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Sheikh Hasina to be released: Bangladesh govt

Bangladesh's military-led government announced the release of ailing former premier Sheikh Hasina who will leave for the United States, nearly 11 months after she was arrested.

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DHAKA: Bangladesh's military-led government on Monday announced the release of ailing former premier Sheikh Hasina who will leave for the United States, nearly 11 months after she was arrested under its massive anti-graft drive.
     
"The government has decided to give her an opportunity to go abroad for treatment. She will be released through an administrative order," chief prosecution lawyer Sharfuddin Ahmed Mukul told reporters here.
      
The announcement came as four special courts trying the 60-year-old Awami League chief in separate corruption cases exempted her from personal appearance during hearings.
      
Mukul said Hasina, who was the prime minister from 1996 to 2001, could be released anytime now as the court had returned her passport but the cases against her would continue.
      
Hasina's lawyers said she will travelling to the US after her release as thousands of party supporters started gathering along roads leading to the national parliament complex, where the authorities have detained her in a make-shift jail since her arrest on July 16 last year.
      
Hasina suffered a major ear injury during a 2004 grenade attack on her rally by suspected Islamic militants that left over two dozen people dead. She was admitted earlier at a city facility under custody for various problems including fluctuating blood pressures, eye complaints and cardiac complications.
     
On April 18 last year, the interim government had barred her from returning to country while she was on a tour of the US and UK.
      
The British Airways that was to fly her home from London was told not to take her on board but after intense international pressure the government was forced to lift the ban a week later.
      
Speculation was rife that Hasina could be released and sent abroad "for treatment" along with her arch rival Khaleda Zia, chief of the country's second major party, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party, after the government formed separate medical boards to access the health of the two women leaders.
     
But Zia on Sunday declined to leave the country.
      
"I will not go abroad for treatment in any way, I will undergo treatment at home," the BNP leader, who was arrested in September under graft charges, told reporters and questioned the "motive" behind the proposal to send the two leaders abroad.
     
Apart from the intense pressure from donor countries like the US and the EU, the BNP and Awami League had also demanded the release of their leaders as a precondition to take part in a dialogue with the interim government ahead of planned general elections in December.
     
The interim government, installed after President Iajuddin imposed a state of emergency in January last year and scrapped general elections following months of political turmoil, had unleashed a massive anti-graft drive, putting behind bars over 150 high-profile people, mostly politicians.
    
Its alleged policy to keep out Zia and Hasina, who have dominated the country's polity after military ruler General Ershad stepped down in December 1990, was dubbed as "minus-two" by media here.

 

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