শুক্রবার, ২৯ জানুয়ারী, ২০১০

13 countries craft plan to save tigers

In this photo taken January 20, two adult male tigers look on at Wat Pa Luangta Bua Yannasampanno Forest Monastery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Photo: AP
More than a dozen Asian nations aim to double the numbers of wild tigers by 2022 and prohibit the building of roads, bridges and other infrastructure projects that could harm their habitats.
However, a draft declaration that was to be adopted by the 13 countries Friday includes no new money to finance the conservation efforts which scientists said must be more than doubled.
The draft, a copy of which was obtained by The Associated Press, mentions only a commitment from countries to use money from ecotourism, carbon financing and infrastructure projects to pay for tiger programs.
"With political will and implementation of the needed action, the extinction of the wild tigers across much of their range can be averted," the declaration states. "Tiger conservation is important to protect biodiversity and preserve a vital part of our national heritage."
Officials at the first Ministerial Conference on Tiger Conservation, in Thai coastal resort of Hua Hin, were to adopt the declaration Friday. It will then be considered for approval by heads of state of the 13 countries in September at a meeting in Vladivostok, Russia.
Tiger numbers in recent decades have plummeted because of human encroachment — with the loss of more than nine-tenths of their habitat — and poaching to supply a vibrant trade in tiger parts. From an estimated 100,000 at the beginning of the 20th century, the number of tigers today is less than 3,500.
John Seidensticker, head of conservation ecology at the Smithsonian National Zoological Park and chairman of the Save the Tiger Fund, said the draft declaration included all the components for ensuring a steady recovery of tigers.
Along with a target for doubling tiger populations, countries would agree to protect core tiger habitats as well as buffer zones and corridors that connect key sanctuaries and national parks. The declaration also supports maintaining a permanent ban on the trade of tiger parts and reducing poaching through beefed-up law enforcement.
"If we get everything done in this declaration, we will turn tiger populations around so in fact it's a positive not a negative," Seidensticker said. "For me, I'm very happy with this."
The meeting which opened Wednesday was organized by Thailand and the Global Tiger Initiative, a coalition formed in 2008 by the World Bank, the Smithsonian Institute and nearly 40 conservation groups. It aims to double tiger numbers by 2022.
The 13 countries attending the meeting are Bangladesh, Bhutan, Cambodia, China, India, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Nepal, Russia, Thailand and Vietnam.

15 Somalis dead as Islamist attacks spark fighting

A medical worker says the heaviest fighting in months has killed at least 15 civilians in Somalia's capital.
Ali Muse says women and children were among the dead and that more than 30 people were wounded. Muse heads the ambulance service in the Somali capital of Mogadishu.
A spokesman for the Islamic insurgency says the fighting started when the Islamists attacked government bases and African Union peacekeeping troops around the city.
Sheik Ali Mohamoud Rage says the attack early Friday was a response to a plan by peacekeepers and the government to wrest back control of the battered seaside capital.
Somali police spokesman Colonel Abdullahi Hassan Barise says Somali forces beat back the insurgents.

5 executed killers of Bangabandhu buried at their village homes

Nation rids itself of stigma

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina takes part in a prayer in the House yesterday for Bangabandhu and his family members killed in the August 15, 1975 bloodbath. Photo: PID
The five executed killers of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman were buried yesterday following the hangings in Dhaka Central Jail in the first hour of the day.
They were buried at their ancestral village homes. Five ambulances, escorted by Rapid Action Battalion and police, transported the bodies to the burial sites.
Sultan Shahriar Rashid Khan was buried at Gopinathpur of Kashba upazila in Brahmanbaria, Syed Farooq Rahman at Marma Mallikpur village in Naogaon, Bazlul Huda at Hatboalia village of Alamdanga upazila in Chuadanga, and AKM Mohiuddin Ahmed and Mohiuddin Ahmed at Neta and Nijkata villages respectively under Golachipa upazila in Patuakhali.
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina offered shokrana namaz and recited from the holy Quran in her official residence Jamuna after the executions.
Hasina, one of the two surviving daughters of Bangabandhu, expressed deep satisfaction over the executions, and called upon the people as well as her party leaders and activists to resist any conspiracy with patience.
Awami League leaders and activists led by Deputy Leader of the Parliament Syeda Sajeda Chowdhury placed wreaths at the portrait of Bangabandhu at Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman Memorial Museum in Dhanmondi of the capital in the morning.
"The nation is now stigma free," said Sajeda Chowdhury, adding that she had been waiting for the executions for long. "The nation was waiting for the day," she said.
Other AL leaders also expressed their satisfaction with the executions, and demanded immediate extradition of the other six fugitive condemned killers.
The parliament in a special munajat also expressed deep gratitude to the Almighty yesterday for the executions.
LGRD Minister Syed Ashraful Islam said the executions prove that the rule of law exists in the country. It also proves that nobody can escape the long arm of the law after committing a crime, the AL general secretary told reporters at a capital hotel expressing his reaction.
Our Patuakhali correspondent reported, Milton Talukder received his cousin AKM Mohiuddin Ahmed's body around 2:30pm.He was buried in his family graveyard at 2:45pm after a hurried namaz-e-janaza. About 200 people however staged a demonstration there protesting against the funeral. They also manhandled AKM Mohiuddin's another cousin Kabir Hussain Talukder, and threw shoes at the body.
AL activists and other local people brought out a march when Mohiuddin Ahmed's body reached his Nijkata village around 3:15pm. Abul Hossain Howlader, an uncle of Mohiuddin, received the body. He was also buried following a namaz-e-janaza.
Golachipa AL unit leaders and activists staged demonstrations against allowing funerals for AKM Mohiuddin Ahmed and Mohiuddin Ahmed when the bodies entered the upazila town around 11:40am.
The namaz-e-janaza of Bazlul Huda was held in Hatboalia High School field around 12:05pm, reported our Kushtia correspondent. Huda's younger brother Nurul Huda received the body.
Sultan Shahriar Rashid Khan's son Ashraf Rahman Khan received his father's body at Gopinathpur around 6:30am. Sultan was buried in his family graveyard, our correspondent reported.
Syed Farooq Rahman's body reached his village Marma Mallikpur around 8:45am reported our Rajshahi correspondent.
Police handed over the body to Farooq's cousin Dewan Asadur Rahman Mithu. His janaza was held at 9.30am.
People at the janaza demanded to see Farooq's uncovered body before burial, and police allowed them to have a look, following which he was buried.
Local AL activists brought out a procession near Farooq's house after the burial, celebrating his exceution.

6 stay out of reach

None of the remaining six convicted killers of Bangabandhu, now holed up in different countries, could be brought back yet despite the government's diplomatic manoeuvres.
The government even does not yet have specific information about the whereabouts of a number of the absconding killers because of their frequent change of location. It already sought assistance from the Interpol in this regard, but for no result.
Law Minister Shafique Ahmed, however, yesterday claimed that the government has information about the fugitives and is working to bring them back to face justice.
The six absconding killers are Lt Col (dismissed) Khandaker Abdur Rashid, Lt Col (relieved) Shariful Haque Dalim, Lt Col (retd) Nur Chowdhury, Lt Col (retd) AM Rashed Chowdhury, Capt Abdul Mazed and Risalder Moslehuddin.
Five of the 12 convicted killers of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman were executed early yesterday at Dhaka Central Jail.
Another convict, Aziz Pasha, died in Zimbabwe in 2002.
All the subsequent military and civil governments coming to power following the coup of August 15, 1975, until the Awami League came to power in 1996, awarded and rehabilitated the leaders of the upheaval politically instead of punishing the self-declared murderers.
General Ziaur Rahman and General Ershad, who became the president of the country, and former prime minister Khaleda Zia--all created opportunities for the killers and directly or indirectly rehabilitated them politically. They also assisted the killers in getting power and authority.
Sources in the administration and intelligence agencies said the government has specific information about two of the six absconding convicts.
Lt Col (retd) AM Rashed Chowdhury now resides in the USA and is trying for getting political asylum in Canada, they said.
The government has requested the US government through its embassy in Washington to deport Rashed Chowdhury.
Another convict Lt Col (retd) Nur Chowdhury, after a long stay in Germany, has also sought political asylum in Canada.
No specific information regarding the locations of four others is available, but different sources say they are hiding in Libya, Pakistan, Kenya and Hong Kong.
According to the sources Lt Col (dismissed) Khandaker Abdur Rashid, one of the key plotters of the massacre of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and most of his family members, is settled in Benghazi, Libya, where he owns a construction business.
He used to be a frequent visitor to Pakistan before he was admitted to a hospital there after a road crash a couple of months ago.
One source says Lt Col (relieved) Shariful Haque Dalim is now in the UK, but Rashed Chowdhury, press minister of Bangladesh High Commission in London, told The Daily Star yesterday that they had searched for Dalim in the UK for the last one month but could find no trace of him.
Another source says Dalim lives in Pakistan and often travels to Libya, particularly Benghazi.
Dalim has a business in Kenyan capital Nairobi and some other African countries. He even has a Kenyan passport, sources said.
Capt Abdul Mazed frequently visits both Benghazi and Pakistan while Risalder Moslehuddin lives in Libya.

রবিবার, ১৭ জানুয়ারী, ২০১০

India visit not only a failure, harmful too: Khaleda

BNP Chairperson Khaleda Zia on Sunday speaks at a press conference in her Gulshan office. Photo: Star
BNP Chairperson Khaleda Zia on Sunday said Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's India visit was not only a failure, but also a harmful event for the country.
In her formal reaction to the visit, Khaleda Zia at a press conference at the BNP chairperson's Gulshan office said the prime minister returned home empty-handed.
Khaleda rejected the joint communiqué signed during the prime minister's visit and urged the people to wage vigorous movement against the anti-people moves.
She said the prime minister apparently gave transit to India in guise of allowing them to use our port and rail facilities.
"Be conscious, exchange views with each other on the demerits of the treaties and take preparation for a final movement to protect the country's sovereignty," she said.
Khaleda said, "They claimed that the visit was hundred percent successful. But the reality is it was not only a failure, it turned out to be harmful too for the nation. The people of the country got disappointed at the failure of the prime minister."
"People expected that the prime minister will bring something from India that will work for our welfare. But they were disappointed as the prime minister returned empty-handed," said the former prime minister.
She also said she was wondered to see the warm reception accorded to the prime minister on her return from India resulting in untold sufferings for the city commuters.
"It's India that can accord her such reception, not the people of Bangladesh," the leader of the opposition said.
She said the people became angry viewing the huge reception to the prime minister who returned home after giving away everything to India.
The people never saw such reception to the prime minister, Khaleda said adding it was actually meant to cover the failures keeping the people in darkness.
"She (Hasina) sold the country to India. People did not give her the mandate to sell the country," Khaleda said in reply to a question from a journalist after she read out her written statement.
On the $ 1 billion credit line announced by India, Khaleda said the total money would be used for infrastructure development of the rail and road link for the use of India.
“We will lose our market in eastern provinces of India and road, rail and the country’s security may be at stake,” Khaleda added.
Khaleda decisively announced that they were not anti-Indian and her party believed in regional cooperation.
Criticising the PM's speech on allowing Bangladeshi television to run in India, Khaleda said the government was working in favour of India.
“It is injustice. Indian channels are allowed in Bangladesh when our channels are prohibited in India and our prime minister said that was not her issue,” Khaleda added.
She expressed deep shock at the death of veteran Indian politician Jyoti Basu.
Khaleda also conveyed sympathy to the people suffering from freezing cold and asked the government to stand beside the poor community.

'Ordinary' Tigers cripple top test team

The Bangladesh fielders are happy to see the back of VVS Laxman of India in the first test of the Idea Cup two-Test series at Zohur Ahmed Chowdhury Cricket Stadium in Chittagong on Sunday. Photo: AP
Bangladesh skipper Shakib Al Hasan and paceman Shahadat Hossain shared eight wickets which caused India's collapse in the first innings of the first test of the Idea Cup two-Test series at Zohur Ahmed Chowdhury Cricket Stadium in Chittagong on Sunday.
Left-arm spinner Shakib took four wickets at the cost of 52 runs and Shahadat bagged four for 51 runs as ICC test number one India struggled to reach 213-8 when the opening day's play was called off nearly 30 minutes before scheduled close due to bad light.
Sachin Tendulkar (76 not out) and stand-in captain Virender Sehwag (52) were the only batsmen to give a good account in a dismal batting performance.
The others failed to cope with a disciplined pace-spin combination, just a day after Sehwag had described Bangladesh as an "ordinary side."
Earlier, Bangladesh skipper Shakib Al Hasan won the toss and elected to field against India.
The match kicked off one-and-half hours late due to foggy weather.
It is the sixth test match between the two neighboring countries.
Bangladesh: Shakib Al Hasan (captain), Shahriar Nafees, Imrul Kayes, Tamim Iqbal, Mohammad Ashraful, Raqibul Hasan, Mahmudullah, Mushfiqur Rahim, Shafiul Islam, Shahadat Hossain, Rubel Hossain.
India: V Sehwag (captain), G Gambhir, R Dravid, SR Tendulkar, VVS Laxman, Yuvraj Singh, KD Karthik, I Sharma, Z Khan, A Mishra, S Sreesanth.

Proshika unrest: 9 Faruque's men sued

Star file photo
Khondokar Mohammad Kamrul Hossain, a staff of Proshika, on Sunday filed a case with a Dhaka court against nine supporters of the non-government organisation's former chairman Qazi Faruque Ahmed.
Metropolitan Magistrate Roksana Begum Happy took the case into cognizance and directed the officer-in-charge (OC) of Pallabi Police Station to submit a report by March 4, 2010 after an investigation into the matter.
On January 12, a group of people backed by Faruque ousted the anti-Faruque group from the head office of the NGO and took control of the building.
Some 20 to 25 people stormed the Proshika Bhaban at the city's Mirpur-6 and beat five to six Proshika officials and ousted those from the office on the day.
Last year, the governing body of Proshika removed Faruque from the chairmanship of the organisation and appointed Abdul Wadud as its chairman.

Dhaka-Aricha highway blocked for 2 hours

Local people block the Dhaka-Aricha highway for about two hours after a seven-year-old girl was injured in a road accident in Manikganj Sunday morning. Photo: Star
Locals blocked the Dhaka-Aricha highway for about two hours after a seven-year-old girl was injured in a road accident in Manikganj Sunday morning.
The injured was identified as Salma, reports our Manikganj correspondent.
Following the accident, the angry people vandalised the bus and blocked the highway at about 10:00am, stranding hundreds of vehicles on both sides of the road.
Meanwhile, the communication was restored after the people left the highway at about 12:00pm.
Locals said a speedy bus hit Salma as she was crossing the highway at about 9:00am, leaving her seriously injured.
She was brought to Manikganj Sadar Hospital.
Additional police were deployed in and around the area to avert any untoward incident.

US missile strike kills 12 in Pakistan

Intelligence officials say a suspected US drone missile strike on a house in Pakistan's volatile tribal area has killed at least 12 people.
The officials say Sunday's attack occurred in the Shaktoi area of South Waziristan.
Drones also targeted a meeting of militant commanders in the Shaktoi area on Thursday, killing 12 people in an apparently unsuccessful attempt to kill Pakistani Taliban chief Hakimullah Mehsud.
The officials said the identities of those killed in Sunday's attack were unknown.
The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.
Sunday's strike was the ninth since the beginning of the year, an unprecedented volley of attacks since the CIA-led program began two years ago.

Hunger and hope, thirst and frenzy grip Haiti

People gestures as a US helicopter makes a water drop near a country club used as a forward operating base for the US 82nd Airborne Division in Port-au-Prince on January 16. Photo: AP
Precious water, food and early glimmers of hope began reaching parched and hungry earthquake survivors Saturday on the streets of this shattered city, where despair at times turned into a frenzy among the ruins.
"People are so desperate for food that they are going crazy," said accountant Henry Ounche, in a crowd of hundreds who fought one another as US military helicopters clattered overhead carrying aid.
When other Navy choppers dropped rations and Gatorade into a soccer stadium thronged with refugees, 200 youths began brawling, throwing stones, to get at the supplies.
Across the hilly, steamy city, where people choked on the stench of death, hope faded by the hour for finding many more victims alive in the rubble, four days after Tuesday's catastrophic earthquake.
Still, here and there, the murmur of buried victims spurred rescue crews on, even as aftershocks threatened to finish off crumbling buildings.
"No one's alive in there," a woman sobbed outside the wrecked Montana Hotel. But hope wouldn't die. "We can hear a survivor," search crew chief Alexander Luque of Namibia later reported. His men dug on. Elsewhere, an American team pulled a woman alive from a collapsed university building where she had been trapped for 97 hours. Another crew got water to three survivors whose shouts could be heard deep in the ruins of a multistory supermarket that pancaked on top of them.
Nobody knew how many were dead. Haiti's government alone has already recovered 20,000 bodies — not counting those recovered by independent agencies or relatives themselves, Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive told The Associated Press.
In a fresh estimate, the Pan American Health Organization said 50,000 to 100,000 people perished in the quake. Bellerive said 100,000 would "seem to be the minimum." Truckloads of corpses were being trundled to mass graves.
A UN humanitarian spokeswoman declared the quake the worst disaster the international organization has ever faced, since so much government and UN capacity in the country was demolished. In that way, Elisabeth Byrs said in Geneva, it's worse than the cataclysmic Asian tsunami of 2004: "Everything is damaged."
Also Saturday, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton flew to Port-au-Prince to pledge more American assistance and said the US would be "as responsive as we need to be." President Obama met with former Presidents George W Bush and Bill Clinton and urged Americans to donate to Haiti relief efforts.
As the day wore on, search teams recovered the body of Tunisian diplomat Hedi Annabi, the United Nations chief of mission in Haiti, and other top UN officials who were killed when their headquarters collapsed.
Despite many obstacles, the pace of aid delivery was picking up.
The Haitian government had established 14 distribution points for food and other supplies, and US Army helicopters were reconnoitering for more. With eight city hospitals destroyed or damaged, aid groups opened five emergency health centers. Vital gear, such as water-purification units, was arriving from abroad.
Thousands lined up in the Cite Soleil slum as UN World Food Program workers distributed high-energy biscuits there for the first time. As the hot sun set, the crew was down to just a few dozen boxes left from six truckloads. Perhaps 10,000 people were still waiting patiently, futilely, in line.
Seven months' pregnant, and with two children, 29-year-old Florence Louis clutched her four packets. "It is enough, because I didn't have anything at all," she said.
On a hillside golf course, perhaps 50,000 people were sleeping in a makeshift tent city overlooking the stricken capital. Paratroopers of the US 82nd Airborne Division flew there Saturday to set up a base for handing out water and food.
After the initial frenzy among the waiting crowd, when helicopters could only hover and toss out their cargo, a second flight landed and soldiers passed out some 2,000 military-issue ready-to-eat meals to an orderly line of Haitians.
More American help was on the way: The US Navy hospital ship Comfort steamed from the port of Baltimore on Saturday and was scheduled to arrive here Thursday. More than 2,000 Marines were set to sail from North Carolina to support aid delivery and provide security.
But for the estimated 300,000 newly homeless in the streets, plazas and parks of Port-au-Prince, help was far from assured.
"They're already starting to deliver food and water, but it's mayhem. People are hungry, everybody is asking for water," said Alain Denis, a resident of the Thomassin district.
Denis's home was intact, and he and his elderly parents have some reserves, but, he said, "in a week, I don't know."
Aid delivery was still bogged down by congestion at the Port-au-Prince airport, quake damage at the seaport, poor roads and the fear of looters and robbers.
The problems at the overloaded airport forced a big Red Cross aid mission to strike out overland from Santo Domingo, almost 200 miles away in the Dominican Republic. The convoy included up to 10 trucks carrying temporary shelters, a 50-bed field hospital and some 60 medical specialists.
"It's not possible to fly anything into Port-au-Prince right now. The airport is completely congested," Red Cross spokesman Paul Conneally said from the Dominican capital.
Another convoy from the Dominican Republic steered toward a UN base in Port-au-Prince without stopping, its leaders fearful of sparking a riot if they handed out aid themselves.
The airport congestion touched off diplomatic rows between the US military and other donor nations.
France and Brazil both lodged official complaints that the US military, in control of the international airport, had denied landing permission to relief flights from their countries.
Defense Minister Nelson Jobim, who has 7,000 Brazilian UN peacekeeping troops in Haiti, warned against viewing the rescue effort as a unilateral American mission.
The squabbling prompted Haitian President Rene Preval, speaking with the AP, to urge all to "keep our cool and coordinate and not throw accusations."
At a simpler level, unending logistical difficulties dogged the relief effort.
A commercial-sized jet landed with rescue and medical teams from Qatar, only to find problems offloading food aid. They asked the US military for help, surgeon Dr Mootaz Aly said, and were told: "We're busy."
As relief teams grappled with on-the-ground obstacles, the US leadership promised to step up aid efforts. In Washington, Obama joined with his two most recent White House predecessors to appeal for Americans to donate to the cause.
"We stand united with the people of Haiti, who have shown such incredible resilience," he said.
Their resilience was truly being tested, however.
On a back street in Port-au-Prince, a half-dozen young men ripped water pipes off walls to suck out the few drops inside. "This is very, very bad, but I am too thirsty," said Pierre Louis Delmar.
Outside a warehouse, hundreds of desperate Haitians simply dropped to their knees when workers for the agency Food for the Poor announced they would distribute rice, beans and other supplies. "They started praying right then and there," said project director Clement Belizaire.
Children and the elderly were asked to step first into line, and some 1,500 people got food, soap and rubber sandals until supplies ran out, he said.
The aid official was overcome by the tragic scene. "This was the darkest day of everybody living in Port-au-Prince," he said.

Adjournment sought on hearing of 5th amendment

Two separate petitions were filed on Sunday with the Supreme Court, seeking adjournment of Monday's scheduled hearing on the pending petitions filed against the High Court verdict that had declared the fifth amendment to the country's Constitution illegal.
The fifth amendment had legitimised all governments that had been in power following the coup of August 15, 1975 till April 9, 1979 including late president Ziaur Rahman's ascension to the presidency.
With the two new petitions, a total of six petitions against the HC verdict are now pending with the apex court.
Of the petitions, two separate leave-to-appeal petitions had been filed last year with the SC, challenging the HC verdict, and two others were filed on January 5 this year, seeking reinstatement of a stay order on the HC verdict.
BNP Secretary General Khandaker Delwar Hossain and three SC lawyers--Tajul Islam, Kamruzzaman Bhuiyan and Munshi Ahsan Kabir filed all the six petitions.
On January 5 this year, the SC's Appellate Division fixed January 18 for hearing all the petitions, which have been enlisted as item No-6 for hearing on Monday's cause list of the court.
Tajul Islam, one of the petitioners, on Sunday told The Daily Star that they filed the petitions seeking eight weeks' adjournment on the scheduled hearing on the petitions.
Earlier on January 3, the Appellate Division lifted its four-year old stay order on the HC verdict and also allowed withdrawal by the incumbent government and Muktijoddha Kalyan Trust of two leave-to-appeal petitions against the HC verdict.

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