Hasina ordered to remain in jail

28 Aug, 2007

Bangladesh's Supreme Court ruled on Monday that former prime minister Sheikh Hasina must remain in prison and said she would be prosecuted under special emergency laws for extorting more than $1 million.
The ruling overturned a High Court order for the release of Hasina on bail, who was detained six weeks ago and is being held inside a parliament compound building that has been turned into a special jail.
The High Court ruling was challenged in the Supreme Court by the country's army-backed interim administration, which took over in January, imposed a state of emergency and launched a crackdown on corruption ahead of elections planned for late next year.
Separately on Monday, a court sentenced former minister Nazmul Huda to seven years in jail for taking a bribe of 24 million taka ($350,000) from a construction firm, court officials said.
Huda served as communications minister in the government of the most recent prime minister, Begum Khaleda Zia. The court also ordered Huda's wife, Sigma Huda, to serve three years in jail for abetting her husband in accepting the bribe, lawyers said.
More than 170 senior politicians, including over a dozen former ministers and a son of Khaleda Zia, have been detained for alleged corruption since January. Several of them, who served under both Khaleda and Hasina, her arch-rival, have already been convicted and sentenced to various prison terms.
The interim government says the army is supporting them in carrying out reforms and combating corruption to create conditions for a free and fair election. A state of emergency was imposed in January in the wake of widespread violence between rival political activists. An election planned for January 22 was cancelled and political activity banned.
The United Nations Development Programme said in a statement on Monday donors had agreed to give $50 million to overhaul the country's flawed voters' list. The US-based National Democratic Institute for International Affairs said the list which was prepared in 2006 included more than 12 million fake or duplicate names.

Read Comments