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Ctg port workers confront shipping adviser over DP World deal
Shipping adviser urges protesting port workers to hold talks, assuring them their concerns would be heard
Ctg port workers confront shipping adviser over DP World deal
Shipping adviser urges protesting port workers to hold talks, assuring them their concerns would be heard
Staff Correspondent, Ctg
Photo: Dwaipayan Barua
Agitating workers and employees of Chattogram port today staged demonstrations in front of Shipping Adviser Brig Gen Sakhawat Hussain, protesting the government’s move to appoint a foreign operator at the port’s largest facility, the New Mooring Container Terminal (NCT).
The adviser reached Chattogram in the morning to hold separate meetings with port officials, law enforcement agencies and protesting workers amid the ongoing stalemate over the proposed deal with UAE-based firm DP World.
While travelling from Chattogram airport to the port’s administrative building via the jetty terminal, the adviser was forced to get out of his vehicle on the road in front of the administrative building gate after encountering protesters outside Port Gate No. 4 around 10:30am.
The demonstrators surrounded him, chanting slogans against DP World, the proposed agreement and senior officials of the Chittagong Port Authority (CPA), including its chairman.
Urging the protesters to engage in dialogue, Sakhawat said he had been working for the country for the past one and a half years and had never acted against national interests even not during his three-year posting in the Chattogram Hill Tracts.
Md Ibrahim Khokan, coordinator of Chattogram Bandar Rokkha Sangram Parishad, told the adviser that port workers were not acting against the state.
“We own the Chattogram port. I have served here for 32 years. We do not want any mafia, including DP World, to operate this port,” he said.
Khokan alleged that CPA Chairman SM Moniruzzaman had taken punitive measures against protest leaders over the past year and a half and demanded his removal.
The adviser urged the protesters to sit for talks inside a meeting room instead of blocking the road and assured them that he would listen to their concerns.
The demonstrators allowed him to proceed after he said he would meet them without the CPA chairman present.
Sakhawat asked them to sit in the meeting at the port’s conference room at noon after the emergency meeting with senior officials and department heads of the Chittagong Port Authority (CPA).
All operations at Chattogram Port remain suspended as the indefinite work abstention by workers and employees, enforced on Tuesday, continues.
The strike followed an eight-hour stoppage observed from Saturday to Monday by workers and employees protesting against the proposed lease of the New Mooring Container Terminal (NCT) to Dubai-based DP World. Container and cargo handling at the port’s jetties, deliveries from the yards, and vessel movements have come to a complete standstill.
Shipping adviser urges protesting port workers to hold talks, assuring them their concerns would be heard
Staff Correspondent, Ctg
Photo: Dwaipayan Barua
Agitating workers and employees of Chattogram port today staged demonstrations in front of Shipping Adviser Brig Gen Sakhawat Hussain, protesting the government’s move to appoint a foreign operator at the port’s largest facility, the New Mooring Container Terminal (NCT).
The adviser reached Chattogram in the morning to hold separate meetings with port officials, law enforcement agencies and protesting workers amid the ongoing stalemate over the proposed deal with UAE-based firm DP World.
While travelling from Chattogram airport to the port’s administrative building via the jetty terminal, the adviser was forced to get out of his vehicle on the road in front of the administrative building gate after encountering protesters outside Port Gate No. 4 around 10:30am.
The demonstrators surrounded him, chanting slogans against DP World, the proposed agreement and senior officials of the Chittagong Port Authority (CPA), including its chairman.
Urging the protesters to engage in dialogue, Sakhawat said he had been working for the country for the past one and a half years and had never acted against national interests even not during his three-year posting in the Chattogram Hill Tracts.
Md Ibrahim Khokan, coordinator of Chattogram Bandar Rokkha Sangram Parishad, told the adviser that port workers were not acting against the state.
“We own the Chattogram port. I have served here for 32 years. We do not want any mafia, including DP World, to operate this port,” he said.
Khokan alleged that CPA Chairman SM Moniruzzaman had taken punitive measures against protest leaders over the past year and a half and demanded his removal.
The adviser urged the protesters to sit for talks inside a meeting room instead of blocking the road and assured them that he would listen to their concerns.
The demonstrators allowed him to proceed after he said he would meet them without the CPA chairman present.
Sakhawat asked them to sit in the meeting at the port’s conference room at noon after the emergency meeting with senior officials and department heads of the Chittagong Port Authority (CPA).
All operations at Chattogram Port remain suspended as the indefinite work abstention by workers and employees, enforced on Tuesday, continues.
The strike followed an eight-hour stoppage observed from Saturday to Monday by workers and employees protesting against the proposed lease of the New Mooring Container Terminal (NCT) to Dubai-based DP World. Container and cargo handling at the port’s jetties, deliveries from the yards, and vessel movements have come to a complete standstill.
































