Khaleda Zia’s 10-Year Sentence Suspended
On Monday, November 11, a three-member bench of the Appellate Division, led by Senior Justice Md. Ashfaqul Islam, issued an order suspending the High Court’s 10-year sentence for BNP Chairperson Khaleda Zia in the Zia Orphanage Trust corruption case.
At the same time, the Appellate Division granted Khaleda Zia’s leave to appeal (a petition seeking permission to appeal) against the sentence in this case.
The Anti-Corruption Commission filed the case in July 2008 at Ramna Police Station in Dhaka against Khaleda Zia and five others, alleging the embezzlement of government funds in the name of the Orphanage Trust. Although the charge sheet was submitted in 2009, the case’s charges were formally framed in March 2014.
Subsequently, on February 8, 2018, the trial court sentenced Khaleda Zia to five years in prison and imposed a fine. Khaleda Zia appealed this verdict to the High Court, which later increased her sentence to 10 years after a hearing.
Following the release of the High Court’s full verdict, Khaleda Zia filed two separate leave-to-appeal petitions in the Appellate Division in 2019. After a long delay, the hearing on this matter took place yesterday (Sunday). During the hearing, Anti-Corruption Commission lawyer Asif Hasan argued that Khaleda Zia did not embezzle the trust funds; the funds remained within the trust. Following the hearing, the Appellate Division scheduled an order for Monday, November 11.
Meanwhile, after the fall of the Awami government, the President pardoned Khaleda Zia’s sentences in both the Orphanage Trust and Charitable Trust cases.
When questioned about the need for an appeal hearing despite the presidential pardon, Khaleda Zia’s lawyers stated that Khaleda Zia respects the law. Although the President granted a pardon that includes an element of clemency, Khaleda Zia does not believe in clemency, as she maintains she committed no crime. She instructed her legal team to seek a resolution of the cases through the legal process.
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