|  
  |  
  |  
  |  
RSS
  |  
  |  
May 28, 2012
 
 
 
 
 
 

Bangladesh court upholds removal of Yunus as bank head

Prof. Dr. Muhammed Yunus
9 March 2011 / REUTERS, DHAKA
A Bangladeshi court on Tuesday upheld an order removing Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus as head of the microlending bank he founded, a move seen as part of the government’s vendetta with him over his political ambitions. 

Yunus, 70, had been removed as head of Grameen Bank last week by the central bank at the government’s behest on grounds that he had stayed on past the legal retirement age of 60. In 2007, while Bangladesh was ruled by an interim military government, Yunus tried to set up a political party, but later  stepped back from the idea, saying it would not sit well with Bangladesh’s traditional politics and cycles of unrest. Though Yunus was unlikely to pose a threat to Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, his proposed party could well have challenged the prime minister’s party as he was extremely popular among poor voters.

On the eve of Tuesday’s court ruling, Yunus said his dismissal had been staged by Hasina’s government as part of its drive to take over the bank.  “This is a bank owned by poor women and that’s right now under threat because our government somehow feels ... that they would like to take control of the bank,” Yunus said by video link to a panel on microfinance in Washington. Action against Yunus coincides with increasing criticism of microlending in developing countries, including neighboring India, with officials accusing bankers of exploiting the poor. But analysts said the dismissal would annoy the country’s friends, including the United States, and could even provoke protests within the country.

 
Columnists
Weather
City>>
ISTANBUL
Sun Today Tue
14C°
22C°
15C°
23C°
15C°
22C°