- 2021-08-19 05:40:03
- LAST MODIFIED: 2024-11-21 13:13:20
Court accepts IO's final report clearing Bashundhara Group MD in Munia's death
Photo Collected:
Staff Correspondent: Dhaka, Aug-19,
A Dhaka court on Wednesday relieved Bashundhara
Group Managing Director (MD) Sayem Sobhan Anvir from the charge of incitement
to suicide of college student Mosarat Jahan Munia.
Dhaka Metropolitan
Magistrate Rajesh Chowdhury released him after receiving a final report from
the police.
Sub-Inspector Alamgir
Hossain, General Registration Officer of Gulshan Police Station, confirmed the
release order to UNB correspondent.
Although the plaintiff
submitted a no-confidence motion against the police report the day before, it
failed to sway the court's decision.
Earlier on July 19, the
investigating officer of the case, Gulshan Police Station officer-in-charge
Abul Hasan, submitted a final report to the court seeking Anvir's release.
Bashundhara MD Sayem
Sobhan Anvir was not found culpable in the suicide incitement case of Munia in
the final report submitted by the investigating officer, and asked for his name
to be dropped.
This has been
established without even taking the accused for questioning.
Munia was the married
Anvir's lover, who was covering the cost of accommodating her in her posh
Gulshan apartment, where he regularly visited her.
Police recovered the
hanging body of Munia from the flat in Gulshan on the night of April 26.
Munia's elder sister Nusrat Jahan Tania filed a case against Bashundhara Group
MD Sayem Sobhan Anvir that night alleging incitement to suicide.
There are apprehensions
that that is the point at which the entire case outcome was effectively
hatched. Incitement to suicide is almost impossible to prove beyond a shadow of
doubt, and also easily bailable.
Police have hardly
explored any other possibility - most glaringly, whether she was murdered. The
entire conclusion would seem to hinge on having found Munia's body hanging by a
scarf from her room's ceiling fan. Photos of the scene were leaked, and showed
the dead girl's legs almost slumped and touching her bed.
There was no suicide
note or even any suggestion that she wanted to kill herself, in conversations
with her sister or anybody else. Rather, she was looking forward to her
sister's arrival.
There had been a
falling out with Anvir over the previous few days, and she would be heading
back to Cumilla. This was not the first
time - it had happened last year as well, when she left an apartment rented by
her and Anvir in Banani, going back to Cumilla. No suicide attempt, just in
case there was any history there. None.
It was only in March
that Anvir had showed up in Cumilla and brought her back. But now things had
gone awry again. In fact that is why her sister and cousins were coming to
Dhaka anyway that day, April 26, to take her back home.
That morning though,
Munia began to call her sister Nusrat early in the morning in a distressed
state. The first call Nusrat received was around 9-9.30am. Munia was insisting
that she (the sister) come earlier than planned, and that she faced some grave
danger. Not that she felt like killing herself.
The two sisters spoke a
few more times. It was mostly Munia enquiring if they had set off yet for Dhaka
from Cumilla, trying to hurry them. The last time they spoke was around
11.30am. Nusrat arrived at the house around 3.30pm.
In those 4 hours, Munia
for some reason had decided to kill herself, and gone through with it as well.
End/Dct/Abu/Sma/