Security beefed up near court ahead of Sinha murder verdict


FE ONLINE DESK | Published: January 31, 2022 11:49:53 | Updated: January 31, 2022 16:48:24


Photo: bdnews24.com

Security has been heightened on the court premises in Cox’s Bazar ahead of the verdict in the widely discussed Major (retd) Sinha Md Rashed Khan murder case.

The judge will sit in court at 2 pm on Monday, Mahbubul Alam Tipu, a lawyer for the prosecution, said, citing the bench clerk of the court.

 “The verdict is to be announced today and we are expecting the capital punishment,” he said.

The relatives of some suspects were seen in the court area around 9:00am. The suspects are to be brought to court at 9:30am, reports bdnews24.com.

Md Rafiqul Islam, the district additional superintendent of police, said that security personnel had been deployed at both gates to the court premises and a seven-stage security perimeter has been set up.

 “Police are on alert,” he said. “To strengthen security, members of other law enforcement agencies have been deployed alongside police. We are monitoring the situation to ensure that no unnecessary traffic enters the area. No one, except those involved in trials, will be allowed to enter court today.”

Six police checkposts have been set up at the entrance road to the curt, the deputy commissioner’s office area and the wet market area.

A police official from the Sadar Police Station said that about 80 police personnel were deployed near the court and another police team is on standby.

In July 2020, officers of the law in Cox's Bazar shot and killed retired army officer Sinha in an egregious abuse of their authority, sparking a public outcry.

Sinha, 36, was a member of the Special Security Force tasked with guarding the prime minister. Sinha had gone into early retirement to pursue his personal interests. But his life was cut short within two years of leaving the army.

Fifteen policemen, including the then chief of Teknaf police Pradip Kumar Das, stand accused of murdering Sinha at a checkpoint in the resort town's Marine Drive.

After the incident, the lid was blown on Pradip's chequered past, which involved framing gunfights in the name of drug busts near the Myanmar border in Teknaf.

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