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Friday, October 2, 2009
Victim made to deny rape by BCL men: Bangladesh Police loyalty goes to ruling party men
Victim made to deny rape by BCL men; AL leaders blame journalists for tarnishing party image.
Kalapara police administration under influence of local leaders of the ruling party is holding back facts about the incident of abduction and gang rape of the schoolgirl on September 25 by ruling party activists.
A group of 16 Chhatra League activists kidnapped the schoolgirl while she was returning home with her cousin by a rickshaw from a puja mandap on September 25 evening. They gang raped the girl and left her on the road.
Locals rescued the victim about four hours later and handed her over to a police patrol team led by ASI Kabir Hossain.
The police chased and detained two of the perpetrators with the help of locals.
The law enforcers took the terrified girl to her house but set the two arrestees free.
Asked why they were set free, ASI Kabir said, “They were released as the victim at that moment was unable to identify the two as attackers.”
Meanwhile, unidentified criminals have threatened to kill Patuakhali correspondent of Bangladesh Observer Gofran Biswas alias Palash for writing reports on the incident.
Palash, also correspondent of local daily Sathi, filed a general diary with Kalapara Police Station saying some unknown criminals gave him death threat on his way back home on Women's College Road at around 10:00pm.
The incident of gang rape prompted the Upazila Awami League leaders to hold an arbitration at a local school on September 27.
Upazila AL secretary Rakibul Hasan, vice chairman of Kalapara Upazila Parishad Sultan Mahmud and other local leaders found the 16 BCL men "guilty" of the crimes.
However, they set the accused free after awarding each perpetrator 100 lashes and a fine of Tk 10,000.
Rakibul Hasan, who contested for the post of chairman in the last Upazila Parishad election, told The Daily Star that the incident of the rape was designed to tarnish the image of the ruling party.
“A bunch of irresponsible journalists outside Kalapara fabricated it to tarnish our image. The deputy commissioner and the superintendent of police did not find any element of rape in their investigation," he claimed.
He further said the girl herself has moved to sue the journalists.
Rakibul said the arbitration on September 27 had nothing to do with this case as it was held to address the problem of eve teasers in Kalapara.
Local sources said the ruling party men got annoyed after the incident was reported in national dailies. They intimidated the poor peasant family of the victim and made them publicly refute the allegations of rape at a press conference.
The victim was intimidated to sue a local journalist who reported the incident of rape to his newspaper in Patuakhali.
Sources said Awami League leaders are now desperately trying to suppress the crime that involves their activists.
A businessman in Kalapara seeking anonymity said, “This is a serious issue for the ruling party leaders here. They are using their influence over the police as well as the administration to suppress facts about the incident."
Locals said the victim's family, which is now under the grip of the police and ruling party leaders, has agreed to cooperate with them.
Patuakhali Deputy Commissioner Reaz Ahmed and Superintendent of Police Saibal Kanti Chowdhury along with a female magistrate went to Kalapara Police Station to talk to the victim on Thursday evening.
Reaz Ahmed quoted the victim as saying that she was not raped. She took shelter in a nearby house after her cousin came under attack.
Saibal said they found no evidence of rape. He said the team of investigators from Patuakhali talked to the victim privately in presence of a female magistrate.
“She said the attackers stopped the rickshaw and started beating her cousin. She instantly ran away from the scene and took shelter in a house from where locals and the police rescued her,” he said quoting the victim.
“We also found out that the arbitration held two days after the incident had nothing to do with this particular case but with the problem of eve teasers in the area,” the SP added.
Thursday, October 1, 2009
The pure goodness of Manik Chandra Saha
An excerpt from Marked for Death: Dying for the Story in the World’s Most Dangerous Places.
by Terry Gould
At first glance there is nothing particularly threatening about
Like most regional capitals in
rickshaws outnumber cars a hundred to one. Down the palm-lined lanes where a million people live, roosters crow from every backyard. And the city air, even near the jute mills and brick kilns, smells like tropical heaven.
Two unbridgeable rivers, the Ganges and Brahmaputra, are responsible for
All this water pools in the Bay of Bengal's tidal creeks, forming a mangrove wilderness called the Sundarbans, which walls
There were no tourists in
The twenty-four-hour trip by river from
raped the wives of farmers who refused their extortionate demands. The fanatically motivated violence resembled the insurgencies in
According to local journalists, the seven godfathers wore “white clothes”—that is, they were public figures who ran
from farmers, murder competitors and pillage
The sanctioned gangsterism of Khulna Division was a good part of the reason Transparency International
consistently rated Bangladesh at the bottom of its worldwide corruption index, and why the Committee to Protect Journalists named the country one of the five
most murderous places in the world to report the news. Between 1998 and 2006, sixteen journalists were murdered in
Saha was different from the slain journalists I'd encountered in
The division's 14 million citizens considered him a saint, and even some officials acknowledged he was
local journalists had ever seen him show emotion. Saha's murder precipitated a week of hysterical mourning. Nationwide hartals, or strikes, paralyzed the country. The prime minister's spokesman and the leader of the opposition arrived in
For all the devotion he inspired, Saha was a rather unassuming man. He was stockily built, of middle height, with thinning hair and a voice that could barely be heard when he asked questions at press conferences. What distinguished him in a crowd of reporters were his huge brown eyes, tilted up like wingtips by high cheekbones, which gave him something of a Confucian smile, even when he was being told to shut up by one of the seven godfathers. “Manik did not know how to get angry or raise his voice,” said Mainul Islam Khan, director of a Dhaka-based NGO that attempts to protect journalists. “He had no aggressive side to him, no personal agenda, no ego or inner turmoil. He was a purely innocent person. Whatever he wrote, he just laid the facts out, appealing to reason. He was motivated only by love.”
That love apparently gave Saha tremendous drive. Sleeping at most four hours a night, he divided his days between exposing the region's torments and laboring to rectify them. He founded schools, libraries, cultural organizations, rural poverty councils, human
rights committees, women's shelters, clinics, a theater group, a music academy,
a foundation for working children and an international action forum to save the
Sundarbans. Each of the underground groups had threatened to torture him to
death, but he regularly traveled alone to remote villages to investigate
atrocities. “If they use rape and murder as weapons,” he told his worried
brother Prodip, “if they steal the land and no one arrives to tell the world,
then their wrongs take place in a vacuum.” Trained as a lawyer, Saha
exclusively represented the godfathers' penniless victims—and was penniless
himself most of the time because he gave away the $250 a month he earned from
his groundbreaking journalism. “There is no God to answer the prayers of the
poor,” he told his wife, Nanda. “It's a human universe and therefore up to
humans to fulfill prayers.”
Three days before his murder, Saha
delivered a lecture on his brand of investigative journalism to a reporters'
training session in the nearby town of
“Use the scientific method and the rules of evidence to gather facts about what
is unjust and harmful,” he advised. “When conveying those facts, be neither
subtle nor angry. If threatened, take courage by reminding yourself that you
speak for those who have no voice. Place your skills in the service of the poor
and you will be happy.”
Before I arrived in
atonement, angry resistance to public enemies or compensation for infirmity had played a part with some; manly pride or religious intoxication had fueled the courage of others. But in Manik Saha I found something more difficult to explain: selflessness that seemed to come from pure goodness.
The girl gang-raped: The Daily Star Editorial
Editorial
The incident that follows a similar crime committed by BCL men a few days ago puts the whole nation to shame, not only should the ruling party be. When a schoolgirl is gang-raped by the activists of the ruling party's student wing, people are bound to feel both tormented and insecure.
The BCL activists appear to have gone out of control as reports of their committing all sorts of crime continue to pile up. All the attempts by the AL high-ups to rein the unruly elements in have apparently failed to produce any results. But then gang-raping a young girl and then trying to hush it up is a crime the enormity of which is hard to describe. The criminals, no fewer than 10 in number, committed the mind-boggling crime and then arranged a farcical village arbitration and were let off the hook lightly, as they were asked to pay a fine of only Taka 10,000 each. Now, rape is not the sort of crime that can be settled in a village arbitration dominated by the influential locals who have no legal authority to deal with such matters. In this case the arbitrators themselves committed a crime by allowing the culprits to escape without the punishment that they deserved.
The whole thing smacks of a conspiracy to deny the poor father of the victim the justice that he sought so desperately. The AL leaders of Kalapara upazila in Patuakhali district have failed to handle the matter neutrally as is evident from the arguments put forward by them in defence of the rapists. Perhaps such leaders are as responsible as the criminals themselves for what is happening today across the country.
Justice is clearly eluding the victim and her family. Things are going wrong for them at almost every step. The rapists are reported to have collected the signature of the girl's father on a white paper to make sure that he could not seek legal remedy. This is of course another crime since the poor fellow's right to seek legal protection was violated through it.
So, it is a story of political clout overshadowing everything else. Even the law enforcers appear to be helpless as they released two of the rapists because no case had been filed against them! However, the police should have delved deeper into the matter before releasing the two young men.
The ruling party has to address the issue in order to uphold the right of a poor girl to get justice, and for other girls to feel secure. Such ghastly crimes will surely blur the party's image and expose it to condemnation only unless the culprits are given due punishment.
Bangladesh: Victim's family, not rapists, on the run
Family of the Kalapara gang-rape victim went into hiding leaving home on Tuesday after police remained inactive against the rapists amidst reprisal from the perpetrators.
Meanwhile, Officer-in-Charge (OC) of Kalapara Police Station Ishaq Ali claimed that the girl (victim) submitted a written statement to the police station yesterday declaring she was not raped.
Father of the teenaged schoolgirl, who was kidnapped and gang-raped by 10 Bangladesh Chhatra League activists on Friday, left his house along with his wife, three daughters and a son.
Relatives of the victim said they are afraid of revealing the family's present whereabouts; that would earn them wraths from the rapists and their political mentors.
Locals and relatives alleged the ruling Awami League Kalapara upazila unit secretary Rakibul Ahsan took signatures from the victim and her father after staging village arbitration and awarding fines of Tk 10,000 each to the 10 rapists to ensure their escape.
They also suspected the statement submitted in the name of the victim was actually one of those blank paper signed under coercion.
Asked who submitted the statement, the OC could not answer but said he was away from the office till 3:00pm and was busy attending a case in the court.
The duty officer, who was present at the police station in absence of the OC, also could not ascertain who submitted the statement.
Bangladesh: Ruling Party leaders pressurize victim to 'refutes' rape report
The Kalapara schoolgirl, who was kidnapped and gang raped on September 25 and whose family had to leave home under duress, told a press conference that she was not raped but tortured by a gang.
The poor girl along with her peasant father and mother addressed the hurriedly called press conference at Kalapara press club Wednesday night flanked by local Awami League leaders Rakibul Ahsan and Sultan Mahmud.
Rakib, secretary of AL Kalapara upazila unit, and Mahmud, vice chairman of Kalapara upazila parishad, were the two arbitrators who set the 16 Chhatra League activists, accused of kidnap and rape, free on Sunday last after fining them Tk 10,000 each.
Local human rights activists however said no proper steps on the matter could be taken until the victim is rescued from the grip of a local political group.
Locals alleged that the victim girl was forced to read out a written statement, declaring she was not raped but tortured while she along with a cousin was returning home after visiting a puja mandap on September 25.
They alleged that a local political clique has taken the entire family of the victim under its shelter and using them as safeguard against legal steps against the perpetrators.
Meanwhile, the victim also filed a defamation case with judicial magistrate court of Kalapara upazila yesterday accusing three--publisher, editor and reporter--of a daily. Judge Md Jamal Hossain ordered that Kalapara Upazila Social Welfare Officer will look into the matter and hearing on the case will be held on November 3.
Patuakhali Deputy Commissioner Md Reaz Ahmed told The Daily Star yesterday that the Prime Minister's Office had asked him to look into the incident and subsequently, he asked local police to take lawful action.
Major Rajib Amin, commander of Rapid Action Battalion (Rab) camp in Patuakhali, told this correspondent that Rab on Wednesday invited AL leader Rakibul Ahsan, who awarded the fines through a village arbitration, to provide Rab with his version of the incident but he did not appear till last evening.
Kamrul Huda Siddiqui alias Sumon, project coordinator for Anirban, a local rights body, said they are trying to liaise with Rab and local police so that they can rescue the victim and send her to a safe home in Dhaka.
“It will not be possible to take any step till the victim is rescued from the grips of political persons,” he added.
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Bangladesh: Seminar held on "Land Rights of the Indigenous People of the Plain Land"
url: http://www.thedailystar.net/newDesign/news-details.php?nid=107644
The government, if it deems necessary, will form a separate land commission to resolve the land-related problems of the indigenous people of plain lands, said Land Minister Rezaul Karim Hira yesterday.
Talking to journalists after attending a seminar on 'Land Rights of the Indigenous People of the Plain Land', he said the government is committed to resolving all the problems of the indigenous people but it would take time.
Commenting on the objections from different organisations about the land survey in the Chittagong Hill Tracts scheduled to start on October 15, the minister said they opposed it as it went against their interest.
The seminar organised by Karitas Mymensingh region was held at the Biam auditorium in the city.
Speakers at the seminar also demanded the government form a separate land commission to this end.
State Minister for Cultural Affairs Promod Mankin, who is also a member of the indigenous community in plain land, said land related problems cause the indigenous people suffer most.
"Proper investigations should be carried out to resolve the land related problems in the area and for that the government can form a separate land commission like the land commission in the Chittagong Hill Tracts area," he said.
Syeda Rizwana Hasan, director (programme) of Bangladesh Environmental Lawyers Association (BELA), said the government should formulate Forest Right Act like India, which would ultimately help the indigenous people in establishing their land rights.
Shamsul Huda, executive director of ALRD, said the government should form separate laws for the indigenous people to establish their rights.
At the seminar, representatives of different indigenous communities of the plain land shared the problems they had been experiencing in their respective areas.
The seminar presided over by Dr Benedict Alo D Rojario, executive director of Karitas, was also addressed by Theofil Hajang, operations director of World Vision, Bangladesh National Office, and Prof Mesbah Kamal of Dhaka University.
Bangladesh: Christian murdered for a cellphone
url: http://www.speroforum.com/site/article.asp?id=20480&t=Bangladesh%3A+Christian+murdered+for+a+cellphone
Swopon Mondol, a Baptist, died in hospital from serious injuries sustained during the beating -- police blame university students.
ByAsia News
Beaten by a group of young students from the University of Dhaka for an - alleged - theft of a mobile phone, he died after a few hours from serious injuries sustained during the beating. The victim is Swopon Mondol, a Christian from the Free Christian Baptist Churches of Bangladesh. His body was found the evening of 12 September on the university campus. Rushed to hospital, he died shortly after midnight on September 13, his wife, who rushed to his side, has been threatened by the attackers not to report the crime.
Police have opened an investigation into the matter and seem to have identified the culprits. Mohammed Wahid, a police officer from Sahabag station cites internal sources according to whom "a group of students from Mohasin Hall in Dhaka University, led by Mohammed Rajan" brutally tortured and killed the young Christian, husband and father of a child of 10.
"On 12 September - said Mohammed Wahid - around 8 o'clock in the evening I received a call from a source, who noted the presence of a man seriously injured near the park of Suhrawardi. When I saw the condition of man, I ordered his transfer to the Medical College in Dhaka, where his wife also arrived".
The officer (pictured) adds he knew the young man involved and does not believe the "thesis of the stolen phone". He confirms recent cases of "aggression from the University of Dhaka," perpetrated by "groups of violent students" who use "excuses" such as the theft of a phone "to harass innocent people." "He was a good and kind person - highlights Wahid - and he was killed in a brutal manner”.
"In the hospital - adds Lucky Modolo, wife of the victim Diptoo, and mother of a boy of 10 - some young people surrounded me, asking me for money as compensation for the theft of mobile phones. My husband was struggling between life and death, I felt hopeless. "
The woman admits to "being afraid" to ask for an investigation, "the fear of retaliation: they could also kill me”. Her thoughts now go to her young son and "how we are going to survive" because "my husband was the only one who earned money." Swopon Mondol was buried on 13 September; his sister Sulekha is "seeking justice" for the murder.
The Free Christian Churches of Bangladesh has 320 churches and more than 30 thousand faithful, and has been present in the country for more than 25 years. The movement has faced attacks during the second Gulf War and several times members have suffered persecution. "Swopon Mondol was a very active member of the church - emphasizes Baptist bishop Alberti P Mirdha - his death has shocked us. Minorities are not safe in Bangladesh. "
Reported by William Gomes.
