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     Volume 10 |Issue 26 | July 08, 2011 |


   Inside

 Letters
 Voicebox
 Chintito
 Perspective
 Cover Story
 Conference
 Reflections
 Special Feature
 Current Affairs
 One Off
 International
 Straight Talk
 Art
 Star Diary
 Education
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 Exhibition
 Human Rights
 Musings
 Book Review
 Postscript

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"Voicebox"

"Charges were pressed against Tarique Rahman as part of a conspiracy to destroy the Zia family, and divert public attention as the government is facing people's wrath due to scrapping of the caretaker government system."
MIRZA FAKHRUL ISLAM ALAMGIR
BNP acting secretary general
about the submission of supplementary charge sheets implicating party leaders Tarique Rahman in the August 21 grenade attack cases

"It's now a matter of law, and law will take its own course. We have no personal vendetta."
SHEIKH HASINA
prime minister
about the charges and conviction brought against Tarique Rahman and Arafat Rahman Koko, sons of opposition leader Khaleda Zia.

"It would be a historic mistake if the present government approves the bill taking advantage of two-thirds majority. The whole nation might suffer for this."
FAZLUL AZIM
independent lawmaker
about the Constitution (15th amendment) Bill, 2011 placed in the parliament where none of the opposition party lawmakers were present.

"The prime minister was busy voting for the Sundarbans through SMS whole Friday. She sent at least 500 SMS."
MAHBUBUL HOQUE SHAKIL
chief executive of AL's research cell
about Sheikh Hasina spending her holiday by giving votes for the Sundarbans through SMS (short message service).

"The colonel (Gaddafi) is sending signals that he is prepared to relinquish power in exchange for security guarantees."
KOMMERSANT
A Russian newspaper
about Russia's talks with NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen and South African President Jacob Zuma to end the war in Libya.

"I would like to offer my apologies for offending the people in the disaster-hit areas. I thought I was emotionally close to the disaster victims, but I lacked sufficient words and my comments were too harsh."
RYU MATSUMOTO
Japan's disaster reconstruction minister
about his resignation after his remarks have been widely criticised as offensive during a visit to the tsunami-devastated areas in Japan.

 

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