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Bangladesh ex-PM in murder probe | Bangladesh ex-PM in murder probe |
(about 5 hours later) | |
A court in Bangladesh has told police to investigate whether former prime minister Khaleda Zia should face murder charges over a 2004 grenade attack. | A court in Bangladesh has told police to investigate whether former prime minister Khaleda Zia should face murder charges over a 2004 grenade attack. |
Twenty-seven others, including her son Tarique Rahman and senior members of her Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), are also under investigation. | |
At least 20 people died in the attack on the Awami League rally in Dhaka. Its leader Sheikh Hasina was injured. | At least 20 people died in the attack on the Awami League rally in Dhaka. Its leader Sheikh Hasina was injured. |
Ms Zia, who was in power at the time, denied she had tried to kill her rival. | Ms Zia, who was in power at the time, denied she had tried to kill her rival. |
The BNP joint secretary general Salima Rahman described the case as "false and politically motivated to destroy the image of Khaleda Zia and her party leaders". | |
Rebuffed | |
The case was brought by Awami League supporter Alhaj Badr Aziz, who was injured in the attack on 21 August 2004. | |
Bangladesh's unsolved bombings | |
He told AFP news agency that he had asked police to investigate the attack while the BNP-led coalition government was in power but had been rebuffed. | |
"I tried to file the case but no police station took it," he said. | |
The BBC's Waliur Rahman in Dhaka says that the authorities are still some way away from filing a final charge-sheet in the case, which means that the prospects of Khaleda Zia appearing in court in the immediate future are slim. | |
Police investigations into the attack - the worst on a political rally in recent years - were inconclusive. | |
The court ordered police to report back as soon as possible. | |
"Government actions after the incident proved that the then prime minister and her colleagues engaged professional killers to eliminate opposition leader Sheikh Hasina once [and] for all," a court official - quoting from the case petition - told Reuters news agency. | |
Sheikh Hasina escaped the blasts with minor leg injuries and partial loss of hearing. Shots were fired at her vehicle as she was taken away by aides. | |
"She came as close as you can possibly come to being assassinated. It was a well co-ordinated and well thought out attack," her political secretary Saber Hossain Chowdhury told AFP at the time. | |
Others being investigated by police are Motiur Rahman Nizami, head of the BNP's largest coalition partner Jamaat-e-Islami, and a number of senior BNP figures, including former home minister Lutfuzzaman Babar. | |
Extortion charges | |
Mr Babar is among 150 high-profile detainees - including politicians, businessmen and civil servants - arrested since January on suspicion of corruption. | |
The military-backed government says it wants an end to corruption | |
Sheikh Hasina - who herself faces murder and extortion charges - has always maintained that the BNP and its Islamist allies were behind the incident. | |
The BNP and its Islamist allies have always denied any involvement in the attack. | |
Khaleda Zia's government stepped down in October 2006. | |
Street demonstrations ahead of elections set for January led to their cancellation and the imposition of a state of emergency. | |
Re-scheduled elections are expected by the end of 2008, by which time the military-backed caretaker government has pledged to rid the country of corruption. | |
Sheikh Hasina and Khaleda Zia alternated as prime minister since 1991 and are bitter foes. |
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