The Star Malaysia

Khaleda Zia gets seven years’ jail

Former Bangladesh PM found guilty of abuse of power to collect money for charity

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DHAKA: A judge sentenced Bangladesh’s former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia (pic) to seven years in jail after finding her guilty of misusing her power to collect money for a charity fund named after her late husband.

Her supporters see the multiple criminal cases against Zia and her party as attempts to weaken the opposition ahead of elections expected in December. But the government says they have specific charges against those accused.

The 73-year-old Zia was absent from the filled courtroom in Dhaka yesterday and her lawyers also skipped the proceeding­s, saying they would not get justice. The Supreme Court earlier had rejected Zia’s appeal to halt the verdict. Zia is serving a prison term of five years in a separate corruption case and was transferre­d to a hospital earlier this month for what her party said were multiple medical problems. Her party says both cases are politicall­y motivated.

Judge Md Akhtaruzam­an found Zia had misused her power while leading the government in 2001-2006 by collecting US$375,000 (RM1.56mil) from unknown sources for the Zia Charitable Trust Fund named for Ziaur Rahman, the former military chief and president who was assassinat­ed in 1981.

The judge sentenced three others, including a former political secretary of Zia, to seven years in jail each for collecting the money.

Mosharraf Hossain Kajol, a prosecutio­n lawyer, said after the verdict that they were happy as the judge gave the defendants the highest punishment for the offenses.

Zia faces more than 30 other cases pending in courts across the country, and her Bangladesh Nationalis­t Party says the cases are a misuse of the government’s power as Zia’s longtime rival, Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, seeks a third consecutiv­e term in the next elections.

Zia and her political partners boycotted the last general elections in 2014, paving the way for Hasina to return to power despite protests and violence. Zia’s main partner right wing Jamaat-e-Islami, a fierce opponent of Hasina, is attempting to regain its strength after the executions of its top leaders for war crimes involving the 1971 independen­ce war against Pakistan.

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