Saturday, June 28, 2014

World Cup Round of 16′s match schedules

Source: The Bangladesh Today, Friday, 27 June, 2014
Link: http://thebangladeshtoday.com/sports/2014/06/world-cup-round-of-16s-match-schedules/


For two weeks, the Round of 16 has been a hypothetical. Now that the games are set, here’s what you need to know about the second round of the 2014 World Cup.
Format and changes
  • Top two teams from the tournament’s eight groups have advanced, slotting into a pre-determined bracket;
  • Teams that finished first in one group will face second place-finishers from others;
  • Games start on Saturday and will happen two-per-day until the quarterfinals are set on Tuesday;
  • If a game is tied after 90 minutes, there’ll be 30 minutes of extra time, then penalty kicks;
  • Your margin for error is over – it’s now win or go home;
  • Yellow cards carry over from group stage and will continue matter in the knockout round.
Here are the eight matches, which begin on Saturday at 12:00 p.m. Eastern. Winners of each day’s games play each other in the quarterfinals. Your bracket is below.

Schedule

Saturday, June 28
Brazil vs. Chile, 10:00 p.m. BST, Belo Horizonte - The home nation will be favorites, but a midfield that failed to impress during group stage will have its hands full with an energetic Roja. Slotted adjacent to Colombia-Uruguay, this pod ensures one South American team will make it to the tournament’s semifinals.

Colombia vs. Uruguay, 2:00 a.m. BST, Rio de Janeiro - The day’s second all-South America matchup with see the CONMEBOL champions, without Luis Suárez, take on the favored Cafeteros. Colombia’s attacking midfielder James Rodríguez has been one of the stars of the tournament, while Edinson Cavani will be asked to step up in the wake of his suspended teammate.

Sunday, June 29
Netherlands vs. Mexico, 1o:00 p.m. BST, Fortaleza - The Dutch have been as strong as any team in the tournament, but allowing only one goal in group play, Mexico’s already showed the quality to keep up with the Oranje. Their veteran defense led by Rafa Márquez will be tasked with slowing the competition’s most potent striker tandem: Robin van Persie and Arjen Robben.

Costa Rica vs. Greece, 2:00 a.m. BST, Recife - The least-likely of the knockout round match ups features two teams who’ve found success without seeing much of the ball. Greece’s last minute winner against the Ivory Coast clinched their first knockout round spot, while Costa Rica were the surprise winners of one of the tournament’s deepest groups. Shockingly, one of these teams will be in the quarterfinals.

Monday, June 30
France vs. Nigeria, 10:00 p.m. BST, Brasilía - Though they were drawn in their last group game by Ecuador, France has been one of the tournament’s best teams. Nigeria, much like Greece and Algeria, were the beneficiaries of a thin group, finishing second behind Argentina. On paper, this is one of the most lopsided of the round’s matchups, but given the surprises we’ve seen throughout the tournament, there’s no Round of 16 mismatch that can’t be overcome.

Germany vs. Algeria, 2:00 a.m. BST, Porto Alegre - Despite stumbling in their second group game against Ghana, Germany remains one of the tournament’s favorites, with a possible matchup against France potentially providing semifinal quality in the round of eight. To get there, however, the Germans will have deal with the team they controversially put out of the 1982 World Cup. Though collusion with Austria kept Algeria from getting out of the teams’ group in Spain, Algeria is finally into the knockout round after Thursday’s draw with Russia.

Tuesday, July 1
Argentina vs. Switzerland, 10:00 p.m. BST, São Paulo – Four goals from Lionel Messi pushed the Argentines to the top of Group F, while Switzerland recovered from its thrashing by France to make the final 16. Both teams have a wealth of attacking talent, but Argentina’s is amongst the best in the world.

Belgium vs. United States, 2:00 a.m. BST, Salvador - Belgium is one of four perfect teams remaining in the tournament yet failed to show it in any of their three group matches. They’ll still be favored over the U.S., however, though the resiliency the Americans showed to get out of a difficult group will force the Belgians to play closer to their potential.



Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Forcible land acquisition in Babuchara: Is BGB’s Battalion 51 above the law?

Source: chtnews.com, Monday, 16 June, 2014 | Link: http://chtnews.com/english/?p=1174

THE forcible acquisition of  land for a battalion headquarters of the Border Guards Bangladesh has been at the centre of recent protests in Dighinala. In one such protest on 10 June, at least 18 Jumma villagers, mostly woman, were wounded when the BGB, police and Bengali settlers attacked them with tear gas, rubber bullets, rifle butts and sticks. Some of the critically injured women are still lying in hospital beds in Khagrachari, while police women guarding them, so that they can be arrested as soon as they are released from hospital. These women are part of the 250 Jummas against whom the BGB filed a criminal case following the 10 June crackdown. Acting on the case, the police have arrested two persons, including a 60-year-old man, from Khagrachari Sadar Hospital gate when they went there to see their wounded wives.

The BGB has long been trying to acquire lands in Jatna Mohan Karbari Para under Dighinala Union to house its battalion 51. In 2005, the Deputy Commissioner of Khagrachari served a notice of intent to acquire 45 acres of land in two villages – Jatna Mohan Karbari Para and Shashi Mohan Karbari Para. [Memo no. 63/L. A. branch, dated 31/03/2005]. These lands are owned by eleven Jummas, who filed a writ petition in the High Court against the said notice. The court issued a rule on the Deputy Commissioner of Khagrachari and BGB’s Khagrachari Sector commander to show cause why the notice of intent to acquire lands for BGB battalion 51 should not be declared illegal, and ordered the suspension of the operation of the notice until the dispute is settled. [case No. 3455-3463/2005]

Desperate to occupy
While the habeas corpus petition is still pending, the Khagrachari Deputy Commissioner, on 10 April, served another land acquisition notice on 11 Jumma villagers. [Memo No. 05.42.4600.018.014.02.13 (part-2)]. Included in these eleven villagers are three persons on whom similar acquisition notice was served earlier in 2005. This means that the new notice left out eight of the eleven recipients of the first notice and included another eight new names in their place. However, all of them refused to receive compensation for the acquisition of their lands since the case was still pending in the high court.

The second notice, like the first one, was issued under the Chittagong Hill Tracts Land Acquisition Law of 1958, a Pakistan-era law, which authorizes the Deputy Commissioners to acquire such land “which is not resumable under the Chittagong Hill Tracts Regulation, 1900 (Regu. I of 1900)”. The process of acquiring land under this law is so brief that what the Deputy Commissioner has to do is just state that “your land has been acquired and so come and receive compensation for it”. And the land so acquired is vested with the Deputy Commissioner from the day the notice was served.
While a writ petition is still pending and the Deputy Commissioner was yet to hand over the ‘acquired’ land, members of the BGB Battalion 51 occupied the said land on the night of 14 May. It was only the following day that a representative of the Deputy Commissioner formally handed the ‘acquired’ land over to the BGB.

The BGB has now set up makeshift tents and erected barbed-wire fence around the land they are occupying. It is even denying actual land owners access to their houses which fell inside the boundary it arbitrarily created. This has forced a total of 21 families to take shelter in Babuchara Primary school. The BGB also shut down a primary school near its ‘acquired land’, badly affecting the educational prospects of about 250 children. In the ‘acquired 29.81 acres’ is also included land belonging to Jetoban Buddhist temple, which existed until 1989 when the people of the area fled to India to become refugees. After their return, the villagers attempted many times to build the temple anew. But each time the army from nearby Babuchara camp prevented them.

Contempt of court
While it is debatable whether the BGB needs a battalion headquarters in Dighinala in addition to a military cantonment and dozens other military and para-military camps, the deputy Commissioner’s second acquisition notice is a clear case of Contempt of Court. But Md. Mashud Karim, the Deputy Commissioner, in reply to a legal notice served on him by the landowners’ appointed attorney, denied this, saying that he had acquired 29.81 acres after deducting the lands in respect of which a writ petition was filed in 2005. But a review of the matter reveals that at least three persons’ lands, which are the subject of the writ petition of 2005, have been included in the ‘acquired 29.81 acres’. These three aggrieved landowners have already filed a contempt of court case in the High Court, while the others are preparing to file another writ petition.

The Deputy Commissioner has also violated the District Council Act. Section 64(1B) clearly states: “Notwithstanding anything contained in any other laws for the time being in force, … (B) No land, hill and forest under the control and jurisdiction of the Council shall be acquired and transferred by the Government without consultation with, and consent of, the Council.” [Translation: chtnews.com] On 12 June, at a meeting on law and order the Deputy Commissioner acknowledged that consent of the District Council had not been taken while acquiring land for the Battalion 51 in Dighinala, despite it being mandatory. Moreover, the Headman of the concerned Mouza and the elected public representatives of the area were not consulted before acquiring the land.

Protests
There have been a series of protests against the forcible occupation of the land by BGB. On 27 May, villagers of the affected area submitted a memorandum addressed to the Prime Ministher. This was followed by another appeal to the PM and a sit-in in front of the UNO office by all the elected Jumma representatives and traditional leaders of Dighinala on 8 June. On 19 May, thousands of people formed a human chain in front of the UNO office. On 10 June, local people and the landowners demonstrated in front of the BGB men, the occupiers, who used brute force against them so mercilessly.

What the locals say
Gopa Chakma, a resident of Jatna Mohan Karbari Para, is one of the 18 Jummas wounded in the BGB attack. She is now undergoing medical treatment at Khagrachari Sadar Hospital. One day before the attack, in an interview with chtnews.com, she said:

“The presence of the BGB personnel has created many problems for us. When the women and girls bathe at the pond, the BGB men stare at them. They use our courtyard to go to, and come from, their camp. We cannot move at night because they have set up a check post on the road. They have closed the road and because of this our children cannot go to school and private tuition. There was no problem before if we stayed out till 10 or 11pm. Now, we the women are feeling most insecure.”

Babul Chakma of the village of Shashi Mohan Karbari Para said they were the first to settle in the village. Claiming that the BGB occupied their land by force, he said:

“The BGB men have grabbed our pond as well. We were evicted once in 1989 when we became refugee in India. As the BGB have come, we are going to be evicted for the second time. We have been living here since the time of the British rule. It was we who fought with wild beasts to make the land suitable for habitation.”

Shashi Mohan Karbari’s wife Ranjan Mala Chakma was overcome with emotion while talking about the occupation of their land by BGB. She said:

“How can we hand over our land to BGB, the land where we have been living for generations? The land which we made suitable for habitation with hard labour, the land where my husband’s cremation ground is located, the land with which many of our memories of joy and sorrow are intermingled – the loss of this land is like death.”

Chandra Ranjan Chakma, chairman of Dighinala Union No. 4, said that the BGB have occupied the land by force and that is why nobody can accept them. He demanded that the BGB men be withdrawn from Jatna Mohan Karbari Para and Shashi Mohan Karbari Para, and added:

“We, all the distinguished people of Dighinala, have come together to save the land of the poor families of these two villages. Many poor families will be dislodged from their lands if BGB’s battalion headquarters is established unjustly.”

Prantor Chakma, Headman of Dighinala Mouza No. 51, under whose jurisdiction the ‘acquired land’ is located, is one of the 250 people against whom BGB filed a criminal case. He told chtnews.com:

“I am the Headman of this area, but I have not been consulted about the acquisition of the land in question. My opinion is that it is absolutely unjust to set up BGB’s battalion headquarters by driving poor and innocent Jumma families out of their ancestral lands.”

Conclusion:
It is clear that the acquisition of 29.81 acres of land for BGB has been made in violation of the existing laws of the CHT as well as the High Court order. Hence the occupation of the land by BGB’s Battalion 51 is completely illegal. The way they occupied the land, the way they drove the poor villagers out of their homes, the way they attacked them and the way they shut down a school – all this raises the question: are the BGB’s Battalion 51 above the law?


Sunday, June 15, 2014

Babuchara BGB attack: Police arrest 5 including 3 wounded women

Source: chtnews.com, Friday, 13 June, 2014 |

Link: http://chtnews.com/english/?p=1170


THE police have arrested five Jummas including 3 wounded women who are undergoing medical treatment in Khagrachari Sadar Hospital.
 
Pradeep Chandra Chakma, 60, and Shneha Ranjan Chakma, 58, were arrested at 3pm today when hey went to Khagrachari Sadar Hospital to see their wounded wives.

Both of them have been sent to Khagrachari jail, while their wives, Maya Rani Chakma and Phulo Rani Chakma, remain under arrest at the hospital, with police standing guard at their bed sides.

This is the first arrest since the BGB Subeder Golam Rashul filed a criminal case against 250 Jummas following an attack on the protesting Jummas in Babuchara on 10 June.

The attack had left 18 Jummas, mostly women, injured, with many of them hurt badly enough to require hospitalization.

The police also arrested another woman – Gopa Chakma, (48) who is undergoing treatment in Khagrachari hospital.

CHT Commission condemns Babuchara BGB attack

Source: chtnews.com, Friday, 13 June, 2014 |

Link: http://chtnews.com/english/?p=1166

 

THE INTERNATIONAL Chittagong Hill Tracts Commission has condemned the 11 June attack on indigenous Jumma villagers in Babuchara by BGB’s 51th Battalion and called for an independent investigation and justice, according to a press release issued by it.

 

It said “there are allegations that both the BGB and nearby police attacked and injured local indigenous people who protested the setting up of the battalion and also used tear gas on them.”
“It is completely unacceptable for state authorities to use such brutal force against protesters.” the Commission added.

It urged the authorities to carry out a fair, thorough and independent investigation into this attack and arrest those responsible for abusing their power as law-enforcers.

The statement, issued on 12 June, has been signed by the Commission’s co-chairs Eric Avebury, Sultana Kamal and Elsa Stamatopoulou.

The full text of the Commission’s press statement follows:
CHT Commission Condemns BGB & Police attack on indigenous villagers in Dighinala;
Calls for urgent action for independent investigation and justice

Dhaka: June 12, 2014. The International Chittagong Hill Tracts Commission (CHTC) condemns the alleged attack by the 51 Border Guards Bangladesh (BGB) on indigenous villagers in Babuchara Union in Dighinala Upazila of Khagrachari district in the Chittagong Hill Tracts (CHT) of Bangladesh in the afternoon of June 11, 2014. The CHTC calls upon the Government to take immediate action to ensure fully independent and impartial investigation and bring the guilty to justice in a manner to prevent any further recurrence.

According to news reports, between 14 to 17 people have been injured in this attack which was over a long-standing dispute over land which the BGB has been trying to use to set up a new battalion.

There is a Court Stay Order over the land which says that no one is to use the piece of land in question until the Court has given its verdict over the ownership of the said land. Local indigenous people have been using this land for cultivation for many years and it was only in 1991, during the insurgency and before land ownership issues were settled, that the Government of Bangladesh took the initiative to build a BGB Battalion there, to which the locals protested as they had customary ownership of the land. It is most regrettable and unacceptable that members of the discipline forces like BGB and police defy the Court Order and involve in gross violation of human rights of the innocent people of the indigenous community.

In the incident of June 11, there are allegations that both the BGB and nearby police attacked and injured local indigenous people who protested the setting up of the battalion and also used tear gas on them. It is completely unacceptable for state authorities to use such brutal force against protesters. We immediately urge the authorities to carry out a fair, thorough and independent investigation into this attack and arrest those responsible for abusing their power as law-enforcers. Those found guilty in the due process must be brought to justice failing which such violations will go on unabated. CHTC also calls upon the Government to urgently amend the Land Commission Act and appoint an able, credible and fair person as the Chairperson of the Land Commission to settle all land disputes in the CHT to prevent further violence and human rights violations in the area.

Saturday, June 14, 2014

BGB shuts down school in Babuchara


Source: chtnews.com, Friday, 13 June, 2014 |


THE BGB has shut down Baghaichari Primary School No. 2 in Jatna Mohan Karbari Para, after it forcibly occupied lands of the Jumma villagers on 14 May, while villagers are being denied access to their homes.

 

The closure of the school, previously named Quid-e-Azam Government Primary School in the days of Pakistan, has affected about 300 students, with no classes being held.

Meanwhile, 10 of the 18 injured Jumma villagers, who are mostly women, were released from Dighinala Health Complex on Thursday after medical treatment.

But they have been denied access to their homes by BGB which has erected barbed wire fence around the land they occupied for its 51th battalion headquarters.

Even the Jummas whose lands have not been “acquired” are being denied access to their homes which have been included within the boundary.

After being denied access to their homes, a total of 14 Jumma families including those released from Dighinala Health Complex have now taken shelter in Babuchara High School.

In the meantime, the BGB has filed a criminal case against 250 Jumma villagers including Babuchara Union Council chairman, Sugata Priya Chakma, ex-chairman of the same Council, Paritosh Chakma and Headman of Dighinala Mouza No. 51, Prantor Chakma.

Thursday, June 12, 2014

Sexual violence in Chittagong Hill Tracts


Courtesy: New Age, Thursday, June 12, 2014

 ‘The reason for escalating sexual violence in CHT has been multifaceted since the conflict in the hills, home to various ethnic minorities, is linked with land, religions and cultural aggression with the state trying to dominate in all aspects.’

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

14 hurt in clash in Khagrachhari


Courtesy: The Daily Star, Wednesday, June 11, 2014
 


At least 14 people, including several women, were injured yesterday in a clash between indigenous people and members of police and the BGB over setting up of a helipad in Dighinala upazila of Khagrachhari.

When Border Guard Bangladesh personnel tried to plant a flag at the proposed site of a helipad at Babuchhara around 4:30pm, about a dozen indigenous women protested it, and got into an altercation with the BGB men saying the land belonged to them.

The women first tried to resist the BGB men from planting the flag, and some indigenous men joined them, said Shahadat Hossain Tito, officer-in-charge of Dighinala Police Station.


The argument led to clashes that left several BGB members and indigenous people wounded, he said.


Police personnel later went to the spot, and fired rubber bullets and tear gas shells to bring the situation under control.


The government acquired the land for the BGB at Babuchhara in 1991. Fearing eviction, local indigenous people filed a writ petition with higher court against the move.



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Sunday, June 8, 2014

Teacher killed after rape in Bandarban



Source: The Daily Star, Sunday, June 08, 2014

A schoolteacher was killed allegedly after gang rape in Ngarheisatong area of Roangchhari upazila on Friday.
The deceased was identified as U Pru Marma, 24, a teacher at Ananda School run by a non-government organisation (NGO).
Officer in-Charge of Roangchari police station Abdus Sattar Bhuiyan quoting locals said, U Pru Marma was killed by the Rohingyas after rape. She had gone 'missing' on Friday at around 9:00am, he added.
Locals found her body at 11:30pm at the valley of Ngarheisatong hill of Bangchhari in the upazila.
The criminals might have killed her after rape as she bore some injury marks on the body, he added.
Locals caught Tara Chang Tanchangya alias Debong Tanchangya, 27, and Musalm, 28, of Bangchhari area of the upazila on suspicion and beat them up.
Critically injured Musalm died at Sadar Hospital, the OC said.
Contacted, District Police Superintendent Devdas Bhattacharya Tara Chang Tanchangya confessed to police that he along with three other Rohingyas of the area raped U Pru Marma and killed her.

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

250 Bangladeshi tribals seek refuge in Tripura

Courtesy: Business Standard, Agartala, June 3, 2014 
"Over 250 men, women and children of Chakma and Tripuri tribes have taken shelter in northern Tripura's Gandachara area along the international border since Monday after fleeing their villages in Khagrachari district," Gandachara sub-divisional magistrate Bhaskar Dasgupta told IANS over phone.

"The tribals entered India Monday and Tuesday after ethnic trouble in Bangladesh.We have asked the Border Security Force (BSF) to step up security along the unfenced border," he said.

The tribals fled from the Chittagong Hill Tracts by Muslims in southeast Bangladesh after ethnic clashes and incidents of arson. The exact reason for the conflict is not yet known. A state home department official said Tripura has informed the union home ministry about the development.

The BSF here also informed their headquarters in New Delhi and is coordinating on the matter with the Border Guards Bangladesh. In a similar incident in August last year, over 1,500 tribals took shelter in the border village of Karbook after fleeing from five villages in the same Khagrachari district over the reported abduction of a leader of the opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party.

Tripura shares a 856-km border with Bangladesh which is porous because it extends over mountains that are densely forested.

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Over 250 Chakma and Tripuri tribals left their habitats in CHT and took sheltered in the Indian state of Tripura

June 4, 2014
ACN Staff Reporter
Read more at: http://www.archakmanews.com/entries/apcsu/over-250-chakma-and-tripuri-tribals-left-their-habitats-in-cht-and-took-sheltered-in-the-indian-state-of-tripura