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13:06 GMT, Wednesday, 30 July 2008 14:06 UK

B'desh sets up 'truth commission'

Police in Bangladesh

A Truth and Accountability Commission has been set up in Bangladesh to tackle the country's endemic corruption.

The interim government says it will offer partial amnesties in return for information about corrupt deals.

Critics say the terms of reference are unclear and the commission will achieve little before December polls when the government is due to relinquish power.

Bangladesh remains one of the world's most corrupt countries, according to watchdog Transparency International.

Last month, the group said corruption in the country had continued to thrive since the army-backed caretaker government took power last year pledging to tackle it.

Leniency

Justice Habibur Rahman Khan has been appointed to chair the new three-member commission.

Former Comptroller and Accountant General Asif Ali and Maj Gen Manzur Rashid Chowdhury are its other members.

Habibur Rahman Khan

The three men will have 26 officials to help them at the commission's office in central Dhaka.

A government spokesman said people who appeared before the commission and gave details of fraudulent deals would not be tried for their crimes and given a partial amnesty.

However they would still be barred from contesting any elections for five years.

The government says that anyone already convicted of corruption - serving a sentence of two years or less - will also be shown leniency by the commission if he or she confesses and returns any illegal earnings.

But it says that anyone providing false or misleading information will face stiffer punishment.

People convicted of arms, drugs, child trafficking and rape cases will not get any clemency.

Critics say that the commission is doomed to failure because it will not have time to hear testimonies from people who may want to appear before it.

They also say that it should have started its work before the authorities began prosecuting scores of politicians and businessmen for corruption and sending them to prison.

Many well-known Bangladeshis still face corruption charges, including two former prime ministers.



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Related to this story:
Bangladesh 'losing on corruption' (19 Jun 08 |  South Asia )
Bangladesh former PM flies to US (12 Jun 08 |  South Asia )
Thousands arrested in Bangladesh (04 Jun 08 |  South Asia )
Bugs eat Bangladesh court papers (30 May 08 |  South Asia )
Truth commission for Bangladesh (26 May 08 |  South Asia )
More corruption charges in B'desh (15 May 08 |  South Asia )

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