Bench-Bar relations
Civility must be maintained
Recently  retired Chief Justice ABM Khairul Haque declined to accept a formal  farewell from the Supreme Court Bar Association on the eve of his going  into retirement. Obviously, he was miffed by the fact that during his  tenure as head of the nation's highest judiciary he faced constant  resistance from the SCBA, whose leading figures could not or would not  agree with some important legal decisions reached by the Supreme Court  under Justice Haque's stewardship. Also a faction of the SCBA led by its  president made it known that they would not attend the reception  accorded to the newly appointed CJ Mohammad Mozammel Hossain. 
To  the nation's great discomfiture, and whether or not anyone acknowledges  this fact, a certain degree of politics or a reflection of it has  contributed to this unsavoury situation. It has been observed that while  lawyers with a pro-government bias have generally been friendly toward  incoming or outgoing judges, those identifying with the political  opposition have usually refrained from cooperating with the judges. Such  a situation has been more or less common during the tenure of various  governments and not just the present one. Our question is: should the  time-honoured tradition of lawyers showing respect, despite their  professional or political perceptions of how the judiciary may have  performed, to judges be undermined in this manner?
The truth must  not be lost on anyone that at this point of time, Bangladesh's judiciary  remains one institution the nation can turn to where showing a path out  of the woods on critical issues is concerned. The role played by the  higher judiciary in dispensing with some amendments undermining the  constitution and even the state is to be appreciated. Much as some  lawyers may not agree with those moves, we believe that it is important  to keep alive and aloft certain traditions of respect and civility which  have consistently helped people to keep faith with the legal profession  and the judiciary. Some conventions cannot simply be pushed aside.
Investment in foreign farms
A window of opportunity opens
THE  news  that two Bangladeshi firms have leased in large chunks of  farmlands in Africa to grow rice, wheat and other kinds of food grains  is  very heartening. First because, it is indicative of our local  entrepreneurs' coming of age as they are now looking for overseas  investments. Second, they have chosen agricultural farmlands as the area  of investment. Third, their objective is to bring the lion's share of  the produces back home with a view to reducing our growing dependence on  food grains import. Above all, it is thinking out of box and looking  for new pastures. 
The government's support to facilitate those  companies in signing lease deals with the African governments--Uganda  and Tanzaniais undoubtedly commendable. It is further reassuring to  learn that more entrepreneurs from Bangladesh are looking for similar  investment opportunities in Africa. 
African countries hold out  huge prospects for overseas investment in the farming sector. Many  countries including China that have the necessary capital and expertise  have taken hold of the opportunity earlier than others. Bangladeshi  investors' entry into this area is evidently reflective of their growing  capital that can be invested abroad as well as the attainment of  the  expertise that goes into such ventures.
The African countries like  Uganda and Tanzania that are wooing foreign investment in the farm  sector on easy and lucrative terms, definitely want to see their own  manpower employed in agriculture.  Bangladeshi entrepreneurs, on their  part, will be able to make profits, help the country in addressing its  growing demands for food grains as well as enrich their experience and  knowledge profusely in food grain production in different other climes.   This will no doubt go to add to Bangladesh's own wealth of research  experience in agriculture.
To succeed, the companies that have  pioneered in this kind of overseas investment, hopefully, will also  learn to adapt and associate themselves well with the local people and  their culture with due respect. Since it is a very potential sector  meriting extensive exploration, the government needs to continue its  encouragement and support to the willing entrepreneurs. 


1 comments:
Hi all, here every person is sharing these kinds of know-how, so it’s nice to read this website, and I used to go to see this blog daily.
Foreign Investing In Florida
Post a Comment