
Dhaka: Bangladesh's embattled former premier
Khaleda Zia has surrendered before a local court that granted
her bail in graft and defamation cases, a week after it issued
an arrest warrant against her.
"The bail was granted on conditions that she would inform
the court before leaving the country in future," an official
of the court told reporters yesterday.
He said Zia, 72, also the chairperson of the Bangladesh
Nationalist Party (BNP), had to give a bond of Taka 100,000
(USD 1211) for obtaining the bail.
Surrounded by her party activists, Zia came to the court
complex in old Dhaka and surrendered before the judge, a day
after she returned home from London after a three-month visit.
Court officials and lawyers said she appeared on the dock
and sought the bail this morning at the makeshift court set up
on Alia Madrasha ground at Bakshibazar in the old city.
After granting the bail, the court held a routine hearing
wherein she gave an hour long statement claiming her innocence
in the graft cases.
The judge fixed October 26 as the date for the next
hearing.
"She also claimed that cases filed against her are false,
motivated and imaginarily made up and aimed at harassing her,"
a defense lawyer said, adding she was allowed to speak as the
court accepted her petition to give a statement.
Court officials and lawyers said Dhaka s Metropolitan
Magistrate issued the first warrant as Zia failed to appear in
another court over a case accusing her of undermining the
Bangladesh s map and national flag.
She is being tried for inducting in her 2001-2006 cabinet
the people who were opposed to the country's independence and
committed crimes against humanity by siding with the Pakistani
troops.
She obtained the bail against the second warrant issued
by Dhaka s Fifth Special Judge's Court as she evaded
appearance in a case involving her alleged corruption with
funds of an orphanage trust named after her husband and slain
president Ziaur Rahman.