Prize bond expires if not claimed within 2 years

Bangladesh government introduced prize bonds in 1974 to encourage people to save.

The government usually borrows money from people by selling this bond which is issued by the Department of National Savings (DNS).

The government-run savings program is called ‘Bangladesh Prize Bond’. By selling it, the government borrows directly from the people. It is basically a financial product of the DNS and Bangladesh Bank (BB) takes care of everything of this bond.

Officials of the BB and DNS said that although many people bought prize bonds with a keen interest in reversing their fortunes, many were too lazy to match the draw results.

Many people do not match the number of prize bonds due to negligence. Many cannot even get the prize money, although the government has the opportunity to claim the prize money within the two years of the result, they said.

If none of the winners claimed the prize money within the two years, it expired and returned to the government treasury.

After the draw, the winner is given a pay-order within a maximum of two months if he applies in the prescribed form along with the original bond.

The government has to pay 20 percent withholding tax on the prize money. According to the central bank, there are about 5 crore prize bonds in the country.

This prize bond is also known as prize bond and lottery bond. Some people call it an interest free bond as it has no interest. Money can be refunded at any time by breaking the prize bond. Both redemption and purchase can be done from all cash offices of Bangladesh Bank, any commercial bank and post office.

The draw worth Tk100 prize bond is held four times a year. The dates are 31st January, 30th April, 31st July and 31st October.

A committee headed by the Divisional Commissioner of Dhaka conducts the draw. However, two months after the purchase, the prize bond comes under draw.

The prize bond has 46 prizes for each series, worth Tk16.25 lakh. The first prize is Tk 6 lakh, the second prize is Tk 3. 25 lakh, the third prize is two Tk 1 lakh for each, the fourth prize is two, and 5th prize is 40 prizes of each Tk 10,000.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

Joy shares video report on ‘BNP’s money laundering’

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s ICT Advisor Sajeeb Wazed Joy has levelled hefty money laundering allegations against BNP leaders, including Tarique Rahman, backed by evidence from top global watchdogs.

Joy shared an “investigative” video report accompanied by a text “A whistleblower on who, how, when, and where laundered money from Bangladesh’ from his verified Facebook page which described how the BNP leaders siphoned off a huge amount of money during the party’s last tenure (2001- 2006).

Among them, according to the video report, Khaleda Zia’s elder son, Tarique Rahman stashed over Tk 20 crore in the account of his friend, Gias Uddin Al Mamun, with Citi Bank in Singapore.

Even an FBI official testified in a money laundering case against Tarique, said the report mentioning that money laundering a disease.

Khaleda Zia’s younger son Arafat (Koko) illegally transferred a huge amount of money to Singapore during the BNP’s tenure between 2001 and 2006, the video report mentioned.

A portion of money siphoned off by him– more than 3 million Singaporean dollars– was brought back by the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) in three phases. His corruption was even detailed on the FBI website, according to the video.

In the Paradise Papers, many BNP leaders were named, including Abdul Awal Mintoo, former adviser to the BNP chairperson, his wife, and three sons, according to the video report that mentioned that wherever there was an investigation into corruption in the world, names of BNP leaders surfaced.

The infamous Panama Papers named 34 Bangladeshis, individuals and organisations, for involvement in money laundering, according to the video report.

Among them are M Morshed Khan, former foreign minister of the BNP-led government, and his son Faisal Morshed Khan, it mentioned.

The video mentioned that these global watchdogs do not care if somebody is in power or not — so they would expose Awami League leaders for similar corruption if they could — but they have not.

Recently, Pandora’s papers leaked around 12 million secret documents. “Be it Pandora’s Papers or Panama Papers, no global corruption watchdog has ever named any top-level leader of Awami League. But, BNP leaders were named everywhere,” according to the video report.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

Dhaka seeks global support in rehabilitation of climate migrants

Bangladesh has urged global leaders to share the burden of rehabilitation of the climate migrants, noting that each year thousands of people are being uprooted from their sweet homes and traditional jobs due to global warming, riverbank erosion and erratic climate changes.

As the CVF (Climate Vulnerable Forum (CVF) President, Foreign Minister Dr AK Abdul Momen urges the international community to proactively address the unique challenges of the CVF countries.

“They indeed need further support in building capacity for trade-facilitation reforms. Otherwise, they would have to sacrifice development and quality of life for their citizens,” said Dr Momen while delivering his remarks at a webinar on “Climate Change Priorities in Trade and Investment” on Monday evening.

World Trade Organization (WTO) Director-General Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, WIPO Director-General Daren Tang, Deputy Secretary-General of UNCTAD Isabelle Durant and Deputy to the Director-General of UNIDO Hiroshi Kuniyoshi also joined it.

The Foreign Minister flagged six points and first, he said, all must be strict in implementing the Paris Agreement.

Secondly, Dr Momen said, transfer of clean, green, and advanced technology to developing countries at affordable costs, including for meeting energy requirements is crucial.

Sharing his third point, the Foreign Minister said, developed countries must keep their commitments to mobilise 100 billion dollars annually for climate finance with a 50:50 balance between adaptation and mitigation finance.

Fourth, he said, climate-vulnerable countries’ development needs, including climate smart agriculture, sustainable industrialisation, and enhanced contribution to the global value chain, must be addressed by decisive actions.

Fifth, the Foreign Minister said collaborative steps must be taken for ensuring sustainable marine fishing which is important for preserving marine ecosystems and combating climate change.

“It also remains crucial that developed countries and global financial institutions extend developing economies access to low-interest financing for climate friendly and climate proof trade and investment,” Dr Momen said as he flagged the sixth point.

Dr Momen thanked Bangladesh’ Permanent Mission in Geneva for organising this event. “Indeed, we’re speaking at a time when the correlation between human activities and climate change is more scientifically proven.”

He said climate change is the single most harmful contributor to humanity and the planet and this has severely impacted human lives and livelihoods. “The increased number of climate disasters and their impacts have brought vulnerable countries to a tipping point of irreversible damage.”

As identified by the United Nations, Dr Momen said, climate-related disasters increased by 83 per cent in the first two decades of the 21st century compared to the last two decades of the 20th century.

“These have affected our agriculture, food, energy security, economic growth, and sustainable development. Needless to say, the implications are more disastrous for the most vulnerable countries,” he said.

Bangladesh contributes less than 0.47 per cent to global carbon emissions and its per capita carbon-di-oxide emission is 0.5 metric tons, which is about 30 times less than that in the high emitting countries.

“However, we’re the seventh most climate-vulnerable nation. The whole coastal area of Bangladesh, which includes the gateways of our international trade, is under serious threat. Frequent disasters often severely disrupt our domestic supply chain,” he said, adding that, “We’ve lost our land and capital due to sea-level rise. Our infrastructure and transport routes are regularly hit hard by the climate effects that affect transportation of goods and services.”

Despite constraints, Dr Momen said, under the visionary leadership of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, Bangladesh has emerged as a global leader in climate change adaptation.

Bangladesh is the first LDC to set up a self-financed 450 million dollars “Bangladesh Climate Change Trust Fund” back in 2009 that supports nearly 800 adaptation and resilience projects in the vulnerable areas of the country.

“Bangladesh has one of the world’s most extensive domestic solar energy programmes. Last year, we submitted our updated NDC to the UNFCCC, enhancing both unconditional and conditional contributions with ambitious quantifiable mitigation targets,” he said.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

Tamim finds commentary an ‘interesting’ job

Bangladesh ODI captain Tamim Iqbal was seen in the commentary box for the first time during the Bangabandhu Bangladesh Premier League (BPL) Eliminator match between Khulna Tigers and Chattogram Challengers on Monday.

Tamim has a great speaker in him that he revealed during the early days of the pandemic when he hosted some big cricketing names on his social media handle including Virat Kohli, Faf du Plessis and Kane Williamson.

But Tamim in the commentary box is a completely new sight for Bangladesh’s cricket fans. Many expressed their excitement on social media seeing Tamim in the commentary box. Tamim himself also expressed his excitement while talking to the media.

“I came to the BCB today for a meeting,” he said during a short visit to the press box.

“I was asked to join the commentary team during the Pakistan series at home. I tried it today. It was really interesting. I may give it (taking commentary as a profession) a thought in future.”

Tamim got Athar Ali Khan, the former Bangladesh cricketer and long-time commentator, in the box and shared his experience.

Tamim represented Minister Group Dhaka in the ongoing BPL. He scored more than 400 runs with a stunning and match-winning hundred in Chattogram.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

AQI: Dhaka’s air remains unhealthy

Dhaka’s air quality remained ‘unhealthy’ as the city continued dominating the list of cities with the worst air quality in the world.

Dhaka occupied the second position in the list as its Air Quality Index (AQI) was recorded at 192 at 9am on Monday.

India’s Kolkata and Pakistan’s Lahore occupied the first and third spots, with AQI scores of 197 and 189 respectively.

An AQI between 101 and 200 is considered ‘unhealthy’, particularly for sensitive groups.

Similarly, an AQI between 201 and 300 is said to be ‘poor’, while a reading of 301 to 400 is considered ‘hazardous’, posing serious health risks to residents.

AQI, an index for reporting daily air quality, is used by government agencies to inform people how clean or polluted the air of a certain city is, and what associated health effects might be a concern for them.

In Bangladesh, the AQI is based on five criteria pollutants — Particulate Matter (PM10 and PM2.5), NO2, CO, SO2 and Ozone.

Dhaka has long been grappling with air pollution issues. Its air quality usually turns unhealthy in winter and improves during the monsoon.

A report by the Department of Environment (DoE) and the World Bank in March 2019 pointed out that the three main sources of air pollution in Dhaka “are brick kilns, fumes from vehicles and dust from construction sites”.

With the advent of winter, the city’s air quality starts deteriorating sharply due to the massive discharge of pollutant particles from construction work, rundown roads, brick kilns and other sources.

Air pollution consistently ranks among the top risk factors for death and disability worldwide. Breathing polluted air has long been recognised as increasing a person’s chances of developing a heart disease, chronic respiratory diseases, lung infections and cancer, according to several studies.

As per the World Health Organization (WHO), air pollution kills an estimated seven million people worldwide every year, largely as a result of increased mortality from stroke, heart disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, lung cancer and acute respiratory infections.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

Will try to make SUST 100% student-friendly: VC Farid Uddin

Making his first public appearance of note since students started a campaign to remove him, Shahjalal University of Science and Technology (SUST) Vice Chancellor Farid Uddin Ahmed on Monday pledged to make the institution “100% student-friendly”.

SUST VC said this while attending a celebration for the 31st founding anniversary of SUST at Gol Chattar area in the campus.

He said, ”We have come out of the things that were embarrassing for the university with everyone’s joint effort and regained our honour. SUST has 99.99 percent of good governance that a university should have.”

“Students can make mistakes but teachers will have to be forgiving towards them. We teachers will always support the students,” he added.

The founding anniversary of SUST was celebrated at the campus along with different festivities of Pohela Falgun.

At 10am VC Farid Uddin Ahmed and Treasurer Dr Anwarul Islam hoisted the national flag and university flag in front of academic building -2.

After placing a wreath at Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman’s mural, a gorgeous rally was brought out on the campus.

The general students however did not attend the rally, apart from members of Bangladesh Chhatra League.

After remaining shut for around a month SUST announced it would resume all its academic activities online from Tuesday after the students suspended their movement demanding resignation of VC Farid Uddin Ahmed on Saturday.

The residential halls for students were reopened Monday following a decision made at the emergency syndicate meeting on Sunday.

SUST authority announced a shutdown following a clash on the campus between police and the protesting students on January 16. The students were asked to leave the dormitories by 12pm the next day.

The police action on the students triggered a long protest and hunger strike in campus rejecting the authority’s orders.

The students of SUST suspended their movement on Saturday following a successful meeting with Education Minister Dipu Moni on Friday.

They suspended the protest after VC Farid Uddin Ahmed expressed regret over the police action on protesting students on January 16 and apologised earlier on Saturday.

On Friday, regarding the students’ demand for VC’s resignation, Dipu Moni said it will be placed before the President as he is the Chancellor of the university, holding the power to appoint and remove someone from the post of VC.

Regarding the two cases filed against the protesting students, she said arrangements will be made to withdraw those cases as soon as possible.

The protests began in the middle of January. Over two dozen SUST students who went on fast unto death ended their strike on January 26. They broke the fast after former SUST Prof Zafar Iqbal intervened.

The students embarked on the hunger strike on the university campus on January 19, demanding the resignation of the VC over the police crackdown on their fellows.

The strike was launched after police swooped on the protesting students, charging batons and firing sound grenades and shotgun bullets. On the other hand, the police had filed a case against 300 unnamed protesting students.

The alleged attack was carried out to free the VC from confinement in the university’s IICT building, and it had left 40 people hurt, including teachers, students and cops.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

Missing schoolboy’s body recovered in Chuadanga

Police recovered the decomposed body of a third grader, who had gone missing 25 days ago, from an old grave at Taltala Bara graveyard in Chuadanga early Monday.

The deceased was identified as Abu Huraira, son of Abdul Barek of Chuadanga town. He was a student of Chuadanga VJ Govt High School.

Md Mohsin, officer-in-charge (OC) of Chuadanga Sadar Police Station, said the schoolboy went missing on January 19 after going out for tuition.

His father Abdul Barek filed a case at the Chuadanga Sadar Police Station against five people on January 25. Police arrested his private tutor Ranju and his brother Manju in this connection.

Later on Sunday evening, police arrested two others including Abdul Momin, the deceased’s neighbour.

Based on the arrestees’ information, police recovered the decomposed body of Huraira from an old grave in Taltola Bara graveyard in Chuadanga around 2am on Monday, said Sukhendu Basu, officer-in-charge (OC-Operation) of Chuadanga Police Station.

The body was sent to Chuadanga Sadar Hospital morgue, said OC Sukhendu.

Investigation is underway in this regard, he added.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

Prince Charles’ wife Camilla tests positive for COVID-19

Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall has tested positive for COVID-19 four days after her husband Prince Charles was confirmed to be infected with the coronavirus, the couple’s office said Monday.

Clarence House said Camilla was self-isolating. Charles has been isolating since he tested positive on Thursday, but Camilla had continued with public engagements while taking daily tests.

Both Charles, 73, and 74-year-old Camilla are triple-vaccinated.

Charles, who is heir to the British throne, previously contracted the coronavirus in March 2020, during the first wave of the pandemic.

Charles is believed to have met with his mother Queen Elizabeth II early last week when both were at Windsor Castle. Buckingham Palace hasn’t said whether the 95-year-old queen has tested positive, though it said last week she wasn’t displaying symptoms.

The queen, who reached the milestone of 70 years on the throne on Feb. 6, marked her Platinum Jubilee by expressing her wish for Camilla to be known as Queen Consort when Charles becomes king.

The announcement was a major vote of confidence in Camilla, who married Charles in 2005 and was initially shunned by fans of his late first wife, Princess Diana.

The British public has since warmed to her down-to-earth style and sense of humor. Camilla has taken on roles at more than 100 charities, focusing on a wide range of issues including promoting literacy, supporting victims of domestic violence and helping the elderly.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

Canada protests sound common refrain: ‘We stand for freedom’

Canadians who have occupied downtown Ottawa, disrupted travel and trade with the U.S. and inspired copycat protests from New Zealand to the Netherlands sound a common note when asked about their motivation: Decisions about their health shouldn’t be made by the government.

“We stand for freedom,” said Karen Driedger, 40, who home-schools her kids and attended protests in Ottawa and Windsor. “We believe that it should be everyone’s personal decision what they inject into their bodies.”

The refrain isn’t new to a pandemic-weary world, two years after the COVID-19 virus prompted curfews and closures, mask mandates, and debates over vaccine requirements. Still, the timing of the protests has raised some eyebrows, since they began just as many of the toughest pandemic-era restrictions were being lifted across Canada, the U.S. and Europe; experts say antipathy toward Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is a significant underlying force.

The in-your-face protests that have fueled frustrations around the country and world have been aided by publicity and support from far-right and anti-vaccine groups. And influential Americans such as former U.S. President Donald Trump and billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk have rallied behind the protesters.

Most Canadians have been supportive of the pandemic restrictions, which health officials have stressed are necessary to protect the public from a virus that has killed at least 5.8 million people globally. The vast majority of Canadians are vaccinated, and the COVID-19 death rate is one-third that of the United States.

Trudeau has labeled the protesters a “fringe,” and authorities have braced for violence because some have expressed hope that the rally will become the Canadian equivalent of last January’s riot at the U.S. Capitol by Trump supporters.

The Canadian “freedom convoy” was announced last month by a group founded by a QAnon conspiracy theory supporter and other organizers, and includes the ex-leader of Alberta’s far-right Maverick Party.

Protesters who spoke to The Associated Press this week defended their actions and argued that they represent many more frustrated residents.

Don Stephens, a 65-year-old retired graphic designer, said he’s come into Ottawa twice to show support for protesters there. He views them as representatives of a “silent majority that had been longing to have their voice heard.”

Mat Mackenzie, a 36-year-old trucker from Ontario, said he’s been among the protesters in Ottawa for 15 days, feeling “a duty” to show his opposition. Citizens should be in charge of making decisions around masks, vaccines and other COVID mitigation efforts, not government officials, he said.

“I can tell you 90% of truckers here are likely vaccinated. We’re here for freedom of choice,” Mackenzie said. “And that’s what we’re here to fight for.”

Michael Kempa, a criminology professor at the University of Ottawa, said there are two faces of the protest. It isn’t just about vaccine mandates and other COVID restrictions; organizers have said they want to oust Trudeau’s Liberal government and be part of forming a new one, he said.

“In many ways, the friendly face protesters are acting as the foot soldiers of the organizers,” Kempa said. “We are seeing a huge amount of misinformation. People who are legitimately angry are being manipulated by the protest leadership.”

Many Canadians have been outraged over the crude behavior of some demonstrators. Some urinated on the National War Memorial and danced on the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, while others carried signs and flags with swastikas and used the statue of Canadian hero Terry Fox to display an anti-vaccine statement, sparking widespread condemnation.

The images of protests across Canada have ignited copycats elsewhere.

In Paris, police prevented a threatened blockade of the French capital on Saturday. But a few dozen vehicles were able to disrupt traffic on the famed Champs-Elysees, prompting police to fire tear gas to disperse the crowd.

“The convoys are for the restoring of our liberties,” said Pierre-Louis Garnier, a 64-year-old who attended a protest in Paris on Friday to welcome an anticipated convoy that never materialized.

In the Netherlands, dozens of trucks and other vehicles, some waving Canadian flags, have descended on The Hague, the historic Dutch parliamentary complex.

“We are living now in police state,” said Hans Evenstain, a 76-year-old protester said Sunday. “That’s not a good life anymore. We want to move freely and that’s why we are here for us and for our children and our grandchildren.”

In Belgium, federal police were urging people to avoid Brussels on Monday, when a convoy is expected to gather in the country’s capital, and the headquarters of the 27-nation European Union.

In the New Zealand capital of Wellington, authorities tried blasting Barry Manilow songs and the 90s dance hit “Macarena” on loop in an unsuccessful attempt to break up a convoy of protesters that has been encamped outside Parliament for nearly a week.

“All I want is the mandates lifted, and freedom of choice,” said Kacheeya Scarrow, who drove her van about 380 kilometers (235 miles) from the city of Taupo to support the protest. “I’m not anti-vax, I’m not pro-vax. Everybody should have the right to choose what they want to do with their own body.”

In Windsor, where protesters had blocked the entrance to the Ambassador Bridge that is a crucial conduit for the auto industry in both the U.S. and Canada, police moved to end the demonstration Sunday, arresting about a dozen protesters and beginning to tow vehicles.

Before Sunday’s crackdown, the shutdown often had the feel of a block party.

Protesters milled about, carrying Canadian flags affixed to the ends of hockey sticks while music blared and food was handed out. They put up signs bearing slogans such as “Freedom Is Essential,” “Say No To Mandatory Vaccines” and “End Mandates.”

Troy Holman, a 32-year-old Windsor resident who has been at the protest every day since its start on Monday, said he believes the government overreached with its COVID-19 restrictions, which negatively impacted his wife’s small business.

“If we weren’t doing something such as this, no one would pay attention to us,” he said Friday. “Unfortunately, we have to be here, because this is what’s going to get the attention of the government.”

Source: United News of Bangladesh

India reports 34,113 new COVID-19 cases

India’s COVID-19 tally rose to 42,655,534 on Monday, as 34,113 new cases were registered during the past 24 hours across the country, showed the health ministry’s latest data.

Besides, 346 deaths due to the pandemic since Sunday morning took the total death toll to 509,011.

There are still 478,882 active COVID-19 cases in the country with a fall of 58,163 active cases during the past 24 hours. This was the 21st consecutive day when the number of active cases declined in the country.

A total of 41,677,641 people have been successfully cured and discharged from hospitals so far, out of which 91,930 were discharged during the past 24 hours.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

Key US-Canada bridge reopens after police clear protesters

The busiest U.S.-Canada border crossing reopened late Sunday after protests against COVID-19 restrictions closed it for almost a week, while Canadian officials held back from a crackdown on a larger protest in the capital, Ottawa.

Detroit International Bridge Co. said in a statement that “the Ambassador Bridge is now fully open allowing the free flow of commerce between the Canada and US economies once again.” Esther Jentzen, spokeswoman for the company, said in a later text to The Associated Press that the bridge reopened to traffic at 11 p.m. EST.

The crossing normally carries 25% of all trade between the two countries, and the blockade on the Canadian side had disrupted business in both countries, with automakers forced to shut down several assembly plants.

Police in Windsor, Ontario, said earlier in the day that more than two dozen people had been peacefully arrested, seven vehicles towed and five seized as officers cleared the last demonstrators from near the bridge, which links the city — and numerous Canadian automotive plants — with Detroit.

The protest in Ottawa, meanwhile, has paralyzed downtown, infuriated residents who are fed up with police inaction and turned up pressure on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who presided at a Cabinet meeting late Sunday.

The demonstrations have reverberated across Canada and beyond, with similar convoys in France, New Zealand and the Netherlands. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security warned that truck convoys may be in the works in the United States.

Youtube video thumbnail

The Ambassador Bridge had remained closed for most of the day despite the break up of the protest as a heavy snowstorm blanketed the area. Windsor Mayor Drew Dilkens had said the span would open once authorities determined it was safe to do so.

Canada’s industry minister, François-Philippe Champagne, welcomed the development, saying on Twitter: “Good news. Glad to see that the Ambassador Bridge is now reopened.”

U.S. President Joe Biden’s administration on Sunday acknowledged the seemingly peaceful resolution to the demonstration, which it said had “widespread damaging impacts” on the “lives and livelihoods of people” on both sides of the border.

“We stand ready to support our Canadian partners wherever useful in order to ensure the restoration of the normal free flow of commerce can resume,” Homeland Security Advisor Dr. Liz Sherwood-Randall said in a statement.

In Ottawa, which is about 500 miles northeast of Windsor, Mayor Jim Watson said Sunday the city struck a deal with protesters who have jammed downtown streets for more than two weeks that will see them move out of residential areas in the next 24 hours.

Watson said he agreed to meet with demonstrators if they confined their protest to an area around Parliament Hill and moved their trucks and other vehicles out of residential neighborhoods by noon Monday.

The mayor shared a letter from one of the protest’s organizers, Tamara Lich, in which she said demonstrators “agree with your request” to focus activities at Parliament Hill. But Lich later denied there was an agreement, saying in a tweet: “No deal has been made. End the mandates, end the passports. That is why we are here.”

Watson added in his letter to protesters that residents are “exhausted″ and “on edge” due to the demonstrations and warns that some businesses are teetering on the brink of permanent closure because of the disruptions.

The ranks of protesters had swelled to what police said were 4,000 demonstrators by Saturday, and a counter-protest of frustrated Ottawa residents attempting to block the convoy of trucks from entering the downtown emerged Sunday.

Clayton Goodwin, a 45-year-old military veteran who was among the counter-protesters, said it was time for residents to stand up against the protesters.

“I’m horrified that other veterans would be down there co-opting my flag, co-opting my service,” said Goodwin, who is the CEO of the Veterans Accountability Commission, a nonprofit advocacy group. “It’s a grift. The city was free. We’re 92% vaccinated. We’re ready to support our businesses.”

Colleen Sinclair, another counter-protester, said the demonstrators have had enough time to have their discontent heard and need to move on — with police force, if it comes down to it.

“They’re occupiers. People are scared to go to work, too scared to leave their homes,” she said. “This is not how you get your voice heard. This is domestic terrorism and we want you out of our city. Go home.”

The city has seen similar expansions of the protest on past weekends, and loud music played as people milled about downtown where anti-vaccine demonstrators have been encamped since late January, to the frustration of local residents.

“It just feels like I’m living in a different country, like I’m in the States,” said Shannon Thomas, a 32-year-old teacher. “It just makes me really sad to see all these people waving Canadian flags and acting like patriots when it’s really the most sad and embarrassing thing I’ve ever seen.”

Trudeau has so far rejected calls to use the military, but had said that “all options are on the table” to end the protests. Trudeau has called the protesters a “fringe” of Canadian society. Both federal and provincial politicians have said they can’t order police what to do.

Major-General Steve Boivin, commander of Canadian Special Operations Forces Command, said Sunday that two of his special forces soldiers were supporting the protests in Ottawa and were in the “process of being released” from service. Boivin said the activity goes against the military’s values and ethics.

On Friday, a judge ordered an end to the blockade at the crossing in Windsor and Ontario Premier Doug Ford declared a state of emergency allowing for fines of 100,000 Canadian dollars and up to one year in jail for anyone illegally blocking roads, bridges, walkways and other critical infrastructure.

Partial closures at the bridge started on Feb. 7 and by midweek the disruption was so severe that automakers began shutting down or reducing production. The standoff came at a time when the industry is already struggling to maintain production in the face of pandemic-induced shortages of computer chips and other supply-chain disruptions.

“We are protesting the government taking away our rights,” said Windsor resident Eunice Lucas-Logan. “We want the restrictions removed. We have to wait to find out.”

The 67-year-old has been out supporting the protest for the past four days. She said she appreciated that police have been patient.

On the other side of the country, a major truck border crossing between Surrey, British Columbia, and Blaine, Washington, was closed Sunday, a day after Canadian authorities said a few vehicles had breached police barricades and a crowd entered the area by foot.

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police said Sunday afternoon four people had been arrested for “mischief” during the protest. Some people who stayed overnight had packed up and left, but the border crossing and roads in the area remained closed.

A border blockade that began in Coutts, Alberta, north of Sweet Grass, Montana, on Jan. 29 remained in place as well. Police issued more than 50 traffic tickets Saturday and continued issuing them Sunday, RCMP Cpl. Troy Savinkoff said.

Officers also intercepted and disabled three excavators that were being brought to the protest, Savinkoff said.

“Had those made their way to the blockade, it would only have compounded the unfortunate situation we’re facing at the border,” he said.

While the protesters are decrying vaccine mandates for truckers and other COVID-19 restrictions, many of Canada’s public health measures, such as mask rules and vaccine passports for getting into restaurants and theaters, are already falling away as the omicron surge levels off.

About 90% of truckers in Canada are vaccinated, and trucker associations and many big-rig operators have denounced the protests. The U.S. has the same vaccination rule for truckers crossing the border, so it would make little difference if Trudeau lifted the restriction.

Pandemic restrictions have been far stricter there than in the U.S., but Canadians have largely supported them. The vast majority of Canadians are vaccinated, and the COVID-19 death rate is one-third that of the United States.

Meanwhile, Biden, in an interview with NBC’s Lester Holt on Sunday ahead of the Super Bowl, struck a critical tone when asked about those likely to object to the mask mandate at the NFL championship game.

“I love how people talk about personal freedom,” he said. “If you’re exercising personal freedom, but you put someone else in jeopardy, their health in jeopardy, I don’t consider that being very good with freedom.”

Source: United News of Bangladesh

Amar Ekushey Book Fair 2022 begins Tuesday

After being shifted from its traditional February 1st inauguration day due to Covid-19, Amar Ekushey Book Fair 2022 will begin on Tuesday.

The traditional book fair will be held stBangla Academy premises and the adjacent venue at Suhrawardi Udyan in the capital.

This year, the fair is scheduled to be held till February 28.

However, the duration would get an extension if the Covid-19 situation gets better, State Minister for Cultural Affairs KM Khalid said on Monday.

Bangla Academy announced the details of the fair at a press conference at the AKSB auditorium on Monday, where the state minister and officials of the academy shared the detailed planning of the fair to the media.

Alongside Khalid, Bangla Academy Director General poet Nurul Huda, Ministry of Cultural Affairs Secretary Md Abul Monsur Ekushey Book Fair organizing committee Member Secretary Dr Jalal Ahmed were also present at the press conference.

Like the last year, Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina will virtually inaugurate the fair on Tuesday from Ganobhaban.

The inauguration ceremony will be chaired by novelist Selina Hossain, the newly appointed President of Bangla Academy.

The prime minister will also distribute the Bangla Academy Literary Award 2021 among the recipients at the inaugural ceremony.

KM Khalid said, “Due to the ongoing Covid-19l pandemic situation, the total duration of Amar Ekushey Book Fair 2022 has been curtailed. However, if the situation improves, the time will be extended and we are looking forward to everyone’s cooperation for a successful book fair this year.“

It was announced that there will “No Mask, No Sell” policy for the sellers-customers at this year’s fair, which means no one can buy the books without being masked up.

Also, the officials and publishers of the academy concerned with the fair, the concerned officials and the sales executives in the stalls and the pavilions will have to carry their vaccination certificates. Customers will have to show the vaccination certificates at the food stalls at the fair.

Violators of this guideline will face punishments and adequate social distancing must be observed in food stalls and the entire fair zone, MoCA Secretary Md Abul Monsur said at the press conference.

The territory of this year’s book fair will cover a total of 7,00,000 square feet area. A total of 776 units have been allocated to 534 organizations for this year’s book fair, compared to 834 units to 540 organizations last year.

There will be 142 stalls on the Bangla Academy premises and 634 stalls at Suhrawardy Udyan.

For the second year in a row, the fair authority has decided not to have the traditional ‘Shishu Prohor’ event on the inaugural day of the fair, and the children’s corner has been again shifted to Suhrawardi Udyan this year.

Seminars will be held at the main stage of the fair venue at 4 pm every day, followed by cultural events.

To prevent the hassle of the fair-goers, there will be 3 information centres. The fair-goers can move through the 4 entrances and 3 exit points from 2 pm to 9 pm on regular days and 11 am to 9 pm on the holidays.

However, the fairgoers can enter the fair on International Mother Language Day at 8 am. Entrance points will be closed after 8.30 pm.

The numbers of volunteers and other necessary amenities have been increased this year to ensure adequate support for the book-lovers, including some new features such as children zone, police control room, breast Feeding zone, wheelchair for physically challenged booklovers, prayer zone and more.

The fair venue was first extended to Suhrawardy Udyan in 2013 to accommodate more

There will be strict security arrangements in and around the venue by the Bangladesh Police, RAB, BGB and other security enforcements to prevent any unpleasant incidents. The entire fair zone will be closely monitored by more than 300 CCTV cameras.

‘Chittaranjan Saha Memorial Award’ will be distributed to the best publishers, while the ‘Munir Chowdhury Memorial Award’ will be conferred upon three organizations for publishing the best books in the 2022 fair.

In addition to that, the ‘Rokanuzzaman Khan Dadabhai Memorial Award’ will be awarded to the best children book, and the ‘Artist Qayyum Chowdhury’ memorial award will be awarded to the best-designed stall at the fair.

The month-long book fair is arranged every year in February commemorating the sacrifices of people who laid down their lives on February 21, 1952, for establishing Bangla as the mother tongue.

The traditional Amar Ekushey Book Fair began informally in 1972 on Bangla Academy premises; however, the academy officially took the responsibility to arrange the fair regularly, every year since 1978.

It was then named ‘Amar Ekushey Grantha Mela’ and a guideline was laid out in this regard in 1984.

Source: United News of Bangladesh