Bangladesh drug war death toll hits 200 — rights group

Bangladesh police conduct a drive against narcotics in Dhaka on June 5. (AFP)
Updated 17 July 2018
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Bangladesh drug war death toll hits 200 — rights group

  • Around 25,000 alleged drug dealers have been arrested, home ministry spokesman Sharif Mahmud Apu said
  • Authorities last year seized a record 40 million pills but said an estimated 250-300 million more entered the market

DHAKA: The death toll from Bangladesh’s contentious war on drugs since May has hit 200, a local rights group said Tuesday, with some 25,000 others imprisoned.
Bangladesh launched the crackdown to smash the surging trade in “yaba,” a cheap methamphetamine and caffeine pill, which authorities say has spread to almost every village and town.
Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan has said the “war” will last until the narcotics trade is brought under control, saying those killed are all involved in at least 10 drugs crimes.
But rights groups say that many of the victims are shot by police in cold blood and that the onslaught was in part being used as a cover to settle scores.
In June the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, said he was “gravely concerned” that “such a large number of people” had died.
Official declarations that none of the victims was innocent were “dangerous... and indicative of a total disregard for the rule of law,” a UN statement said.
Bangladesh’s state-run National Human Rights Commission has also expressed alarm.
“It is unprecedented in Bangladesh. So many people have been killed in such a short period of time,” Sheepa Hafiza, executive director of Ain o Salish Kendra rights group, said.
“This is very unfortunate. We condemn these extrajudicial killings and want fair investigations into each of these killings,” she said.
Around 25,000 alleged drug dealers have been arrested, home ministry spokesman Sharif Mahmud Apu said.
The prison population has shot up to 89,589 people, almost two and a half times higher than the system’s capacity, he said.
Last month the killing of a border town councilor in an anti-drug raid sparked outcry when his wife went public with tapes that she says prove her husband was murdered in a set-up.
Ayesha Begum says phone conversations she recorded with Akramul Haque on the night he died contradict the official narrative that he was armed and shot at police who returned fire in self-defense.
“They killed him in cold blood,” Begum said from Teknaf in southeast Bangladesh, where her husband was gunned down May 27.
Bangladesh has struggled to contain the trade in “yaba,” with hundreds of millions of pills entering the country from Myanmar.
Authorities last year seized a record 40 million pills but said an estimated 250-300 million more entered the market.
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s brutal war on drugs since coming to power in 2016 has left thousands of people dead and prompted allegations of crimes against humanity.
Sri Lanka has also expressed interest in emulating Duterte, announcing plans to deploy the army and start hanging drug criminals, ending a near-half century moratorium on capital punishment.


India plans AI ‘data city’ on staggering scale

Updated 56 min 27 sec ago
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India plans AI ‘data city’ on staggering scale

  • ‘The data city is going to come in one ecosystem ... with a 100 kilometer radius’

NEW DELHI: As India races to narrow the artificial intelligence gap with the United States and China, it is planning a vast new “data city” to power digital growth on a staggering scale, the man spearheading the project says.

“The AI revolution is here, no second thoughts about it,” said Nara Lokesh, information technology minister for Andhra Pradesh state, which is positioning the city of Visakhapatnam as a cornerstone of India’s AI push.

“And as a nation ... we have taken a stand that we’ve got to embrace it,” he said ahead of an international AI summit next week in New Delhi.

Lokesh boasts the state has secured investment agreements of $175 billion involving 760 projects, including a $15 billion investment by Google for its largest AI infrastructure hub outside the United States.

And a joint venture between India’s Reliance Industries, Canada’s Brookfield and US firm Digital Realty is investing $11 billion to develop an AI data center in the same city.

Visakhapatnam — home to around two million people and popularly known as “Vizag” — is better known for its cricket ground that hosts international matches than cutting-edge technology.

But the southeastern port city is now being pitched as a landing point for submarine internet cables linking India to Singapore.

“The data city is going to come in one ecosystem ... with a 100 kilometer radius,” Lokesh said. For comparison, Taiwan is roughly 100 kilometers wide.

Lokesh said the plan goes far beyond data connectivity, adding that his state had “received close to 25 percent of all foreign direct investments” to India in 2025.

“It’s not just about the data centers,” he explained while outlining a sweeping vision of change, with Andhra Pradesh offering land at one US cent per acre for major investors.