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BD govt asked to justify state of emergency

July 21, 2008

DHAKA (AFP) - Bangladesh’s High Court on Sunday ordered the country’s army-backed authorities to justify the legality of its ongoing state of emergency, lawyers said.
The ruling came after four lawyers appealed to the court that the state of emergency, imposed by the government in January 2007 when it came to power after cancelling elections, was illegal.
“The High Court has asked the government to explain in four weeks why the proclamation of the emergency would not be declared illegal,” said Deputy Attorney-General Naima Haider, who appeared on behalf of the government.
“It wanted to know whether the President, who imposed the emergency, acted on the mandate of the constitution,” she said.
The court also ordered the government to give details about how it plans to hold general elections at the end of the year and transfer power back to a democratically elected government, said lawyer M I Farooqi, acting on behalf of the petitioners.
The ruling comes less than a week after the country’s attorney general stepped down, saying he was no longer able to work with “dignity and integrity” under the current regime.
The High Court has in recent weeks also released on bail a handful of prominent politicians and tycoons who had been detained under the government’s crackdown on corruption.
Interim lawmakers have eased emergency curbs in the past few months, but have not said when they will lift the emergency.


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