Bangladesh army chief pledges support for Yunus’ interim government ‘come what may’

Bangladesh's Chief of Army Staff General Waker-uz-Zaman gestures during an interview with Reuters at his office in the Bangladesh Army Headquarters, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, on September 23, 2024. (REUTERS)
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Updated 24 September 2024
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Bangladesh army chief pledges support for Yunus’ interim government ‘come what may’

  • Yunus has promised to carry out essential reforms to the judiciary, police and financial institutions
  • General Waker-uz-Zaman, Bangladesh’s army chief, says wants to distance army from political establishment

DHAKA: Bangladesh’s army chief vowed to back the country’s interim government “come what may” to help it complete key reforms after the ouster of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, so that elections could be held within the next 18 months. 

General Waker-uz-Zaman and his troops stood aside in early August amid raging student-led protests against Hasina, sealing the fate of the veteran politician who resigned after 15 years in power and fled to neighboring India.

In a rare media interview, Zaman told Reuters at his office in the capital Dhaka on Monday that the interim administration led by Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus had his full support and outlined a pathway to rid the military of political influence.

“I will stand beside him. Come what may. So that he can accomplish his mission,” Zaman, bespectacled and dressed in military fatigues, said of Yunus.

The pioneer of the global microcredit movement, Yunus has promised to carry out essential reforms to the judiciary, police and financial institutions, paving the way to hold a free and fair election in the country of 170 million people.

Following the reforms, Zaman — who took over as the army chief only weeks before Hasina’s ouster — said a transition to democracy should be made between a year and a year-and-a-half, but underlined the need for patience.

“If you ask me, then I will say that should be the time frame by which we should enter into a democratic process,” he said. Bangladesh’s main two political parties, Hasina’s Awami League and its bitter rival Bangladesh Nationalist Party, had both previously called for elections to be held within three months of the interim government taking office in August.

Yunus, the interim administration’s chief adviser, and the army chief meet every week and have “very good relations,” with the military supporting the government’s efforts to stabilize the country after a period of turmoil, said Zaman.

“I’m sure that if we work together, there is no reason why we should fail,” he said. More than 1,000 people were killed in violent clashes that began as a movement against public sector job quotas in July but escalated into a wider anti-government uprising — the bloodiest period in the country’s independent history.

Calm has returned to the teeming streets of Dhaka, a densely packed metropolis that was at the heart of the rebellion, but some parts of the civil service are not yet properly functional after the dramatic fall of Hasina’s administration.

With much of Bangladesh’s police, numbering around 190,000 personnel, still in disarray, the army has stepped up to carry out law and order duties nationwide.

PUNISHMENTS AND REFORMS

Born out of erstwhile East Pakistan in 1971 after a bloody independence war, Bangladesh came under military rule in 1975, following the assassination of its first prime minister, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, Hasina’s father.

In 1990, the country’s military ruler Hossain Mohammad Ershad was toppled in a popular uprising, leading to the restoration of democracy.

The military again staged a coup in 2007, backing a caretaker government that ruled until Hasina took power two years later.

A career infantry officer who served through these periods of turmoil, Zaman said that the Bangladesh Army that he leads would not intervene politically.

“I will not do anything which is detrimental to my organization,” he said, “I am a professional soldier. I would like to keep my army professional.”

In line with sweeping government reforms proposed since Hasina was shunted from power, the army, too, is looking into allegations of wrongdoing by its personnel and has already punished some soldiers, Zaman said, without providing further details.

“If there is any serving member who is found guilty, of course I will take action,” he said, adding that some military officials may have acted out of line while working at agencies directly controlled by the former prime minister or interior minister. The interim government has formed a five-member commission, headed by a former high court judge, to investigate reports of up to 600 people who may have been forcibly “disappeared” by Bangladesh’s security forces since 2009.

In the longer-term, however, Zaman wanted to distance the political establishment from the army, which has more than 130,000 personnel and is a major contributor to United Nations peacekeeping missions.

“It can only happen if there is some balance of power between president and prime minister, where the armed forces can be placed directly under president,” he said.

Bangladesh’s armed forces currently come under the defense ministry, which is typically controlled by the prime minister, an arrangement that Zaman said a constitutional reform process under the interim government could potentially look to amend.

“The military as a whole must not be used for political purpose ever,” he said. “A soldier must not indulge in politics.”


Pope offers refuge to Myanmar's jailed Suu Kyi

Updated 24 September 2024
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Pope offers refuge to Myanmar's jailed Suu Kyi

  • Suu Kyi, 78, is serving a 27-year prison sentence on charges ranging from corruption to not respecting Covid pandemic restrictions

VATICAN CITY: Pope Francis has offered to give refuge on Vatican territory to Myanmar's detained former leader Aung San Suu Kyi, Italian media said on Tuesday.
"I asked for the release of Aung San Suu Kyi and I met her son in Rome. I have proposed to the Vatican to give her shelter on our territory," the pope said according to an account of meetings with Jesuits in Asia during his trip there earlier this month.
The Corriere della Sera daily published an article by Italian priest Antonio Spadaro giving extracts from these private meetings, which took place in Indonesia, East Timor and Singapore between September 2 and 13.
"We cannot stay silent about the situation in Myanmar today. We must do something," the pope is reported as saying.
"The future of your country should be one of peace based on respect for the dignity and rights of everyone and respect for a democratic system that enables everyone to contribute to the common good."
Suu Kyi, 78, is serving a 27-year prison sentence on charges ranging from corruption to not respecting Covid pandemic restrictions.
In 2015, her National League for Democracy won Myanmar's first democratic election in 25 years.
She was arrested by the military when it staged a coup in 2021 and is said by local media to be suffering health problems in detention.
The 1991 Nobel Peace laureate was once hailed as a beacon for human rights.
But she fell from grace among international supporters in 2017, accused of doing nothing to stop the army persecuting the country's mainly Muslim Rohingya minority.
The crackdown is the subject of an ongoing United Nations genocide investigation and persecution continues, according to Rohingya refugees in neighbouring Bangladesh.
Mainly Buddhist Myanmar has been in turmoil since the 2021 coup, with the junta fighting both establish ethnic rebel groups and newer pro-democracy forces.


China slams ‘lies and smears’ after Canadian ex-diplomat alleges torture

Updated 24 September 2024
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China slams ‘lies and smears’ after Canadian ex-diplomat alleges torture

  • Canadians Michael Spavor and Kovrig, who became known as “the two Michaels,” were detained by Beijing in December 2018

BEJING: China on Tuesday condemned “lies and smears” and defended its three-year detention of former Canadian diplomat Michael Kovrig after he alleged psychological torture during his imprisonment in the country.
Canadians Michael Spavor and Kovrig, who became known as “the two Michaels,” were detained by Beijing in December 2018 in apparent retaliation for the arrest in Vancouver of a senior Huawei executive on a US warrant.
All three of them were freed in September 2021.
In an interview with Canadian broadcaster CBC released Monday, Kovrig alleged he was held in solitary confinement and that guards tried to “bully and torment and terrorize and coerce” him during his confinement in Beijing.
“The United Nations standard is no more than 15 days in solitary confinement. More than that is considered psychological torture. I was there for nearly six months,” he told CBC.
Asked about Kovrig’s claims at a regular briefing, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Lin Jian insisted “China is a country under the rule of law.”
“Lies and smears cannot change the fact that the person you mentioned broke the law and committed crimes,” he said.
“We advise the relevant parties to respect the facts and reflect on their mistakes,” he added.
Beijing’s 2018 to 2021 detentions of “the two Michaels” on espionage charges plunged bilateral relations into a deep freeze.
Kovrig told CBC his detention was “psychologically, absolutely, the most gruelling, painful thing I’ve ever been through.”
“It’s a combination of... total isolation and relentless interrogation for six to nine hours every day, on and on and on,” he said.


Meryl Streep says a ‘squirrel has more rights’ than an Afghan girl

Updated 24 September 2024
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Meryl Streep says a ‘squirrel has more rights’ than an Afghan girl

  • Women and girls have borne the brunt of restrictions — including being barred from public parks, universities and singing in public — which the United Nations has labeled “gender apartheid”

NEW YORK: American actor Meryl Streep has said a “squirrel has more rights” than a girl in Afghanistan, adding her voice to a call by Afghan women to end the Taliban government’s severe restrictions on their lives.
Taliban authorities have implemented an austere interpretation of Islamic law since returning to power in Afghanistan in August 2021 following the withdrawal of US-led forces.
Women and girls have borne the brunt of restrictions — including being barred from public parks, universities and singing in public — which the United Nations has labeled “gender apartheid.”
“A squirrel has more rights than a girl in Afghanistan today because the public parks have been closed to women and girls by the Taliban,” Streep said on Monday during a discussion on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York.
“A bird may sing in Kabul, but a girl may not, and a woman may not in public,” the Oscar-winning actor said.
“I feel that the international community as a whole, if they came together, could affect change in Afghanistan, and stop the slow suffocation of an entire half (of) the population.”
The Taliban government, which is yet to be recognized by any other country, published a widely criticized law in August further tightening restrictions on women’s lives.
While many of the measures had been informally enforced since the Taliban’s takeover in 2021, their formal codification sparked an outcry from the international community and rights groups.
The “vice and virtue” law dictates that a woman’s voice should not be raised outside the home and that women should not sing or read poetry aloud.
It requires them to cover their entire body and face if they need to leave their homes, which they should only do “out of necessity.”
Asila Wardak, a leader of the Women’s Forum on Afghanistan, said at the UN discussion Afghan women were there to remind world leaders that “this fight is not only an Afghan fight” but “a global fight against extremism.”
Speaking about the situation of Afghan women during the General Assembly this week was “a small sign of hope” for them, said Fawzia Koofi, a former member of parliament in Kabul.
“But it’s not enough,” she said, calling for the appointment of a UN special envoy to put pressure on the Taliban government.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said that discrimination against women was causing major damage to Afghanistan.
“Educating girls is one of the fastest ways to kick-start economic development and improve the health, well-being and prosperity of communities and entire societies,” Guterres said.
“Women’s participation and leadership has proven benefits for peace and security, social protection, environmental stability and more,” he said.
“Afghanistan faces serious challenges in all these areas.”


Ethiopia worried over arms supplied to Somalia, state news agency says

Updated 24 September 2024
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Ethiopia worried over arms supplied to Somalia, state news agency says

NAIROBI: Ethiopia’s foreign minister has expressed concerns about ammunition being supplied to Somalia potentially ending up with terrorists, Ethiopia’s state news reported on Tuesday.
The statement was made a day after an Egyptian warship unloaded heavy weaponry in Mogadishu.
Ethiopia, which has thousands of troops stationed in neighboring Somalia to fight Al-Qaeda-linked Islamist insurgents, has fallen out with the Mogadishu government over its plans to build a port in the breakaway region of Somaliland.
Egypt and Somalia have drawn closer this year over their shared mistrust of Ethiopia, prompting Cairo to send two arms
shipments
to Mogadishu within a month, after they signed a joint security pact in August.
Ethiopia’s Foreign Affairs Minister Taye Astke Selassie said he was concerned that the supply of ammunition by “external forces would further exacerbate the fragile security and would end up in the hands of terrorists in Somalia,” Ethiopia News Agency reported.
Egypt, at odds with Ethiopia for years over Addis Ababa’s construction of a vast hydro dam on the headwaters of the Nile River, has also condemned the Somaliland port deal. 


Ukraine says China is key route for foreign tech in Russian weapons

Updated 24 September 2024
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Ukraine says China is key route for foreign tech in Russian weapons

  • Moscow has been able to replenish its military machine with western microchips and semiconductors

BRUSSELS: Roughly 60 percent of the foreign parts found in Russian weapons on the battlefield in Ukraine come via China, Ukraine’s presidential adviser Vladyslav Vlasiuk told reporters on Tuesday.
“If you take all the usual types of weapons and count the foreign made components – about 60 percent would be coming from China. We have had lengthy discussions with some manufacturers about this,” Vlasiuk said.
“The PRC (China) is the biggest problem I would say.”
He said important parts used in surveillance, drones and missiles have also originated from the United States, the Netherlands, Japan and Switzerland among other western countries.
Russia began a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 and despite sweeping western sanctions, Moscow has been able to replenish its military machine with western microchips and semiconductors.