Bangladesh court jails ex-PM Zia for seven years for corruption

Khaleda Zia found guilty of misuse of power as PM in collecting $375,000 for a charitable trust from unknown sources.

Bangladesh Khaleda Zia
BNP has accused the ruling Awami League party of running political vendetta against BNP leadership (File: AM Ahad/The Associated Press]

Bangladesh‘s imprisoned opposition leader Khaleda Zia was handed another seven years in prison on Monday on corruption charges her supporters say are politically motivated to prevent her running in general elections due at the end of the year.

Zia, long a rival to Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, is already behind bars after being handed a five-year term in February on separate embezzlement charges.

Judge Md Akhtaruzaman on Monday found her guilty of misuse of power as prime minister in collecting $375,000 for the Zia Charitable Trust Fund from unknown sources.

The Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) leader was absent in court as she is currently hospitalised while serving a prison term. The terms will run concurrently, meaning she will spend an extra two years in jail.

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The judge also sentenced three others to seven years in jail each for collecting the money from undeclared sources for the trust named after Zia’s late husband and former President Ziaur Rahman.

Her lawyers, who were also absent during the verdict, have consistently described the trial as “political vengeance” by Hasina, who has been accused of stifling her opponents.

The opposition vowed nationwide marches on Tuesday to protest against the guilty verdict.

“The people will never accept this judgement,” BNP Secretary-General Fakhrul Islam Alamgir told reporters.

In February, Tarique Rahman, Zia’s elder son and heir apparent, and four others were also sentenced to 10 years in the case.

Pre-election crackdown

The fresh conviction is expected to further impede Zia’s chances of challenging her erstwhile ally Hasina in the parliamentary elections slated for December.

Zia boycotted the 2014 general election which saw her arch-rival Hasina returned to power.

The BNP had been hoping a higher court would overturn Zia’s earlier sentence, setting her free and paving the way for the veteran opposition leader to run against Hasina.

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But the latest guilty verdict throws up more hurdles for the opposition, which says 4,000 of its supporters have been arrested since September in a pre-election crackdown.

Prosecutor Khurshid A Khan said the latest charges against Zia occurred in 2005, during her second term as prime minister of the Muslim-majority democracy of 160 million.

“We finally got justice, despite some delay,” he told AFP.

Zia entered politics in the mid-1980s after her husband, a former military dictator, was assassinated in an abortive coup.

She faces dozens of separate charges related to violence and corruption that her lawyers insist are baseless.

The 73-year-old leader says the charges are designed to keep her family out of politics.

It is not Zia’s first time in prison. She and her son Tarique Rahman spent one and a half years behind bars after being held by the army-backed government in 2007 awaiting trial for alleged corruption.

Zia’s sentencing was yet another blow for her political dynasty with Rahman, her eldest and heir apparent to the opposition movement, jailed for life in absentia this month. He lives in exile in London.

Rahman was found guilty of playing a key role in a 2004 grenade attack on one of Hasina‘s political rallies, which injured the then opposition leader and killed at least 20 others.

Nineteen people were sentenced to death over the attack on Hasina, whose father, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman led Bangladesh’s push for independence from Pakistan and long feuded with Zia’s own father, an opposition hero.

The guilty verdict comes at a time when the independence of Bangladesh’s judiciary is under question.

In a recently published best-selling memoir, a former chief justice alleged he was forced into exile last year after disagreeing with Bangladesh’s powerful intelligence services over a case.

Source: News Agencies