Show Posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.


Topics - Nahid Afreen

Pages: 1 [2] 3
16
Law / Bangladesh: Vulnerability to Environmental Challenges
« on: November 06, 2018, 07:47:03 PM »
Like all other third world countries, the environmental problems Bangladesh faces are based on poverty, illiteracy and ignorance of a majority of the population. These environmental problems are the consequence of absence of development rather than the outcome of any development strategy. Being economically and technologically backward, having non-accountable administrative machinery, the vast populations of this country are largely dependent on nature for their livelihood and are helpless while facing the disturbance in the balance of nature.
   At the national level, the root of the environmental problems of Bangladesh lies in its socio-economic structure. The booming population and chronic poverty of the country are seriously affecting the limited natural resources as well as the ecological balance. Deforestation, water, air and industrial pollution, unsustainable land use, intense use of fisheries, soil and water resources might be traced as the most acute environment challenges Bangladesh is facing domestically. But in fact, there are so many other environmental hazards people of this country are facing which can never be assessed without proper administrative without proper administrative efforts. While addressing these issues, the national legislation of Bangladesh lack in clarity due to absence of any environmental quality and impact assessment.  There are also some multiple factors responsible for causing such environmental problems which include: global changes and thirst for power, excessive control over nature, urbanization and unplanned development works, industrialization without sufficient control on industrial pollution, improper use of agricultural chemicals and pesticides, faulty policy priorities and approaches, narrow and isolated law and policy, poorly designed development activities, institutional weaknesses among the public agencies in charge of environmental protection and natural resource management etc.

References:
1. Md. Nazrul Islam, ‘Rights to Healthy Environment: Legal Efforts in Bangladesh’, The Dhaka University Studies, Part-F, Vol. IV (1),
    (June 1993), pp. 87-9.
 2. Md. Iqbal Hossain, International Environmental Law Bangladesh Perspective, 3rd ed. (Dhaka:Ain Prokashan, 2010), pp. 
     457-458.

17
Law / Constitution Day
« on: November 06, 2018, 07:34:38 PM »
On November 4, 1972, Bangladesh adopted its Constitution but it was given antedated validity with effect from December 16, 972, the 1st independence day of the People’s Republic.
Since 1972, November 4 has been celebrated as the new republic’s Constitution Day.
As a free nation, Bangladesh traveled through ups and downs in last 47 years, including one party rule and martial law rules but there was no break in constitutional continuity as the Constitution was never abrogated through it was amended 17 times some highly controversial and tailored to perpetuate autocratic rule.
On July 15, 1973, the 1st Amendment was brought to try and punish 195 Pakistani prisoners accused of committing genocide, crimes against humanity or war crimes.
On September 22, 1973 the 2nd Amendment was brought to incorporate the emergency provision by suspending fundamental rights.
On November 28, 1974, the 3rd Amendment ratified the Bangladesh-India Land Boundary Agreement signed by prime ministers Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and Indira Gandhi.
On January 25, 1975, the 4th Amendment introduced for one-party BKSAL rule in Bangladesh and brought the judiciary under the president’s control.
The 5th Amendment, the 7th Amendment, the 8th Amendment, the 13th Amendment and the 16th Amendment had been struck down by the Supreme Court.
On April 6, 1975 the 5th Amendment ratified the martial law proclamation of president Khandker Moshtaque Ahmed.
In 1978, under the 2nd Proclamation Order Bismillahir Rahmanir Rahim was inserted in the Preamble of the Constitution and ‘the Principles of absolute trust and faith in the Almighty Allah’ replaced Secularism one of the four fundamental principles of the State.
On July 10, 1981, he 6th Amendment enabled then vice president Justice Abdus Sattar to contest the presidential election.
On November 11, 1986, the 7th Amendment ratified military ruler Lieutenant General HM Ershad’s martial law proclamation.
On June 9,1988 through the 8th Amendment Ershad incorporated in the Constitution Islam as the state religion of Bangladesh.
Under the same amendment High Court Divisions’ benches were opened outside the capital.
On July 11, 1989, the 9th Amendment provided for holding together elections to the offices of the president and the vice-present.
On June 23, 1990, the 10th Amendment extended the provision of women’s reserved seats in Parliament for 10 years.
On August 10, 1991, the 11th Amendment made the provisions for the return of acting president Chief Justice Shahabuddin Ahmed took the office of acting president after the fall of military dictator Ershad in December 1990.
On September 18, 1991, 12th Amendment restored parliamentary democracy in Bangladesh after 16 years.
On March 28, 1996, 13th Amendment introduced nonparty caretaker government system for holding general elections.
In 2004, the 14th Amendment provided for electing women to their reserved seats in Parliament for political parties according to proportional strength in Parliament and extended the retirement age of Supreme Court judges.
On July 3, 2011, the 15th Amendment abolished the provision of holding parliamentary elections under non-party caretaker government.
On September 17, 2014, 16th Amendment restored Parliament’s power to remove Supreme Court Judges for incapacity and misbehavior.
In July 2018, the last and 17th Amendment extended women’s reserved seats by 25 years or until 2044.

Source: http://www.newagebd.net/article/55043/constitution-day-today

18
Law / Alluvion and Diluvion
« on: November 06, 2018, 07:30:03 PM »
Alluvion and Diluvion barring some hilly areas in the southeast and the northeast, Bangladesh is the world's largest delta formed by three great river systems Ganges/Padma, Brahmaputra/Jamuna and Meghna. These mighty rivers originating in the Himalayas carry millions of tons of mud and sand every year on their journey to the Bay of Bengal. The bulk of the sand and mud get deposited in their meandering courses raising the river beds and forming chars or accretions along the course of the rivers and at their confluence. Since the torrential monsoon flow is unable to discharge itself through the inflated riverbed, it inundates vast tracts of land on both sides and swallows up the landmass on one side of the bank, and gradually and imperceptibly forms accretions on the other side. Erosion of the bank on one side and formation of char on the other are the recurring acts of the river systems. Such loss of landmass (diluvion) and formation of chars (alluvion) since time immemorial must have led to the growth of a body of usage and custom regulating the rights of ownership of such lands.
Because the rules of usage were 't being generally known, the courts of justice established in the early period of the East India Company's rule found it difficult to determine the rights of litigant parties claiming ownership of char lands. In this context, the rules of usage were given statutory shape for the first time by promulgation of the Bengal Alluvion and Diluvion Regulation 1825. The regulation was t intended to introduce any new rule of law. On the contrary, it declared the supremacy and applicability of the rules of usage wherever a clearly established usage was available.
It was in the absence of such a clearly established usage that the principles contained in the regulation were to guide the courts in deciding the ownership of char lands. The regulation of 1825 covers broadly two categories of land re-formation: in situ and new accretions. The right to land once diluviated and subsequently re-formed in the old site and the right to new accretion are two distinct rights. The right of ownership of land re-formed in situ is considered to be incidental to one's title to a tangible property. It is t specifically provided in the regulation but is derived from the principle of justice and equity contained in the fifth clause of section 4. The underlying idea of the above principle declared by the Privy Council is that the right to property is t destroyed or affected merely because it goes under water. The owner of the diluviated land is deemed to be in constructive possession of the same during the period of its submergence and can claim back the same when it reappears out of water and is identified as such. Thus the right of ownership of the land re-formed in situ can be said to have been derived from the judge-made law.
The tenancy law, as contained in sections 17 and 18 of the Bengal Rent Act 1859, recognised the corollary principle that the tenant was liable to enhancement of rent in case of increase of area of his land by alluvion and he is entitled to a reduction of rent in the event of decrease of the area of land by diluvion. Similar provisions were made in section 52 of the Bengal Tenancy Act, 1885. By an amendment a new section, 86A, was inserted in the Bengal Tenancy Act providing that the tenant's right to the diluviated land would be deemed to have been surrendered or extinguished if he had obtained a reduction of rent. This provision was again amended in 1938 to provide for automatic abatement of rent in case of diluvion and ensured subsistence of his right to get back the land if it re-formed within 20 years of diluvion, twithstanding the abatement of rent.
In the East Bengal State Acquisition and Tenancy Act,1950, a specific provision regarding the law of accretion, which was so long being regulated by Regulation XI of 1825, was made in section 87. The provisions relating to abatement of rent for the diluviated land and subsistence of tenant's right to such land, similar to those of section 86A of the Bengal Tenancy Act, were incorporated in section 86 of the Act of 1950. On 4 August 1972, President's Order No. 135 was promulgated to provide that in case of diluvion the rent of the holding shall be abated and the tenant's right of ownership shall be extinguished and the land on reappearance shall vest in the government, except the land in respect of which the tenant's right to repossession was finally recognised by the court or competent authority before in situ, which was declared to have been founded on universal law and justice, and enjoyed the sanction of positive law from 1825, was abrogated. All char lands, whether re-formation in situ or new accretion, were declared to be khas lands. The position was again changed in 1994.
By the amending Act of XV of 1994 provision was made for abatement of rent in the case of land lost by diluvion and subsistence of the right to land re-formed in situ for 30 years, subject to the ceiling of 60 bighas. The present legal position regarding the right of ownership of the land re-formed in situ, as settled by the amending Act XV of 1994, is that the owner of the land once diluviated will get the land re-formed in situ if it reappears within 30 years of diluvion and land re-formed in situ after that period will be the property of the government. To facilitate identification of the owner, a certificate of abatement of rent from the revenue authority will be necessary.
All accretions other than those identified as re-formation in situ may broadly be of two categories, depending on the ownership of the riverbed. The Regulation of 1825, which was promulgated when the system of permanent settlement was in force, contemplated the existence of two types of rivers: (a) a small and shallow river, the bed of which with the jalkar right (right of fishery) was the property of an individual and (b) a large and navigable river, the bed of which was a part of public domain. Any char thrown up in a small and shallow river, the bed of which belongs to an individual, will remain in the ownership of that individual. This is based on the principle similar to the one, which guides the right of ownership of the land re-formed in situ.
With the abolition of zamindari system in 1956, all small and shallow rivers with the right of fisheries were acquired by the government and consequently, chars formed in such small and shallow rivers after 1956 would w be the property of the state. The right of ownership in respect of chars formed in a large navigable river or the sea, the bed of which is part of the public domain, was treated in the Regulation in three different situations.
The general law of ownership of accretion is that chars formed by slow and imperceptible means in contiguity of a person's land by recess of a river or sea will be considered as increment to the land of that person subject to payment of rent for the increased land. Such a char can't be claimed as re-formation in situ because it arises out of the public navigable river, which is t the property of any individual. When a char is thrown up in a large navigable river or sea and is separated from the shore by a channel, which is navigable by boat throughout the year, it will become the property of the state. But if the channel separating the char from the shore becomes fordable (crossable on foot) at any season of the year, such char will be considered as increment to the land, which is most contiguous to the shore.
The regulation also provides ather situation which in Roman Law is called Avulsion. This is made as an exception to the general law of accretion stated above. When a river by a sudden change of its course breaks through an estate without any gradual encroachment, or if the violence of the stream separates a piece of land from one estate and joins into ather estate without destroying the identity, such land on being clearly recognised will remain the property of the original owner.
This law of accretion as laid down in the Regulation continued in force till a new provision was made in section 87 of the State Acquisition and Tenancy Act 1950. Retaining the old provision of the regulation regarding accretion, it provides for an exception to the effect that the right to accretion will be limited to a ceiling of total holding of land and such right will t extend to accretions caused by any artificial or mechanical process as a result of development work undertaken by the government. On 28 June 1972, the riparian owner's right of accretion was also abrogated by President's Order No. 72 of 1972. The amended section 87 of the State Acquisition and Tenancy Act 1950, provides that accretions, whether from the recess of a river or sea, shall t be considered as increment to any person's holding but shall vest absolutely in the government.
A concession has been made in favour of persons whose right to accretion was finally recognised by a court or competent authority in respect of chars that appeared before the date of commencement of President's Order No. 72 of 1972. The present legal position is that all chars other than those re-formed in situ within 30 years of diluvion are the property of the state, which the government may settle in accordance with the rules. The act of forcibly taking and keeping control of accreted land is popularly known as char dakhal. An owner of diluviated land has the unfettered right to repossess the land re-formed in situ without any sanction from the government machinery. Similarly, the riparian owner has the right to occupy the new char, which slowly forms contiguous to his land. His only liability is to pay rent or taxes. This indefeasible property right is said to have been 'founded on universal law and justice' and codified in the Regulation of 1825. This encourages zamindars and other proprietors to grab by force any new char whenever and wherever it appears claiming the same as diluviated land re-formed in situ or contiguous accretion as the situation demands. The rival claimants are t slow in appearing with similar claims. The new chars are fertile lands and would yield handsome salami and new rents. The result invariably is the use of violence leading to riot and killings over the possession of char lands.
Initial possession obviously gives an advantage in the field as well as in law courts and muscle power almost rule the field whatever might be the legal niceties in favour of one or the other. Such a situation prevailing in the past led to the enactment of the Bengal Alluvial Lands Act 1920, with the objective 'to prevent disputes concerning the possession of certain lands in Bengal gained by alluvion or by dereliction of a river on the sea'. It provided that if the collector is credibly informed that a dispute likely to cause a breach of peace exists, or likely to arise in regard to any alluvial land, which in his opinion has recently formed, he may by an order in writing attach such land, demarcate it with boundary pillars, appoint a receiver to manage it, invite claims to such land, and after examination send the list of claimants to the district judge for determination of title of the claimants. On receipt of the order of the district court, the collector shall put the person certified to be entitled to the land in possession thereof. The collector should also cause a survey of the char and prepare a map, which will be presumed to be accurate until the contrary is proved.
This law is similar to the preventive action contemplated under section 145 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. It could be resorted to only when the collector is satisfied that a dispute likely to cause breach of peace exists or is likely to arise. This is t very helpful where someone has already taken forcible possession. Naturally, use of this law was few and far between and muscle power continued to prevail.
After abolition of the zamindari system, the situation was expected to improve. But this expectation was belied by actual events. Although zamindars were gone, the big land holders and persons who commanded money and political power stepped into the shoes of the erstwhile zamindars and continued to grab the char land as before. The most serious socio-economic impact of the recurring acts of diluvion is the instant loss of land and home suffered by thousands of peasant families every year.   
Suddenly, they find their homesteads, lands and means of earnings gone. Persons affected by land acquisition get compensation and sometimes a scheme of rehabilitation is included within a land acquisition project. But in the case of land and home by diluvion, the affected persons get thing. They are forced to take shelter on the roadside land, embankments, and vacant spaces in the towns and cities forming bustees (slums), which create environmental hazards and other related problems.
Having lost everything, they become desperate elements in the society, ready to resort to any crime. These proletariats become easy prey to ambitious political leaders and musclemen of the locality who use them for furtherance of their interests. They are used in taking forcible possession of new chars in return of a promise of extending political support in obtaining allotment of land as landless cultivators. The real weakness of the law is that survey of the char can t be made immediately after the appearance of the char and in absence of map to be prepared after the survey, it is t possible to determine whether the char is a re-formation in situ or a new accretion. Taking advantage of the delay in the diara survey and preparation of map and determination of the nature of the new char, the local elite take possession of the char land and grow crops on the basis of money receipts issued from the revenue office. Rival parties also obtain money receipts, manufacture documents and cut away the growing crops. Attempts made to prevent riots and violence by establishing police camps during the crop cutting season have t proved to be effective.
The amendment of 1994 is intended to make an improvement of the situation in so far as initial responsibility of taking over possession of the char land has been given to the collector, who, after survey and preparation of map, will allot the lands re-formed in situ to the persons whose lands were diluviated. Success of this measure depends upon the ability of the relevant government machinery to conduct survey and prepare maps immediately after appearance of the char and to take over possession of the same notwithstanding political pressure.
Source: http://en.banglapedia.org/index.php?title=Alluvion_and_Diluvion

19
Law / Professional Ethics in Law
« on: August 12, 2018, 07:58:46 AM »
CANONS OF PROFESSIONAL CONDUCT AND ETIQUETTE

[Framed in exercise of the power conferred on the Bangladesh Bar Council by Section 48 (q) of the Legal Practitioners & Bar Council Act, 1965 and adopted by a resolution of the Bar Council on the 5th January, 1969.] [Vide Article 44 (g)]

WHEREAS the rule of law is an essential feature of civilized society and a pre-condition for realizing the ideal justice;

AND WHEREAS such a society affords to all citizens the equal protection of law and thereby secures to them the enjoyment of their lives, property and honor;

AND WHEREAS an indispensable condition of such protection of the rights of citizens is the existence in society of a community of Advocates, men learned in the law and respected as models of integrity, imbued with the spirit of public service and dedicated to the task of upholding the rule of law and defending at all times, without fear or favor, the rights of citizens;

AND WHEREAS by their efforts Advocates are expected to contribute significantly towards the creation and maintenance of conditions in which a government established by law can function fruitfully so as to ensure the realization of political, economic and social justice by all citizens;

AND WHEREAS in order effectively to discharge these high duties Advocates must conform to certain norms of correct conduct in their relations with members of the profession, their clients, the courts and the members of the public generally;

CONDUCT WITH REGARD TO OTHER ADVOCATES

1. It is the duty of every Advocate to uphold at all times the dignity and high standing of his profession, as well as his own dignity and high standing as a member thereof.
2. An Advocate shall not solicit professional employment by advertisement or by any other means. This clause shall not be constructed as prohibiting the publication or use of ordinary professional cards, name plates or conventional listings in directories, so long as the information contained therein is limited to professional and academic qualifications and public offices currently held, and does not contain any matter which savors of personal advertisement.
3. An Advocate shall not employ any other person to solicit or obtain professional employment nor remunerate another for soliciting or obtaining professional employment for him; nor shall he share with an unlicensed person any comprehension, arising out of or incidental to professional employment, nor shall he aid or abet an unlicensed person to practice law or to receive compensation thereof; nor shall he knowingly accept professional employment offered to him as a result of or as incidental to the activities of an unlicensed person.
4. An Advocate shall not communicate about a subject of controversy with a party represented by an Advocate in the absence and without the consent of such Advocate.
5. An Advocate shall not, in the absence of the opposing counsel communicate with or argue before a judge or judicial officer except in open court and the merits of a contested matter pending before such judge or judicial officer, nor shall he, without furnishing the opposing Advocate with a copy thereof, address a written communication to a judge or judicial officer concerning the merits of a contested matter pending before such judge or judicial officer. This rule shall not apply to expert matters or in respect of matters not sub-judice before the judge or judicial officer concerned.
6. A client’s proffer of assistance of additional Advocate/s should not be regarded as evidence of want of confidence but the matter should be left to the determination of the client. An Advocate should decline association as a colleague unless the dues of the Advocate first retained are paid.
7. Clients, not Advocates, are the litigants. Whatever may be the ill feeling existing between clients, it should not be allowed to influence Advocates in their conduct and demeanour toward each other or toward the parties in the case. All personal clashes between Advocates should be scrupulously avoided, in the trail of a cause it is indecent to allude to the personal peculiarities and idiosyncrasies of Advocates appearing on the other side. Personal colloquies between Advocates which causes delay and promote unseemly wrangling should be carefully avoided.
8. No division of fees with any person for legal services is proper,     except with another Advocate based upon the principle of division of work as expressed in the agreement between the Advocates.
9. Subject to the precedence of the Attorney General and the Advocate General as established by constitutional usage and practice, it is the duty of Advocates to maintain and uphold the order of precedence in accordance with the Roll of Advocate maintained by the Bar Council.
10. Junior and younger members should always be respectful to senior and older members. The latter are expected to be not only courteous but also helpful to their junior and younger brethren at the Bar.
Where more than one Advocate is engaged on any side it is the right of the senior member to lead the case and the junior members to assist him.
11. Where more than one Advocate is engaged on any side it is the right of the senior member to lead the case and the junior members to assist him.

To know more, visit: https://www.barcouncil.gov.bd/disciplinary-jurisdiction/conduct-of-ethics-of-lawyers/

20
Law / The Girl Child
« on: August 11, 2018, 01:20:13 AM »
Enclosed please find the file.

21
Law / Contradiction between a Child's Right and a Mother's Right
« on: August 11, 2018, 01:18:50 AM »
Enclosed please find the file.

22
Law / Ignorance of law is not an excuse!
« on: August 11, 2018, 01:17:11 AM »
Enclosed please find the file.

23
Law / Is Independence Day simply a holiday?
« on: August 11, 2018, 01:14:12 AM »
Enclosed please find the file.

24
Law / Women Smokers: A New Episode
« on: August 11, 2018, 01:08:53 AM »
Enclosed please find the file.

25
Law / Law in daily life (part 4)
« on: August 11, 2018, 01:02:52 AM »
Enclosed please find the file.

26
Law / Law in daily life (part 3)
« on: August 11, 2018, 01:01:08 AM »
Enclosed please find the file.

27
Law / Law in daily life (part 2)
« on: August 11, 2018, 12:59:11 AM »
Enclosed please find the file.

28
Law / Law in daily life (part 1)
« on: August 11, 2018, 12:57:43 AM »
Enclosed please find the file.

29
Law / How does law relate to literature?
« on: August 11, 2018, 12:52:10 AM »
Enclosed please find the file.

30
Law / Nahid Afreen: when social activist
« on: August 11, 2018, 12:49:05 AM »
Enclosed please find the files.

Pages: 1 [2] 3