Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

B’DESH COURT ORDERS ARREST OF NOBEL WINNER

- Agence France-Presse letters@hindustant­imes.com

DHAKA: Bangladesh­i economist and Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus has been issued with an arrest warrant after failing to appear at a hearing over the sacking of workers at a company he heads, officials said Thursday. A judge at a court in Dhaka issued the order Wednesday as sacked workers from Grameen Communicat­ions lodged a complaint saying they were fired because they set up a trade union, court clerk M Nuruzzaman told AFP. Yunus, who is chairman of GC, did not attend the hearing. He left Bangladesh before receiving any summons, said his counsel.

DHAKA: Bangladesh­i economist and Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus has been issued with an arrest warrant after failing to appear at a hearing over the sacking of workers at a company he heads, officials said on Thursday.

A judge at a court in Dhaka issued the order Wednesday as sacked workers from Grameen Communicat­ions (GC) lodged a complaint saying they were fired because they set up a trade union, court clerk M Nuruzzaman told AFP.

Yunus, chairman of GC, did not attend the hearing as he was abroad. The chief executive officer and a senior manager at the company appeared at the court and secured bail.

“He (Yunus) left Bangladesh before receiving any summons for appearing before the court. As soon as he returns, an appropriat­e legal step shall be taken,” Yunus’s lawyer Kazi Ershadul Alam told AFP.

The 79-year-old former economics professor who founded the pioneering poverty-busting micro lender Grameen Bank, has been at odds with Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina since 2007 when he made a brief foray into the country’s highly polarised politics.

In 2011, he was sacked as the head of Grameen Bank, in a move widely believed to have been orchestrat­ed by Hasina. He challenged his sacking in the highest court, but lost.

Yunus set up the bank, which jointly won the Nobel with him, in 1983 to make collateral-free micro loans to millions of rural entreprene­urs. Hasina has accused him of “sucking blood” from the poor amid allegation­s the bank charges interest rates of more than 20%.

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