Published on 08:54 PM, March 06, 2018

CHT Regional Council: SC hearing on HC order adjourned for 4 weeks

Star file photo

The Supreme Court today adjourned for four weeks hearing on the appeals filed against the 2010 High Court verdict that declared the Chittagong Hill Tracts (CHT) Regional Council illegal and unconstitutional.

Following two separate writ petitions, the HC in April 2010 delivered the verdict observing that the state’s unitary character, which is the basic feature of the constitution, has been hampered due to formation of the regional council.

The council can now run since the HC verdict has been halted following a SC stay order.

The four-member bench of the Appellate Division of the SC headed by Chief Justice Syed Mahmud Hossain was scheduled to hear the appeals today.

The apex court bench passed the adjournment order following a time prayer moved by Additional Attorney General Murad Rezafor taking preparation to place arguments on the appeals.

The SC’s earlier stay order (April 2010) will continue until disposal of the appeals, Additional Attorney General Murad Reza told The Daily Star yesterday.

The CHT regional council has been functioning under the leadership of JyotirindraBodhipriyaLarma, popularly known as SantuLarma, since its formation in 1999 following the signing of the CHT Peace Accord 1997.

Following two separate writ petitions filed by Bangalee settler M Badiuzzaman and the SC's pro-Jamaat-e-Islami lawyer Tajul Islam on April 13, 2010, the HC declared the CHT Regional Council Act 1998 illegal and unconstitutional.

The Appellate Division on March 3, 2011 upheld the chamber judge's stay order and allowed the government and SantuLarma to move separate appeals before it against the HC verdict.

Later on, the government and CHT Regional Council filed two separate appeals with the SC, saying that the regional council is a statutory authority to facilitate the functions of three hill district councils and was formed in line with the constitution.

The provisions of the regional council act, which have been declared unconstitutional by the HC, are actually protected by the constitution, as it provides for an affirmative action in favour of a backward section of the population, they said in the appeals.