Monday, April 15, 2013

‘Prothom Alo’ retracts short story


The short story, titled “TV Camerar Samne Meyeti” (The girl in front of the TV camera), centres around a politically active girl ‘Seema’ leading the slogan shouting brigade who is sexually exploited by a senior politician, the man who recruits her. The story suggests her popularity stems from her sexual free-mixing with males. The decision to retract the short story was taken by the ‘Prothom Alo’ management after a flurry of protests by readers, who vented mostly in social media as well as at Shahbagh, the city square hosting a campaign against religious fanatics since Feb 5. Readers feel the story seeks to run down the image of the large number of women participating in the mass protests at Shahbagh. One reader even pulls up the short story as being inconsistent with the image of a ‘modern, emerging Bangladesh’. Many have said that the damage to the ‘brand’ has already been done but some say the apology puts the record straight. Still others say the tenor of the story sharply questions gender emancipation. Some of the comments are posted on the paper's online version. Bangladesh has been globally acclaimed in recent years for giant strides it has taken towards female empowerment. “The opinions expressed in the short story are not in keeping with our editorial policy and the ideals espoused by the newspaper,” the Editor said in a statement carried in the daily’s online version. There was no print edition of the paper on Monday (Apr 15) because the 14th, the Pahela Baishakh, was public holiday. He ‘sincerely apologised’ to all readers of ‘Prothom Alo’ for the ‘inadvertent goof-up’ which he says led to the publication of this short story. Hye, the writer who is a retired senior civil servant who served as Secretary at the Ministries of Industries and Land, also apologised, hours after the editor’s apology was put up in the internet edition. There have also been demands that his various awards, including the Ekushey Padak and Bangla Academy Award, be revoked. Hye joined the Civil Service of Pakistan in 1965 after a stint at the Dhaka University economics department as a teacher, and retired from the Bangladesh Civil Service in 1999. Born in 1939, Hye won the Academy Award in 1977 and was chosen for Ekushey Padak in 1994 for ‘contribution to literature’. The short story has already been withdrawn from the e-paper and the online archive of ‘Prothom Alo’, the editor said in the statement. Abdul Qaiyum, Associate Editor of the daily, echoed the editor who would not speak to bdnews24.com for comment. Asked whether action was underway against those involved with the ‘gaffe', Qaiyum said, "We are investigating who made the mistake and at what point [of editorial decision-making]. “We will take steps so that such incident is never repeated.” In 2007, Prothom Alo similarly apologised for a cartoon, allegedly defaming the Prophet Mohammad, after a flurry of protests from readers. The management sacked the 20-year-old cartoonist Arifur Rahman and section editor Sumanto Aslam for the goof-up, and Arif was also dragged to prison. The paper’s management refused to give legal support to the cartoonist, and Matiur Rahman, the editor, went to a hardline cleric to personally apologise for the ‘blunder’.BDNEWS24.COM

Friday, April 12, 2013

Pak teen Madhia Tariq gets back liver, and life, in Delhi hospital


NEW DELHI: Sixteen-year-old Madhia Tariq from Pakistan had no hope of survival when she slipped into coma after collapsing in her school in Lahore in January due to acute liver failure. An air ambulance went from Delhi and brought her to the capital on February 2 - and back to life. Madhia, who had developed hepatitis, underwent a successful liver transplant on February 3 at Indraprastha Apollo Hospital in the city where a team of 18 doctors operated upon her. Her brother Rizwan donated almost half his liver. Dr Anupam Sibal, group medical director, Apollo Hospitals, said, "If the girl was not operated on time, she could not be saved. We completed all formalities in 48 hours." According to Dr Subash Gupta, chief liver transplant surgeon at the hospital, it took 18 hours to conduct the donor and transplant surgery. Madiha was discharged on March 6 but was staying in India for check-ups, said her brother Rizwan. "We are happy my sister has recovered and it has been great coming here. We have got tremendous support," he said. The teenager is the 350th Pakistani to have undergone liver transplant at the hospital. Pakistanis form the second largest chunk of such patients to the hospital from any country other than India, said Gupta. In all, Apollo Transplant Programme has performed 1,252 liver transplants from 27 countries in the past 15 years.TOI