackets.


The biggest operational tool in their hands is the humble cellphone. Without it they wouldn?t know what to do.


The crime bosses escaped to India when law enforces came down hard on them with the help of army soldiers during the caretaker regime before the Awami League-led government captured power.


Bangladesh and India have exchanged several lists of criminals hiding across the border. The last exchange took place in September during a top level Border Guard Bangladesh-Border Security Force conference in Dhaka.


But it?s business as usual with the two sides accusing one another of not giving priority to nabbing and deporting fugitives essential for busting well-oiled crime operations whose turnover runs into billions of Takas.


Intelligence sources said top Bangladeshi criminals are staying in Bongaon, Bohorampur, Helacha, Bagdah, Chagdah, Murshidabad, Jalpaiguri and Siliguri and other bordering areas of Paschimbanga and continue to commit crimes, including extortions, with the help of their cronies. Bandit king Shahid of Old Dhaka and Shahadat, Nabi Hossain and Subrata Bain who held sway over various parts of the capital escaped to India soon after combing operations were launched.


An official of the police headquarters said close accomplices of the fugitives, using Indian mobile phones, are engaged in collecting tolls from the rich, particularly businessmen.


They demand huge sums of money from rich people as toll and force them to pay sometimes at gunpoint, he added.


According to a Criminal Investigation Department (CID) source, six suspected criminals, accused of killing two DB men, are residing across the borderlines of Paschimbanga and in Nepal.


Of them, five ? Tanvirul Islam Joy, Haris Ahmed alias Haris, Molla Masud, Khorshed and Jishan ? are staying in Paschimbanga while the other, Trimurti Subrata Bain, is in Nepal.


According to the list, top criminals Tanvir Islam, Prokash Kumar Biswas and Molla Masud are hiding in India, Aminur Rasul Sagar alias Tokai Sagar in the USA and Imam Hossain in Canada.


Sources said Indian police handed over a total of five listed criminals of Bangladesh, including a close aide of notorious criminal Kala Jahangir, to CID.


They are Habibur Rahman Taj, 29, Ibrahim, 31, and Selim alias Lambu Selim, 35.


Police said Taj, second-in-command of Kala Jahangir, had been hiding in India under the alias ?Naimul Hasan? with Ibrahim and Selim under the aliases ?Sohel Ibrahim? and ?Biplob?.


Taj and Selim were arrested in Kolkata in March 2007 while Ibrahim in August on charges of illegal intrusion into India and were sent to jail.


Kolkata police planned to deport them to Bangladesh after their jail terms, but there is no extradition treaty between the two countries.


Home ministry sources said the criminals were later handed over to Bangladesh following a request from the authorities concerned.


Police sources said the arrestees are also infamous, although their names were not included in the list of 23 top criminals declared by the then government on December 27, 2001 in the wake of a slide in law and order.


A home ministry official said the list handed over to BSF comprised some top criminals and members of United People?s Democratic Front of the CHT region.


?Our list contained the names of those who are wanted by the law enforcement and intelligence agencies. It was prepared in association with the law enforcers,? the top official of police HQ added.


Sources said the BGB list comprised the names of 12 top criminals and 13 UPDF members while the BSF list included the leaders and activists of different separatist groups active in some Indian states.


Source: daily-sun.com


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New openings for Bangladeshis in post-Gaddafi Libya

New openings for Bangladeshis in post-Gaddafi LibyaReturnees too will get back jobs they abandoned? Rabiul IslamFresh job opportunities await Bangladeshis in Libya as the troubled country will require an army of workers for post-war reconstruction as soon as a democratic government starts functioning.

?We will be in a position to export a huge workforce to Libya after a new government is sworn in?, Expatriates? Welfare and Overseas Employment Minister Engineer Khandaker Mosharraf Hossain told daily sun on Monday.


Officials at the ministry added that Bangladeshi workers who were forced to return home from war-torn Libya are likely to get back their jobs in companies which they deserted fearing for their lives.


Libya?s transitional government declared the country liberated on Sunday three days after ousted despot Muammar Gaddafi was captured and killed.


Libya?s acting Prime Minister Mahmoud Jibril said elections will be held by June next year.


?We have details of all Libya returnees who will be sent back to their respective companies when the employers contact with us,? an official preferring anonymity told daily sun.


The official also said many of the Libya returnees will not require to follow any procedure for going to Libya as they returned home before expiry of their work permit.


Sources at the Bureau of Manpower Employment and Training (BMET), around 37,000 Bangladeshis escaped from Libya as violence escalated.


Earlier, the government declared that the Libya returnees would get priority in getting overseas jobs in future.


The expatriates? welfare minister said the Libya returnees will get priority in getting jobs abroad as they had to return home empty handed.


He also said many companies in Libya want to take back their employees.


But Bangladesh Association of International Recruiting Agencies (BAIRA) secretary general Ali Haidar Chowdhury warned that workers will have to wait before luck smiles at them again.


It will take at least five months to send Bangladeshi workers in the war-torn Libya after formation of new government there, he added.


Ali Haidar also hoped that Libya will need huge manpower for construction sector.


Following massive allegation of irregularities and mismanagement, Libya had stopped hiring workers from Bangladesh before the war started in the middle of February.


Bangladesh Overseas Employment and Services Limited (BOESL) managing director Mohammad Abdullah said some multi-national companies have already approached BOESL to recruit Bangladeshi workers for Libya.


?I have held talks with Thitti Sianwala, an owner of multi-national company, who wants to recruit 200 workers for a construction firm in Libya,? BOESL MD said.


Source: daily-sun.com


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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Come tap our liberal FDI policy, Hasina urges wealthy Germans

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota
Berlin: Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina on Monday sought German investment from both public and private sectors in pharmaceuticals, tourism, manufacturing, ICT, ceramics and renewable energy projects.

?There is also a huge potential for joint ventures in Bangladesh. We invite you to take advantage of the opportunities we have offered. We are eager to work in partnership with you for mutual gains and benefits,? she said at a seminar on trade and investment on the sidelines of the World Health Summit 2011 here.

Hasina has invited German entrepreneurs to cash in on investment opportunities in Bangladesh, declaring that her country has the most liberal foreign direct investment (FDI) regime in South Asia.

?Bangladesh allows the foreign investors for repatriation of hundred percent of their profits and equity. We are eager to work in partnership with you for mutual gains and benefits as we journey to the future,? she told a seminar on Monday.

Representatives of leading German companies including Macuanji GIZ, Commerce Bank, DHL, Ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development, Solar World AG, Federal Foreign Office of Germany and local parliament members attended the seminar on ?Bangladesh-Emerging Market? organised by German Bangladesh Chamber of Commerce at Hotel Adlon.

Hasina said, ?Come to Bangladesh and help us build ?Sonar Bangla? (Golden Bangladesh), a land of prosperous and happy people.?

She highlighted the business opportunities offered in Bangladesh for foreign investors and said Bangladesh has always relied on Germany as a trusted development and trading partner.

The two countries enjoy the best of relations based on shared values, she said.

German Ambassador to Bangladesh Hogler Michael gave the welcome speech while president of Bangladesh-German Chamber of Commerce and Industries (BGCCI) Saiful Islam made opening remarks.

Partner of McKinsey & Company Dr Achim Berg presented a case study report on readymade garments (RMG) industries while Chief Executive of PICARD Germany Thomas Picard spoke on leather industry investments in Bangladesh.

Deputy chief executive officer and MD of International Economic Affairs of German Chamber Federation (DIHK) Dr Volker Treiers, and president of Federation of Bangladesh Chamber of Commerce and Industry AK Azad, and Bangladesh Ambassador in Germany Mosud Mannan, spoke, among others, on the occasion.

The presentation was followed by a panel discussion in presence of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and moderated by editor of the Daily Star of Bangladesh Mahfuz Anam.

Touching upon Bangladesh?s economic success over the years, she said, ?Despite global economic downturn, the country during the present government?s tenure could maintain an average 6 percent GDP growth. Last year, the GDP growth was 6.7 percent.?

Bangladesh?s next Five-Year Plan (2011-2015) has been designed with the goal of achieving an average growth of around 8 percent, she said.

The Prime Minister also mentioned about export growth, increase of the remittance flow and said that Bangladesh in recent years has made vast advancement in manufacturing, infrastructure, human resource development, banking and corporate sectors.

?Our macroeconomic fundamentals are solid and we are socio-economically a stable country with a domestic market of 150 million people,? she said.

Referring to Bangladesh?s geographical location, Sheikh Hasina said the country bordering with India and close to China, Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar, and South East Asia, might be a natural regional hub at the heart of an economic area of three billion people.

She said the government has taken steps for corporate tax holidays, cutting import duty on machinery import, bureaucratic tangle and reducing company setting up times from several months to a day.

Moreover, our Board of Investment (BOI) which deals with the needs of foreign investors is a modern, friendly institution with a ?one stop shop? service, she said.

The Prime Minister chose the occasion to point out that presence of free press, independent judiciary and statutory bodies such as Election Commission, Human Rights Commission and Anti-Corruption Commission, have ensured good governance and the rule of law in Bangladesh.

In this regard, she mentioned about Bangladesh?s ranking by a number of international organisations including Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan, Standard & Poor?s, Moody, UNCTAD, and World Bank for its business and investment worthiness.

Hasina said Bangladesh government has also undertaken infrastructure projects on a massive scale and adopted the public- private-partnership (PPP) policy to facilitate building more robust infrastructures in a short timeframe.

Construction of some highways, Dhaka city monorail, improved rail network, and new power stations are underway, she said, adding that her government added 2200 megawatt power in two years, which shows Bangladesh?s rapid advancement in energy provisions.

She said contracts for 34 new power plants were awarded and by the end of 2013 there will be no more energy shortages in Bangladesh. ?UNB, BSS


Source: daily-sun.com


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Tk 6bn ADP cut likely to keep budget deficit within 5pc

Tk 6bn ADP cut likely to keep budget deficit within 5pcEnsure disbursement of WB fund, Muhith tells coordination council? Asif ShowkatThe fiscal coordination council on Monday asked the Economic Relation Division and other authorities to ensure disbursement of World Bank and other donors? funds with timely implementation of schemes, apart from the Padma Bridge project.

The decision was taken at the coordination council meeting at the Secretariat with Finance Minister AMA Muhith in the chair.


Besides, the officials of Planning Commission were informed that the government might slash the Annual Development Programme (ADP) to Tk 40 billion from existing Tk 46 billion to maintain five percent budget deficit as well as to reduce pressure on the budget.


Meeting sources informed that the finance minister had requested the Prime Minister?s Economic Affairs Adviser Dr Moshiur Rahman to coordinate the matter to ensure timely disbursement of funds for WB-aided projects.


The minister also said that due to suspension of fund for the Padma Bridge by WB, disbursement of funding for other development schemes aided by international lender will be hampered.


Meeting sources said Mashiur Rahman mentioned that the Ministry of Planning has already been informed that the ADP might be reduced by Tk 6 billion due to fall in disbursement of foreign assistance.


The finance minister also asked the authority of the Bangladesh Institution of Development Studies (BIDS) to conduct a study on the impact of recent inflation on common people?s life.


On a point-to-point basis, the overall inflation increased to 11.97 percent in September, 2011 from 11.29 percent a month ago, according to Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics.


Muhith also asked the Bangladesh Bank representative to prepare recommendations on an alternative to bank borrowing as the government has borrowed a large sum of money from the country?s internal sources. The central bank has warned of a ?crowding-out effect? on the private sector as the government borrowing from the banking system is on the rise.


The government borrowed Tk 9.5 billion fresh money from the central bank till 10 October and it will have an inflationary effect as soon as it lands in the market.


The meeting also urged the authorities concerned to concentrate on setting up coal-based power plants instead of furnace oil-based rental power plants as the second one is very expensive compared to the first one.


According to the central bank?s letter of credit (LC) settlement statistics, import of petroleum surged by 151 percent in the July-August period of the current fiscal year compared to that of the same period of last year.


The government will import 940,000 tonnes of petroleum products at a cost of Tk 66.07 billion mainly to meet the rising demand of diesel and furnace oil-based power plants.


The cost of per barrel furnace stands at US$650 on an average in the international market at present.


The finance minister further asked the Bangladesh Bank to conduct a thorough study on the shortfall of the country?s exports in September.


Export Promotion Bureau (EPB) will also prepare a paper on exporters? incentive and quest for new export markets, meeting sources said.


Exports grew 2.29 percent in September ? the lowest in nine months this year ? due to a financial crisis in Europe and its impact on the local business.


Forex earnings in the month were $1.44 billion, according to the latest data provided by the EPB last week.


Moshiur Rahman, Bangladesh Bank Governor Atiur Rahman and Finance Secretary Mohammad Tareq attended the meeting.


Source: daily-sun.com


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Himalayan climate change alerts Bhutan

Agence France-Presse. Thimphu

Bhutan Prime Minister has a grim warning about the effects of climate change say the Himalayas, that it the small Kingdom of ambitious plans to a world leader in the use of water power could wreck.

Between India and China isolated, mountainous nation is famous for "Happiness" for its citizens instead of Orthodox economic growth, to pursue environmental protection for its development model.

Bhutan, 700,000 people, is already a carbon neutral electricity producers, with almost all its power plants, energy from the overlapping streams criss-cross of its spectacular landscape.

But the Prime Minister, Jigmi Thinley, said that the country was powerless against the changes by shifting weather patterns threaten regional water supply and planning, the energy of melting of Himalayan Snow.

' The glaciers are very fast retreat, some even disappear. The flow of water in our system is very worrying, "he said in an interview in his Office in the capital Thimphu." use fluctuating

' In the summer they their banks in a way that will never happen that in the past and in winter the last straw, they shrink and almost dry up.

"The climate change, global warming is real and the impact on our hydrology is very difficult."

The meltwater caused by warmer summer also to the creation of lakes, which led high in the mountains, to threaten the people in the valleys below.

The Government builds early warning system to alert authorities to potential breaches of the natural dams that hold back the water.

1994 Lake Lugge in the Northern Bhutan burst and killed 21 people.

A team of 200 to 300 workers and engineers in the same area, the largest glacier lake in the country are currently working to reduce district Thorthormi Lunana.

Workers, one during the summer months, when it is possible to work in the field of icy and inhospitable, digging drainage canal, which reduced the lake level from five metres.

The equipment for the task had, with the air too thin with helicopters carried out. To obtain on the spot on foot had to pass everyone a 5,000-meter peak.

"It Spades and shovels, is literally," said the Secretary of the gross national happiness Commission, a governmental agency, the vets Karma Tshiteem, and suggests the policy reviewed the work recently.

"This is that climate change is not some theoretical thing, still discusses a strong example,." We are opposite and mitigation efforts, have to do ' in an interview, he told AFP.

The shift can endanger ambitious hydroelectric power plans to capacity from a current high of about 1,500 megawatts for four plants, 10,000 seven-part MW by adding an another 10 projects by 2020.

Through the sale of electricity energy-starved neighbors India, hoped the aid-dependent country economically until 2018 self-sufficiency.

But Thinley said the Government had to rethink that a limitless source of energy and income would be rivers the adoption. The total for hydropower in Bhutan is estimated at 30,000 had MW.

"Water power not the kind of exponential source, the we it as it can,", he said.

"The River in the winter and summer used to, the change was not so much." Now it is so much so that in winter, we import electricity from India. "


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| Source: newagebd.com

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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Gaddafi was shot dead

Misrata/ Tripoli/ Cairo: Muammar Gaddafi died from a gunshot wound, a doctor involved in an overnight autopsy on the former Libyan leader?s body told Reuters.

?He died because of a gunshot wound. It is obvious,? the doctor said, giving no details about whether it was from an apparent gunshot wound on the left side of Gaddafi?s head.


?There are still several issues. We have to pass (the report) to the prosecutor general. But everything will be revealed publicly. Nothing will be hidden.?


The autopsy was carried out at a morgue in the city of Misrata, about 200 km (130 miles) east of Tripoli. Local officials said Gaddafi?s body would now be brought back to the cold store at an old market in Misrata where it has been on public display.


?We worked all through the night. We just got done,? said the source, who spoke on condition of anonymity. He did not reveal any of the autopsy?s findings.


The autopsy was carried out at a morgue in the city of Misrata, about 200 km (130 miles) east of Tripoli. Local officials said Gaddafi?s body would now be brought back to the cold store at an old market in Misrata where it has been on public display. Body to be handed to his relatives


Libya?s interim government will hand the body of slain despot Muammar Gadhafi to his relatives after consulting with them on the location of his burial, a senior government advisor said on Sunday.


?The decision has been taken to hand him over to his extended family, because none of his immediate family are present at this moment,? Ahmed Jibril told AFP.


?The NTC (National Transitional Council) are in consultation with his family. It is for his family to decide where Gadhafi will be buried, in consultation with the NTC,? he added.


Jibril, who is an advisor to the new regime?s interim premier Mahmud Jibril, declined to say when the transfer would take place.


Since he was killed on Thursday, as he tried to flee his hometown of Sirte, Gadhafi?s body has been held in a refrigerated chamber outside Misrata, drawing large crowds wanting to view the remains of the despot who ruled Libya with an iron fist for decades.


The NTC has been reticent about plans for his burial, not wishing to see the grave become a rallying point for residual loyalists, and NTC leaders and military officials have indicated that he would be buried in a secret location.


Disquiet has grown internationally over how Gadhafi met his end on Thursday after NTC fighters hauled him out of a culvert where he was hiding following Nato air strikes on the convoy in which he had been trying to flee his falling hometown.


Ceremony begins to declare Libya ?liberated?


A ceremony to declare Libya fully liberated from Moamer Gadhafi?s hardline rule began in the eastern city of Benghazi on Sunday, three days after the ousted despot was captured and killed.


An AFP reporter said the ceremony before thousands of people in Kish Square opened with the singing of the national anthem and the waving of flags, both of which date back to the monarchy which Gadhafi overthrew in a 1969 coup.


Libya?s interim leader Mustafa Abdel Jalil was during the ceremony to proclaim the oil-rich North African nation ?liberated? of the last vestiges of Gadhafi?s almost 42-year autocratic rule.


Abdel Rahman al-Kabisi, minister of martyrs and the wounded, told the gathering that the event marked ?a great historic moment in beloved Libya?s history.?


?Oh pharaoh of the century, you are now in the bin of history... in a stroke of fate ... you have been thrown into the bin of history. Go to hell,? he thundered.


Clues to Gaddafi?s death concealed from public view


Libyan forces guarding Muammar Gaddafi?s body in a cold storage room let in members of the public to view the deposed leader for a second day on Saturday, but the wounds that may hold the clue to how he died were covered up.


Gaddafi?s body lay on a mattress on the floor of the cold room, as it did on Friday when hundreds of members of the public filed in to see for themselves that the man who ruled Libya for 42 years was dead.


But unlike the previous day, Gaddafi?s body was covered by a blanket that left only his head exposed, hiding the bruises on his torso and scratch marks on his chest that had earlier been visible.


And, crucially, a Reuters reporter who viewed the body said, Gaddafi?s head had been turned to the left. That meant a bullet hole that earlier could be seen on the left side of his face, just in front of his ear, could no longer be seen.


Guards overseeing Gaddafi?s body handed out green surgical masks to dozens of people filing in to take a look because of the stench of rotting flesh filling the room.


The bullet hole in Gaddafi?s head, and the other wounds, could help solve the riddle of whether, as Libya?s new rulers said, he was shot in crossfire in a battle or, as some accounts suggest, he was killed by the fighters who caught him.


A local military commander in the city of Misrata, where the forces which captured him took his body, said ?over-enthusiastic? fighters took matters into their own hands when they came face to face with the man they despise.


?We wanted to keep him alive but the young guys, things went out of control,? he said speaking on condition of anonymity.


Few people in Libya ? where thousands of people, including civilians, were killed by Gaddafi?s forces in the seven-month rebellion ? say they are troubled by the manner of his death.


But if he was indeed killed by his captors, it will cast doubt on the promises by Libya?s new rulers to respect human rights and prevent reprisals. It would also embarrass Western governments which gave their wholehearted backing to the NTC.


Son vows to avenge father?s death


Seif al-Islam, one of the sons of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, has vowed to take revenge for his father?s death.


Al-Islam appeared on the Syria-based Alrai TV channel Saturday night with an appeal to his supporters, saying he was alive and staying in Libya and intended to fight to the bitter end against the rebels.


?We are continuing resistance. I am in Libya, I am alive and free and willing to fight to the end and take revenge,? the TV channel loyal to the Gaddafi regime quoted him as saying.


A website of Gaddafi?s supporters earlier posted a statement that Seif al-Islam had been named an heir to the Libyan dictator and charged with the command of forces fighting the rebels. ?AFP, Reuters, IANS


Source: daily-sun.com


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A year of true and impartial journalism

 Ahmed Akbar Sobhan, chairman of Bashundhara Group, cuts a cake at the 1st anniversary celebration of daily sun on Sunday. syed zakir hosainThe first anniversary of daily sun, an arm of East West Media Group Limited, will be observed today with a solemn oath to practise free and fair journalism also in the future.

To mark the occasion, a function was organised at the office premises of the premier English daily on Sunday. Ahmed Akbar Sobhan, chairman of Bashundhara Group (BG), cut the anniversary cake at the celebration as the assembled staff clapped enthusiastically.


Prof. Dr Syed Anwar Husain, editor of the daily sun, Imdadul Haq Milon, acting editor of the Kaler Kantho, Alamgir Hossain, editor of banglanews24.com, and Naem Nizam, executive editor of Bangladesh Protidin, graced the occasion.


After cutting a big cake, the BG chief expressed the hope that daily sun will grow daily and raise the standards of journalism the country.


The BG chief Sadvised the management of the daily to create and nurture readers? forums in various educational institutions in Dhaka and elsewhere in Bangladesh to acquaint the younger generation with English journalism.


With smiles on their faces, the daily sun staff who attended the function and heard the Chairman with rapt attention hoped for better days ahead.


Source: daily-sun.com


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Graft, politics killing NU slowly

If a prize is announced for the worst administered university in Bangladesh, National University is sure to bag it.

Gross irregularities, mismanagement, ?session jam? and outdated curricula are threatening the very existence of a university funded by taxpayers? money. At stake is the future of thousands of students.


Countless young men and women who make the mistake of getting admitted to colleges affiliated to NU spend many more years on the campus than they should because examinations are never held on time and results make it to the notice board after ages!


The long delay in holding of examinations and publication of results is hurting students where it hurts most: jobs.


The first-year honours admission procedures will face a major setback this month for acute manpower shortages. The projected annual student intake of the university is 0.35 million. As many as 807 staff and officials, recruited during the tenure of the then BNP-led four-party alliance government, were sacked as per a High Court directive on September 11.


The NU authorities had to witness the same situation during the BNP rule as the officials and staff loyal to the then opposition party ? Awami League ? were sacked or made officers on special duty.


Allegations are there that a section of officials, loyal to the ruling party, are engaged in the leakage of question papers.


The students, who fail


to gain their admissions to the universities of their choices, enrol themselves at NU, the country?s largest higher education providing institution.


But they have to wait year after year to pursue higher education, wasting valuable time. Even, a huge amount of money is spent unnecessarily for a long delay in getting their cherished degrees per year.


?I am sitting for the first-year examinations at the time when I was supposed to enter 3rd year of the honours course. Like me, all the students are facing the same fate,? said Fuad, a Dhaka college student.


When contacted, Prof Serajul Islam Chowdhury said universities should introduce job-oriented subjects to beat the rising rates of unemployment among educated youths.


National University produces a huge number of educated unemployed who lack quality as well, he told daily sun. ?NU needs to be reorganised. It should incorporate market-oriented subjects.?


According to a recent UGC report, both NU and Open University provided a staggering 300,072 degrees among students last year while the other 30 universities provided 48,502 degrees.


Not the session jam only, but outdated curricula, negligence of the authorities and corruption in the administration are leaving thousands of students in an uncertain future.


NU started a three-year pass (degree) course instead of two years in a bid to enhance its competitiveness in the job market, but the extension rather worsened students? sufferings instead of adding any value to the degree for huge time consumption.


Sources said most of the sacked staff were from computer unit and ICT department of the university for their alleged involvement in corruption.


Several hundred students regularly fall prey to the corrupt officials of the university in Gazipur. Without greasing the officials? palms, no work is completed properly, said a student who preferred not to be named.


When contacted, a highly-placed source told insincerity on the part of the university staff is responsible for their failure to hold examinations and publish results in time.


There are also some complexities in the exam and result processes, he said, adding that lack of skilled manpower shortage is also a reason behind session jam.


Lax management, lengthy examination schedules, tremendous pressure on the government press and negligence of a section of teachers and employees also lead to session jam.


NU Pro-VC Prof. Tofail Ahmad Chowdhury said, ?We are trying to address an acute manpower shortage. If necessary, we will take technical support as we are planning to set up a powerful server with latest software.?


Academic as well as administrative activities of six regional centres of the university at six divisional headquarters are in progress, he added.


Source: daily-sun.com


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Monday, October 24, 2011

Support policy for farmers key to the sustainable food production

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image Himal Fonseka

Himal Fonseka, a senior programme specialist at the SAARC Agriculture Centre, tells New Age

by Shahidul Islam Chowdhury

EMPOWERMENT of farmers through policy support and incentive for young educated people to take interest in agriculture are necessary for sustainable production of quality food, says Himal Fonseka, a senior programme specialist at the SAARC Agriculture Centre in Dhaka.

If farmers are helped to make their own choices about agricultural inputs including seeds, and get a guaranteed price for their produces, it will encourage them to continue with farming, the Sri Lankan agricultural scientist told New Age in an exclusive interview on Tuesday.

Fonseka believes South Asian countries can and should work together on agriculture with a view to eradicating hunger from the region. ‘For this, the countries need to be honest and show some commitment,’ he added.

Excerpts:


Boro, which requires intensive irrigation and other inputs, e.g. fertilisers and pesticides, constitutes 60 per cent of Bangladesh’s annual staple output. Don’t you think that increasing cultivation of irrigate boro poses a threat to agro-ecological balance?

Yes, I do. Farmers in Bangladesh are not utilising groundwater efficiently. They are just taking water up and putting it on rice fields. They hardly think that shortage of drinking water is a problem when most water sources are polluted. By doing so, they are bringing up arsenic, in many areas, with irrigation water. In addition, you are also inviting desertification in the

long run.

In a nutshell, you are getting into a complex situation. A lot of people are demanding drinking water and also crops.

So you need to supply food as well as water to the people. There are also environmental aspects. There needs to be a balance among the three.


In the past, farmers would prepare seeds themselves. Now, dealers have taken over, often creating artificial crisis and selling low-quality seeds.

Farmer’s seed is the best option for the poor people for their subsistence, for their livelihood and for fulfilment of their need. It is called subsistence agriculture when you produce something to eat.

But when the question of commercial production comes, when you need to produce more for commercial purpose, you need to maintain uniformity of crops. For that you would need to use perfect seed. I think hybrid seeds are good options in this case. Here, the government needs to regulate supply and quality of seeds used for commercial production. Unfortunately, in most countries in the region, there is no regulation.

In Sri Lanka, whatever seeds come in, they are first tested in government laboratories and then handed over to farmers for use. But here in Bangladesh, anybody can bring seeds and sell them to farmers. There is no effective regulation in Bangladesh. Who bears the consequences when something goes wrong in production? Poor farmers, nobody else.


How about farmers’ freedom over home-grown seed?
Once you buy hybrid, you cannot use it like other crops or what we call open-pollinated crops. There are crops that you can keep seeds of. The cycle, however, cannot go further. After two to three years you would not get seeds.
That is where the government should play a role. I think, in Bangladesh, the monopoly of hybrid seeds should not be kept protected for the private sector. The government should produce hybrid seeds to provide them to farmers at an affordable price.
Yes, hybrid seed production is costly and involves a lot of money, time and effort. The government has to do it.  It is possible.
We blame the private sector. We need to keep in mind that they are for making profit through business.

The use of farm labour has decreased remarkably with the increase in the use of power tillers, motorised winnowers and many other tools. How do you look at the trend, keeping in consideration the employment situation?

Cow plough is becoming a tale of the past. Do you think that a young person would go behind cows now? What I want to say is agriculture should be made attractive for the young people. With increasing mechanisation, people do not want to get all muddy for work.

A lot of people including agriculture graduates even do not want to go to field now. They prefer to work at laboratories.

We face the problem in Sri Lanka too. I do not get people to work in the fields to get my research done. There are going to laboratories to work on biotechnology and tissue culture. Our generation is getting old. People who are based in agriculture are of the older generation. Once they are gone, agriculture would struggle to survive.

So to keep the younger generation on the field, agriculture has to be made attractive.

Labour cost is gradually increasing. Can farmers deploy high-priced labour for farming? No. You need to cut the cost establishing efficiency at every level of production. Combined harvest with a balance between job opportunities, cost of production and efficiency can be a choice.


Farmers are now switching to alternative products including hybrid vegetables and fruits in the same field where they used to produce paddy. What do you think about the trend?

I do not think the rice farmers are making paddy fields into mango orchards unless there is a good profit. We, Asians, are rice eaters. We do not compromise with it in any way. So, if things are not profitable, farmers will not switch to other crops. I think the root cause of the problem is cost of production and how we can sell the crops. If our farmers do not get a better price, they would oft for products that have a guaranteed price. 

If the governments think that the farmers need to produce a crop that they do not produce, then it must ensure an attractive price for the crop.

We have a paddy market board in Sri Lanka to ensure good price for farmers. But still the private sector is involved in the market.


What is the state of agricultural research in Bangladesh?

I think Bangladesh is doing well in agricultural research. The BRRI has the capacity to analyse pesticide residues in farm products. BINA is a fantastic organisation working on application of nuclear technology in agriculture. We do not have any such facility in Sri Lanka. Those things can be utilised by other countries. What I can say is Bangladesh is better than Sri Lanka in agricultural research.

The giant big brother (India) is also doing well. Yes, Sri Lanka has an edge in education sector. I think we require better exchange between what richness we have and what richness the others have.


Are the South Asian countries cooperating with each other in agriculture under SAARC?

SAARC, for me, is like an EU and you call it like USA—United South Asia. That you can promote to share experiences and richness. The EU countries are moving together even though for they went against each other on many occasions. How many wars they fought! How many lives they lost by doing so! Still, they came together! 17 countries! They opened their border. They are using one currency, one visa, everything!

Why can we, the eight countries in South Asia, not do that despite sharing histories, languages, culture, everything. For Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, we derived our languages from Sanskrit. You say Khabi (eat?), we say Khamu! Same meaning! You say Subha Nababarsha (Happy New Year), we say Subha Nababarsha! Samity (cooperative) is Samity! So we have lots of things to cooperate with each other on. So, it is the duty of the politicians to use this sharing of commonalities to the betterment of the people. We have a lot to do to strengthen cooperation.

Yes. SAARC is there. We have centres in most countries on agriculture, weather and some other things. These people (experts) are connecting the countries in their respective areas. There are some other forums like BIMSTEC. However, we require some commitments to resolve things despite differences among us.


How can the interests of marginal farmers be protected when corporatisation of agriculture goes on unabated?

If you think politically, especially from left-leaning political perspectives, then you can say agriculture is becoming corporatised. Here come issues including intellectual property rights which can protect small farmers’ rights to produce crops the way they want to.

A lot of plants and their varieties have originated in South Asian countries including Bangladesh reflecting the rich natural biodiversity in this region. If you have a variety of agricultural products that is not available in other countries, you must protect the IPR of that product. Otherwise they (other countries) will analyse everything and claim IPR of that product as their product.

Farmers, however, need to be looked after by the government.

Is the SAARC Agriculture Centre doing anything in this regard?
We normally keep record of what is available including medicinal plants and others.
One thing I must add that in addition to sharing of good practices and knowledge we also require work sharing. If Bangladesh is doing one thing successfully, why would Sri Lanka do the same thing? Or, vice-versa? Individual countries have agreements on transferring technology. I think there should be a regional mechanism for technology transfer.

Will poor farmers get benefit of knowledge sharing, good practices and technology among SAARC member countries?
We are working to establish linkages among researchers, extension agents and farmers. 

What is the SAARC Agriculture Centre doing to improve policies and strategies on agriculture in member countries?
SAC is providing inputs for developing regional policies and strategies primarily through developing networks in the crop, livestock and fisheries sectors for efficient utilisation of soil, water and other resources. It is not that one country is doing everything. We are working with participation of all the eight countries.

What about harmonisation of agricultural related standards?
Each and every country has its own facilities, policies, rules, regulations and standard. For instance, seed regulations. We think they require some harmonisation.  That is another important thing we are trying to do.

Are all countries cooperating with each other on agricultural issues on the ground?
In think all the parties (countries) can work together on agriculture including seed production. But for this all parties need to be honest.

Which countries are not honest?
I should not comment.

Public-private partnership has become the buzzword now. Is it possible in agriculture?
The private sector is out to make profit through business. The public sector is expected to provide service to the people. So they require a compromise to provide people with service at an affordable cost. The private sector also provides some services to the communities.

They do it in the name of corporate social responsibility. Are they maintaining their corporate social accountability to the people?
I should not comment on that.

How can poor farmers cope up in this
complex situation?

People are now going beyond their traditional way of thinking and practices. We can only provide some guidelines. The farmers are very rational. They decide what crop they should produce and for this what seeds—hybrid or traditional—they would use. In the past, the farmers ploughed land with buffalos and sowed seeds. Now they are using machines. It is nothing but evolution of a system. The same thing happens to our food habit. We were habituated with rice and curry. Now noodles and bottled juice are found in remote village shops. Because there are consumers of these products.

However, I need to say that the rights of the farmers are required to be protected. The governments need to help them get agricultural inputs and services at an affordable price. The governments are also required to ensure fair price of their products. It will help farmers to make their own decision and continue farming.


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| Source: newagebd.com

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Make medicare affordable by forging global partnership

Berlin: Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has urged the world community to develop global and regional partnership in health technology to ensure greater access to medicine at affordable prices.

?Making health services accessible and affordable is a global challenge? our needs and challenges require matching mobilisation of resources beyond public sources,? she said in a keynote address at the opening session of the 4-day World Health Summit WHS), 2011 that began here on Sunday at the Charit? - Universit?tsmedizin Berlin, Campus Mitte.


The WHS is the annual conference of the M8 Alliance of Academic Health Centres and Medical Universities together with the National Academies.


Dirk Niebel, Federal Minister for Economic Cooperation and Development of Germany; Detlev Ganten, Co-President World Health Summit; and President-designate WHS 2011 Prof Dr Steve Wesselingh of Monash University, Melbourne also spoke at the opening session..


Mentioning that the Summit?s theme, `Today?s Science - Tomorrow?s Agenda?, as timely, Hasina said there is immense scope to develop collaboration among pharmaceutical companies to enhance quality and scale up production and distribution of drugs.


She stressed the need for extending the flexibilities accorded to the LDCs within the existing Intellectual Property Regime on pharmaceuticals beyond 2015.


The prime minister called for enhancing regulatory capacity to combat medical products of inferior quality, safety and efficacy.


About the importance of preventive medicines, she said that as the world concentrate on cutting-age technology and high-end health products, simple and cost-effective interventions like immunisation must not be forgotten as they can help reduce morbidity and disease burden.


?We can prevent millions of death by making vaccines affordable. Technological breakthrough thus needs to be employed to produce new generation of vaccines.?


About the Non-Communicable Diseases (NCD), Hasina said NCDs cause more mortality and morbidity these days and require greater attention.


She said that unsustainable exploitation of natural endowments, unchecked industrial growth and concomitant pollution, and unplanned urbanisation all played their roles in the growth of heart and lung diseases, hypertension, diabetes, and cancers.


Accident is another major cause of disability and death which together inflict great cost on society and economy, she added.


The Prime Minister deplored that NCD prevention and control have remained a low priority for national and international engagements.


She suggested a greater balance in the global focus between communicable and non-communicable diseases.


?We can no longer ignore increasing genetic disorders like thalassemia. Services and facilities on NCDs both in the public and the private sectors in the developing world are inadequate,? Hasina told the summit.


She called for forging global and regional partnership in health technology and research, capacity building of health personnel, health policy and health infrastructure. ?UNB


Source: daily-sun.com


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1,000 feared dead in Turkey quake

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota
Ankara: An earthquake of 7.3 magnitude rocked eastern Turkey on Sunday, with a seimological institute saying up to 1,000 people could lie dead under the rubble of dozens of collapsed buildings.

Turkey?s strongest earthquake in years struck Van, a large eastern city populated mainly by Kurds.

?Five hundred to 1,000 people are estimated to have been killed in the quake,? Mustafa Erdik, director of the Kandilli seismological institute in Istanbul, told a news conference.

Earlier reports did not mention casualties, but many were feared trapped in collapsed buildings and officials warned they were struggling to assess the extent of the damage.

At least 50 people were taken to hospital in Van, Anatolia news agency said.

?There is serious human and material loss,? said a brief statement from the national disaster body, which is based in the prime minister?s office.

Around 50 buildings have collapsed including a dormitory, officials said.

The most serious damage occurred in Ercis, a district of around 100,000 people, they added.

Television footage showed panicked residents using shovels and other digging tools trying to rescue people trapped under a collapsed eight-storey building in the city centre as nightfall approached.

Most people are expected to spend the night outdoors, with the temperature expected to dip to three degrees Celsius (37 Fahrenheit).

?People are panicked. The telecommunication services have collapsed. We cannot reach anybody,? Van Mayor Bekir Kaya told the NTV television in an initial assessment.

The government is due to send satellite phones to the region, according to media reports. The army will also send search and rescue teams to the area.

Six helicopters, including four ambulance helicopters, as well as C-130 military cargo planes were sent to the area carrying tents, food and medicine.

The US Geological Survey measured the quake at 7.3 magnitude and said an aftershock of 5.6 magnitude had also been registered. The epicentre of the aftershock, which occurred at 1056 GMT, was 19 kilometres (12 miles) northeast of Van.

The depth of the initial quake was 7.2 kilometers (4.5 miles), according to the US seismologists. The depth of the aftershock was 20 kilometers, they added.

The epicentre of the quake, which struck around 1041 GMT, was at Tabanli in Van province, the Kandilli institute said.

The Turkish institute said there were two aftershocks which affected the villages of Ilikaynak and Gedikbulak in particular.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan cancelled his official programme and will visit the quake region on Sunday, NTV said.

The quake damaged Van?s airport, the Anatolia news agency reported, adding however that it did not disrupt the air traffic, quoting civilian aviation authorities.

Van, a city of 380,000 mainly Kurdish inhabitants, is more than 1,200 kilometres from the capital Ankara.

The quake was also felt across the border in northwestern Iran, causing some panic in major cities, Iranian media reported, but without any mention of casualties or damage.

The tremors were strong enough to cause ?scenes of panic among the population of the cities,? according to several Iranian media.

Earthquake-prone Turkey lies atop several fault lines.

In 1999, two strong quakes in the heavily populated and industrialised regions of northwest Turkey left some 20,000 dead.

And a powerful earthquake in the town of Caldiran in Van province killed 3,840 people in 1976. ?AFP


Source: daily-sun.com


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Sunday, October 23, 2011

Ivy fears of vote rigging

Narayanganj City Corporation pioneer Selina Hayat Ivy, who is the choice with ?inkpot and Pen? symbol challenge in talking to potential voters election campaign appearance in a zone of the city on Friday. Sun PhotoMayoral candidate Selina Hayat Ivy on Friday said that they of electoral fraud in the first Narayanganj City Corporation, which feared on 30 October.

Ivy claims that MP, Nasim Osman, brother of her opponents Shamim Osman, publicly declared that the election results would announced by 19: 30 on the election day, would lose the local in the Ivy by 5,000 votes.

She claimed that their competitors to refrain from their followers were threatened centres in Siddhirganj to vote. She made the allegations in the course of the election campaigns in various parts of the city.

?When of a local MP has such a speech, it was normal that people would vote rigging fear, ?, they added.

To stop vote rigging, the Election Commission will introduce only electronic voting machines (EVMs) in the nine, 27, wards of the city.

The NCC surveys to monitor more than 500 observers, journalists on Thursday in his Office in the city to Asaduzzaman, Director (public relations) of the Electoral Commission said.

The Commission sources said that no observer is allowed to stay permanently in accordance with in one of the local Government Act.

Two leaders of the ruling Awami League ? Selina Hayat Ivy, also Mayor of Narayanganj municipality was in the City Corporation in 2011 and Shamim Osman ? are former legislators in the mayoral race, local party men split into two groups.

The two candidates with their followers spend hours by the campaigns to search get votes in the busy.

However, Ivy way disproved their intensification apart from the race, and hope that she would win the elections, unless, of course, vote rigging was committed.

In the meantime some AL Central leaders, including Kazi Zafar Ullah, Abul Hasnat Abdullah, and Bahauddin Nasim, is involved in the election campaign their party of supported candidates Shamim Osman and was looking for him to vote.

Both AL heads of State and Government ? Ivy and Shamim ? accompanied go men of their party in the areas of get door to door and sought votes for them.

Only BNP-backed mayoral candidate leads, Taimur Alam Khandkar, together with the party men and his followers also campaigns and hopefully the surveys to eat, how AL supporters now divided into two groups.


Source: daily-sun.com


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