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His lawyer, Dewan Abdun Naser, told bdnews24.com that a hearing had been scheduled for Tuesday because the state had not received a copy of the request for review.
Meanwhile, the court of first instance could not order the start of the trial in the case on Monday, as it requested time to cite the lawsuit and the cause of the illness of the lawyer of the three defendants.
Dhaka Metropolitan Sessions Judge KM Imrul Kayesh set November 28 to frame the charges. Previously, the case was not heard three more times.
Nasser told bdnews24.com that Maruf was not charged on the earlier charge sheet in the Sagira Morshed murder case. His name was added on January 15 of this year. According to the national identity card and passport, Maruf was 18 years, 10 months and 26 days old at the time of the incident. Therefore, the case will be judged in your case according to the Children’s Law of 2013.
“If the Juvenile Law of 2013 applies to me, then I can demand the trial of this defendant in juvenile court.”
Metropolitan Sessions Judge KM Imrul Kayesh dismissed Sagira Morshed’s murder case application to the Juvenile Court on September 6. A request for review was subsequently filed with the Superior Court.
The matter went to court on Monday. At one point during the hearing, the deputy attorney general said they did not have a copy of the request for review. Then the court reserved Tuesday for a hearing.
According to the details of the case, on July 25, 1989 Sagira Morshed Salam went to look for her daughter at the Vikarunnisa Noon School. As soon as he reached Siddheswari Road around 5 pm, the hijackers on a motorcycle tried to snatch the gold bracelet from his hand. They shot him when he was running. Sagira died on the way to the hospital.
Sagira’s brother-in-law was arrested after 31 years. Hasan Ali Chowdhury (60), his wife Sayedatul Mahmuda Shahin (64), Shahin’s brother, Anash Mahmud Rezwan (59) and Maruf Reza (59) gave confessional statements in court.
Based on his confessions, DIG Banaj Kumar Majumder of the Bureau of Investigation (PBI), the investigating agency on the case, said that Dr. Maruf Reza, a ‘terrorist’ from the Bailey Road area, was hired at the time for 25,000 rupees to punish his younger brother’s wife. Smile. Maruf was assigned by his wife’s brother, Rezwan, to help him.
According to the plan, on the afternoon of July 25, 1989, Maruf and Rezwan, a motorcyclist, blocked Sagira Morshed’s passage in front of the Vikarunnisa Noon School in a rickshaw to fetch their daughter from school. After snatching the bag from her, Sagira said she recognized Rezwan when he was about to take the bracelet, then Maruf Reza shot him in the chest.
Now Maruf Reza, a real estate entrepreneur and resident of Bailey Road, is the nephew of retired Major General Mahmudul Hasan, the interior minister in the Ershad government. Although he was arrested at the time, the police dropped his name and filed a charge sheet in the case.
Although the trial began after that, the court ordered a further investigation as the Maruf Raza issue came up in testimony. Later, Maruf went to the superior court and suspended the case. Subsequently, the defendants Mintu and Maruf were arrested during the investigation. But the charge sheet was issued without Maruf Raza’s name.
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