Editorial

Limon tragedy goes on

High level intervention needed
A hapless victim of the use of arbitrary power by the law-enforcers, the teenage boy Limon has now landed in jail. The police have deprived the boy of a complete course of treatment of his amputated leg in order to produce him in a Jhalakathi court for hearing in an arms case. He was undergoing treatment at the orthopaedic Pangu Hospital in Dhaka after being shot in the leg by members of the Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) near his home in Jhalakathi. It was a double jeopardy for Limon and his family members. The Pangu Hospital authority released him though he was still recovering. Even the request from the chairman of the National Human Right Commission to keep the victim under treatment for some more days could not prevail upon the hospital authority. This is how a victim of mistake by law-enforcers has now been subjected to further torture, apparently because the boy's father had sued the members of RAB for crippling his son. This is not only an inexcusable wrong done to an innocent boy from a poor household, but also an instance of gross human rights violation. It would be worthwhile to note here that the RAB is already under scrutiny by the local as well international human rights watch bodies, the civil society and the media for their records in extra-judicial killings. Manifestly, this is a reprehensible attempt by the police at covering up the grave offence of wrongly shooting college student Limon by indicting him in a trumped-up criminal charge. Unfortunately, the home minister washed her hands of the matter by saying it is before the court. Seemingly, the police, in connivance with the higher authorities are bent upon protecting themselves at the expense of a poor, unsuspecting citizen's career and life. In this situation nothing short of the intervention from the highest authority can save Limon and his family from further tragedy.