Dhaka,
Aug 13 (UNB) - BNP Chairperson and former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia is set to
get a police escort once again after nearly a decade.
The Ministry of Home
Affairs issued an order for ensusring police escort for Khaleda Zia, Jahangir
Alam, senior secretary to the Public Security Division of the ministry said on
Tuesday.
The police escort was
withdrawn by the then Awami League government after Khaleda Zia lost her post
as the opposition leader in parliament in 2015.
On August 6, Khaleda Zia
was completely freed by an order of President Mohammed Shahabuddin.
The president passed the
order under Article 49 of the Bangladesh Constitution, according to a gazette
issued by the home ministry on August 6.
Article 49 states that
"The president shall have power to grant pardons, reprieves, and respites
and to remit, suspend, or commute any sentence passed by any court, tribunal,
or other authority."
She was placed in Old
Dhaka Central Jail on February 8, 2018, after a special court sentenced her to
five years in prison in the Zia Orphanage Trust corruption case. On October 30,
2018, the High Court raised her punishment to 10 years. Later, she was
convicted in the Zia Charitable Trust corruption case.
Amid the coronavirus
outbreak, the government temporarily freed Khaleda Zia from jail after 776 days
through an executive order suspending her sentence on March 25, 2020, with
conditions that she would stay in her Gulshan house and not leave the country.
Khaleda, a former prime
minister, aged 79, has long battled various ailments, including liver
cirrhosis, arthritis, diabetes, and issues related to the kidney, lung, heart,
and eyes.
Since her conditional
release from jail in 2020, the BNP chief has been receiving treatment
frequently at the hospital under a medical board headed by cardiologist Prof
Shahabuddin Talukder.
Khaleda's doctors have
been recommending sending her abroad since she was diagnosed with liver
cirrhosis in November 2021.
On October 26 last year,
three US specialist doctors completed the hepatic procedure known as the
transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS procedure) to stop water
accretion in Khaleda Zia's stomach and chest, and bleeding in her liver.
END/UNB/ARJ-M/SU/FH/2010
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