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11 more Rohingyas pushed back

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Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB) personnel pushed back 11 more Rohingyas who tried to intrude into Bangladesh territory through the Teknaf border.

They were sent back to Mongdu city of Myanmar on an engine-run boat around 5:30pm on Tuesday, Lt Col Zahid Hasan, Commanding Officer of the BGB 42 Rifles Battalion, told bdnews24.com.

The 11 Rohingyas were arrested from Sabrang area of Teknaf upazila in Cox's Bazar district at 10pm on Monday. The BGB men provided them with necessary dry foods before sending them back.

The BGB officials said there was no incident of intrusion of Rohingya refugees into Bangladesh until Tuesday 7pm and the situation along the Teknaf border was returning to normalcy.

Rohingyas had been trying to intrude into Bangladesh by boats since riot broke out in Muangdaw district in coastal Rakhine state on June 8.

Hundreds of them were turned away by the BGB and Coast Guard personnel.

Meanwhile, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has been repeatedly urged Bangladesh to reconsider its position on closing the border to asylum-seekers fleeing the sectarian violence in Rakhine.

But the government has turned down the call saying the country was already burdened with more than 500,000 Rohingya refugees, who had fled their homeland more than two decades ago.

Though Bangladesh was not a signatory to any international statute on refugees, the country had been hosting a large group of refugees for years on humanitarian grounds, the government said.

Mujib's memoir leaves Hasina-Rehana emotional

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Audience of a programme in Dhaka watched Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina trying to control her emotions on Tuesday while her sister Sheikh Rehana was in tears after getting the printed versions of their father's unfinished autobiography.

"It was ours to date, but it belongs to people now," Hasina said at a programme at Ganabhaban marking the release of "Ausamapta Atmajiboni" and its English version "The Unfinished Memoirs" by Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman.

"Every time I read the copies, they make me nostalgic," she said.

"It was very painful to hand over the diary," she said.

The University Press Limited (UPL) has published the diary, in the form of book, written by Sheikh Mujib during his time in jail through 1967-69.

Hasina said she wrote the preamble in jail during the military-backed caretaker government's tenure.

She seemed unable to speak for some time while throwing light on the contents of the book.

"It's in the same condition as he (Sheikh Mujib) had written. We didn't touch anything," she said.

"There are many names [in it], which one might think should not have been there. But we didn't drop. History is history," she added.

Rehana said, "There should be something to be left behind. We allowed it be published for this very thought. We should enlighten the new generations."

Hasina handed over copies of both versions of the autobiography to Prof Salauddin Ahmed, whose suggestions helped them publish the book.

Shamsuzzaman Khan and A N M Mahfuza Khatun Baby Maudud also did some editing to give the book a contemporary look while Prof Fakhrul Alam translated it into English.

Hasina's Deputy Press Secretary Moninur Nesa Ninu typed the book. "Baby [Maudud] and I dictated and Ninu typed," Hasina said.

A press release issued by UPL a few days back said: "In his memoirs, Bangabandhu describes the context of writing it, and then he takes us back to the beginning – his lineage, birth and childhood, days in school and college, and social and political involvements."

"The book progresses to recount the historical events the great leader experienced standing in the forefront – famine, communal riots in Kolkata and Bihar, partition, politics of Kolkata-centric State Muslim Student League and Muslim League, Pakistan central government's discriminatory attitude and the Agartala conspiracy," it said.

The book also had contents on all integral aspects of Sheikh Mujib's life in and out of prison, his parents, wife and children, and kin, the release said.

The Penguin Books, India, and Oxford University Press, Pakistan had also collaborated with UPL to publish the book simultaneously in India and Pakistan, it said.

The books carry price tags of Tk 525 and Tk 1,200 for Bengali and English editions, respectively. The deluxe editions would cost Tk 650 for Bengali and Tk 1,500 for English.

The Oxford University Press has also finalised an Urdu translation of The Unfinished Memoirs to be published in July.

Born in Tungipara village of Gopalganj district in 1920, Sheikh Mujib became the Father of the Nation, who fought the war for independence against Pakistan in 1971.

After the independence, Mujib became the Prime Minister of Bangladesh, the new country. During the Liberation War, he had been kept in jail in the then West Pakistan. He was also president of the wartime government named after him, the Mujibnagar Government.

On Aug 15 1975, some army personnel shot him dead, along with most of the members of his family. His daughters Hasina and Rehana survived as they were outside the country that day.

Myanmar boat people swap violence for desperation

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At first, the boat bobbing in the water in the middle of the night appeared to be empty. But when Bangladeshi villagers took a closer look, they found a baby too weak to cry, a refugee from marauding mobs in Myanmar apparently abandoned by her family.

The cleft-lipped infant, just weeks old, is among hundreds of Rohingya Muslims who fled this month's sectarian violence in Myanmar's western state of Rakhine, packing themselves into rough wooden boats and heading for the shores of neighbouring Bangladesh.

No one knows how many made it ashore. Bangladesh has ordered its border guards to push the boats back, determined that - with at least quarter of a million "illegal migrants" already here - there must be no more.

The baby, named Fatima by the family that has taken her in, is out of the danger that she and her family faced in Myanmar, but she joins a throng of stateless people in southeast Bangladesh who - for the most part - lead desperate lives of squalor, deprivation and discrimination.

Among them is Mohammad Kamal, a young religious leader from Rakhine's Maungdaw district, where ferocious violence erupted on June 9 between Rohingyas and ethnic Rakhine Buddhists and spread across the state.

He escaped to Bangladesh in 2006 after his brother and others were jailed in a crackdown on Muslim clerics.

Kamal, now 28, settled in a makeshift "unregistered" camp, where - along with some 20,000 others - he is not recognised as a refugee and where even international aid agencies have to work under the radar because Bangladesh has not granted them legal status.

"I went out for a walk one day last year and was arrested because I had no documents," said Kamal, pulling up a trouser leg to show a line of angry sores that broke out during the following nine months he spent in jail.

Behind him, naked children play in a muddy pool and the rickety dwellings of an overcrowded shanty town - his camp - rise up, lashed by monsoon rains.

In 2010, it s alleged, the authorities forcibly evicted thousands from a makeshift camp. The medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres recounted at the time that some Rohingyas had been thrown into the Naf River and told to swim the 3 km (2 miles) back to Myanmar, and the organisation said it had treated many for beatings, machete wounds and even rape.

"A DESPERATE LIFE"

Craig Sanders, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees' representative in Dhaka, said that although Bangladesh has disowned the Rohingyas - dubbing them illegal economic migrants - it has shown "tremendous generosity over many years".

Rohingyas first came in large numbers to the South Asian nation in 1973, and over the years gained a reputation for drug-smuggling, gun-running and human trafficking.

A sudden flood of more than quarter of a million arrived in 1991-92 after a spasm of repression by the security forces in military-ruled Myanmar.

Those that remain from that wave, now numbering some 30,000, live in two official camps where the UN provides everything from shelter and water supply to healthcare and schooling.

But at least 200,000 others - probably many more - have settled on the Bangladesh side of the 200-km (125-mile) border, mingling with the population where they struggle to find employment or squeezing into unofficial camps.

It is these "unregistered" Rohingyas who are most vulnerable.

"It's an extremely desperate life for these people," said one worker for a humanitarian group that provides assistance illegally at one camp, asking not to be named. "They have been here for such a long time and there is no prospect of change."

UNHCR's Sanders has crossed swords with the government in recent days over its decision to turn back the boatloads of traumatised Rohingyas.

"Bangladesh, one more time, is being urged to step forward to deal with a situation that is not of their making," he said. "We are not trying to push them into a corner on this issue, but there is a question of fair and right treatment here."

BANGLADESH SAYS "NO MORE"

There have been sketchy and conflicting reports of the communal violence that erupted in Rakhine, but scores are feared dead after widespread torching of houses by both sides.

Abdus Salam, one of 10 Rohingyas who reached Bangladesh and are now hiding in a coastal village to avoid arrest, told Reuters last week: "The Rakhine torched our houses, killed our relatives, assaulted our women. They were killing Muslims. When we protested, the government forces also shot our people dead. Then we started fleeing."

Muhammad Zamir, Dhaka's chief information commissioner, maintains that the authorities have treated the boat people humanely, providing those they turn away with water, medicines and fuel for the journey back, assisting a woman who gave birth on arrival and treating those with gunshot wounds in hospital.

"We want to help the refugees, they have rights," Zamir told Reuters in the coastal town of Cox's Bazar, a bumpy three-hour drive from the shores where Rohingyas are being pushed back.

"But we can only look after them to a point. We really can't handle any more."

He argues that, as a densely populated and poverty-plagued country of 150 million, Bangladesh has played its part. Now, as democracy stirs in Myanmar, it is time for its neighbour to address the root causes of the chronic exodus of Rohingyas, and for the international community to put pressure on it to do so.

SILENT CRISIS

There has been some dismay in this part of Bangladesh at the hard line taken by the government on the new arrivals. The populations share the same ethnicity, religion and dialect, and they are so close that if you call a Rohingya on a mobile phone in Myanmar it is likely to be a Bangladesh number.

Yet the plight of those already here gets little attention.

A report by US-based rights group Refugees International last year described a "silent crisis" of abuse, starvation and detention faced by stateless Rohingyas in Bangladesh.

According to UNHCR, a 2011 survey in the two official camps found that 17 percent of children between six months and six years were suffering from acute malnutrition, higher than the emergency threshold set by the World Health Organisation.

In the makeshift camps, malnutrition rates are even higher.

"It's a hopeless situation," said the aid worker. "You treat the children who are sick, and then they fall ill again because they are not getting the right food."

For now at least, tiny Fatima is safe. She has been taken in by a fisherman and his wife who already have four sons and two daughters. But an uncertain future awaits her, stateless in the land of her refuge.

Police file case over Ashulia unrest

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Police have sued several hundred people over the demonstrations by readymade garment workers in Ashulia for riot and vandalism.

Ashulia Police Station Sub-Inspector (SI) Hafizur Rahman filed the case in the wee hours of Sunday on charges of blockading the road, assaulting police, obstruction to government work and vandalism.

Eleven people, all of whom are leaders and activists of main opposition BNP and its front organisations, were named in the case along with several hundred other unnamed people.

Anwar Hossain, a BNP leader who owns Anwar CNG filling station and former member of Piarpur Union's ward number 1, has been made the chief accused in the case.

Manager of the filling station Abul Kashem alleged up to 15 policemen, led by Ashulia Police Station OC (investigation) Mustafa Kamal, broke into the station's office room where Anwar was sitting and beat him up around 9am.

Kashem said the BNP leader was currently undergoing treatment at Savar's Enam Medical College Hospital.

The garment workers at Ashulia demonstrated again on Sunday morning as the weeklong unrest reached a new height after factory owners shut all garment factories in the industrial hub for an indefinite period.

They have been demonstrating since June 11 demanding better wages. Hundreds of people have been injured and over 150 vehicles vandalised during the weeklong protest.

On Thursday, the owners failed to agree on the proposal of FBCCI President AK Azad, owner of Ha-Meem Group, to raise salaries.

The meeting, however, ended deciding that all factories in Ashulia would be shut down if the ongoing unrest was not contained by Sunday.

Apex bodies -- Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA) and Bangladesh Knitwear Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BKMEA) -- took the decision and also threatened to shut all factories nationwide.

Around 450,000-500,000 workers are engaged in nearly 350 garment factories in Ashulia and there are about 3,500 garments factories across the country.

Shahabuddin to replace Gilani: report

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Pakistan People's Party has selected senior leader Makhdoom Shahabuddin for the position of Prime Minister following the Supreme Court's disqualification of Yousuf Raza Gilani, according to a number of local media outlets.

The decision was reportedly made at a meeting of senior party leaders chaired by President Asif Ali Zardari on Wednesday morning, Geo News TV said quoting unnamed sources.

It was also decided to formally elect the new leader of the House in a session of the National Assembly on Thursday.

The party or the President's office is yet to make any official statement regarding the nomination.