Former Bangladeshi prime minister and opposition BNP chief Khaleda Zia is set to surrender before a trial court to face corruption charges over contracting a gas field to a Canadian company in exchange for kickbacks during her tenure as premier.
“She will appear before the Special Judge’s Court-9 tomorrow at 11:30 am in line with the Supreme Court directives,” Zia’s counsel Mahbubuddin Khokon said.
The high court in June this year rejected the ex-premier’s plea seeking to quash a graft charge over contracting out a gas field to Canada’s NIKO as the lower court trials were underway involving the case, withdrawing a temporary ban.
The NIKO case was filed during the past military-backed interim government in 2007 after the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) accused the ex-premier and 10 others of causing a loss of nearly 13,777 crore Taka (USD 1.78 billion) by reaching a non-transparent deal with the Canadian company.
Zia is also being tried in two other graft cases involving two charities named after her husband slain Bangladeshi military ruler and Bangladeshi Nationalist Party (BNP) founder Ziaur Rahman.
Zia was premier from 2001 to 2006, and earlier from 1991 to 1996.
Khaleda Zia was earlier charged by police of masterminding an arson attack on a bus that left 29 people injured, days after Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina said the former premier could be put on trial for recent violence.
Bangladesh Nationalist Party leader was named in the case as the ‘hukumer ashami’ or accused of ordering the attack that wounded 29 people, nine of them critically. Another official, on condition of anonymity, told PTI that the case was filed early yesterday but the disclosure came late night because of the death of Zia’s self-exiled younger son Arafat Rahman Koko in Malaysia.
Prime Minister Hasina last week had hinted that her arch-rival Zia could be tried for instigating deadly violence saying, “It will be logical to bring her (Zia) under the purview of law as the accused of giving order of the killings.”“But it is up to agencies enforcing the law to check this out and take necessary action,” she had told the Parliament as her ruling Awami League lawmakers demanded legal actions against Zia.
At least 34 people have been killed in violence during anti-government protests that took place following BNP’s call for a nationwide non-stop blockade from January 6 after authorities barred its chief Zia from joining a protest rally to mark the first anniversary of the last year’s divisive January 5 polls.
The police headquarters, meanwhile, announced late yesterday a bounty of Taka 500,000 for specific information about the people who torched the bus at Jatrabari by hurling two petrol bombs. The government earlier had announced Taka 100,000 as bounty for help in arresting the people involved in bomb attacks as part of a desperate effort to mobilise people’s support in tracking down the arsonists.
Political divisions have sharply increased as manifested in the controversy that emerged yesterday when Hasina, who had gone to offer condolences on the sudden death of Zia’s youngest son, was turned away from the gates of her archrival, in an apparent snub.