Millennium Post

B’DESH CHIEF JUSTICE RESIGNS AMID CRITICISM

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DHAKA: Bangladesh’s first Hindu Chief Justice Surendra Kumar Sinha, facing graft and money laundering allegation­s, has resigned a month after he went on leave abroad amid a row with the government over a crucial Supreme Court judgement, a senior official said on Saturday. Sinha assumed office on January 17, 2015 as the country’s 21st Chief Justice. He is scheduled to retire on January 31 next. “His (Sinha’s) resignatio­n letter has reached Bangabhaba­n (presidenti­al palace),” President’s press secretary Joynal Abedin said without elaboratin­g, but legal experts said this confirmati­on meant that Sinha has quit his office.

DHAKA: Bangladesh’s first Hindu Chief Justice Surendra Kumar Sinha, facing graft and money laundering allegation­s, has resigned a month after he went on leave abroad amid a row with the government over a crucial Supreme Court judgement, a senior official said on Saturday.

Sinha assumed office on January 17, 2015 as the country’s 21st Chief Justice. He is scheduled to retire on January 31 next.

“His (Sinha’s) resignatio­n letter has reached Bangabhaba­n (presidenti­al palace),” President’s press secretary Joynal Abedin said without elaboratin­g, but legal experts said this confirmati­on meant that Sinha has quit his office.

Officials familiar with the developmen­t said, Sinha submitted his resignatio­n letter to Bangladesh Embassy in Singapore on the last day of his month-long leave on Friday, where he had gone for medical checkups.

On October 13, he had left Dhaka for Australia on a private tour amid reports that the government was upset with him over his decision to scrap parliament’s authority in impeaching Supreme Court (SC) judges.

Before his departure, Sinha had said that he was “embarrasse­d” over the controvers­y surroundin­g his July ruling.

“I am the guardian of the judiciary, in the interest of the judiciary, I am leaving temporaril­y so that its image does not get hurt. I will return,” he briefly told newsmen before leaving Dhaka.

Row with the government and the higher judiciary started in July this year when the apex court declared as void the 16th constituti­onal amendment, scrapping Parliament’s authority in impeaching SC judges.

The dispute grew in the subsequent weeks as many ministers attacked Sinha for slamming the government for reactions over the verdict, and cited Pakistan’s example where Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif was stripped of the premiershi­p following an apex court ruling.

Before leaving home, Sinha said he “firmly believes” that his stance over the verdict was misinterpr­eted to the government, upsetting Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina but expected her to realise soon the fact.

A day after his departure, the Supreme Court issued a statement saying that other judges of the apex court had decided not to sit in the bench with Sinha over allegation­s of “grave” graft and moral lapses, brought to their notice by President Abdul Hamid.

“This written statement (of Sinha) is misleading,” a Supreme Court statement said, adding that President Hamid on September 30, invited all the five apex court judges to Bangabhaba­n, barring the chief justice, and handed over to them “evidences of 11 specific allegation­s” against Sinha. It said the allegation­s included some grave charges like money laundering, financial irregulari­ties, corruption and moral lapses.

In unitary Bangladesh, the Supreme Court has two wings, the High Court Division and the apex Appellate Division.

According to the SC statement, all the five apex court judges held a meeting on the next day and subsequent­ly met Sinha and sought his explanatio­n about the allegation­s but “didn’t get any acceptable explanatio­n or reply”. “So all of them (five judges) clearly conveyed to him that until the disposal of those charges it will not be possible for them to share the bench with him to deliver justice,” the statement said. Former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia-led main opposition outside parliament, BNP had put their weight behind Sinha while its standing Committee Member and former law minister Moudud Ahmed blamed the government for “forcing” him to quit.

“Sinha’s resignatio­n day will be marked as a black chapter,” he said accusing the government of “smashing independen­ce” in the judiciary. The President had appointed senior most judge of the apex court Abdul Wahhab Miah as the acting chief justice. According to Bangladesh Constituti­on, if the chief justice’s office becomes vacant, the next senior most judge of the Appellate Division will perform his duties.

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