Sinha to be brought back home for trial: Minister

Former chief justice Surendra Kumar Sinha. File Photo
Former chief justice Surendra Kumar Sinha. File Photo

Branding former chief justice Surendra Kumar Sinha as a 'black sheep and thief', liberation war affairs minister AKM Mozammel Haque on Saturday said he will be brought back home from abroad and put on trial, reports UNB. 


“He (SK Sinha) will be dragged back home tying in with rope around his waist and put on trial. He'll be spared in no way," the minister said while addressing a function marking the inauguration of the Muktijoddha Complex Bhabans of four upazilas in Moulvibazar.

He also came down hard on BNP founder Ziaur Rahman, saying he had been involved in the plot to assassinate Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman.

Mozammel mentioned that freedom fighters will now get allowances each month instead of once in every three months.

Additional deputy commissioner Mallika Dey presided over the programme jointly organised by the district administration and the local government engineering department (LGED).

On 22 January, a Dhaka court directed authorities concerned to publish an advertisement in two national dailies asking the former chief justice and 10 others to appear before it on 20 February in a case filed on charges of misappropriating and laundering Tk 40 million.

On 5 January, the court issued a warrant for the arrest of the accused as they did not appear before it on the day.

On 10 July last, the ACC filed the case accusing SK Sinha 10 others of accumulating illegal wealth and laundering Tk 40 million.

SK Sinha went on leave on 2 October, 2017 and left for Australia on 13 October amid a row over some of his observations in the 16th amendment verdict.

Just before his departure, he had told reporters that he was not sick, contradicting the government's claim that he went on leave on health grounds.

A day after SK Sinha's trip to Australia, the Supreme Court issued a statement, saying he was facing 11 charges, including graft, moral turpitude and money laundering.

On 11 November, 2017, he resigned from his post of the chief justice of Bangladesh.