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Bangladesh to release Khaleda Zia

Former PM’s family had sought her release following the virus outbreak

Updated - March 24, 2020 11:02 pm IST - Dhaka

A file photo of Khaleda Zia in Dhaka.

A file photo of Khaleda Zia in Dhaka.

Bangladesh on Tuesday initiated a process to “conditionally” release jailed former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia for six months following the COVID-19 outbreak in the country.

The Bangladesh Nationalist Party chief is serving a 17-year prison term in two graft cases since February 8, 2018.

“The decision has been taken on humanitarian ground,” Law Minister Anisul Huq said.

Also read: Battle for Dhaka

He said the decision was taken in line with Prime Minister Shekh Hasina’s directives and considering the age of the former Prime Minister.

Freedom for 6 months

“... Zia will be released for a period of six months and she must stay in her own house,” the Minister said.

He declined to elaborate immediately but officials familiar with the process said the Home Ministry would take subsequent steps for the former premier’s temporary release under a criminal procedure code (CrPC).

Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan Kamal said his office would take steps for the release of Zia, who is being treated for old-age complications at the prison cell of a State-run specialised hospital, “as soon as” they receive the file from the Law Ministry.

The development came a day after Zia’s family sought her release over the COVID-19 outbreak.

“This is a decision we welcome,” BNP leader Ruhul Kabir Rizvi told reporters in brief comments at the Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University here.

“I thank Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina,” Zia’s younger sister Selima Islam said.

Zia served thrice as the premier since 1991. Her party suffered a miserable defeat in the 2018 elections bagging only six seats in 300-seat parliament.

Her conviction on “moral turpitude” charges debarred her from contesting the polls.

She was sent to jail in February 2018 by a local court on charges of embezzling foreign donations meant for an orphanage, named after her slain husband and President Ziaur Rehman, during her premiership between 2001 and 2006.

Rehman, a military ruler-turned-politician, was the founder of the BNP.

She was convicted in another corruption case later the same year, though her party claims both cases are politically motivated.

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