Arab News

Bangladesh to fell building deemed ‘symbol of corruption’

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DHAKA: Bangladesh’s highest court Sunday ordered the demolition of a lakeside building occupied by powerful garment groups, a move welcomed by activists who considered the structure an enduring symbol of corruption.

The 16-story building, long criticized for openly flouting Dhaka’s strict constructi­on laws, must be destroyed within six months at a cost borne by its occupants, the Supreme Court ruled.

“If they fail to carry out the order, the (government’s) capital developmen­t authority will demolish the building,” Attorney General Mahbubey Alam told AFP.

The Bangladesh Garment Manufactur­ers and Exporters Associatio­n (BGMEA), which occupied the building, said they would vacate as “soon as possible.”

The building has been a source of a bitter legal dispute for years.

A court first challenged its legality seven years ago after it was revealed the building was constructe­d illegally on a state-owned floodplain.

Lawyers declared the hard-fought verdict a “landmark” in Bangladesh’s judicial history.

“It is challengin­g the culture of impunity that prevails in our society,” Rizwana Hassan from the Bangladesh Environmen­tal Lawyers’ Associatio­n, told AFP.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina lay the foundation stone for the controvers­ial BGMEA building in 1998, while a former premier now opposition leader formally opened it for business in 2006, underscori­ng the industry’s ties to politics.

The BGMEA represents Bangladesh’s clothing industry, which last year accounted for 80 percent of the country’s $35-billion exports.

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