10 june, 2016

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FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016 | Jyoishtha 27, 1423, Ramadan 4, 1437 | Regd No DA 6238, Vol 4, No 48 | www.dhakatribune.com | 32 pages plus 24-page Weekend supplement | Price: Tk10 SECOND EDITION GRAB YOUR EURO 2016 FIXTURE INSIDE ‘Driver saw Mitu murder’ Jane Alam, driver of the black microbus which was allegedly used by standby assailants during the SP wife murder, had witnessed the killing, a senior police officer has claimed. PAGE 3 Ruling party men grab government land A section of ruling party men grabbed the land of the Roads and Highways Department in Madhabpur Bazar area of the district. PAGE 6 Takeways from Modi’s speech to US Congress Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi delivered an ode to US-India relations to a joint session of Congress Wednes- day. PAGE 8 DhakaTribune has brought out a fixture for Euro 2016. Please collect your copy today from hawker. SEHRI & IFTAR FOOD CRISIS CHT Ramadan June Sehri Iftar 04 10 - 6:49 05 11 3:38 6:50 06 12 3:38 6:50 Source: Islamic Foundation Law against derogatory remarks on ’71 war likely n Mohammad Al-Masum Molla The government is mulling over a plan to enact a law against derog- atory or misleading comments on the history of Bangladesh's Liber- ation War. Liberation War Affairs Minis- ter AKM Mozammel Huq came up with the disclosure replying to a query in parliament yesterday. The minister said after the killing of Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman all governments except the Awami League distorted the history of the 1971 Liberation War. The government has been im- plementing various projects to present the real history as well as the sacrifices of war heroes to the young generation. The Law Commission has al- ready drafted the Liberation War Denial Crimes Act 2016 with a provi- sion for five years' imprisonment as the highest punishment for denial of historically established facts and settled issues of the Liberation War. Any act of undermining, misin- terpreting, distorting, disrespecting PAGE 2 COLUMN 1 Rampal power plant yet to get environmental clearance n Mohammad Al-Masum Molla The proposed coal-fired pow- er plant in Rampal to be set up in close proximity to the Sundarbans is yet to get clearance from the De- partment of Environment. Environment and Forest Minis- ter Anwar Hossain Monju made the statement while addressing parlia- ment yesterday afternoon. He told parliament that the En- vironmental Impact Assessment (EIA) report on the plant was ap- proved after adding a good number of preconditions. Replying to a query, the minister said: “If mitigation measures are implemented properly as per pro- posals of the EIA report, the project will not cause any damage to the Sundarbans.” Reiterating that the Sundarbans will not be affected if Rampal pow- er plant is constructed Monju, said it will rather generate employment for local people. “People’s purchasing capacity will increase and their dependency on the Sundarbans decrease.” The minister said the coal-based power plant will be established with super critical technology and 59 conditions were imposed in the EIA report to avoid any negative impact on the Sundarbans during the construction and operation of the plant. Monju told parliament that on- line monitoring system will be in place to curb pollution. He also said a well coordinated round-the-clock monitoring team comprising the Department of En- vironment, Power Development Board and other officials concerned will monitor the system. PAGE 2 COLUMN 5 n Nure Alam Durjoy, back from Thanchi, Bandarban For generations, the highlanders in Bandarban’s Thanchi have known only one thing: how to fight hunger to stay alive. The indigenous people in some of the most remote areas of Bangla- desh live in a state of limbo; no one is willing to take responsibility for their well-being. Toiling everyday in the jhum fields in the remote hills, most of them have resigned to the fact that neither they nor their children would get any basic education or healthcare services during their lifetime. In a place where the nearest school or medical facility is almost a day’s journey away, there is hard- ly any option to avail such basic hu- man rights. If you hire an engine-boat and start a journey upstream in the Sangu River from Thanchi, you will come across only two or three schools in the local bazars. But Andharmanik – which is two days’ boat journey from Thanchi – is the last frontier; beyond here, there is no government or NGO-run education or medical facilities. Illiteracy and the lack of health awareness are invisible chains tethering the future of these com- munities. In the absence of oppor- tunities, jhum cultivation becomes their only choice of living. The Dhaka Tribune recently vis- ited remote areas in Thanchi’s Re- makree union to find that almost no children went to school and no one had access to medical services. Jhum cultivation for kids The kids in the remote indigenous communities either spent their time working in the jhum fields with their parents or by playing on the yards and the river. PAGE 2 COLUMN 2 The forsaken communities of Thanchi A local in Bandarban’s Thanchi tells the Dhaka Tribune how villages in the remote hills are being denied basic human rights such as education and healthcare for ages NURE ALAM DURJOY

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Page 1: 10 June, 2016

FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016 | Jyoishtha 27, 1423, Ramadan 4, 1437 | Regd No DA 6238, Vol 4, No 48 | www.dhakatribune.com | 32 pages plus 24-page Weekend supplement | Price: Tk10

SECOND EDITION

GRAB YOUR EURO 2016 FIXTURE

INSIDE‘Driver saw Mitu murder’Jane Alam, driver of the black microbus which was allegedly used by standby assailants during the SP wife murder, had witnessed the killing, a senior police o� cer has claimed. PAGE 3 Ruling party men grab

government land A section of ruling party men grabbed the land of the Roads and Highways Department in Madhabpur Bazar areaof the district. PAGE 6

Takeways from Modi’s speech to US CongressIndian Prime Minister Narendra Modi delivered an ode to US-India relationsto a joint session of Congress Wednes-day. PAGE 8

DhakaTribune has brought out a � xture for Euro 2016. Please collect your copy today from hawker.

SEHRI & IFTAR

FOODCRISISCHT

Ramadan June Sehri Iftar 04 10 - 6:49 05 11 3:38 6:50 06 12 3:38 6:50

Source: Islamic Foundation

Law against derogatory remarks on ’71 war likelyn Mohammad Al-Masum Molla

The government is mulling over a plan to enact a law against derog-atory or misleading comments on the history of Bangladesh's Liber-ation War.

Liberation War A� airs Minis-ter AKM Mozammel Huq came up with the disclosure replying to a query in parliament yesterday.

The minister said after the killing of Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman all governments except the Awami League distorted the

history of the 1971 Liberation War.The government has been im-

plementing various projects to present the real history as well as the sacri� ces of war heroes to the young generation.

The Law Commission has al-ready drafted the Liberation War Denial Crimes Act 2016 with a provi-sion for � ve years' imprisonment as the highest punishment for denial of historically established facts and settled issues of the Liberation War.

Any act of undermining, misin-terpreting, distorting, disrespecting

PAGE 2 COLUMN 1

Rampal power plant yet to get environmental clearance n Mohammad Al-Masum Molla

The proposed coal-� red pow-er plant in Rampal to be set up in close proximity to the Sundarbans is yet to get clearance from the De-partment of Environment.

Environment and Forest Minis-ter Anwar Hossain Monju made the statement while addressing parlia-ment yesterday afternoon.

He told parliament that the En-vironmental Impact Assessment (EIA) report on the plant was ap-proved after adding a good number of preconditions.

Replying to a query, the minister said: “If mitigation measures are implemented properly as per pro-posals of the EIA report, the project will not cause any damage to the Sundarbans.”

Reiterating that the Sundarbans will not be a� ected if Rampal pow-er plant is constructed Monju, said it will rather generate employment for local people.

“People’s purchasing capacity will increase and their dependency on the Sundarbans decrease.”

The minister said the coal-based power plant will be established

with super critical technology and 59 conditions were imposed in the EIA report to avoid any negative impact on the Sundarbans during the construction and operation of the plant.

Monju told parliament that on-line monitoring system will be in place to curb pollution.

He also said a well coordinated round-the-clock monitoring team comprising the Department of En-vironment, Power Development Board and other o� cials concerned will monitor the system.

PAGE 2 COLUMN 5

n Nure Alam Durjoy, back from Thanchi, Bandarban

For generations, the highlanders in Bandarban’s Thanchi have known only one thing: how to � ght hunger to stay alive.

The indigenous people in some of the most remote areas of Bangla-desh live in a state of limbo; no one is willing to take responsibility for their well-being.

Toiling everyday in the jhum � elds in the remote hills, most of them have resigned to the fact that neither they nor their children would get any basic education or healthcare services during their lifetime.

In a place where the nearest school or medical facility is almost a day’s journey away, there is hard-ly any option to avail such basic hu-man rights.

If you hire an engine-boat and start a journey upstream in the Sangu River from Thanchi, you will come across only two or three schools in the local bazars.

But Andharmanik – which is two days’ boat journey from Thanchi – is the last frontier; beyond here, there is no government or NGO-run education or medical facilities.

Illiteracy and the lack of health awareness are invisible chains tethering the future of these com-munities. In the absence of oppor-tunities, jhum cultivation becomes their only choice of living.

The Dhaka Tribune recently vis-ited remote areas in Thanchi’s Re-makree union to � nd that almost no children went to school and no one had access to medical services.

Jhum cultivation for kidsThe kids in the remote indigenous communities either spent their time working in the jhum � elds with their parents or by playing on the yards and the river.

PAGE 2 COLUMN 2

The forsaken communities of Thanchi

A local in Bandarban’s Thanchi tells the Dhaka Tribune how villages in the remote hills are being denied basic human rights such as education and healthcare for ages NURE ALAM DURJOY

Page 2: 10 June, 2016

News2DTFRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

The forsaken communities of ThanchiIn the remote community of Young Naung Para, locals said in the histo-ry of the village there had been only one boy who managed to study up to HSC exams, but had to leave his own house to � nish his education at a college in Bandarban’s Ali Kad-am upazila.

The village head, Young Naung Karbari, told the Dhaka Tribune that around 15 children of the vil-lage have studied up to class two; but to do attend classes, they had to walk to the next village of Katan-gia Para where an NGO named Kari-tas Light House had a small school.

In Loyakree Para, there is a school for 28 households. But only two children study there in class two. The school was informally set up in 2014 by the Turtle Research Centre, but villagers said the stu-dents had no books or paper.

However, not all remote com-munities have the chance to send their kids to school.

Mo Bayu, head of Malungia Para, said there was no school or healthcare facility for his village or the villages nearby. So, all children joined their parents in the jhum � elds.

Kayingpre Mro of May Thow-aing Para, and Kya Swe Pru Karbari of Mro Gong Para said their villages

shared similar fates.Ranglang Murong said educa-

tion can change the face of the area and shape a better future for the children, who now had no other choice but to work in the � elds.

“No one from the union pari-shad comes to help us because we live in such a remote place. There is no one here who gets their basic rights,” said Silo Tripura of Sur-jyamoni Para.

Jungle medicine and family planningIn the hard-to-reach areas of the upazila, there are many people who have never even seen a doctor in their lifetimes.

Forty-two-year-old Kya Swe Pru Karbari of Mro Gong Para told the Dhaka Tribune that it was only three years ago when he � rst visit-ed a doctor for a blood test.

Water-borne diseases are en-demic in the region, while many children su� er from skin diseases. Even in cases of severe sickness, they have to rely on herbs and jun-gle medicine for cure.

Apart from the obvious di-lemmas of not having a doctor or medical facility nearby, the remote regions of Bandarban face another crisis – the lack of family planning

awareness.“We have 11 households in our

village, with each family having around six or more children,” Kya Swe said.

“A child died during birth last month in the village. The mother was lucky to survive. She has six children; of them, three have died from diseases,” he added.

Ren Chang Mro, a 27-year-old father of � ve from Loyakree Para, said the size of families was only getting bigger as people in the re-mote areas have no idea about birth control.

“As a result, many problems arise. For example, we have many mouths to feed, meaning more crops have to be cultivated in a big-ger land,” he said.

Eighty-� ve-year-old Rui Moun has spent half of her life provid-ing midwifery services to Young Noung Para.

Rui, who never had any formal training in midwifery, admits it has been a tough journey as she had seen many deaths during child-birth.

Through her struggles of a life in the remote hills, the octogenarian knows one thing – there is no end in sight for the su� erings for the in-digenous communities. l

BNP urged to cut ties with Jamaatn Sheikh Shahariar Zaman

At least 20 members of European Parliaments representing di� erent political parties have expressed con-cern over the human rights violation and brutal killings in Bangladesh.

In a debate on Situation on Bangladesh that took place in the

European Parliament Tuesday late night, they also condemned the ongoing attacks on teachers, blog-gers, publishers, writers, members of minority communities and ex-pressed concern at their killings.

Lawmaker Charles Tannock said that Bangladesh is a secular South Asian democracy and is champion-

ing in religious tolerance, freedom of expression, women’s rights, ed-ucation and values.

Tannock in his speech at the debate urged the opposition par-ty, BNP to end links with the Ja-maat-e-Islami.

This is the second time the Eu-ropean parliament voiced concern

over the BNP-Jamaat link. After the 2014 national election, the Europe-an Parliament through a resolution urged BNP to cut ties with Jamaat.

Another lawmaker Jean Lambert suggested that a strong civil society is absolutely essential as well as ef-fective policing and judicial system to combat violent extremism. l

Law againstand running propaganda cam-paigns against these historical facts would be deemed as o� ences under the proposed law.

Besides, making arguments or launching campaigns in support of criminal activities committed dur-ing the war or questioning the war crimes trial would be regarded as o� ences.

Currently, 22 countries have speci� c laws on such issues and also on genocides and crimes against humanity. O� enders have been brought to justice in those countries.

On March 22, Law Commission Chairman Justice ABM Khairul Haque said the commission had completed the draft of a law to pre-vent the distortion of the history of the Liberation War.

BNP Chairperson Khaleda Zia claimed that there are controver-sies over the number of martyrs during the country’s Liberation War.

The Ekattorer Ghatak Dalal Nir-mul Committee and other pro-lib-eration organisations have been demanding for a long time enact-ment of the Liberation War denial act so that no one can question the settled issues of the country’s Lib-eration War. l

Rampal plantThe government move to build the power plant has already caused an angry outcry from environmental-ists across the country.

The National Committee to Pro-tect Oil, Gas, Mineral Resources, Power and Ports and some other environmental organisations have expressed their concerns over the proposed coal power plant in Ram-pal terming it a project against na-tional interests.

They said the coal power plant would make the ecosystem of the mangroves forest more vulnerable whereas many people would lose their livelihood.

The government, however, claims that the projects would not harm the Sundarbans, a Un-esco World Heritage Site, as they would use advanced technology to cut emission of hazardous gas-es including carbon dioxide, � ne particles and � y ash, and properly dispose the solid and liquid wastes.

Bangladesh-India Friendship Power Company Ltd (BIFPCL), a joint venture of Bangladesh’s PDB and the NTPC of India, is devel-oping the Maitree Super Thermal Power Project at Rampal which will use imported coal.

The plant would adopt super critical technology. India’s state-run Bharat Heavy Electrical Ltd or BHEL has won the deal to build the plant.

On the other hand, local � rm Orion Group is building a 566MW power plant in Rampal area.

According to the EIA, the project area is about 14km north-eastward of the Nalian Range of the Sundar-bans and 4km away from the Eco-logically Critical Area boundary.

The project area has 95% arable land within a 10km radius and it will also a� ect � shing, cattle and birds and animals of the forest. l

Nasreen Zamir honorary consul of Luxembourg to BDn Tribune Desk

N a s r e e n Z a m i r , f o u n d e r and manag-ing director of Nasreen Zamir And Associates, has been ap-pointed the

honorary consul of Luxembourg to Bangladesh by the government of the Grand Duché of Luxembourg.

She is a well-known interior designer, businesswoman and en-trepreneur in the country who has been promoting “Made in Bangla-desh” as a concept and reality in support of talented people in the � eld of interior design, online stores for home furnishing and accessories

manufactured in Bangladesh.Her company promotes the

“Heritage Art of Bengal” by provid-ing a portion of her business prof-its in support of local artisans and homegrown craftsmen. She is also an avid social worker.

Nasreen’s husband Muhammad Zamir was a former ambassador and chief information commissioner. Her father Muhammad Delwar Hos-sain was awarded the prestigious Ekushey Padak for his social work.

The new role of being the honor-ary consul of Luxembourg in Bang-ladesh is exciting, Nasreen said at her swear-in ceremony.

“I look forward to a bilateral relationship between Bangladesh and Luxembourg including trade and commerce, higher education and other possible areas of common interest.” l

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina say prayer with children during an iftar arranged in Ganabhaban yesterday for orphans, physically challenged children and Alem-Olamas BSS

Page 3: 10 June, 2016

3D

TFRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016

News

‘Microbus driver witnessed Mitu murder’n FM Mizanur Rahaman,

Chittagong

Jane Alam, driver of the black mi-crobus which was allegedly used by standby assailants during police o� cer Babul Akter’s wife murder, witnessed the killing that took place in Chittagong city’s GEC area on Sunday morning, a senior police o� cer has claimed.

Alam, 50, was arrested from outside the city on Wednesday night, hours after the police seized the microbus (Chatta Metro Cha-116119). He hails from Jungle Sal-impur area of Sitakunda.

The microbus was seen in CCTV footage leaving the crime scene following the three assailants on a

motorcycle. The bike was found in an abandoned condition from the city on Sunday night.

At the CMP Headquarters, Addi-tional Commissioner Debdas Bhat-tachariya told reporters that Alam was the owner and driver of the microbus.

“We are con� rmed that it is the same black microbus which was seen in CCTV footage collected from near the murder spot,” he said, adding that the law enforc-ers were trying to know about the persons staying inside the vehicle during the killing operation.

“After primary interrogation, Jane Alam confessed that he was in the spot during the killing mission … he witnessed the whole incident of murder. We are interrogating

the person to glean more informa-tion from him. If his involvement is found, he will be arrested in the case,” the o� cer said.

About Mitu’s coming out of the house 30 minutes earlier on that day, Debdas said that Mitu used to come out of her house at 7am or 7:05am along with her son to catch the school bus. Other residents of the building too came out at the same time. The bus usually wait at GEC intersection around 7:15am to pick students.

“We need to know why Mitu started for the bus stop half an hour ago on that day. The school authorities did not send any SMS on Mitu’s phone regarding early school on Sunday.”

However, Mitu’s mobile phone

has remained missing since the murder, he added.

Police’s Counter-Terrorism and Transnational Crime Unit, Crimi-nal Investigation Department (CID) and Police Bureau of Investigation are jointly investigating the case.

Meanwhile, a court in Chittagong yesterday sent a former activist of Islami Chhatra Shibir to jail, a day after he was arrested in connection with the gruesome murder.

The court of Metropolitan Mag-istrate Abdul Kader sent Gunnu to jail after the investigation o� cer of the murder case produced him before the court with a 10-day re-mand prayer, CMP Additional Dep-uty Commissioner (prosecution) Nirmalendu Bikash Chakrabarty

told the Dhaka Tribune.The court directly questioned the

IO, Detective Branch Inspector Kazi Rakibuddin, regarding the case. Later the court � xed Sunday for the hearing asking the IO to present all relevant documents of the case.

Gunnu, who was arrested on Wednesday from Hathazari, is an attendant of a local shrine. Police said that he is a charge-sheeted ac-cused in an abduction and murder case � led with Satkania police.

“He had been arrested in Mitu murder case based on concrete in-formation,” Debdas told reporters.

Gunnu’s family and locals refut-ed his connection with Shibir, and claimed that he had not left the shrine in the last seven days. l

Family claims Gunnu implicated falselyn Anwar Hussain, Chittagong

Family members and locals yester-day claimed that Abu Nosor Gun-nu, arrested on Wednesday for his alleged involvement in the murder of police o� cer Babul Akter’s wife Mahbuba Khanam Mitu, was impli-cated deliberately.

From a press conference at Chit-tagong Press Club, they also refut-ed the police’s statement hat Gun-nu had been involved with Islami Chhatra Shibir, the student wing of

Jamaat-e-Islami.Gunnu, 40, son of late Mofazzel

Hossen, is a member of Hathazari Nazirhat Collegiate School manag-ing committee and general secre-tary of Darbar-e-Musabia manag-ing committee.

Darbar-e-Musabia is a shrine founded by late Ahmudul Haque Siddique in Farhadabad area of Hat-hazari in Chittagong. Ahmudul’s two daughters – Shamshunnur Monira Siddiqa and Hamidunnesa Siddiqa – have been struggling for

a long time to take control over the management of the shrine. Nosor used to work for Monira.

Reading out a written statement at the press conference, Monira’s daughter Khairun Nur Siddiqa termed Gunnu’s arrest a conspir-acy. She alleged that a section of dishonest police had arrested an innocent man like Gunnu for mak-ing some quick bucks.

“The image of the police force is being tarnished for a section of dis-honest police. We urge the prime

minister and the home minister to release Gunnu without any delay,” she said.

Refuting Gunnu’s involvement in Mitu murder, Khairun claimed that Gunnu had not left the shrine in the last seven days, and urged the law en-forcers to analyse his mobile phone.

About his a� liation with Ja-maat-Shibir, Khairun said: “Gun-nu was never involved with any anti-liberation politics. His elder brother was a freedom � ghter.”

Following his arrest from Hat-

hazari on Wednesday, police claimed that Gunnu, a former Shibir activist, had been facing an abduction and murder case � led with Sitakunda police.

They also said that Gunnu was arrested as his mobile phone had been tracked near the crime scene where Mitu had been stabbed and shot to death on Sunday.

Police produced Gunnu before a court seeking remand. But the court sent him to jail and set Sun-day for the remand hearing. l

Police starting drive against militantsn Arifur Rahman Rabbi

The police forces are beginning a week-long drive from today to ap-prehend terrorists and militants, Inspector General of Police AKM Shahidul Haque has said.

The decision was made at a meeting in the Police Headquarters yesterday. The IGP said the drive was a part of e� orts to strengthen anti-terror and anti-militancy cam-paigns and to collect information on militants using community policing.

Terming the murder of SP Babul Akhter’s wife ruthlessly brutal and tragic, Shahidul ordered law en-forcers to arrest perpetrators be-hind the killing as soon as possible.

As part of other decisions reached at yesterday’s meeting, the IGP also issued directives on updating the list of the country’s militants, increasing surveillance on di� erent religious organisations, making community policing more e� ective, increasing surveillance on pilgrims and tenants, and providing security to foreigners.

He also instructed young police recruits to rise above self interests and engage fully in crime � ghting.l

Teachers and students of Dhaka University’s criminology department bring out a condolence procession yesterday inside the campus demanding the arrest of SP Babul Akhter’s wife Mitu’s murderers RAJIB DHAR

Page 4: 10 June, 2016

FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016

4DT News

Police: Aslam has named mastermindsn Kamrul Hasan and

Md Sanaul Islam Tipu

Dhaka Metropolitan Police (DMP) investigators yesterday claimed that the arrested BNP Joint Secre-tary General Aslam Chowdhury has disclosed the names of people who sent him to attend a meeting with Israeli politician Mendi N Safadi.

DMP Additional Commissioner Monirul Islam in a media brie� ng at DMP media centre yesterday said Aslam had given the Detective Branch detailed information on the

meeting between him and Safadi. We learned from him who he

met, who were involved with them, who ordered him to go there, who encouraged him and what was their next course of action,” the of-� cer said.

“These people will be arrested if the information is proved to be true,” he added.

“He gave us su� cient evidence for the charges brought against him.”

Aslam Chowdhury was arrested on May 15 on charges of sedition

and put on a seven day interroga-tion with the DB. Later a Dhaka court on Wednesday approved an-other � ve days of questioning.

On May 26 Inspector Gener-al AKM Shahidul Haque claimed Aslam had confessed to meeting alleged Mossad agent and Likud Party leader Mendi N Safadi sever-al times to conspire to topple the government. Safadi also heads the organisation International Diplo-macy and Public Relations, known to have ties with Mossad.

Monirul, who is also the Coun-

ter-Terrorism and Transnational Crimes Unit chief, claimed that the recent killings were conducted to embarrass the government.

“What could be the reason behind killing a village tailor, a van-puller? The purpose is to em-barrass the government. They are trying to show that the government cannot protect minorities,” he said.

Aslam had tried to establish in his meeting that minority were be-ing subjected to torture in Bangla-desh, Monirul said.

“Here is the link between the

two. Safadi is an Israeli citizen. And SITE Intelligence is owned by an Is-raeli,” he added.

The US-based terrorism moni-toring group SITE Intelligence has regularly released statements from Islamic State and al-Qaeda follow-ing targeted killings in Bangladesh. It is owned by Rita Kartz, an Israeli.

Police applies to exempt Aslam from section 54

On Tuesday, Detective Branch applied to a Dhaka Court to exempt Aslam from a case � led under pe-nal code section 54. l

Two suspected muggers killed in Dhaka ‘gun� ghts’n Kamrul Hasan

Two suspected muggers were killed in separate alleged gun-� ghts with Rapid Action Bat-talion early yesterday in Dha-ka’s Turag and Rampura areas.

The dead were Nazrul Is-lam, 37, son of late Abdul Aziz from Panchagarh, and Kamal Paevez, 42, son of Kenai Kazi from Gournadi, Barisal. RAB Legal and Media Wing Assis-tant Director Mizanur Rah-man Bhuiyan con� rmed the Dhaka Tribune of the deaths.

RAB 1 Deputy Director Lt Commander Kazi Mohammad Shoaib said that around 2am yesterday, three hijackers on a motorcycle opened � re at RAB o� cials when the elite force challenged them at a check post near Prottasha bridge in Turag area.

In retaliation, RAB o� cials � red back, leaving left one of the three, Nazrul Islam, in-jured. The other two hijackers managed to � ee.

The RAB o� cial said Naz-rul was member of a Dhaka based dope gang and was also involved in women tra� cking and robbery.

Sub-Inspector Khagendra Chandra Sarker of Turag po-lice station said he recovered Nazrul’s body from Tongi 50 bed hospital and took it to Dhaka Medical College Hospi-tal around 3pm yesterday.

Turag police OC Mahbub-e Khuda told the Dhaka Tribune that Nazrul had a case � led against him with Tongi police station.

In Rampura, Kamal Parvez was killed during an alleged gun� ght between RAB 3 o� -cials and a group of muggers in Rampura East Balurmath area around 12:30am yester-day.

According to RAB press re-lease, Kamal was a member

of a group of muggers that hijacked a woman named Sheuli Parvez on Wednesday 4pm. When locals intercept-ed the four muggers on two motorcycles, they started to shoot at the locals and a youth named Rimon received bullet wounds.

However, Kamal fell o� the motorcycle during the chase and the locals detained him, RAB said quoting Sheuli.

Later when RAB ques-tioned Kamal, he revealed the names of his associates – Ha-bib, Babu and Sultan. Follow-ing the information, a team of RAB 3 along with Kamal went to their hideout where the hi-jackers sensed the RAB’s pres-ence and started shooting.

Kamal was shot during the gun� ght and was rushed to Dhaka Medical College Hospital where duty doctors declared him dead, the RAB statement said.

SI Delowar Hossain said they recovered the body from the area and sent it to DMC morgue. However, it could not be ascertained if Kamal had any case against him with any police stations.

However, when Kamal’s family members went to DMCH to receive his body, Kamal’s wife Shwapna Begum claimed that her husband was a RMG scraps trader. She said on Wednesday evening, Sul-tan had called her and said Kamal was picked up by law enforcers. She then informed local police and RAB but they denied of any such arrest.

Yesterday morning, some-one called her from Kamal’s phone and told her that her husband’s had received bul-let wounds and was in DMCH. Shwapna Begum said she came to the hospital after the call and found that her hus-band was already dead. l

Page 5: 10 June, 2016

FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016News 5

DT

PRAYERTIMES

Cox’s Bazar 29 26Dhaka 33 27 Chittagong 33 26 Rajshahi 37 29 Rangpur 35 26 Khulna 36 27 Barisal 35 28 Sylhet 34 26T E M P E R AT U R E F O R E C A S T F O R TO DAY

Source: Accuweather/UNB

D H A K ATODAY TOMORROW

SUN SETS 6:46PM SUN RISES 5:10AM

YESTERDAY’S HIGH AND LOW36.5ºC 23.5ºC

Rajshahi RangpurFRIDAY, JUNE 10Source: Islamic Foundation

Fajr: 3:49am | Jumma: 1:15pmAsr: 5:15pm | Magrib: 6:59pmEsha: 8:45pm

THUNDERSHOWER WITH RAIN

Ashraf: Killings aimed to create panicn BSS

Public Administration Minister Syed Ashraful Islam today said the recent killings have been carried out to create a sense of panic in public mind.

“The aim of the killers will not be ful� lled as Bangalee is a brave nation. They will not feel fear in some killing incidents,” hetold the concluding ceremony of a foundation training courseat Bangladesh Public Administra-tion Training Centre (BPATC) at Savar.

Ashraf said, “Our law enforce-ment agencies have remained alert to stop such killings. They (law enforcers) are intensifying their e� orts to arrest those who are responsible for the heinous inci-dents.”

He said the government is sin-cerely working to complete un� n-ished works for translating the Vi-sion-2021 into reality. l

Detectives arrest nine members of question leak gangn Arifur Rahman Rabbi

The Detective Branch of police has arrested nine people, allegedly in-volved with the leakage of Higher Secondary Certi� cate (HSC) ques-tion papers.

The suspects were arrested in di� erent areas around Dhaka be-tween Wednesday night and early

yesterday morning, said Monirul Islam, additional commissioner at Dhaka Metropolitan Police (DMP), during a press brie� ng yesterday.

The suspects are Saiful Islam Jewel, Rubel Bepari, Abdus Sattar, Mezbah Ahmed, Kawsar Hossain, Al Amin, Ekram Hossain, Hridoy Hossain and Jahangir, Monirul told reporters.

Police also recovered fake ques-tions of 2016 HSC chemistry, ac-counting, physics and biology ex-ams and 10 mobile phone sets from the suspects’ possession.

Explaining how the gang op-erates to smuggle the exam ques-tions to students, Monirul said a corrupt employee of Bangladesh Government (BG) Press – where all

the board exam question papers are printed – memorises the ques-tions during the printing, writes them down and sends them to Jew-el. Jewel then passes it on to Sattar, who passes it on to Ridoy and Ri-doy sends it to Ahmed Niloy, who is currently in hiding.

Niloy spreads the word about the question papers on social me-

dia, and sells them to students, who pay him via mobile banking service Bkash.

Meanwhile, Jahangir, Rubel, Kawsar and Mezbah leak the questions via messaging services WhatsApp and Imo.

During primary interrogation, Jewel told police that their leader’s name is Alamgir Hossain. l

BD lauded for nuclear power programmesn Aminur Rahman Rasel

Bangladesh has made noticeable progress in implementing the rec-ommendations of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Inte-grated Nuclear Infrastructure Re-view (INIR) mission, a team of ex-perts concluded earlier this month.

Experts have found that a ma-jority of the recommendations and suggestions have been acted on, but considerable work remains as Bangladesh moves forward in de-veloping its infrastructure for a nuclear power programme, said a statement from IAEA on June 1.

Bangladesh and Russia signed a general contract on December 25 last year for the construction and commissioning of Rooppur Nucle-

ar Power Plant in Pabna at a cost of $12.65 billion.

Bangladesh Atomic Energy Commission, under the Science and Technology Ministry, will im-plement the Rooppur project.

The 2011 INIR mission had pro-vided recommendations and sug-gestions to develop an action plan for the establishment of the coun-try’s nuclear infrastructure.

The expert team, made up of IAEA and international experts, conducted a follow-up INIR mission from May 10-14 to assess the progress and as-sist in prioritising further infrastruc-ture development activities.

The expert team has identi� ed the following main achievements: Bangladesh has established its nu-clear safety regulatory body. It se-

lected the Rooppur site in the Pab-na district, 160km north of Dhaka, for the construction of the � rst nuclear power plant. It undertook the site characterisation and envi-ronmental impact assessment and adopted a law for the establish-ment of the operating organisation, the Nuclear Power Plant Company Bangladesh Limited, and strength-ened coordination among relevant government entities.

But formalised procedures be-tween the future operator and the regulatory body are yet to be laid down, the mission said.

Last year, Bangladesh signed a general contract with Atomstroy-export from the Russian Federa-tion for the construction of two VVER 1200 nuclear power reactors

at the Rooppur site.Milko Kovachev, Head of the

IAEA’s Nuclear Infrastructure De-velopment Section, who led the follow-up INIR mission, said: “Bangladesh has chosen a turn-key contractual option, � nanced by a sovereign loan from Russia.”

Although Bangladesh has initi-ated responses to all recommen-dations and suggestions from the 2011 mission, the implementation of some of these needs further at-tention, the team concluded.

These included further strength-ening the national project plan to re� ect the actual status of the pro-gramme and its future challenges, � nalising a national and institu-tional human resource plan and a national communication strategy

for stakeholder involvement and public information.

Policies for the management of low and medium level radioac-tive waste should be formally ap-proved, the team said.

Bangladesh government re-quested an INIR mission in 2009 after deciding to include nuclear power in its national energy mix, as part of e� orts to address a rapidly increasing demand for energy, im-prove economic development and reduce dependence on natural gas.

The government subsequently. These missions enable IAEA mem-ber state representatives to have in-depth discussions with interna-tional experts about experiences and best practices in infrastructure development. l

Members of Khashia Chhatra Sangathan Bangladesh form a human chain yesterday in Shahbagh, Dhaka protesting the eviction of Khashia people from Sylhet’s Nihar Punji SYED ZAKIR HOSSAIN

Page 6: 10 June, 2016

FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016

6DT News

Ruling party men grab government land n Md Emroz Khandakar, Pabna

A section of ruling party men grabbed the land of the Roads and Highways Department in Madhab-pur Bazar area of the district.

According to sources, the ruling party men led by Korban Ali Bisaws, local Awami League leader and the chairman of Ataikulla union coun-cil built party o� ce recently after evicting 20 makeshift shops in the area causing much su� erings to the poor people.

The chairman and his men evicted the shops without any show cause notice, locals alleged.

When visited the area, it was found the party men built the of-� ce of Awami League and its front organisations on the govt land.

Pictures of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and local MP Sham-sul Haque Tuku were hung with the trees in the area.

According to locals, the arrange-ment was only to occupy the land for the interest of the chairman, his supporter the union AL secre-tary Arshad Ali Vandari, AL leader Moshiur Ranju, Abdul Kuddus and Azad Hossain.

The shopkeepers said the ruling party cadres stormed into the area suddenly and vandalised the estab-lishments.

Shopkeeper Abdul Quddus said: “We have been doing business in Khasland for 30 years. The ruling party men evicted us illegally.”

“Now, where will we go and how

will we support our family,” he asked.Drugstore owner Syful Islam

said: “No body came to take toll or tried to grab land in last 30 years.”

“We are at a loss to see activities of

the chairman and his men,” he said.“We have cast vote for Awami

League, but the leaders of the party evicted us. So, where will we go,” he asked. Traders Sulaiman Mian,

Abdul Gafur, Selim Hossain and Sydul echoed Sy� ul and Kuddus.

When contacted, Arshad Ali said he had taken the position of the land to build up party o� ce.

Korban Ali’s brother-in-law Azad denied the allegation of grab-bing the land. Ranju said they had built the o� ce in his own land.

Korban Ali could not be reached as his mobile phone was switched o� .

His son Mirajul Islam said his fa-ther could not speak as he was ill.

“Some one might have grabbed land in the name of my father. He is not involved with it,” he added.

The department Executive En-gineer Mofazzal Haider said he did not know who had grabbed the land. “After investigation, we will take steps,” he added. l

FOUR SCHOOLBOY MURDER CASE

5 accused denied bailn Md Noor Uddin,

Habiganj

A court yesterday canceled the bail of � ve people includ-ing the prime accused, in a case � led for their alleged involvement in the killing of four schoolboys at Bahubal upazila in the district.

According to sources, sev-en accused of the case ap-pealed for their bail in the court led by Judge Shankar Haldar in the afternoon.

After hearing, the judge canceled the bail of Arzu, Bashir Mia Abdul Ali, his sons Rubel Mia and Jewel Mia. They were sent to jail.

The court granted the bail of two other accused Basir and Saleh. Public Prosecutor

advocate Abul Hashem Molla said the court � xed June 20 for next hearing.

On February 12 this year, the four children Monir Miah, 7, Zakaria Shuvo, 8, Moham-mad Tajel Mia, 10, and Ismail Miah, 10, went missing from Sundrateki village in Bahubal.

Five days later, their bod-ies were found buried under sand at a place around a kilo-metre o� the village.

Later, a murder case was � led with Bahubal police station.

Eight people were indicat-ed in the case at Sundrateki village in the district.

Seven of the accused were arrested while Bachchu, an accused died in what the law enforcers described as a ‘shootout’. l

Three to die for killing schoolboy after abductionn Md Raihanul Islam

Akand, Gazipur

A Gazipur court yesterday sentenced three people to death penalty for killing a schoolboy after abduction 20 years back.

Sessions Judge of Gazipur M Fazle Elahi Bhuiyan handed down the verdict on Ataur Rah-man, Alam Hossain and Yusuf, residents of Saldai village. The court also � ned them Tk10,000 each. Among the convicts, Yusuf was tried in absentia.

According to the prose-cution, the convicts abduct-ed Gias Uddin, a resident of Saldai village and also a

student of Class VII, on Sep-tember 5,1996 and demanded Tk50,000 as ransom.

Following the incident, victim’s father Abdul Baten Bepari � led a case with Kapa-sia police station.

Being failed to realise ran-som money, the trio killed Gias and dumped his body into a water body.

Police recovered the skele-ton of the boy from the water body after three months of his death.

Later, police arrested Ataur, Alam, Yusuf, Judge Miah and his wife Some-ja Khatun and submitted a charge sheet against them. l

Ruling party men hang pictures of national leaders from a tree after grabbing land of Roads and Highways Department in Madhabpur Bazar, Pabna DHAKA TRIBUNE

Page 7: 10 June, 2016

FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016News 7

DT

Warrant issued for 2 doctors for negligence of dutyn Anwar Hussain, Chittagong

A Chittagong court yesterday is-sued arrest warrant for three per-sons, including two physicians, in connection with a case � led over death of a woman during delivery.

Metropolitan Magistrate Har-unur Rashid issued the warrant of arrest for the three persons identi-� ed as Gynecologist Dr Kajal Rekha

Roy and Registrar of cardiology department of Chittagong Medical College Hospital Dr Debashish Ta-lukder and Managing Director of Patient Care Hospital Abdul Jabbar.

Sayma, 23, wife of Morshedul Alam, an assistant district judge of Noakhali, was under the medical supervision of Gynecologist Dr Ka-jal Rekha Roy. The expected date of the delivery was June 20. How-

ever, the gynecologist asked to ad-mit Sayma to Patient Care Hospital when she felt labour pain on June 2.

Sayma Shikder gave birth to a baby boy around 2am, but she did not regain her consciousness fol-lowing the caesarian operation. Later, she was shifted to Metropoli-tan Hospital of the city around 7am where the doctors pronounced her dead.

Dr Kajal Rekha Roy performed the operation on her while Dr De-bashish anesthetized the patient.

Later, mother of Sayma � led a case against the three persons.

Sayma Shikder, daughter of Em-dad Ullah and a fourth year student of Sociology at Chittagong Govern-ment Women College, was married o� to Morshedul Alam on March 17, 2015. l

Bangladeshi youth allegedly killed by BSFn Abdullah Al Dulal, Rajshahi

A Bangladeshi youth died early yesterday after being allegedly shot by the Indian Border Security Force (BSF) in Paba upazila of Rajshahi.

The dead was identi� ed as Rony Khalashi, 28, son of Abul Khalashi of the upazila’s Char Majhardiar village.

According to locals, Rony was shot by BSF when he crossed the border to India around 2am to

bring phensedyl. Later he escaped and came back to his village home where he died around 4am.

However, Commanding O� cer of BGB 1 Battalion Shahjahan Siraj said they were investigating the in-cident as there might be a possibil-ity that a certain group is trying to put the blame on BSF.

He said after Rony was wound-ed, he walked about 3kms to his home, which is unusual for a per-son who sustained bullet wounds.

A letter has been sent to the BSF for a � ag meeting in this regard, Shahjahan Siraj said.

Rajshahi Rajpara police station OC Mahbubur Rahman said they recovered Rony’s body from his home after they were informed and then sent it to Rajshahi Medi-cal College for autopsy. l

Shyamal Kanti’s family still in panicn Tanveer Hossain,

Narayanganj

Shyamal Kanti Bhokto, headmaster of Piyar Sattar Latif High School, returned to his residence located in Mokorba area, Narayanganj from hospital yesterday, but his family is still in panic and they do not want to talk to anybody over the issue.

Local sources said as they had talked against an in� uential quar-ter of the locality, they were fearing that they might face dire conse-quences in future, although local administration as well as educa-tion minister have already assured them that therewas nothing to worry about their future.

When this correspondent went to Shyamal Kanti’s residence, he was prevented from entering the house. Gate man told him that Shy-amal Kanti’s family had asked him not to allow anybody to enter the house.

Later, Sobita Hawladar, wife of Shyamal Kanti, told the Dhaka

Tribune over phone that they ar-rived at their residence in the after-noon.

She said her husband was still traumatised. He was taking rest.

Sobita who is a nurse by profes-sion said: “We do not want to talk to anybody. He needs rest. We will talk to you [journalist] two days later.”

In reply to a question she said they were still in fear. She also expressed hope that everything would be � ne after her husband got back his normal life.

On Wednesday, Shyamal Kanti Bhakta, who was beaten up by lo-cals and made to do sit-ups holding his ears in presence of the local Jatiya Party lawmaker AKM Selim Osman, told the Dhaka Tribune that he would join the school after recovering illness.

The teacher then said the local people were provoked by false al-legations and some teachers held a grudge against him for not meeting their unfair demands.

On May 13, the headmaster was humiliated in front of a law maker for allegedly making derogatory comments over Islam.

On May 17, the management committee of the school suspended him for hurting religious sentiment.

The incident triggered wide-spread protest across the country and condemnation demanding dis-missal and arrest of local lawmaker Salim Osman.

Education Minister Nurul Islam Nahid reinstated the humiliated headmaster and dismissed the gov-erning body of the school.

On May 20, he was shifted to the Dhaka Medical College Hospital for better treatment. Since then, he was undergoing treatment at the Dhaka Medical College Hospital till yesterday.

Earlier, in an Education Ministry probe committee it was found that the school committee forced him to resign with unproven allegation that he had hurt the religious sen-timent. l

Police get more time to investigate Shyamal Kanti incidentn Ashif Islam Shaon

The High Court yesterday asked the Narayanganj district police to submit detailed reports on the incident of public humiliation of schoolteacher Shyamal Kanti Bhakta by August 4.

The High Court bench of Moy-eenul Islam Chowdhury and Justice Md Iqbal Kabir came up with the order after the superin-tendent of police and o� cer-in-charge of Bandar police station in Narayanganj sought more time.

On May 29, the court in a suo moto rule ordered Narayanganj’s

deputy commissioner and the two police o� cials to submit sep-arate detailed reports specifying the steps taken against those in-volved in humiliating Shyamal, head master of Piyar Sattar Latif High School, by June 9.

The court had also expressed dissatisfaction as the DC, SP and OC failed to prepare the reports in line with the rule of court’s di-rective.

On May 18, the High Court asked why necessary legal ac-tions against local lawmaker Sal-im Osman and others will not be initiated. l

The Shramik Oikya Parishad brings out a procession in the capital yesterday demanding payment of garment workers’ arrears before the upcoming Eid-ul-Fitr MAHMUD HOSSAIN OPU

Rony was shot by BSF when he crossed border to India to bring phensedyl

Page 8: 10 June, 2016

INSIGHT

Five takeways from Modi’s speech to United States Congressn Tribune International Desk

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi delivered an ode to US-In-dia relations to a joint session of Congress Wednesday, capping something of a phoenix-like rise for both the man and his country’s relations with the US.

Modi is the � fth Indian prime minister to address a joint session of US lawmakers (sixth if you in-clude Nehru, who addressed the House and Senate separately in 1949), and from the packed audi-ence it seemed as if they had mo-mentarily put aside the intensely riveting politics around the two presumptive nominees of both major parties-- Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump, to come and hear Modi in the Capitol Hill.

By now, the man from Gujarat is clearly a pastmaster at the tel-eprompter. It is also totally irrel-evant that he speaks in a Gujarat/Hindi accent. In fact, in this “land of the free and the home of the brave,” another American aph-orism with which Modi brought the House down, the nondescript origins of Narendradas Damodar-das Modi and his consequent rise and rise are treated with unusual interest. Especially when the op-position in India shows few signs of attempting to pick itself up and give Modi a good � ght.

Here are the five takeaways from Modi’s speech--1. The American treatment of

prime minister Narendra Modi as a pariah because of his alleged role in the Gujarat riots of 2002 in which about a 1000 Muslims were killed, is a thing of the past. The Americans have decided that debates about tolerance and democracy and free speech and the right to eat any kind of meat must belong to the stratosphere inside India. The US is not going to lecture India anymore, and they are certainly not going to lecture Modi. The Americans are pragmatists and they need India for a variety of reasons. This in-cludes the hope that India will join the so-called “containment” of an increasingly powerful Chi-na by an increasingly nervous US. They also want India to join the US e� ort to put Afghanistan back on its feet. Moreover, frustrated by the Pakistani establishment’s decision to undercut America’s initiatives against the Taliban, the US is coming round to agree-

ing with India’s description of Pakistan being the “epicentre of terrorism” around the world.

2. Prime Minister Modi is equally pragmatic. When the US reissued his visa to visit the US in 2014 as prime minister -- abandoning its own 2005 policy which can-celled his visa because of Modi’s alleged role in the Gujarat 2002 riots -- there were many Indi-ans who suggested that the PM “not go” to the US because of the insults and humiliation the US had meted out to him. But Modi chose to ignore that advice and went ahead. He has since met Barack Obama seven times. He calls him by his � rst name, Barack, like the other leaders of nations considered allies as well as non-Nato allies. Two years later, that pragmatic policy has paid o� . In the midst of a global slowdown, US business may be � nally turning to look at India. Amazon founder Je� Bezos an-nounced his decision to invest $3bn more into India soon after he met Modi along with 22 other CEOs, as well as separately.

3. Modi has made India a closer partner of America -- although even he stopped short of using the problematic word, “ally” -- than any other prime minister since independence. “We will walk shoulder to shoulder to-gether,” Modi told US President Barack Obama when he met him on June 8, and his speech at the Congress was littered with words like “connectivity,” “coopera-tion,” “shared practices,” and of course, “partnership.” So even

though India is still not a US ally, unlike Nato allies such as the UK and Turkey, or non-Nato allies such as Australia and Japan, it looks like it is becoming Ameri-ca’s preferred partner in Asia.

4. The PM’s trip to the US was cer-tainly about saying farewell to Barack Obama, but equally to tell the bipartisan US Congress that he is willing to deal with whoever becomes the next pres-ident of the US. No wonder he was aiming to please the Con-gress, especially sections who wonder about his democratic credentials. Modi’s invocation that the “Constitution is his only holy book,” is aimed at reassur-ing this section of the US politi-cal class.

5. Modi, simply, cannot refrain from taking a dig at his political oppo-nents inside India, even when he is abroad. In his speech at the US Congress, he joked that he is the target of partisan politics, especially in the Upper House of Parliament, the Rajya Sabha, just like the “bipartisan spirit” that prevailed in the US Congress.Modi wants the US to lean to

China again, to get India a con-sensus at the Nuclear Suppliers’ Group. The Americans seem to be willing to do so – again. But Modi must understand that foreign pol-icy is above politics. That’s how it used to be in the good, old days. As prime minister, he has the re-sponsibility of returning India to that position. l

8DT WorldFRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016

SOUTH ASIA

Nepal police arrest 162 over nationwide strikePolice arrested 162 members of a Maoist splinter group across Nepal Thursday for vandalising vehicles and injuring two in a petrol bomb attack while trying to enforce a na-tionwide strike. The protesters called on factories, schools and public trans-port to shut down as they demanded the release of fellow cadres from the hardline faction, the Communist Party of Nepal Maoist. -AFP

INDIA

17 people an hour die in road accidents in IndiaIndia’s transport ministry admit-ted Thursday it has so far failed to improve road safety but said it was pushing for stricter laws, as new � g-ures revealed 17 people die in tra� c accidents every hour. The report found 146,133 people died in 501,423 road accidents in 2015, an increase of almost 5% from 2014, while half a million more were injured. -REUTERS

CHINA

China uses SWAT teams to crack down on college exam cheatsFrom sending SWAT teams into exam centres to arresting rule-breakers, China’s public secu-rity authorities have been cracking down hard on college entrance examination cheaters who could face jail if caught. This week’s uni-versity entrance exam determines which university students will attend and what major they’re able to select - and as a result, much of their future. -REUTERS

ASIA PACIFIC

PNG court bars university protestsA Papua New Guinea (PNG) court has granted an injunction barring university students from protest-ing on campus after dozens of peo-ple were wounded during clashes between student protesters and police in the capital, Port Moresby. A groundswell of political unrest in recent weeks has surged in the country amid calls for Prime Min-ister Peter O’Neill to resign over corruption allegations. -REUTERS

MIDDLE EAST

Baghdad bombings kill 25

Two suicide bombings that killed about 25 people in Baghdad on Thursday were claimed by IS, whose stronghold of Falluja near the capital is surrounded by Iraqi forces which are now advancing on the city. The ultra-hardline Sunni insurgents said one attack was carried out with a car laden with explosives and the sec-ond with an explosive vest. -REUTERS

MODI’S SPEECH IN NUMBERSLength of speech 48 minutes

Number of standing ovations 9

Rounds of applause 64

Mention of the word “partnership/partner” 15

Mention of the word “freedom” 11

Mention of the word “terrorism/terrorist/terror” 10

Mention of the word “democracy” 7

Mention of the word “Yoga” 3

Mention of the word “equality” 2

Mention of the word “religion” 1

Mention of the word “Pakistan” 0

Mention of the word “cow” 0

India Prime Minister Narendra Modi addresses a joint meeting of Congress in the House Chamber on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC on Wednesday REUTERS

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9D

T

FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016World

USAUS endorses plan to cede internet oversight The US administration on Thursday endorsed a plan to cede its oversight of the gatekeeper of internet ad-dresses to the broader online com-munity. The plan aims to maintain internet governance under a mul-ti-stakeholder model which avoids control of the online ecosystem by any single governmental body. -AFP

THE AMERICASVenezuela SC bans publishing lynchings videosVenezuela’s Supreme Court on Wednesday banned media from publishing videos of lynchings, saying they create anxiety and uncertainty. Gory videos of mob justice or photos of bloody corpses sometimes make the rounds on social media. President Nicolas Maduro’s socialist government says the footage is part of a larger plan to sully his administration. -REUTERS

UKBrexit camp threatens legal action over EU vote extension Brexit campaigners accused the government of trying to rig the EU referendum and threatened legal ac-tion on Thursday as former London mayor Boris Johnson squared up for the campaign’s � rst TV debate. British MPs on Thursday approved emergency legislation to extend voter registration -- a move that has infuriated the “Leave” camp because many late requests have been from broadly pro-EU younger voters. -AFP

EUROPEEU to rule on Russian access to Nord Stream gas pipelineBrussels is expected to rule next month on whether to allow Russia to pump more gas via its Nord Stream pipeline’s gas link to Germany, risking fresh discord between member states over energy dependence on Russia. The expansion would see more Russian gas bypass Ukraine - a move seen depriving Kiev of transit fees as the route for more than half of Russian gas supplies to Europe. -REUTERS

AFRICAWest Africa marks end of deadly Ebola outbreakLiberia said Thursday it was free of Ebola, meaning there are now no known cases in west Africa of the tropical virus that has left more than 11,300 people dead in the region since late 2013. The west African nation has now passed the World Health Organisation thresh-old of 42 days - twice the incuba-tion period for the virus - since the last known patient tested negative for the second time. -AFP

EU, Germany hit back at Erdogan in genocide rown AFP, Berlin

German politicians hit back Thurs-day at Turkey’s president for accus-ing lawmakers of Turkish origin of having “tainted blood” in a row over whether the Ottoman Empire com-mitted genocide in World War I.

President Recep Tayyip Erdo-gan reacted furiously after the 11 German MPs with Turkish roots last week backed a parliamentary resolution that recognised the mass killings of Armenians as a genocide.

The sensitive issue has infuri-ated Erdogan at a time when rela-tions are already strained by dis-putes about media freedom, while the EU is banking on Turkey to stop the cross-border � ow of migrants.

A group of Turkish lawyers has also � led a complaint with prosecu-tors asking for the 11 German law-makers to be charged with “insult-ing Turkishness and the Turkish state,” the Hurriyet daily reported.

European Parliament President Martin Schulz wrote to Erdogan to voice his “great concern” about his “verbal attacks and allegations concerning freely elected mem-bers of the German Bundestag”.

‘Hateful threats’The German parliament’s presi-

dent, Norbert Lammert, said that statements by Turkish leaders had prepared the ground for a torrent of “hateful threats and insults” that were mailed to the MPs.

Lammert also warned that “we will respond accordingly with all op-tions available to us under the law”.

Erdogan late Wednesday spoke of people with “tainted blood” -- explaining he meant those “who wrong their own people” -- and pointed at the “members of parlia-ment in Germany that accuse their own country of genocide”.

His comments went a step fur-ther than remarks at the weekend in which he suggested the MPs should undergo blood tests to see “what kind of Turks they are”.

Germany’s foreign ministry on Tuesday asked in the Turkish charge d’a� aires to say that recent state-ments about German MPs were met with “incomprehension” in Berlin.

One of the German lawmakers, the Green party’s Cem Ozdemir, told Turkey’s Armenian weekly Agos that while he and other parliamen-tarians were the targets of “death

threats and insults”, at least they were “not incarcerated” and not had their “immunity lifted for having simply expressed what we thought, unlike our colleagues in Turkey”.

Mass killings The Armenian issue has thrown Turkey into con� ict with a num-ber of countries that have labelled the mass killings a genocide.

Armenians say some 1.5m of their people were killed in a geno-cidal campaign by Ottoman forces - ordered by the minister of war, Enver Pasha, and other top o� -cials - to wipe them from Anatolia.

But Turkey insists similar num-bers of Muslims and Armenians were killed during wartime con-� ict and has always � ercely resist-ed pressure to recognise that any genocide took place.

The dispute comes while the EU and Turkey are locked into a deal to contain the migrant crisis, which last year sent record num-bers of people � eeing Syria and other war zones and trouble-spots into Europe.

Turkey has pledged to stop mi-grants from travelling to EU mem-ber Greece, and to take back illegal migrants from there, in return for � nancial aid and bene� ts. l

INSIGHT

Clinton ally Elizabeth Warren weighs potential VP role, sees hurdlesn Reuters, New York/

Washington, DC

US Senator Eliza-beth Warren has considered the idea of serving as Hillary Clinton’s running mate but

sees obstacles to that choice as she prepares to endorse the presump-tive Democratic presidential nom-inee, several people familiar with Warren’s thinking told Reuters.

While her thinking could evolve, Warren has concerns about joining a Clinton ticket, including the question of wheth-er running two women would give the Democrats the best shot at defeating Republican Donald Trump, one source said.

Advisers to Warren, a � ery critic of Wall Street and a popular � gure among progressive Demo-crats, have been in close contact with Clinton’s campaign team and the conversations have increased in frequency in recent weeks, the sources said. Warren has signalled to people close to her that she is intrigued by the possibility of be-

ing Clinton’s number 2 but has not discussed the role with Clinton, 68, or anyone else from her cam-paign, the people said.

Warren, 66, has been one of the Democrats’ most outspoken crit-ics of Trump, 69, and her priority is helping to defeat the presump-tive Republican nominee in the November 8 presidential election, the sources said.

Warren is also committed to advancing her own political agen-da, which they described as “more progressive” than Clinton’s more centrist positions. Warren fears that as vice president, or in a cabinet po-sition, her voice could be less heard than it is in the US Senate on her priority issues such as addressing

income inequality, the sources said.In the past, Warren has accused

Clinton of abandoning her support for stronger bankruptcy legislation to try to appease Wall Street.

‘Get ready Donald’An endorsement of Clinton could come within a week or two, one of the sources said. Clinton has been appealing for Democratic Party uni-ty. On Twitter over the weekend, Warren echoed that call and em-phasised the importance of the par-ty coming together to beat Trump.

“Get ready, Donald,” Warren tweeted. “We’re coming.”

Warren, who represents Mas-sachusetts in the US Senate, has stayed neutral in the Democratic primary race, notably remain-ing the only woman senator not throwing her support behind the � rst woman presidential nominee of a major US political party.

Were she to join the Clinton ticket, she could help energise progressives and win over sup-porters of Clinton’s rival Bernie Sanders, a democratic socialist US senator from Vermont. Sanders’ calls for reining in Wall Street and

breaking up big banks dovetail with Warren’s views.

An ongoing feud with Trump gained steam on social media with a series of posts in which she labelled the celebrity businessman racist, sexist and xenophobic and said she was going to � ght to make sure his “toxic stew of hatred and insecurity never reaches the White House.”

Warren joined Clinton late last month in criticising Trump for rooting for the 2008 � nancial cri-sis and delivered a 10-minute in-vective on the subject at an annual Washington gala two weeks ago.

“What kind of a man roots for people to get thrown out of their house? I’ll tell you exactly what kind of man does that,” Warren said. “It is a man who cares about no one but himself - a small inse-cure money-grubber who doesn’t care who gets hurt so long as he makes a pro� t o� it.”

Trump has ridiculed Warren by calling her Pocahontas in a mock-ing reference to her having said in the past that she had Native Amer-ican ancestry. Pocahontas was a famous Native American in early colonial Virginia. l

Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren REUTERS

Turkish protesters hold placards reading “The name of real genocide is Germany” over World War II picture of camps, during a protest against the approval of a resolution by Germany’s parliament that declares the 1915 massacre of Armenians by Ottoman forces a “genocide” in front of the German Embassy in Ankara last Friday AFP

Page 10: 10 June, 2016

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FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016World

Ex-British PMs in anti-Brexit campaignn Reuters, Belfast

Tony Blair and John Major warned on Thursday a vote to leave the European Union on June 23 would jeopardise the unity of the United Kingdom by undermining peace in Northern Ireland and bolster-ing the Scottish independence movement.

Speaking together in Northern Ireland, the two former British prime ministers, who both played important roles in the prov-ince’s peace process in the 1990s, warned that unity was e� ectively on the ballot paper.

“Throw away the membership of Europe and don’t be surprised if in the end, as a consequence, we accidentally throw away our union as well,” Major, Conserva-tive prime minister from 1990 to 1997, told students at the Ulster

University in Londonderry.“The most successful union in world history could be broken

apart for good,” he said.Major warned that if Scotland votes to stay and the rest of the

United Kingdom votes to leave, the pressure for a new referen-dum on Scottish independence “could prove to be uncontrolla-ble and politically irresistible.”

Scots rejected independence by 55%-45% in a vote in 2014 but since then the Scottish National Party has gained further strength, taking 56 of the 59 seats representing Scotland in the national parliament in London in last May’s national election.

“If the UK was outside the European Union I could well envis-age a di� erent result” he added.

Blair said the referendum could also undermine the 1998 Northern Ireland peace deal that ended three decades of tit-for-tat killings between Catholic Irish nationalists who wanted the province to unite with Ireland and their Protestant rivals who wanted to keep it British. Over 3,600 died in the con� ict.

“If we were to leave on June 23, it would put ... Northern Ire-land’s future at risk, it would put our union at risk, it would be deeply damaging, a reckless course,” said Blair, who oversaw the peace deal as Labour prime minister from 1997 to 2007.

Blair said the European Union and free travel and trade on the island of Ireland had been an important factor in securing the peace deal in 1998 and that it would be “profoundly foolish to play any form of risk with those foundations of stability.”

Theresa Villiers, an opponent of EU membership who serves as Britain’s minister for Northern Ireland, said the comments by Blair and Major were irresponsible.

“Whatever the result of the referendum, Northern Ireland is not going back to the troubles of its past and to suggest other-wise would be highly irresponsible,” Villiers said. l

US may ask Canada for help with Nato force in east Europen Reuters, Brussels/Warsaw

The United States could turn to Canada to help it establish a new Nato force in eastern Europe as a deterrent against Russia because it is struggling to win support from its European allies, diplomats say.

Despite its show of force with a military exercise across eastern Europe this month that involved more than 20 Nato and partner countries, the alliance is moving slowly in its efforts to build a ro-tating force of 4,000 troops on its

eastern flank in Poland and the Baltics.

Only Britain and Germany have said they are willing to contribute. The US will provide a third battal-ion, leaving Nato requiring one more country to provide a fourth.

“European allies have reasons why they can’t come forward. They’re thinly stretched, at home, in Africa, in Afghanistan. They just don’t have the money,” said a senior Nato diplomat involved in the discussions.

The reluctance of some Europe-

an governments to help the mili-tary build-up, the biggest since the end of the Cold War, reflects internal doubts over whether the alliance should be more focused on combating militant groups and uncontrolled flows of migrants, mainly from the Middle East and North Africa.

Unity is crucial for Nato as Mos-cow and Washington accuse one another of intimidation close to the Nato-Russia border. Nato and Russia feel threatened by each other’s large military drills and are

at odds over the crisis in Ukraine.Former communist states in

Nato want to bolster its east-ern defences without stationing large forces permanently, worried since Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea from Ukraine that Moscow could invade Poland or the Baltic states in days.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov dismissed such an idea this week, saying he saw no threats in the region that would justify the area’s militarisation.

Nato defence ministers will

next week formally agree on the plan for four battalions to be in-volved in the new force, part of a deterrent made up of forces on ro-tation and warehoused equipment ready for a rapid response force in case of attack.

Britain is likely to deploy to Estonia, Germany to Lithuania and the United States to Latvia. The United States will also sup-ply an armoured brigade to rove around the eastern flank. Canada has 220 armed forces personnel in Poland. l

13 DAYS TO GO

Former UK PMs John Major, left, and Tony Blair share a platform for the Remain campaign event in Belfast on Thursday REUTERS

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FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016World

After deadly Tel Aviv attack, Israel suspends Palestinian permitsn Reuters, Jerusalem

The Israeli military on Thursday re-voked permits for 83,000 Palestin-ians to visit Israel and said it would send hundreds more troops to the occupied West Bank after a Pales-tinian gun attack that killed four Israelis in Tel Aviv.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the assault by two gunmen on Wednesday in a trendy shopping and dining mar-

ket near Israel’s Defence Ministry, but Hamas and other Palestini-an militant groups were quick to praise it.

The assailants came from near Hebron, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. They dressed in suits and ties and posed as customers at a restaurant, ordering a drink and a chocolate brownie before pulling out automatic weapons and open-ing � re, sending diners � eeing in panic.

Two women and two men were killed and six others were wound-ed. The attack followed a lull in recent weeks after what had been near-daily stabbings and shootings on Israeli streets. It was the dead-liest single incident since an attack on a Jerusalem synagogue in No-vember 2014 that killed � ve.

The Tel Aviv gunmen, cousins in their 20s who security experts said appeared to have entered Israel without permits, were quickly ap-

prehended. One of them was shot and wounded.

After consultations with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the military said it was rescind-ing some 83,000 permits issued to Palestinians from the West Bank to visit relatives in Israel during the ongoing Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

At an emergency meeting, Isra-el’s security cabinet discussed pu-nitive measures against attackers,

including destroying their homes more quickly, and e� orts to bolster the number of security guards in public places, an o� cial said.

The army announced that two battalions would be deployed in the West Bank to reinforce troops stationed in the area, where the military maintains a network of checkpoints and often carries out raids to arrest suspected militants. Israeli battalions are comprised of around 300 troops. l

Page 12: 10 June, 2016

12DT Business

FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016

Capital market snapshot: ThursdayDSE

Broad Index 4,419.0 -0.0% ▼

Index 1,082.9 -0.2% ▼

30 Index 1,738.1 -0.2% ▼

Turnover in Mn Tk 3,404.9 5.3% ▲

Turnover in Mn Vol 86.2 2.6% ▲

CSEAll Share Index 13,597.9 0.0% ▲

30 Index 12,550.5 0.1% ▲

Selected Index 8,274.3 0.0% ▲

Turnover in Mn Tk 239.0 4.1% ▲

Turnover in Mn Vol 6.7 -4.7% ▼

WB: Bangladesh sees jump in e-procurement Bangladesh is making a paradigm shift for its public procurement environment with an exponential growth of electronic government procurement, known as e-GP, the World Bank said in a statement yesterday. PAGE 13

Merger ‘synergies’ can’t just be code for job cutsFor companies, failure and expan-sion couldn’t be more di� erent. For employees, they can feel the same. That uncomfortable truth ought to play more of a role in future calculations over whether doing deals makes sense. PAGE 15

TOP STORIES

Sugar price: Who calls the shot?Traders asking for higher prices than retail prices shown on packets n Ibrahim Hossain Ovi

Millers are manipulating sugar prices at the consumer level by tightening their grip on the supply chain, a number of retailers and wholesalers allegedly said yester-day.

They also said the re� ners are not only cashing in on the arti� -cial supply shortage but also con-tributing to price hike in the mar-ket which the consumers alone su� er the brunt of.

Sugar – a highly demanded es-sential commodity during Rama-dan – is being sold at much higher price, even, higher than the Maxi-mum Retail Price (MRP) in all the stores across the country.

The Dhaka Tribune in a market review found that the retailers were selling one kilogram of fresh sugar packet for Tk70, violating the MRP price tag that reads Tk58.

A pack of fresh sugar was bought from M/S Ela Store at Shukrabad in Dhaka yesterday.

Asked why the trader was charging higher price, he said he had to buy it for Tk68 from suppli-er, and so he is forced to sell it for Tk70 in order to make a marginal pro� t only.

The millers claim that they have su� cient stock of sugar to meet the demand during Rama-dan. They say they are selling it for Tk48 at mill gates, but the reality is di� erent.

The consumers are buying the unpacked sugar at between Tk60 and Tk65 while the packed one Tk65 and Tk70 due to supply chain manipulation, the Dhaka Tribune has found.

During a meeting with Com-merce Minister Tofail Ahmed yes-terday, sugar re� ners said they have enough stock of the commodity and they are selling it to the whole-salers at Tk48 per kilogramme at the mill gate which the retailers and wholesalers contradict.

“If the supply is enough, there is no chance of price manipula-tion,” Hazi Abul Hasem, president of Bangladesh Chini Baboshayee Samity told the Dhaka Tribune.

The wholesalers are fully de-pendent on the millers and they (millers) are tightening the supply chain to create shortage in the mar-ket to hike prices, Hasem claimed.

He said although the millers earlier promised to ensure smooth supply at a reasonable price, they did not keep their word.

The business tycoon urged the government to monitor the supply status properly in order to � nd out

the truth. “We sell per kilogramme of un-

packed sugar for Tk48 at the mill gate while the packed one is sold at Tk55 a kg,” Biswajit Saha, gener-al manager of City Group, told the Dhaka Tribune.

But the Dhaka Tribune obser-vation of di� erent kitchen mar-kets in the capital ran counter to what Mr Saha claimed.

It was found that there is short-age of packed sugar in the market because of high prices.

Although the City Group o� -cial claimed that the retail price of Teer brand packed sugar is Tk55 per kg, the packet MRP reads Tk63.

The sugar packet with MRP Tk63 is being sold at Tk65 and MRP Tk58 at Tk70 in di� erent kitchen markets of the city. The price of unpacked sugar, however, ranges between Tk60 and Tk65 in almost all markets.

Meanwhile, Commerce Minis-ter Tofail Ahmed during a meeting with the traders said the price of per kilogramme sugar should not be over Tk60.

There is no reason behind price hike of sugar as there is an abun-dance of supply in the market, To-fail said, warning of stern action if anyone tries to make pro� t by arti� cially hiking price.

At the meeting, the City Group

Chairman Fazlur Rahman claimed that there is enough stock of sugar in the country and there is no sup-ply chain constraint.

The highest demand for sugar is 5,000 tonnes daily while the millers are supplying 7,000 to 8000 tonnes per day, he said.

But the retailers say the supply is not su� cient in the market that shoots the price up.

Showing the payment receipt of supply orders, Bablu, a shop-keeper at Karwan Bazaar, told the Dhaka Tribune he placed an order for sugar from Deshbandhu Sugar Mill on May 15, but the order is yet to be delivered to the wholesalers.

“I am really frustrated about it.” Although the millers claim that

they have been supplying sugar at Tk48 per kg, the traders need to pay Tk58.78 per kg while the

amount is Tk54.21 at normal time. The wholesalers of Moulvi Ba-

zar are demanding higher price and not paying receipts for the products, he said.

“I have bought a sack of sugar at Tk2,950 which means per kilo-gram sugar costs Tk59,” he said.

He also alleged that he cannot provide the sugar as per the de-mand.

During the meeting, the com-merce minister asked the National Consumer Rights Protection De-partment to coordinate with the importers, retailers and sellers for sugar price margin.

“Prices of one or two items have soared slightly due to rise in their prices in the internation-al market, but we hope that they would be normal within a week in the country,” Tofail added. l

Retailers charging higher prices than tagged on packets DHAKA TRIBUNE

Banks asked to take necessary steps against fake notesn Tribune Business Desk

Bangladesh Bank has asked all the schedule banks to take necessary steps for checking fake notes dur-ing the month of Ramadan.

As part of the fake note preven-tion measure, banks have been asked to display the video footage containing real note features at the vital road intersections or crowded places, said a Bangladesh Bank cir-cular issued yesterday.

The video footage will have to display for an hour once a week in the evening time in every division-al city including Bogra district.

Moreover, all the branches will display the video at their own TV monitor during the banking hours, according to the circular. l

Page 13: 10 June, 2016

Business 13D

TFRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016

Denmark to give Bangladesh over Tk393 crore n Tribune Business Desk

Denmark will provide over Tk393 crore to Bangladesh for imple-menting 12 development projects related to tackling climate change, sustainable development and strengthening public organisation.

An agreement to this e� ect was signed between Bangladesh gov-ernment and Denmark at the NEC conference in the city yesterday. The fund will be disbursed be-tween 2016 and 2021.

Economic Relations Division (ERD) Senior Secretary Moham-mad Mejbahuddin and Danish Am-bassador in Dhaka Hanne Fugl Esk-jær signed the agreement on behalf of their respective organisations.

Mejbahuddin said the projects will be implemented for the coun-try’s capacity building to face natu-ral disaster, raising agriculture pro-ductivity, employment generation and strengthening di� erent public institutions. Besides Danish fund, Bangladesh government will also pump over Tk328.85 crore for im-plementing the projects.

Danish Ambassador said the country programme has already been made attaching importance to the de-velopment of Bangladesh and in line with the country’s Seventh Five Year Plan beginning from this year.

“The projects will help Bangla-desh achieve middle income coun-try by 2021.”

Last month, Danmark has made an agreement for the � ve-year programme for development part-nership with Bangladesh. The pro-gramme, which will take e� ect by the end of 2016, is aligned to the Bangladeshi government’s Seventh Five Year Plan that aims to achiev-ing middle-income status for the country by 2021. l

$81m heist: all probe documents kept in BB vault n Asif Showkat Kallol

Bangladesh Bank has put all the documents on $81m theft into its vault to conduct further investiga-tion to � nd any involvement of the central bank o� cials with the cy-ber heist, said o� cial sources.

“A large number of documents found in 11 computers that were seized, 70 messages sent through SWIFT, compromised devices and hardware are now in the vault as the three-member body recom-

mended further investigation,” said an o� cial.

The government-formed probe body, headed by former Bangla-desh Bank governor Mohammed Farashuddin, submitted its report to Finance Minister AMA Muhith on May 30.

Earlier, Mohammed Farashud-din said the government should carry out further investigation to � nd out whether the suspected Bangladesh Bank o� cials were re-ally involved in the theft.

In a primary report, the US-based � rm FireEye found that 32 compromised devices and hard-ware (computers) were identi� ed in the Bangladesh Bank’s network that were vulnerable to attacks. The report says “more could be found as the investigation contin-ues.”

An Indian consultant team ap-pointed by World Bank as part of its central bank strengthening project had examined 4,500 computers after the bank’s SWIFT security

system became corrupted on Feb-ruary 5.

On February 4, hackers stole $81m from the central bank’s ac-count in the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and wired it to Philip-pines’ Rizal Commercial Banking Corporation from where the mon-ey was moved to local casinos.

Investigation into one of the his-tory’s largest cyber thefts appears to have hit a wall in the Philippines as the perpetrators are yet to be ar-rested. l

Stocks inch down in choppy trading n Tribune Business Desk

Stocks fell marginally amid chop-py trading yesterday as late prof-it-booking sale cut early gains.

The market opened higher and traded within a band of 19 points throughout the trading session. Eventually, it edged higher on prof-it booking mainly on power and telecommunications sector.

The Dhaka Stock Exchange (DSE) benchmark index DSEX edged over 1 point to close at 4,419.

The blue-chip comprising index DS30 lost 2 points or 0.3% to 1,082. The DSE Shariah Index DSES shed about 3 points to 1,738.

The Chittagong Stock Exchange Selective Category Index CSCX closed at 8,274, rising 1.5 points.

Trading activities remained al-most unchanged as the DSE turn-over stood at Tk340 crore, up by 5.3% over previous session.

Modest pro� t-booking took place on power and telecommu-nications, which moved down 0.5% and 0.2% respectively. Banks closed � at. Food and allied sector was the highest gainer with a ral-ly of 1%, followed by engineering

0.7% and non-banking � nancial in-stitutions 0.3%.

Gainers took a lead over the los-ers as out of 319 issues traded, 116 advanced, 141 declined and 62 re-mained unchanged.

Meanwhile, ACME Laboratories, in its third trading day, gained 7.5% after falling 5.3% on previous day.

The debutant pharmaceutical company also continued to remain top turnover leader with shares

worth Tk40 crore changed hands. After ACME, other turnover

leaders included BSRM Limited, Orion Infusion, BBS, Linde Bangladesh and Lafarge Surma Cement. l

WB: Bangladesh sees jump in e-procurement Over 55,000 tenders worth $5.8bn have so far been done in e-GP n Tribune Business Desk

Bangladesh is making a paradigm shift for its public procurement environment with an exponential growth of electronic government procurement, known as e-GP, the World Bank said in a statement yesterday.

The e-GP covers four key gov-ernment agencies – Roads and Highways Department, Local Gov-ernment Engineering Department, Bangladesh Rural Electri� cation Board and Bangladesh Water De-velopment Board.

These agencies together spend about half the country’s annual development budget and are also

monitoring procurement perfor-mance online.

In the last two years, the tender invitations through e-GP in these four agencies increased by seven times.

The agencies together invited over 55,000 tenders online up to May 2016, up from 8,000 in June 2014. The corresponding value increase is to US$5 billion from US$700 million in the same period.

In addition to making public contracting more accessible, se-cure, e� cient and transparent, the electronic procurement is signi� -cantly reducing collusive bidding practices at the local levels.

e-GP has made doing business

easier and reduced the transaction costs for both the procuring agen-cies and the bidding community.

In addition, the system is be-coming self-sustainable. The World Bank supports the government in implementing e-GP through Public Procurement Reform Project II.

The project facilitated develop-ing professionalisation of procure-ment in the country. Sixty public o� cials have been certi� ed as na-tional trainers while 89 personnel received the ‘blue color’ interna-tional procurement accreditation following a rigorous screening and quali� cation process at the UK-based Chartered Institute of Procurement and Supply, and 84

o� cials received Master’s in pro-curement.

The project also facilitated three-week procurement training to about 2,400 o� cials from the four key agencies covering over 1,000 procuring entities, and over 1,900 o� cials from 20 additional agencies with over 500 procuring entities, ensuring that over 85% of procuring entities have at least one three-week trained sta� . Moreo-ver, over 5,000 participated in 17 types of short courses.

The project also piloted public procurement monitoring through citizen’s engagement to ensure better value of money, and trans-parency and accountability at the

grass-roots level. The project also facilitated a

government-contractors forum and public-private stakeholders com-mittee with representatives from the ministries, the procurement en-tities, and the leading think tanks.

A joint team of the World Bank and the government recently re-viewed the project progress and noted that the government’s high commitment is contributing to more transparency and competitiveness of the public procurement system.

The World Bank’s total support to the project is $68.10 million, which includes $10 million ad-ditional � nancing to project ap-proved on June 6, 2016. l

The market opened higher and traded within a band of 19 points throughout the trading session yesterday DHAKA TRIBUNE

Page 14: 10 June, 2016

Business14DT

FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016

CORPORATE NEWS

LankaBangla Finance Ltd (LBFL) and Nowhatta Green Bricks Limited have recently signed a memorandum of understanding on setting up a tunnel kiln automatic brick project at Nowhatta in Rajshahi, said a press release. Deputy managing director of LBFL, Khwaja Shahriar and managing director of Nowhatta Green Bricks Limited, Waheed Murad Jamil have signed the agreement

Southeast Bank Limited has recently signed an agreement with Bakhrabad Gas Distribution Company Limited on collecting gas bills, said a press release. The bank’s managing director, Shahid Hossain and secretary of Bakhrabad Gas Distribution Company Limited, MA Hannan Azad have exchanged the signed agreement

Japan may seek WTO help to resolve India steel tari� disputen Reuters

Japan said it may ask the World Trade Organisation (WTO) to help resolve a dispute related to India’s “safeguard” tari� s on the import of hot-rolled steel.

Prompted by massive steel ex-ports from the China, the world’s

top producer, countries including the United States and Australia as well as the European Union have imposed duties on steel imports. As the second-largest global steel producer, Japan’s own exports are potentially under pressure because of these protectionist stances.

India has extended its safeguard

import taxes on some steel prod-ucts until March 2018, in a bid to stop cheap overseas purchases from � ooding its market and bol-ster the domestic steel sector.

Japan will make repeated re-quests to the Indian authorities to ensure the consistency of their measures with the WTO agree-

ments, the Japanese Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) said in its annual report on unfair trade on Wednesday.

The India safeguard tari� s were placed as one of the priority issues that the METI will be working on, said Osamu Nishiwaki, director of rules and dispute settlement at

METI, yesterday.“We will step up our bilateral

discussions with India over the safeguard measures,” he said.

Asked whether Japan may consider bringing the issue to the WTO soon, Nishiwaki said it will depend on the results of the bilateral talks. l

Oil prices soften on pro� t taking after hitting 2016 highsn Reuters, London

Oil prices edged lower yester-day as traders took pro� ts after three sessions of gains, though prices remained close to their highest this year thanks to a fall in US crude inventories and supply disruptions.

International Brent crude oil futures traded 13 cents a barrel lower at $52.38 a bar-rel at 0845 GMT, after setting a 2016 high of $52.86 a bar-rel earlier in the session. US crude fell by 5 cents a barrel to $51.20 after also hitting a new 2016 high at $51.67.

“While we’re above $50 a barrel, momentum still re-mains fairly positive and what we’ve just seen today is a little bit of pro� t taking after three

consecutive days of gains,” CMC Markets chief market an-alyst Michael Hewson said.

Oil prices gained ground af-ter data on Wednesday from the US Energy Information Admin-istration (EIA) showed US crude stocks last week fell 3.23 million barrels to 532.5 million, the third consecutive weekly fall.

“Lower than usual Canadi-an � ows have helped fuel the draw in ... stock,” consultancy Energy Aspects said.

“We estimate Canadian output losses will total 29 mil-lion barrels across May and June, after adjusting for turn-around work that was under-way before the wild� res broke out, and assuming a pre wild-� re utilisation rate of 85% of (the 2015 average),” it said. l

Page 15: 10 June, 2016

Business 15D

TFRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016

Merger synergies can’t just be code for job cutsn John Foley

For companies, failure and expan-sion couldn’t be more di� erent. For employees, they can feel the same. That uncomfortable truth ought to play more of a role in future calcu-lations over whether doing deals makes sense.

On the one hand, the collapse of British retailer BHS, with the poten-tial loss of 11,000 jobs, has triggered a witch hunt. Meanwhile, energy giants Shell and BG Group have merged, and expect to generate $4.5bn of annual savings, or syn-ergies, as a result. The cost is that 12,500 jobs worldwide get the chop. Here, investors have pushed the stock up. That’s rational: fewer sta� means more pro� t to go around.

The numbers tell the story. Breakingviews analysed public � l-

ings for all the $30bn-plus mega-deals completed between 2002 and 2012 that involved US or UK non-� -nancial companies. Five years later, 14 of the 17 merged companies had fewer employees. On average, head-count fell 15%. But 15 had higher revenue per employee, while 11 had higher operating pro� t per worker.

In other words, mergers work – insofar as their goal is to make human and � nancial capital work harder, and generate higher re-turns. To an investor or economist, comparing Shell and BHS may thus seem ludicrous. Mergers are of-ten economically bene� cial. More pro� t per person should make the country richer.

But that connection is hard to see for those who are out of a job. The political-� nancial debate even in pro-market Britain is dominated

by anxiety over the labour market, from the investigations into work-

ing conditions at retailer Sports Direct to the uproar over plans to

close Tata Steel’s pensions-bur-dened steel plant in South Wales.

None of this invalidates the case for cost savings and mergers that create them. If countries have � exible markets, workers can be re-absorbed. If they don’t, pro� t-mo-tivated layo� s can be a spur for reforms. But the increasing anxiety over protecting workers can’t be brushed o� .

At the very least, it may increase the discount investors apply to merger synergies, on the basis that politics makes them hard to deliv-er. In some cases, deals that once would have looked appealing may not happen at all. l

John Foley is Reuters Breakingviews’ editor for Europe, the Middle East and Africa. The article was initially published at Reuters.

A worker carries belongings out of the US investment bank Lehman Brothers o� ces REUTERS

Page 16: 10 June, 2016

16DT

FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016Kids

Make your own hand-made jewellery that looks great.

Safety pin bead bracelet

The hot day and stink of a rubbish heap at

Hazaribagh is still not stopping children from being children. Rather

then avoid the mess, the kids are playing

with a balloon and even using the trash

dump to � y a kite.

| photo of the week |

| drawing |

| diy |

What you’ll need:• Safety pins, at least 30 large

ones• A variety of small beads• Wide and thin elastic bands

cut into two pieces

Instructions:• Open a safety pin, and place

the beads on the pointy end, one at a time, until it is full. Close the pin. Be careful when you do this. Repeat this for all pins.

• Now string the elastic through a pin, one through the hole on the head of the pin and one at the end.

• String the elastic through all of them until � lled.

• Tie the ends together into a tight knot.

There you have a beautiful bracelet!

PHOTO: MAHMUD HOSSAIN OPU

Page 17: 10 June, 2016

17D

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FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016Feature

food habits

mythical creatures mythical creatures

n Rad Sharar

The sea was dark and foggy. The sailors were lost in the night, and did not know what was going to come next. Then, suddenly, a beautiful voice sang to them. It was so warm and sweet, that the sailors lost their minds. They moved their ship towards the voice, but they couldn’t see anything because of the mist. They wanted to hear more, so they moved faster and closer. Suddenly, they crashed into a huge rock! The ship started to

sink when the singing monsters came out, watching with an evil smile. The Sirens have won again.

Sirens are creatures with a woman’s body and a � sh’s tail. They love to trap lost ships and drown every sailor in them with their singing. The only way someone could be safe is by covering their ears. Although, do Sirens have a big weakness. They die when someone listening to their singing runs away from them, but usually no one can get away from their voice. l

Sirens

Danger under the sea

Inside food

n Features Desk

The pirates sailed slowly in the sea, far away from land. They were bad men, who stole money and jewels, and even hurt people. All of a sudden, the ship began to shake, and huge tentacles started rising from all sides of the ship. This scary creature was so big that the ship seemed very small. In a few seconds, the ship was gone under the sea. It seems like the Kraken stroke again!

The Kraken is a giant mythical sea-monster, and looks like a huge octopus. It is a sailor’s worst nightmare, as it can easily take big ships under the sea. They do not have targets, so no one knows where they will attack next. They hide themselves inside small islands, and can even make whirlpools if they want to. The Kraken is one of the most dangerous myths of the sea, and we can clearly see why. l

n Features Desk

When talking about food, you often hear people talk about nutrients. What are nutrients? Why should you eat food with a lot of nutrients?

Nutrients are the things in food

that your body needs which allows you to stay healthy and happy. Having healthy eating habits and not eating too much food can allow you to stay � t and to keep up with your friends in school. These nutrients are vitamins, minerals, proteins, and � ber.

Fruits vs pizzaFruits contain vitamins and minerals which are needed for you to stay healthy and active. We need vitamins and minerals to help us grow, to see, to make our bones and muscles stronger, skin and organs, as well as to help us � ght infections. Not eating food with enough vitamins and minerals can make you very sick. For example, you will have a bad eyesight, if you do not eat food with enough vitamin A.

Pizzas and all the other fast foods which you love contain a lot of oil and grease, which are unhealthy and can make you chubby and un� t.

ProteinsProteins build and maintain the

tissues in your body. (Not the tissues you blow your nose in! We mean the stu� your body’s made up of). Your muscles, organs, and your immune system (� ghts germs that make you sick) are made up of protein. Fish, beef, eggs, nuts, seeds, and beans all contain the protein you need to stay � t and on top of your class.

FibreAn apple a day keeps the doctors away! Apples contain a lot of � ber. Fiber is very important for you

because it keeps your washroom activities in control and keeps you healthy so you can eat your favourite foods and enjoy every day. Other rich foods that contain a lot of � ber are bread, cereals, beans, and pears.Although fruits and meat have the nutrients that you need, eating too much can also be bad. A balanced diet is always needed for you to be healthy and � t, so make sure you eat a little bit of everything the next time you sit to have lunch or dinner. l

Page 18: 10 June, 2016

18DT

FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016Ramadan Special

Ramadan: In the blink of an eye

n Shireen Phasha

How long is our “awareness” span? We can be attentive towards a task for an hour, two hours perhaps, but how long can we actually employ our total nervous system to being aware?

Philosopher Paul Virilio in The Aesthetics of Disappearance, writes, “The lapse occurs frequently at breakfast and the cup dropped and overturned on the table is its well-known consequence. The absence lasts a few seconds; its beginning and its end are sudden. The senses function, but are nevertheless closed to external impressions. The return being just as sudden as the departure, the arrested word and action are picked up again where they have been interrupted. Conscious time comes together again automatically, forming a continuous time without apparent breaks. For these absences, which can be quite numerous - hundreds every day most often pass completely unnoticed by others around.” Virilio calls these moments picnolepsy (from the Greek, picnos: freuqent). What happens to this ammassed wealth

of lost time? “For the picnoleptic, nothing really has happened, the missing time never existed. At each crisis, without realising it, a little of his or her life simply escaped.

Who are the picnopletics?We are the picnopletics. A morning drive to work, we lower the window to buy a newspaper, we see a child with pure diarrhea squeezing out her guts in the middle of the street. We think for a second, “terrible.” But then we forget. There is no awareness. Maybe we remember again. But again without awareness. Why not? What keeps us from being aware from the soul - that little girl is me. Being aware from the mind - where are public toilets, where is a� ordable public housing, what made her migrate to the city to live on the street? Being aware with the body - organising self and others to address this serious human right, health and sanitary issue. Instead, a voice reminds us to think of something else - that trip, that task, that responsibility that suddenly seems too heavy. The voice may further say, “These � lthy people are ruining the

country.”We are picnopletics when

we have not fully mastered our sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems. Instead, other forces control us. Just know this, if you are not in control of your atomic mind, someone else is. This Ramadan let us walk towards total awareness.

MindFind ways to relax your mind. Mohammad (PBUH) meditated and encouraged namaz, alone and in community. Through meditation try to know yourself. What are your secret and not so secret beliefs, which ones empower you and which ones tear you and others down? Mohammad (PBUH)

Check out: www.kellycolby.com for information about a thymus gland detox

witnessed mass female infanticide in pre-Islam Arabia. He and Khadija refused to be picnopletics. What are the injustices in our communities now? Predatory lending, gender abuse, hoarding, greed, massive income inequality, rigged economy and rigged food system to support picnopleticism.

BodyClean your body. Mohammad (PBUH) shared with Khadija that the Angel Gabriel cleaned his intestines (solar plexus, pancreas) and his heart (thymus). Take the initiative to do this for yourself. Stop eating processed foods. For this month of Ramadan, do you think you can just have a green salad for Iftar with plenty of water? Do you think you can have just a salad for sehri with plenty of water? It is so, so di� cult but how much longer can we a� ord to be picnopletics? If you can do this for just one week, you will see, be alarmed at just how little food we really need and how abundant our Earth is. What abundance Allah has bestowed upon us. Sadaq Allahul-alliyul-Azeem pragmatically, in order to connect your glands, you need proper circulation between your sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems. Your intestinal plaque accumulated over the years can prevent this � ow of circulation. The heavy, acidic foods, a list which I will share with you again and again this Ramadan, can prevent clean blood and oxygen for the brain. To cleanse your solar plexus (pancreas), which is critical for digestion and blood sugar regulation, once again, eliminate junk food and drink plenty of water, ginger tea and remember to relax through namaz, especially starting your day with Fajr namaz. To clean you heart, focus on detoxing your thymus gland through fresh green salads and avoiding heavy stimulants such as cigarettes, co� ee and alcohol (this is important for total granular health).

SoulI am sure you do this already, so continue to do this. Don’t eat iftar alone. There was a time when we would and could, without fear, invite strangers into our home to share iftar. Can we return to this time? In seeking to connect with ourselves (our glands, chakras), in wanting to reach Allah, our deepest memories of love, trust and forgiveness will be our grace and strength. l

Man y people pilgrimage to Uluru, but what is seen there often depends on where you’ve come from. Uluru is sacred to the Anangu, the Aboriginal people of the area. The area around the formation is home to an abundance of springs, waterholes, rock caves, and ancient paintings - Robert Spanring

Page 19: 10 June, 2016

19D

T

FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016Biz Info

Aarong has opened its 16th outlet on June 8 at Bashabo and shifted its Wari outlet to a new location. Sir Fazle Hasan Abed, KCMG,

founder and chairperson of BRAC, inaugurated the openings.

Tamara H Abed, senior director, BRAC Enterprises, Md Abdur Rouf,

chief operating o� cer, Aarong and other senior management o� cials of the organisation also attended the occasion.

The 8,800 square feet Bashabo outlet is located at the Agomon Cinema Hall building will be serving Aarong customers from Khilgaon, Goran, Madartek, Maya Kanon, Ahmedbagh and Maniknagar areas primarily.

Aarong’s existing Wari outlet has shifted to a larger 13,500 square feet location in the newly constructed A K Famous Tower on Rankin Street, primarily serving Aarong customers in the old Dhaka area.

Aarong is one of the country’s leading lifestyle brand, promoting the craft of 65,000 local artisans. l

Under the initiatives of Bangladesh Ikebana Association (BIA), a workshop of � ower arrangement in Japanese style and Annual General Meeting

(AGM) of BIA were organised on Saturday, June 4th, at the Women`s Voluntary Association (WVA) auditorium in the capital`s Dhanmondi.

Presided over by the President of newly formed Executive Committee, Razia Zaher; head of Cultural and Public A� airs section of Japanese Embassy in Dhaka, Ariyoshi Rumi attended the event as chief guest; deputy head of Cultural and Public A� airs section of Japanese Embassy in Dhaka, Machiko Yamamura was also present as special guest.

Supervised by Dr AKM Moazzem Hussain, the event ran from 11am to 5pm. During the second part of the event, singer Monir Chowdhury performed at the cultural program. l

This Ramadan for the � rst Pimiento brings unlimited pizza and drinks only for Tk599+.

They also have three rice platters for Iftar.

Pizza O� er: Tk599+

Package 1: Tk299+1. Chili Chicken 2. Chinese Vegetable3. Vegetable Fried Rice4. Dates5. Soft Drink

Package 2: Tk399+1. Chili Chicken2. Beef Stir Fry3. Chinese Vegetable4. Vegetable Fried Rice

5. Dates6. Jilapi7. Fresh Juice

Package 3: Tk499+1. Tandoori Chicken2. Beef Stir Fry4. Chinese Vegetable 5. Vegetable Fried Rice6. Dates7. Jilapi8. Fruits9. Fresh Juice10. Water15% VAT will be added. No service charge.

The have limited seats Book your seats now for iftar.For reservation call: 0176262881 l

During the holy month of Ramadan, The Dining Room takes pleasure in o� ering it’s special haleem with generous tender

pieces of mutton, mixture of daal, wheat and perfect blend of TDR spices, making it a must have item for everyone at Iftar. l

Aarong outlets at Bashabo and Wari

Authentic Chinese at Combe Restaurant

Bangladesh Ikebana Association holds workshop

Ramadan O� ers

Must-have mutton haleem at The Dining Room

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Combe Restaurant brings you totally authentic southern Chinese food which is low fat, low spice but completely delicious. For bookings, call 01787664538.

Address: House 11, Road 06, Sector 04, Uttara l

Page 20: 10 June, 2016

TODAY

The deplorable situation of the Jhum people in Bandarban’s Thanchi upazila is a serious dereliction of duty on the government’s part.

 A severe food crisis in the region has been forcing these Bangladeshi citizens to leave the country and try to move to Myanmar to seek food, shelter, and livelihood.

 While poor harvests and harsh � nancial conditions have exacerbated the state of a� airs, the consequences of governmental neglect are reminiscent of the 1974 famine of Bangladesh.

 The government, on paper, has provided relief in the form of grains to the a� ected communities, but in reality, the relief is not reaching them, either in the amount that is o� cially expected or at all.

 Instead, greed and corruption have taken over, with relief being sold in the market or being given to the a� ected people as loans by mahajans with unreasonably high rates of interest.

 Local government o� cers are in denial of the situation and are not taking responsibility to address what is essentially criminal activity, unless ordered from above. However, such inaction and shrugging o� of responsibility is unacceptable.  

 The number of people a� ected within the Jhum community is less than 10,000. In no way is the Jhum population so large that the government should be unable to do anything to help them.

Bangladesh cannot a� ord to see yet another arti� cially created famine which could easily have been avoided through proper action.      

 While relief is a temporary solution, it is hoped that the government will come forward to the aid of these neglected people of Bandarban, and avert a larger humanitarian crisis.

It is hoped that the government will come forward to the aid of these neglected people of Bandarban, and avert a larger humanitarian crisis

PAGE 23

PAGE 21

PAGE 22

The courage and humanity of Muhammad Ali He stood up and fought for his beliefs when doing so meant being hated, he took unpopular social and political positions even when it meant losing his livelihood

Urgent action needed to end CHT food crisis

Be heardWrite to Dhaka Tribune

FR Tower, 8/C Panthapath, Shukrabad, Dhaka-1207

Send us your Op-Ed articles:[email protected]

www.dhakatribune.comJoin our Facebook community:

https://www.facebook.com/DhakaTribune.

The views expressed in Opinion articles are those of the authors

alone. They do not purport to be the o� cial view of Dhaka

Tribune or its publisher.

NURE ALAM DURJOY

EditorialFRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016

DT 20

Tech for allThe time is now to strengthen our e� orts in making technology work, not just for people living in luxury but for that person who doesn’t have access to basic information in the � rst place

Communities in dangerIf the government and society don’t do something about this, we will have to lose the indigenous peoples and their cultures forever

Page 21: 10 June, 2016

Opinion 21D

TFRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016

n John Tripura

There are about 54 indigenous communities in Bangladesh, covering about 2% of the total

population, living in di� erent pockets of the Chittagong Hill Tracts region and in the plain lands of the country.

Today, the indigenous peoples know that they must carefully control the in� uences that could destroy their cultural identity, their future, and the vital resources upon which all life depends.

Indigenous knowledge is essential to our development. The indigenous peoples have accumulated vast amounts of ecological knowledge of modern civilisation in their long history with managing the environment -- knowledge that could be bene� cial for nature and for the sustainable use of natural resources.

They have contributed greatly to global knowledge, for instance, in medicine and veterinary sciences as a result of their intimate understanding of their environment.

The indigenous knowledge system or practice exists principally in the form of songs, dance, proverbs, folklore, community laws, common or collective property and inventions, practices, and rituals.

And this connection to their land is an important source of resilience in indigenous communities.

However, this knowledge has always been ignored and maligned by outsiders. Nowadays, a growing number of international development agencies recognise that local-level knowledge, but it might be too late.

Despite that, indigenous knowledge has entered the sustainable development and bio-diversity conservation discourse today.

Article 8(j) of the Convention on Biological Diversity (in Rio, 1992) has contributed to this process by requiring signatories to “respect, preserve, and maintain knowledge, innovations, and practices of indigenous and local communities embodying traditional lifestyles relevant for the conservation and sustainable use of biological diversity.”

Over the years, indigenous people in Bangladesh have used their knowledge and practices to adjust to changing economic, ecological, and social dynamics in their locality.

But today, indigenous practices, and the environment, are under threat.

Indigenous communities are more vulnerable due to the impacts of climate change. Denial of their identity by the government is also another big factor.

However, when we talk about indigenous practices, we don’t refer only to the traditions of indigenous peoples of today’s life, but also their ancestral heritage.

The di� erent indigenous groups and their colourful lifestyles have signi� cantly enriched the entire cultural diversity of Bangladesh.

For centuries, Bangladesh has been the dwelling place of di� erent indigenous groups. Preserving the land and natural resources is a sacred responsibility for the indigenous peoples.

And the indigenous peoples have been carrying the responsibility of protecting natural resources, both animal and plant life, for millennia.

We know that the Santhal indigenous community is one of the biggest groups. They worship Marang Buru, or Bonga, as their supreme deity.

Their religious concepts are intricately entwined with nature and involve interaction with local ecological systems.

However, the Oraon, Munda, and some other indigenous

communities celebrate Karam Puja (worshiping on the Karam tree) which is one of the biggest festivals among them. But due to deforestation and illegal logging, the Karam tree is becoming extinct.

The Khasi indigenous peoples are slowly being evicted and losing their lands day by day. The main crops produced by the Khasi indigenous people are pan jum (betel leaf), areca nut, and orange. But the tea state garden authority is taking away their lands illegally.

The indigenous communities of Rangamati, Bandarban, and Khagrachari celebrate Boi-sa-bi.

The signi� cance of the festival to the indigenous communities is same though each refer to it by di� erent names.

The Jumma people in the CHT, who have been living in the region since time immemorial, celebrate this festival to wipe out all the sorrows of the previous year and to welcome the new year with hope.

During the continuous three-day celebration of the festival, the indigenous women and children wear colourful traditional dresses and visit each others’ houses.

During festival time, the cultural function and traditional games, including an exhibition of clothes and ornaments and paintings, are the main attractions of the celebration.

Beside this, the water festival in Bandarban, which is celebrated by the Marma community, is another unique expression of cultural diversity in CHT.

But the question is, how long can they practice their cultural activities in this country?

As the forest cover gets eroded as a result of mass migration, destructive development projects, and widespread militarisation, the traditional rituals and practices of traditional medication have continued to decrease.

Women in indigenous communities have also played a vital role in nurturing their culture.

But it is shameful that, nowadays, indigenous women and girls are the � rst group targeted for violence.

They are oftentimes sexually violated in order to terrorise the community and unsettle them, thus creating opportunities to occupy their lands.

The indigenous peoples have staged protests, pressured the government, and fought to secure

their rights for a long time. And I think there is no better

way to show one’s belief in the value of these cultures than by recognising the fundamental right of indigenous peoples to govern themselves and their territories.

This is what the struggle for the human rights of indigenous peoples is all about in Bangladesh.

Beside these, the states should have research projects to study indigenous folk tales, songs, dance, proverbs, stories, and folklore and medicine practices and veterinary medicine.

Moreover, there should be a holistic approach to build peace and harmony and to protect and promote indigenous practices in the country.

If the government and society don’t do something about this collectively, and on a large scale, in today’s world of globalised and ruthless market capitalism, we will have to lose the indigenous peo-ples and their cultures forever. l

John Tripura is an indigenous peoples’ human rights defender.

Indigenous women bear the brunt of the abuse SYED ZAKIR HOSSAIN

Indigenous communities contribute richly to the culture of our country

Communities in danger

If the government and society don’t do something about this, we will have to lose the indigenous peoples and their cultures forever

Page 22: 10 June, 2016

Opinion22DT

FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016

n Ikhtiar Kazi

Muhammad Ali was, by far, the most charismatic, outspoken, and

controversial athlete the world has ever seen. It will be generations before another man or woman remotely challenges Ali on the pantheon of the greats.

History has seen distinguished athletes for sure, those who dominated in an era, in their domain -- Pele, Babe Ruth, Jordan.

But none transcended sports like Ali; he possessed the magnetism, the wit, the poetry, the audaciousness, and sheer showmanship -- he was a rockstar, with the physique of Adonis, and the agility of a ballerina.

He was an original. But more than anything, Ali will

be remembered as the greatest, not only for his ability in the boxing ring, but for his courage when he was outside of it.

He stood up and fought for his beliefs when doing so meant being hated, he took unpopular social and political positions even when it meant losing his livelihood, and he spoke out and gave voice to those who were marginalised and oppressed, when remaining silent

was less costly. Until Ali, not too many athletes

were willing to challenge the status quo. Ali molded the era he lived inasmuch as the era molded him. As the Vietnam War was raging on in the late 60s, Ali was drafted to the US Army.

He � led for a conscientious objector classi� cation, based on his Muslim faith, but was denied. Ali could have easily joined the Vietnam War and never seen the battle� eld; as a celebrity he would have likely performed exhibition � ghts to keep the army entertained, and the country’s morale up.

But Ali disagreed with the Vietnam War on religious principle, and refused to � ght with those who never harmed him.

In 1967, the opposition to the Vietnam War had not grown to the level it eventually would reach by early 1970s.

Ali refused to � ght in an unjust war before it became popular to do so. By staying � rm in his position and refusing to � ght, Ali knew very well that he risked his fame and fortune.

Although Ali was � ghting the American laws that institutionally discriminated against blacks, he had great faith that, eventually,

the tide of reason and justice would ultimately prevail.

He understood very well that it was not a binary option between going to war and going to jail, the third option was justice.

In the end, justice prevailed when the New York State Supreme Court in 1970 reinstated Ali’s boxing license, and the following year the US Supreme Court overturned Ali’s conviction.

By this time, the Vietnam War was becoming more unpopular, and the public who once did not support Ali began to support him. Years later, Ali commented: “Some people thought I was a hero. Some people said that what I did was wrong. But everything I did was according to my conscience. I wasn’t trying to be a leader. I just wanted to be free.”

In 1967, when Ali was 25 years old, his boxing record was 25 wins and zero losses.

When he returned from his suspension, after three and a half years, his � rst � ght was with Jerry Quarry in October 1970, when Ali was nearly 29 years old.

The prime years of Ali’s � ghting career were behind him.

The man who was once lean and agile, was noticeably slower and heavier, he could still dance and dodge punches, but not in the same way.

It was the lead up to the 1971 “Fight of the Century” with Joe Frazier that highlighted Ali was not without his � aws. Although Ali took on racial and religious inequities, his lowest moment may have been his taunts of Joe Frazier -- calling him “Uncle Tom” and “Gorilla.”

The irony of Ali’s attacks on Frazier was that Frazier was the one who grew up in a family of sharecroppers, and did not have much money, while Ali came from a better � nancial background.

Ali, to his credit, later tried to reconcile with Frazier and seemed remorseful for the comments he made when he was younger.

Ali later remarked: “A man who views the world the same at 50 as

he did at 20 has wasted 30 years of his life.” Ali had evolved, and had become a better man.

Nelson Mandela once said in an interview: “When I met Ali for the � rst time in 1990, I was extremely apprehensive. I wanted to say so many things to him. He was an inspiration to me, even in prison, because I thought of his courage and his commitment to his sport. I was overwhelmed by his gentleness and his expressive eyes.”

I too had the opportunity to spend an evening with Ali nearly 25 years ago. What I remember clearly was the joy he had entertaining little kids with magic tricks. He made it a point to mention it was against his faith to deceive.

He didn’t speak much that

day, often he slurred sentences; Parkinson’s had taken its toll.

Nonetheless, he shook everyone’s hand and autographed paraphernalia people brought for several hours.

Throughout Ali’s life, he was involved with humanitarian e� orts around the world; from delivering food and medical supplies to several nations, to committing his time to orphanages, to helping bring awareness and funding to Parkinson’s disease.

In 1998, he was named UN Messenger of Peace.

Ali even met with Saddam Hussein and helped secure the release of 15 hostages during the Gulf War. As Ali put it: “Service to others is the rent you pay for your room here on Earth.”

Ali’s impact on society, sports, and the people around him was immeasurable. Who Ali was, is not captured better than the story of a little boy named Jimmy. Jimmy was dying of leukemia, and his last wish was to meet his hero Muhammad Ali.

Ali, who at the time was training for the “Rumble in the Jungle” in Pennsylvania, took a two-hour car ride to meet the boy.

When Ali visited the hospital, he told the boy that he would

defeat George Foreman, and the boy would defeat cancer. “No, Champ,” the boy said. “I’m going to God, and I’m going to tell God that I know you.” Ali was so impacted, that on his ride back to the training camp, for two-hours, he wasn’t able to say one word.

The greatest, Muhammad Ali, inspired many of us not only because of his eloquence but for his humanity and courage.

He will surely be missed. l

Ikhtiar Kazi is a capital markets professional, human rights activist, and writer, residing in New York City. He was educated at the University of Chicago and the University of Wisconsin-Madison. His articles are posted on his blog https://strategyandexecution.wordpress.com. He can be reached on Twitter @strategyandexec.

The world will surely miss the champ REUTERS

So much more than just a boxer

The courage and humanity of Muhammad Ali

He stood up and fought for his beliefs when doing so meant being hated, he took unpopular social and political positions even when it meant losing his livelihood, and he spoke out and gave voice to those who were marginalised and oppressed

Page 23: 10 June, 2016

Opinion 23D

TFRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016

n Rakib Avi

Technology is everywhere these days. You � re up your smartphone and pretend to be busy

to avoid otherwise awkward moments with strangers. Your seven-year-old daughter is more attached to her tablet than ever; gone are the days of Barbies. Clash of Clans is all the rage.

With more than 60 million people having access to internet and around 120 million mobile users, technology is literally in people’s palms.

The current government was properly ridiculed after it came to power in its previous term back in 2008 for coining the term Digital Bangladesh in their election manifesto. People knew the di� erence between a digital watch and analogue one, but how

on Earth can a country become digital?

To make matters worse, when the government was initially struggling to cope with the electricity shortage in town centres, most of our go-to dialogue during a power outage was: “This is how digital Bangladesh works!”

The line became so popular that it was the most de� nitive comment whenever someone was unhappy with the government’s work -- be it remotely connected to the actual vision of a digitised Bangladesh or not.

We have come a long way from that. We now have more than 4,000 union information centres across the country that are providing access to computers and internet and, more importantly, to government services which are readily becoming more and more digitised.

While the UNDP-backed Access to Information (A2I) project has shown wonders over the last eight years, the private sector and mostly young entrepreneurs have taken up the challenge with gusto.

Bangladesh has seen a large number of technology start-ups over the last decade, and although entrepreneurship is now the go-to ambition for young people, we are actually seeing a lot of changes in the overall technology eco-system.

Although the World Bank data projects a much lower number than the government-provided estimation of 60 million internet users, we are seeing a nascent internet and technology-based service industry slowly making its mark in the country’s economy.

As a result, people are getting access to services more easily and in the process having a better say in the way they communicate with

each other.In the renewed zeal to leverage

technology as a service delivery platform, basic needs like education and health have been digitised up to a certain point.

The government recently launched the entire primary school curriculum in an interactive multimedia digital version where students can not only learn from their teachers but can actually interact with the content if they have a touch-friendly device, which can be taken anywhere with them.

The fact that the government did this with technical support from BRAC and Save the Children -- two development organisations -- show that a partnership approach in making technology mainstream in delivering services is not only taking o� , but is very much necessary to achieve scale and be e� ective at the same time.

One thing which has always been a constant reminder for the innovators is their innovations might have a very brief shelf life if they cannot get investors excited about their projects. How many times have we seen potentially great ideas not coming to fruition because the founder was not savvy

in selling her idea?The world is ripe with examples

of innovators nearly making it, but not quite taking the � nal step.

We need to bring those people out in the front so that they can take that step forward on their own.

BRAC has recently brought to Bangladesh the Manthan Award, the prestigious ICT innovation award which started in India, in the form of BRAC Manthan Digital Innovation Award.

The purpose of the award is simple: Recognising the best use of ICT tools in Bangladesh and creating a space for them in front of a local and international audience to showcase their projects.

The winners of the Bangladesh awards will compete in the Indian Manthan Awards with applicants arriving from more than 30 countries of the Asia Paci� c region.

Technology is changing the way we work and interact with our environment. It has changed the way we talk to our dear ones, express our feelings over great distances, and the way we organise our lives.

You can see older people and school-going kids getting hooked on technology with the same fervour.

By virtue of its usefulness, the pace of technological development will only increase with time. With that will arrive new ways to manage our information and newer ways to reach the people with governance solutions.

The time is now to strengthen our e� orts in making technology work, not just for people living in luxury but for that person who doesn’t have access to basic information in the � rst place.

It is time to break the knowledge barrier and help that young kid who is considering taking o� to Malaysia on a broken trawler with strangers. It is time to help that poor farmer who can easily receive weather updates on his mobile phone.  

It is time to make people understand that technology can be power and not just for the people rolling up their wind-shields in air-conditioned cars, but for the countless thousands as well who we generally discount when we are talking about technology.

Technology can be a potent solution for development -- all it needs is a few champions to drive the point home. l

Rakib Avi is working as Manager, Communications in BRAC.

What a di� erence technology makes BIGSTOCK

The barrier between the rich and the poor can be broken down with technology

Tech for all

The time is now to strengthen our e� orts in making technology work, not just for people living in luxury but for that person who doesn’t have access to basic information in the � rst place

Page 24: 10 June, 2016

24DT Sport

Victoria � nish 1st phase on topn Mazhar Uddin

Victoria Sporting Club � nished on top of the Dhaka Premier League's � rst phase after beating Gazi Group Cricketers by 28 runs yesterday. Abdul Mazid struck his second consecutive hundred be-fore Al-Amin picked up his maid-en List-A � ve-wicket haul to en-sure Gazi Group also didn't make it to the Super League phase.

Victoria are joined in the next phase by Mohammedan Sporting Club, Prime Doleshwar Sporting Club, Abahani Limited, Legends of Rupganj and Prime Bank Crick-et Club, who pipped Kalabagan Krira Chakra on head-to-head count. Gazi Group, who started

the league so promisingly, � n-ished on eighth spot.

Meanwhile, Brothers Union avoided the relegation play-o� s after their match against Rupganj was abandoned due to a wet pitch at the BKSP-3 ground. As a result, Kalabagan Cricket Academy and Cricket Coaching School have been demoted to next season's Dhaka First Division Cricket League.

Back to the game in Fatullah where rain forced the game into a 33-over contest after it started three hours and � fteen minutes later.

Victoria posted a challenging 219/7 in 33 overs riding on Mazid's blistering 92-ball century.

He struck eight fours and two sixes while Mominul Haque

scored 73 o� 66 balls. They add-ed 122 runs for the second wicket that helped Victoria post the for-midable total. Pacers Mohammad Sharif took three wickets while Delwar Hossain took two wickets.

In reply Gazi failed to provide a good start in their do-or-die chase. Shamsur Rahman made 42 while their Indian recruit Puneet Bisht top scored with 86 o� 79 balls. But these were not enough as the rest of the batsmen failed miserably as Gazi Group were bowled out for 191 runs in 30.1 overs.

O� -spinner Al-Amin picked up � ve wickets in just four overs while Mahbub Alam also took three wickets. l

FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016

TOP STORIES

Les Bleus hoping to shake o� the bluesFrance kick o� their Euro 2016 campaign against Romania today with the host nation desperate for a ray of sunshine after being hit by strikes, � oods in the build-up. Protests against a labour law and torrential rain created a bleak backdrop to the tournament. PAGE 28

Sharapova to appeal two-year doping banRussian superstar Maria Sharapova on Wednesday vowed to appeal a two-year doping ban which looks certain to end one of sport’s most celebrated and high-pro� le careers.Sharapova, 29, tested positive for meldonium. PAGE 25

Totti to play 25th season with RomaIconic Roma captain Francesco Tot-ti has signed a new one-year con-tract to play a 25th season with the Serie A side, the club announced on Tuesday. Totti, who turns 40 in September, began his Serie A career with Roma in 1993. PAGE 26

Ex-Reds defender Agger retires aged 31Former Liverpool defender Daniel Agger has announced his retirement due to injuries at the age of just 31. “It’s sad, but it is the right decision to stop. I’m proud of my career,” the Danish centre-back wrote on Twitter PAGE 26 POINTS TABLE

Teams M W L T NR PtsSuper Six

Victoria 11 7 3 1 0 15

Mohammedan 11 7 4 0 0 14

Doleshwar 11 7 4 0 0 14

Abahani 11 7 4 0 0 14

Rupganj 11 6 3 1 1 14

Prime Bank 11 6 5 0 0 12

Safe Zone

Kalabagan KC 11 6 5 0 0 12

Gazi Group 11 5 6 0 0 10

Sheikh Jamal 11 5 6 0 0 10

Brothers 11 4 6 0 1 9

Relegated to 1st Division

CCS 11 2 9 0 0 4

Kalabagan CA 11 2 9 0 0 4

BCCI con� rms Bangladesh Test without daten Minhaz Uddin Khan

Tamim Iqbal has said playing against a top team like India in their own den will be important for the Test team. Board for Control of Cricket in India (BCCI) yesterday announced Bangladesh's � rst-ever Test in India to be held in Hyderabad in their 2016-17 schedule but didn't mention a date.

The tour was originally sup-posed to be held in August this year but now it seems Bangladesh's Test may be squeezed in between Eng-land and Australia's tour to India next year.

The BCCI have included tours of New Zealand and England as the � rst two tours of the home season before Australia will be hosted in February and March next year.

After England's tour to Bangladesh, the BPL will be held in November. Bangladesh then tour New Zealand from late December to mid-January after which the India Test will most likely be scheduled.

As a result, Bangladesh's next international assignment will be in October when England are touring the country, which has left Tamim frustrated due to the lack of cricket since the World T20.

“This Test is important for us. Playing Test cricket against India in India will get us some di� erent experience. But one thing which irks me is that we have been the No 2 side in 2015 but you see in the six months from April to September we have no international cricket,” opener Tamim told Dhaka Tribune yesterday.

“I hope the concerned will take this into account. To continue with the good run of form there is no alternative than playing as many international matches possible,” he added.

But the BCB would still be re-lieved to have con� rmed the Test in India, who had resisted Bang-ladesh since they gained Test sta-tus in 2000. It was said often that the BCCI wasn't interested to host a team that didn't guarantee � ve days of cricket.

India have played eight Tests while on � ve tours to Bang-ladesh, apart from the 12 other times they have toured to play ODIs and T20s here in various tour-naments.

Bangladesh have toured India to play international cricket on four occasions since 1990. l

TOP 5 RUN-SCORERSPlayer Team M R HS Ave

Shamsur Rahman Gazi Group 11 558 136 55.8

Abdul Mazid Victoria 11 538 118 48.9

Imtiaz Hossain Prime Doleshwar 11 526 100* 52.6

Al Amin Victoria 11 502 102 55.8

Mahmudullah Sheikh Jamal 11 497 130 49.7

TOP 5 WICKET-TAKERSPlayer Team M W BB Ave

Chaturanga de Silva Victoria 11 23 6/35 20

Mashrafe Mortaza Kalabagan KC 11 22 6/42 20.2

Kamrul Islam Rabbi Victoria 11 22 4/38 22.8

Mahmudullah Sheikh Jamal 10 21 5/66 19.04

Naeem Islam Mohammedan 11 20 4/21 22.2

Victoria Sporting Club opening batsman Abdul Mazid plays straight during their Dhaka Premier League match against Gazi Group Cricketers at Fatullah’s Khan Shaheb Osman Ali Stadium yesterday MAINOOR ISLAM MANIK

BRIEF SCOREVICTORIA SC 219/7 in 33 overs (Mazid

100, Mominul 73, Sharif 3/19) beat GAZI GC 191 in 30.1 overs (Bisht 86,

Shamsur 42, Al Amin 5/27) by 28 runs

Page 25: 10 June, 2016

Sport 25D

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Sharapova to appeal ‘unfairly harsh’ two-year doping bann AFP, London

Russian superstar Maria Sharapova on Wednesday vowed to appeal a two-year doping ban which looks certain to end one of sport’s most celebrated and high-pro� le careers.

Sharapova, 29, tested positive for the controversial banned med-ication meldonium during Janu-ary’s Australian Open.

A statement by the Internation-al Tennis Federation (ITF) said “an Independent Tribunal” had “found that Maria Sharapova committed an anti-doping rule violation” and consequently had “disquali� ed the a� ected results and imposed a period of ineligibility of two years, commencing on 26 January, 2016”.

Sharapova blasted the ban as “unfairly harsh” in a statement on her Facebook page.

“While the tribunal concluded correctly that I did not intention-ally violate the anti-doping rules, I cannot accept an unfairly harsh two-year suspension,” fumed Sharapova.

“The tribunal, whose members were selected by the ITF, agreed

that I did not do anything inten-tionally wrong, yet they seek to keep me from playing tennis for two years. I will immediately ap-peal the suspension portion of this ruling to CAS, the Court of Arbitra-tion for Sport.”

Sharapova slammed the ITF for spending “tremendous amounts of time and resources trying to prove I intentionally violated the anti-dop-ing rules” before adding that “the tribunal concluded I did not”.

The US-based Russian failed a drugs test on January 26 and was charged with an anti-doping viola-tion on March 2. In a packed press conference in Los Angeles a few days later, she admitted to taking meldo-nium but said she hadn’t realised it was on the banned substance list.

One of her top sponsors Nike, which had suspended ties with the Russian in the immediate af-termath of her confession, stoked controversy Wednesday by reveal-ing they were rekindling their rela-tionship. Racquet sponsors HEAD said they had no hesitation in stay-ing loyal to their client just as they had done after her failed test. l

t Meldonium is also known as mil-dronate or mildronats.

t It is used to treat heart problems and diabetes

t It was only added to the WADA banned list at the start of 2016.

t The drug is manufactured in Lat-via and exported to Russia. It is not approved for use in the Unit-ed States

t Meldonium can increase an indi-vidual’s capacity for physical ex-ertion and, according to WADA, it was outlawed in sport “because of evidence of its use by athletes with the intention of enhancing performance”.

Born: April 19, 1987 in Nyagan, RussiaGRAND SLAM TITLES: Five: Wim-bledon (2004); U.S. Open (2006); Australian Open (2008); French Open (2012, 2014)

MAKING HER NAMEt Born in Siberia, moves to Black Sea

coastal resort of Sochi aged two.t Moves to Florida in 1996 to train at

Nick Bollettieri’s Tennis Academy in Bradenton. Sharapova’s father Yuri, armed with just $700, moves to U.S. with her. Her mother Yelena has to stay in Russia due to visa restrictions.

t Turns professional in 2001.

TENNIS CAREERt Wins � rst tour title in Tokyo in

2003. Finishes inside top 50 for � rst time.

t Becomes � rst Russian woman to win Wimbledon in 2004 aged 17, beating holder Serena Williams 6-1 6-4 in the � nal.

t In August 2005 becomes � rst Russian woman to reach the top of the world rankings.

t Wins her second grand slam after defeating second seed Justine Henin 6-4 6-4 in the 2006 U.S. Open � nal.

t Beats Ana Ivanovic of Serbia 7-5 6-3 in 2008 to win her third grand slam title, and � rst Australian Open.

t Regains number one ranking by beating Petra Kvitova in the French Open semi-� nals in 2012 before defeating Sara Errani 6-3 6-2 in the � nal to complete her collection of grand slam trophies.

t Wins a silver medal in her Olympic debut at the 2012 Games in Lon-don, losing the � nal against Serena Williams 6-0 6-1.

t Wins � fth grand slam title at 2014 French Open.

FAILED TESTt Sharapova tells a news conference

in Los Angeles in March that she tested positive at this year’s Aus-tralian Open for meldonium, which is used to treat diabetes and low magnesium and has been banned by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) since Jan. 1.

t She is provisionally banned by the International Tennis Federation (ITF) pending the outcome of an an-ti-doping hearing in London in May

t ITF announces a two-year ban for Sharapova backdated to Jan. 26. Sharapova says she will appeal against the length of the ban.

FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016

BANNED PLAYER MARIA SHARAPOVA

Musta� z's weight loss a concern for Tigersn Minhaz Uddin Khan

Musta� zur Rahman's weight loss has concerned the Bangladesh Cricket Board. Though homesick-ness was said to be a factor, Dhaka Tribune has learned that he used to take meals inside the hotel but got bored having the same food regularly.

Irregular food intake has been an old issue for Bangladesh crick-eters but for the past few years the culture has changed slightly. The cricketers are more keen towards having proper meal and visit dif-ferent places during a tour or home series. Musta� z is known to be the kind of person who likes to stay in his room mostly.

It is understood that the team management has taken this issue seriously, but is hopeful that he can recover soon. He will be given a diet plan to follow and also some education on how to maintain his physique through proper diet.

Meanwhile, Bangladesh physio Bayjidul Islam said yesterday that Musta� z has recovered from his shoulder and side strains but still needs time to recover from the ham-string and ankle injuries. As a result, Musta� z's stint at Sussex is delayed further after the English county side

expected him to join by today.Bayjid said Musta� z will have

to undergo rehabilitation to obtain full � tness but the time needed for recovery cannot be determined.

“He has some minor issues for which he will have to undergo re-hab. At the moment we cannot tell the time of recovery that he will need as this depends from player

to player. We have decided to assist him every week and see how much he has recovered and make the next decision,” said Bayjid.

“The trainers are assisting him while I am looking after his treat-ment. We have already planned the exercise he needs to do and that will be maintained from now on,” he added. l

BCB's passing fancy?n Mazhar Uddin

The negatives outweigh the posi-tives in Bangladesh Cricket Board's decision to split the selection com-mittee into two levels. The existing three-member selection panel will have the head coach, team manag-er and the cricket operations com-mittee chairman on top of them.

BCB president Nazmul Hasan � nalised the decision earlier this week and said that only the ap-proval of the board of directors re-main. It is likely to be discussed at the next meeting this month.

Previous occasions of “lack of communication” between Bangla-desh coach Chandika Hathurusing-ha and chief selector Faruk Ahmed has been cited as the main reason for making these changes in the process of picking the Bangladesh squad ahead of a series and tournament.

Although there are many exam-ples of coaches being included in the selection process around the cricketing world, the role of a team manager and the cricket operation chairman is rare.

But the inclusion of the head coach in the selection panel could also make a negative impact among the players who would now want to be in his good book as the coach will have the ultimate power in Bangladesh cricket.

Yet at the same time Bangladesh team have been doing pretty well under Hathurusingha's coaching in

the past two years, so his inclusion may have a positive impact. The coach can now set his desired play-ers for certain roles in which he has been looking to do for a long time.

But the inclusion of Khaled Mahmud and Akram Khan, both board directors, is being consid-ered as the board's way of having their representation in the selec-tion panel, which could a� ect its independence. It is also unprece-dented to have the team manager and board directors to be included in the selection panel.

Already, Faruk said that he may resign if these changes are made to the selection committee. In the past he has had public disagreements with the team management over selection matters. In February 2014 Mush� qur Rahim blasted Faruk for not consulting him in selecting the Asia Cup team. In January 2015, Ha-thurusingha said that he prefered having legspinner Jubair Hossain in the World Cup squad while the BCB also questioned the selectors over the inclusion of Al-Amin Hossain and Nasir Hossain. In June, Hathurusing-ha and Faruk had disagreement over the selection of Shuvagata Hom.

Still, according to some former players including Aminul Islam Bul-bul, the new selection committee will have a negative a� ect in future if it includes the manager and coach.

So is this a fancy decision on the part of the BCB, when things are going well for the Tigers? l

Bangladesh trainer Mario Villavarayan imparts instructions as Musta� zur Rahman listens intently in Mirpur yesterday DHAKA TRIBUNE

5 FACTS ON MELDONIUM

Page 26: 10 June, 2016

26DT Sport

FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016

CLEVELAND CAVALIERSStarters MIN FG 3PT FT REB AST PTSR. Je� erson 33 4-7 1-3 0-0 8 2 9L. James 40 14-26 1-2 3-5 11 6 32T. Thompson 31 5-6 0-0 4-5 13 2 14K. Irving 37 12-25 3-7 3-3 4 8 30J.R. Smith 38 7-13 5-10 1-2 4 1 20

GOLDEN STATE WARRIORSStarters MIN FG 3PT FT REB AST PTSD. Green 36 2-8 0-4 2-4 7 7 6H. Barnes 33 7-11 2-5 2-3 8 3 18S. Curry 31 6-13 3-9 4-4 1 3 19K. Thompson 31 4-13 1-7 1-3 2 1 10A. Iguodala 28 5-7 1-2 0-0 2 0 11

NBA FINALSGAME 3, GS LEAD 2-1

CAVALIERS 120-90 WARRIORS73-9, 34-7 Away 57-25, 33-8 Home

1 2 3 4 TGS 16 27 26 21 90CLE 33 18 38 31 120

Cavs crush Warriors to cut Finals de� cit to 2-1n Reuters, Cleveland

LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers stormed back into the NBA Finals with a dominant 120-90 victory over the defending champion Golden State Warriors on Wednesday that cut the series de� cit to 2-1.

James, who called the game “do-or-die” for his team, scored a game-high 32 points and Kyrie Irving added 30 as the Cavaliers breathed new life into a series that had looked headed for a quick � n-ish after a lopsided opening two games in Oakland.

“We talked about e� ort for the last two days, just being aggressive, playing hard, the physicality, and we brought that,” Cavaliers coach Tyronn Lue told reporters. “When we play that way, we’re tough to beat.”

Cleveland, well aware that no team in NBA history has ever come back from an 3-0 series de� cit to win in seven games, got o� to a fast start and led the entire way to keep alive their hopes of avenging last year’s Finals defeat to the Warriors.

NBA Most Valuable Player Ste-phen Curry had a night to forget with 19 points on 6-for-13 shooting

for the Warriors.The Cavaliers were a much dif-

ferent team than the one that lost the � rst two games of the series by a combined 48 points and kept alive their hopes of delivering Cleveland its � rst professional sports champi-onship in 52 years.

James and Irving set the tone early with a dominant � rst quarter, during which they helped Cleve-land establish a 20-point lead at one stage.

The defending champion War-riors showed some signs of life in the second quarter as they chipped away at the Cavaliers lead, getting

to within eight points by halftime despite Curry being held to two points.

However, Cleveland quickly squashed any hopes the Warriors had at making a comeback with a blistering start to the third quarter, where they built a 22-point lead af-ter a jump shot by James with about six minutes left in the quarter.

The Cavaliers, embarrassed by a 33-point loss in Game Two, cruised the rest of the way and led by as many as 31 with a minute to play to change the narrative of a series that many had started to think would be over in four games. l

Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James (R) shoots the ball against Golden State Warriors forward Draymond Green (C) in game three of the NBA Finals at Quicken Loans Arena on Wednesday REUTERS

Ex-Liverpool defender Agger retires aged 31n AFP, Copenhagen

Former Liverpool defender Daniel Agger has announced his retire-ment due to injuries at the age of just 31.

“It’s sad, but it is the right de-cision to stop. I’m proud of my ca-reer,” the Danish international cen-tre-back wrote on Twitter.

Agger joined Liverpool from Brondby in 2006 and made 232 ap-pearances for the club, scoring 14 goals and winning the League Cup in 2012, but his spell at An� eld was frequently disrupted by injuries.

He returned to Brondby in 2014.“It has been di� cult in recent

years. The last two-three years I think I’ve been at an acceptable lev-el. But acceptable is not good enough for me,” he said at a press conference at the Rosenhoj club outside Copen-hagen where he played as a youth.

“I don’t want my level to fall any further and so it was time to stop,” he added. l

Mourinho begins Man Utd rebuilding with signing of Baillyn Reuters

Jose Mourinho’s rebuilding job at Manchester United began when Ivory Coast central defender Eric Bailly became his � rst signing on Wednesday, joining from Spanish side Villarreal.

The 22-year-old signed a four-year contract with an option for two more years, a club statement said.

No fee was disclosed although media reports said United had agreed a deal of about 25 million pounds ($36.44 million) with the La Liga side.

“Eric is a young central defend-er with great natural talent. He has progressed well to date and has the potential to become one of the best around,” former Chelsea manager Mourinho, who replaced Dutchman Louis van Gaal last month, said.

“We look forward to working with him to help nurture that raw talent.” l

Totti to play 25th season with Roman AFP, Rome

Iconic Roma captain Francesco Totti has signed a new one-year contract to play a 25th season with the Serie A side, the club an-nounced on Tuesday.

Totti, who turns 40 in September, began his Serie A career with Roma in 1993, playing 601 matches for the club – only surpassed in the Italian top � ight by Maldini’s 647 with Mi-lan and Zanetti’s 615 for Inter.

He has had a tense relationship with coach Spalletti in recent times and speculation had been rife he could be forced out. But his hopes of earning a � nal year’s deal were boosted late in the season when he came o� the bench to score cru-cial goals for Roma as they � nished third in Serie A. l

Ronaldo inherits richest athlete throne from Tiger, Mayweathern AFP, New York

Real Madrid star Cristiano Ronaldo and Barcelona striker Lionel Messi topped the Forbes magazine list of the world’s highest-paid athletes on Wednesday in the wake of boxer Floyd Mayweather’s retirement and back surgery for golfer Tiger Woods.

The annual list of total reve-nues for top sports stars had been topped 12 times by Woods and in three of the last four by Mayweath-er, who retired unbeaten last year.

This year, 31-year-old Portugal forward Ronaldo topped the list at $88 million (77.2 million euros) with $56 million in salary and $32 million more from endorsement deals.

The three-time FIFA player of the year is a marketing juggernaut with a new Nike deal worth $13 million annually plus endorse-ment partners such as Tag Heuer and Herbalife plus his own lines of suits, cologne, shirts, shoes, under-wear and hotels.

Messi, who sat out Argentina’s opening victory at the Copa Amer-ica Centenario this week, was next at $81.4 million, with $28 million of that from sponsorships.

LeBron James, who leads the Cleveland Cavaliers against de-fending champion Golden State in the ongoing NBA Finals, was third on the list and tops among Amer-icans with $77.2 million. He has endorsement deals of $54 million, including a lifetime pact with Nike

that could pay o� to the tune of $1 billion, and $23.2 million in club salary.

Golden State’s Stephen Curry, the NBA Most Valuable Player and scoring champion, shared 69th on $23.6 million with world number one golfer Jason Day of Australia.

Roger Federer, the Swiss tennis star with a record 17 men’s Grand Slam singles titles, was fourth on $67.8 million. He set the pace in sponsor income at $60 million. l

Name Sport Salary + Endorsements ($m)Cristiano Ronaldo (Por) Football 88.0Lionel Messi (Arg) Football 81.4LeBron James (USA) Basketball 77.2Roger Federer (Sui) Tennis 67.8Kevin Durant (USA) Basketball 56.2Novak Djokovic (Srb) Tennis 55.8Cam Newton (USA) American football 53.1Phil Mickelson (USA) Golf 52.9Jordan Spieth (USA) Golf 52.8Kobe Bryant (USA) Basketball 50.0

FORBES TOP-EARNING ATHLETES 2016

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Cook falls short of century as England stuttern Reuters, London

Alastair Cook fell short of a 29th test century as Sri Lanka hit back just before tea to leave England on 165 for � ve on the � rst day of the � -nal test at Lord’s on Thursday.

Captain Cook and Jonny Bair-stow seemed to be steering the hosts away from trouble after Sri Lanka had reduced them to 84-4 shortly after lunch, but Cook was undone by a beauty from seamer Nuwan Pradeep after reaching a serene 85.

Angling one in, Pradeep trapped Cook plumb lbw to swing the day back towards the visitors who are trying to avoid a 3-0 series white-wash after heavy losses in the � rst two tests.

Cook, who struck nine bounda-

ries, had put on 50 with Bairstow who looked in good nick on 44 not out.

It was Pradeep’s second wick-et of the day after he had bowled James Vince in the fourth over after lunch for 10.

England won the toss on a beau-tiful sunny morning and elected to bat on a pitch that looked ripe for scoring.

Cook, presented with a silver bat before the match after becoming the � rst English batsman to reach 10,000 test runs, made batting look

easy as England eased through the opening hour with barely a nerv-ous moment.

Sri Lanka looked headed for a hard day when Cook and Alex Hales eased to the 50 mark in the 12th over.

By lunch the hosts were 74 for three though, after Sri Lanka’s en-deavour was rewarded with the wickets of Hales, Nick Compton and Joe Root.

Sri Lanka’s slow left-armer Ran-gana Herath and medium pacer An-gelo Mathews strangled the scoring rate to a trickle and Hales lost pa-tience after failing to score for 22 deliveries, swinging wildly across the line and edging Herath to a grateful Mathews in the 19th over with the score on 56.

Compton walked in under pres-

sure to score runs after a torrid se-ries so far but lasted only 11 balls before edging a full delivery from Suranga Lakmal to wicketkeeper Dinesh Chandimal having scored one.

Compton has managed only 32 runs in four innings despite Eng-land’s dominating the � rst two tests and his future in the team is now in serious doubt.

The morning got even better for Sri Lanka when Lakmal trapped Joe Root lbw for three -- the deci-sion going to the third umpire after Root was originally given not out.

After Vince was out Cook stead-ied the ship in his own un� ustered way although Bairstow was lucky when he was dropped by Shaminda Eranga at mid-wicket when he had made 11. l

FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016

BRIEF SCORESDAY ONE, AT TEA

England 165/5 in 58 overs (Bairstow 44*, Moeen 1*) v Sri Lanka

England won the toss

DAY’S WATCHFOOTBALL

SONY SIX1:00 AM

Euro Cup 2016France v Romania

SONY ESPN5:00 AM (Saturday)

Copa America Centenario 2016Chile v Bolivia

7:30 AMArgentina v Panama

CRICKET STAR SPORTS 1

4:00PM Sri Lanka Tour of England

3rd Test, Day 212:15 AM

Natwest T20 Blast 2016Nottinghamshire v Derbyshire

Page 28: 10 June, 2016

28DT Sport

Coutinho leads Brazil rout as Ecuador thwart Perun AFP, Los Angeles

Philippe Coutinho completed a hat-trick as Brazil routed Haiti 7-1 at the Copa America Centenario on Wednesday while Ecuador pro-duced a gutsy � ghtback to thwart Peru’s push for a quarter-� nal berth.

Coutinho conjured up the sort of form which made him one of Liverpool’s most potent attackers in the Premier League last season as the Brazilians outclassed Haiti in the � rst ever competitive meeting of the two nations.

The 23-year-old attacking mid-� elder grabbed his � rst two goals inside the � rst half hour of a

one-sided Group B game at Orlan-do’s Citrus Bowl in Florida.

Coutinho then grabbed his third in the dying seconds of injury time, curling in a spectacular shot to complete a � ne night’s work.

Brazil manager Dunga was left purring with pleasure at the perfor-mance of Coutinho, who scored 12 goals in all competitions for Liver-pool this season.

“He is really taking advantage of the opportunities he has been giv-en,. e have talked quite a lot to him about being the ‘Liverpool Coutin-ho’ - to take the initiative, be a lead-ing part of the team, all within his own style,” said the coach.

Elsewhere, Ecuador frustrated Peru’s hopes of sealing their quar-ter-� nal berth, � ghting back from two goals down to snatch a 2-2 draw in Glendale, Arizona. l

GROUP B P W D L GD Pts

Brazil 2 1 1 0 7 4

Peru 2 1 1 0 3 4

Ecuador 2 0 2 0 2 2

Haiti 2 0 0 2 1 0

FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016

Brazil 7-1 HaitiCoutinho 14, 29, 90+2, Marcelin 70Augusto 35, 86 Gabriel 59, Lima 67

Ecuador 2-2 PeruValencia 39, Bolanos 48 Cueva 5, Flores 13

COPA RESULTS

A group photo during the football match of friendship, with legendary footballer Pele and Maradona, sponsored by Hublot in Paris, France yesterday AFP

Les Bleus open Euro 2016 hoping to shake o� the bluesn Reuters, Paris

France kick o� their Euro 2016 campaign against Ro-mania today with the host nation desper-ate for a ray of sunshine after being hit by

strikes, � oods and scandals in the build-up.

Protests against a labour law and

torrential rain that has caused the Seine river to rise to levels not seen in decades have created a bleak backdrop to the tournament where France will start as favourites.

A state of emergency is also still in force after last November’s Is-lamist attacks killed 130 people in Paris at several sites including the Stade de France, the venue for Fri-day’s opening game.

As if that were not enough, France’s preparations have been hampered by a string of injuries and a scandal involving striker Ka-

rim Benzema, who said last week that he was denied a chance to play in the tournament � nals because of his Algerian origins.

Benzema was suspended indef-initely by the French federation (FFF) last December because of his involvement in an alleged black-mail scandal. The FFF upheld the ban in April, e� ectively ruling the striker out of the tournament.

His accusation of racism was widely denied, with promising forward Kingsley Coman calling it “nonsense”.

His comments did, however, deepen a row about alleged racism in a national team once hailed as a model for ethnic integration after they lifted the World Cup on home soil in 1998.

Current coach Didier Des-champs captained France to that success, but 18 years later he faces a very di� erent challenge.

It seems a formality that France will survive a group, arguably the weakest in the competition, that also features Albania and Switzer-land.

“I trust my players,” said Des-champs. “The � rst game is not de-cisive but it is important because it sets the tone for the whole tourna-ment.”

Romania have struggled in front of goal, but their resolute defence could make them a di� cult side to break down.

The hosts, by contrast, have plenty of attacking talent with Co-man, Antoine Griezmann and in-form Olivier Giroud, who struck twice in a 3-0 win over Scotland in their � nal warm-up game. l

Brazil's Philippe Coutinho (L) shoots to score past Haiti's Romain Genevois during their Copa America group B match in Orlando on Wednesday AP

Page 29: 10 June, 2016

Downtime

CALVIN AND HOBBES

PEANUTS

DILBERT

How to solve: Fill in the blank spaces with the numbers 1 – 9. Every row, column and 3 x 3 box must contain all nine digits with no number repeating.

CODE-CRACKER

CROSSWORD

SUDOKU

YESTERDAY’S SOLUTIONS

CODE-CRACKER

How to solve: Each number in our CODE-CRACKER grid represents a di� erent letter of the alphabet. For example, today 6 represents N so � ll N every time the � gure 6 appears.You have two letters in the control grid to start you o� . Enter them in the appropriate squares in the main grid, then use your knowledge of words to work out which letters go in the missing squares.Some letters of the alphabet may not be used.As you get the letters, � ll in the other squares with the same number in the main grid, and the control grid. Check o� the list of alphabetical letters as you identify them.

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ

CROSSWORD

ACROSS1 Put away (4)4 Document (5)8 Buccaneer (6)9 Snow vehicle (4)11 Tribal symbol (5)12 Afresh (4)14 Day before (3)15 Rich cake (6)19 Book of accounts (6)21 Greek letter (3)22 Time long past (4)24 Interior decoration (5)27 Moist (4)29 Talisman (6)30 Sea nymph (5)31 Observed (4)

DOWN1 Distress call (3)2 Laid bare (6)3 Broad (4)4 Light blow (3)5 Coral isle (5)6 Favourite (3)7 Sucking � sh (6)10 Wash (4)13 Tiny (3)14 Escapes artfully (6)16 Weep (3)17 Charge with gas (6)18 Article (4)20 Garden ornament (5)23 Lyric poems (4)25 Vehicle (3)26 Cricket score (3)28 Play on words (3)

SUDOKU

29D

TFRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016

Page 30: 10 June, 2016

30DT

FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016Showtime

Ashiqur sets to return on TV with Princess

Sudip Chakroborthy to work for Kolkata’s Aneek Theatre

n Showtime Desk

The governor of Minnesota has declared June 7 as ‘Prince Day’ in honour of the recently demised singer, who lived in Minnesota.

On this day, residents in Minnesota are requested to wear purple in Prince’s honour, as the singer lived in the state his whole life. Prince was born in Minneapolis in 1958, and his Paisley Park home and recording studio were in the town of Chanahassen.

The Prince Day declaration was made by Democrat governor Mark Dayton, who last month declared that May 23 was Beyoncé Day to mark a concert by the singer in Minnesota.

Dayton’s citation for Prince on behalf of Minnesota added: “Prince was the creator of ‘The Minneapolis sound’, a contribution not only to the catalogue of music genres, but to Minnesota’s worldwide prominence and its economic growth.”

Prince died on April 21 from an overdose of the prescription drug Fentanyl. l

n Showtime Desk

Gangster Returns, Kistimaat and Musa� r director Ashiqur Rahman came into the limelight while making these � lms. The � lmmaker’s latest work, a short musical � lm titled Saranshe Tumi, is already out on YouTube. Rahman is now on the verge of launching a new project with Shakib Khan.

In the meantime, Ashiqur Rahman is all set to return to TV after a long hiatus. During the forthcoming Eid holidays, his directorial venture Princess, a TV action drama, will air on Asian TV.

The director is creating something new for television after four long years. Although a few proposals for working on TV did come his way, his busy schedule

for the big screen barred him from considering those. However, this time the proposal came from Hasnain Khurshed, the CEO of Asian TV, who praised Ashiqur’s � rst work on TV and took the initiative to air it.

Talking about his latest work on TV, Ashiqur Rahman said: “Though the whole shooting took place in Australia, it’s entirely a Bangladeshi production. No popular faces but some diligent, talented actors have worked in it. The story is delicately told and hopefully, the beautiful locations in Australia will really entice the audience.”

Written by Insan Emon, the TV action drama cast inclucdes Taskeen Rahman, Syeda Tajzi, Anne Sabrin, Nehal Hossnain and Rahmat Ullah. l

n Abida Nowshin

Sudip Chakroborthy, a revered name in the � eld of theatre in our country, is on his way to make another mark abroad.

The assistant professor at the Theatre and Performance Studies Department of Dhaka University � ew to Kolkata to work on Aneek Theatre’s upcoming play (Sha)Kuntala.

Aneek Theatre is producing the play, which is written and directed by Amal Chakrobarty, supported by the central government of India. Sudip has been invited to design the stage and lights for the production, according to Sudip’s recent Facebook post.

“I would call this a recognition of the e� ort and talent of the youth of the country. Undoubtedly, I feel good,” says the young theatre activist, who has a busy year ahead of him.

Recently, Sudip directed Shakespeare Shoptok, a combined production of excerpts of

seven plays by Shakespeare. His upcoming production Gohonjatra, produced by Padatik Natya Sangsad and written by Rubayet Ahmed, will be staged in July.

In October, Sudip will direct Memorai with Bangladeshi diaspora responding to the invitation of National Theatre of Scotland, and in December he will direct Selim Al Deen’s Shwarnoboal, following the invitation of Kolkata based theatre group Rongokormi. l

n Showtime Desk

Bollywood star Parineeti Chopra is all set to star in an on-screen romance with Mahesh Babu in her debut in Tollywood.

The rumours have been con� rmed that the gorgeous actor will indeed play the leading lady in the upcoming bilingual � lm directed by the prominent director AR Murugadoss, who has delivered hits like Ghajini and Thuppakki.

After Mahesh Babu’s latest � lm Brahmotsavam turned out to be a damp squib at the box o� ce, all heads have turned towards his upcoming project. This will be a bilingual project, simultaneously

shot in both Telugu and Tamil.

Mahesh himself will do the Tamil dubbing since the actor is pretty � uent in the language. Interestingly, veteran cinematographer Santhosh Siva will also make his debut in Tollywood with this � lm. l

Source: indiatoday

Prince Day in Minnesota

Parineeti Chopra to romance Mahesh Babu

Page 31: 10 June, 2016

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TFRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016

Showtime

Watchlist: June’s new releases Final Destination 5WB 3:14pmSurvivors of a suspension-bridge collapse learn there’s no way you can cheat death.Cast: Nicholas D’Agosto, Emma Bell, Arlen Escarpeta, Miles Fisher, Ellen Wroe

LucyStar Movies 5:30pmA woman, accidentally caught in a dark deal, turns the tables on her captors and transforms into a merciless warrior evolved beyond human logic.Cast: Scarlett Johansson, Morgan Freeman, Choi Min-sik, Amr Waked, Julian Rhind-Tutt

TroyHBO 6:32pmAn adaptation of Homer’s great epic, the � lm follows the assault on Troy by the united Greek forces and chronicles the fates of the men involved.Cast: Brad Pitt, Eric Bana, Orlando Bloom, Brian Cox, Sean Bean

FasterWB 7:48pmAn ex-con gets on a series of apparently unrelated killings. He gets tracked by a veteran cop with secrets of his own and an egocentric hit man.Cast: Dwayne Johnson, Billy Bob Thornton, Carla Gugino, Moon Bloodgood, Oliver Jackson-Cohen, Maggie Grace

Transformers: Revenge of the FallenZee Studio 9:30pmSam Witwicky leaves the Autobots behind for a normal life. But when his mind is � lled with cryptic symbols, the Decepticons target him and he is dragged back into the Transformers’ war.Cast: Shia LaBeouf, Megan Fox, John Turturro, Ramon Rodriguez, Josh Duhamel l

WHAT TO WATCH

n Nazia Lopa

Independence Day 2There has been a decent amount of movement on the announced sequel to Independence Day, from the sci-� � lm landing a release date to director Roland Emmerich

con� rming various casting moves. Setting the sequel 20 years after the initial events of the 1996 blockbuster also helps explain why certain cast members like Will Smith have chosen not to return for further alien adventures. Original Independence Day stars Bill Pullman

and Je� Goldblum are returning, and that they will be joined by Liam Hemsworth and Jessie Usher, who reportedly will be playing Hiller’s step-son in the � lm. Plot of the � lm is Set 20 years after the original, this sequel sees the nations of Earth use the alien technology to develop an

advanced defense system for the planet. But nothing can prepare them for an unprecedented force of alien attackers out for revenge. It’s up to a few brave men and women to save the world from extraterrestrials once more. Releasing on June 24.

Conjuring 2You probably need a double dose of courage to watch this one. It is pretty obvious that a lot of viewers would chicken out after watching just the trailer! Ed and Lorraine Warren are back, and this time, they’re in England doing what they do best, hunting out evil spirits! Releasing today. It’s the same old blather about things that go bump in the night. Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga are back as real-life paranormal investigators Ed Warren and his

clairvoyant wife, Lorraine. This time they’re working the British equivalent of the Amityville horror case that made global headlines in 1970. Seven years later, single mom Peggy Hodgson (Frances O’Connor) and her four kids, especially 11-year-old Janet (a terri� c Madison Wolfe), � nd their ramshackle North London home bedeviled by demons. (The one that looks like a cadaverous nun with hollowed-out eyes is a doozy.)

Now You See Me 2Sleight of hand is the name of the game in Now You See Me 2 — not just for the renegade magician characters, but for the � lmmakers. With the glossy capers of the � rst movie to live up to, the plot rides a surging tide of ridiculousness and culminates in a pileup of unconvincing explanations. As practitioners of prestidigitation take on the wielders of malevolent corporate power, anyone tempted to give the story’s � ashy twists

much thought should have some aspirin handy. By the time the story’s � nal revelation has been pulled out of the hat, the only thing that’s certain is the eventual materialisation of Now You See Me 3. Jesse Eisenberg, Mark Ru� alo, Woody Harrelson, Dave Franco, Daniel Radcli� e, Lizzy Caplan, Jay Chou, Sanaa Lathan, Michael Caine, Morgan Freeman, David Warshofsky, Tsai Chin are in the movie directed by Jon M. Chu. And this movie is also releasing today.

Central IntelligenceJohnson and Kevin Hart are here to save America. High school is a tough time for anyone, even Dwayne Johnson. In the new trailer for Central Intelligence, we see The Rock as a young and vulnerable, En Vogue-loving teen, who, thanks to a can-do attitude and six-hour daily workout regimen, later grows up to be “Jason Bourne in jorts.”

Kevin Hart co-stars as Johnson’s compassionate former high school classmate who grows up to be an accountant, and does not have a six-hour daily workout regimen.

Much like 10th grade science lab partners, the two must work together in order to get back encryption keys to a U.S. spy satellite program. Central Intelligence hits theaters on June 17. l

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Back Page32DT

FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016

SUGAR PRICE: WHO CALLS THE SHOT? PAGE 12

VICTORIA FINISH 1ST PHASE ON TOP PAGE 24

PRINCE DAY IN MINNESOTA PAGE 30

Booths at airports to realise taxes from foreign workersn Syed Samiul Basher Anik

The National Board of Revenue (NBR) will soon open income tax booths for the departing foreign workers at three airports and a land customs station for realising the unpaid taxes from them.

“The booths will be set up at Hazrat Shahjalal Internation-al Airport (HSIA) in Dhaka, Shah Amanat International Airport in Chittagong, Osmani International Airport in Sylhet and in Benapole Land Port where foreigners have to submit their income tax state-ments obtained from revenue authorities to get the departure clearance from Bangladeshi im-migration, said NBR Chairman Md Nojibur Rahman while talking to the Dhaka Tribune yesterday.

Currently, most of the foreigners are allegedly evading their due tax-es due to lack of immigration check posts in the country. No foreigner will be able to leave the country without paying their due taxes using these ports, once these tax booths are set up.

According to NBR plan, the board will initially set up separate check posts at three airports and a land port and also will establish similar check posts later on at other

immigration points in phases.The revenue authorities made

the decision at its Steering Com-mittee meeting held yesterday at the NBR headquarters in the city with NBR Chairman Md Nojibur Rahman in the chair.

The meeting also decided to incorporate provisions of income tax in Bangladesh VISA Policy, so the foreigners can get a clear idea

about the tax payment rules and procedures before their arrival to Bangladesh, said NBR Chairman.

“To make it happen, some amendments will be made in Bang-ladesh VISA Policy, The Foreigners Act, Registration of Foreigners Act, Income Tax Ordinance etc soon,” said Nojibur.

The government agencies that work with the registration, ap-proval or licensing work permit to foreigners were also asked in the meeting to include income tax re-

lated provisions in their activities.Currently, there have been no

income tax provisions in the pol-icies and rules of those agencies like Bangladesh Export Processing Zones Authority, Immigration of Bangladesh Police, Special Branch of Police, Board of Investment, NGO A� airs Bureau etc.

“Those agencies have assured us that they will include income

tax related issues in their activities. In addition, the apex trade body FBCCI will also help the revenue authorities in getting complete support from the private sector employers, who employ foreign workers, to realise income tax from them,” said NBR boss.

Regarding formation of a data bank, Nojibur said: “If all the agen-cies concerned share their infor-mation among themselves sponta-neously, a complete data bank can be made on the working foreigners

in the country.”Earlier, the NBR has sought

recorded list of foreigners from Board of Investment, NGO A� airs Bureau, Bangladesh Export Pro-cessing Zones Authority (BEPZA), Immigration of Bangladesh Police and Criminal Investigation Depart-ment (CID) to implement the tax provisions.

It has also sent letters to di� er-ent employer organisations asking them to provide speci� c informa-tion only about their foreign work-force.

The data bank will include all information of foreigners including their date of arrival and departure, their local address, issuance date of work permit and its expiry date and also details about their employers.

According to the � nance bill 2015, if found guilty, the compa-nies that employ unauthorised for-eigners, will have to pay 50% addi-tional tax from their total payable tax or Tk5 lakh as � ne, whichever is higher, as penalty for giving jobs to foreign nationals without neces-sary documents and work permits. The companies will also lose tax holiday or exemption bene� ts.

Currently, around 450,000 for-eign nationals, mostly from India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, China, Taiwan,

South Korea and some European and African countries are working legally or illegally in Bangladesh.

Although all the foreigners are bound to pay 30% tax on their in-come, only some little over 10,000 pays their due taxes.

Besides, many of them are working here without any work au-thorisation and leave the country secretly without paying their due taxes.

O� cials alleged that some un-scrupulous employers also helped their foreign workers to evade their taxes as they work on temporary basis, renewing their work permits every three months.

According to the BoI data, nearly 12,000 foreigners receive work per-mit from the authority each year.

As per NBR plan, income tax wings will launch drive soon to � nd out foreigners who do not submit their tax returns despite having a Taxpayers Identi� cation Number.

Currently, two regional task-forces- one for Dhaka and another one for Chittagong- are working for collecting information and coordi-nating among various agencies to prevent tax evasion by foreign na-tionals and monitor the employers for checking employment status of the foreign employees. l

JMB man killedin gun� ght n Md Tazul Islam, Gaibandha

A suspected member of banned Islamist militant out� t Jama’atul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB) was killed in a gun� ght with police at Maloncha village under Gobinda-ganj upazila in Gaibandha district yesterday.

The identity of the deceased could not be known.

Sub-Inspector Gofur of Gobindaganj police station said: “On information, members of De-tective Branch (DB) of police raided a house at Malancha village where a gang of JMB men was holding a

secret meeting for planning sub-versive acts.”

Sensing the presence of po-lice, the JMB men opened � re to them prompting the law en-forcers to retaliate, triggering agun� ght.

At one stage, the JMB men man-aged to � ee the scene.

Later, police recovered the body of an unidenti� ed JMB man and recovered some local weapons and bombs from the spot

Mozammel Haque, o� cer-in-charge of the police station, said the body was sent to Gaibandha Hospital morgue. l

Two taskforces- one for Dhaka and another one for Chittagong- are working for collecting information and coordinating among various agencies to prevent tax evasion by foreigners

Selling of rotten food items at restaurants is not uncommon, but the trend sees a signi� cant rise during the month of Ramadan. In the picture, a magistrate and a RAB team inspect food items at a Bailey Road restaurant that they � ned Tk2 lakh yesterday for selling rotten food as iftar items MAHMUD HOSSAIN OPU

Editor: Zafar Sobhan, Published and Printed by Kazi Anis Ahmed on behalf of 2A Media Limited at Dainik Shakaler Khabar Publications Limited, 153/7, Tejgaon Industrial Area, Dhaka-1208. Editorial, News & Commercial O� ce: FR Tower, 8/C Panthapath, Shukrabad, Dhaka 1207. Phone: 9132093-94, Advertising: 9132155, Circulation: 9132282, Fax: News-9132192, e-mail: [email protected], [email protected], Website: www.dhakatribune.com