Zia remains a popular figure in Bangladesh. Her imprisonment has caused riots [File: Andrew Biraj/Reuters]
Zia remains a popular figure in Bangladesh. Her imprisonment has caused riots [File: Andrew Biraj/Reuters]
Jailed Bangladesh opposition leader and former prime minister Khaleda
Zia has been admitted into a Dhaka hospital following a court order in
response to her deteriorating health.
Zia, 73, was taken from the abandoned 19th-century prison where she is
serving her sentence on corruption charges to a top medical university
clinic in the heart of the capital on Saturday, according to an AFP news
agency photographer at the scene.
"She has been admitted to the Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical
University hospital," director of the clinic Brigadier General Abdullah
al-Harun told AFP.
Her transfer to the hospital came just days after the country's high
court ordered immediate treatment for Zia after her lawyers argued the
government was putting her health at risk by refusing her specialised
care.
Facing further charges of graft at a hearing early last month, she said
she was "extremely ill" and that her arm and leg were becoming
paralysed.
Her lawyer Zainal Abedin told AFP this week that Zia would be able to
choose her own doctors from outside the state-run hospital.
Zia's supporters have remained loyal through her legal troubles [Mohammad Ponir Hossain/Reuters]
Zia was sentenced to five years for corruption in February, triggering
clashes between police and thousands of supports of the Bangladesh
Nationalist Party, which she heads.
Lord Alex Carlile QC, a member of Zia's legal team, told Al Jazeera her
sentence is a "political ploy" meant to keep her out of elections that
scheduled to take place in December.
Zia is appealing the verdict which bars her from standing in the
election. She remains imprisoned while she fights dozens of other
violence and graft charges.
Zia was once an ally of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina of the Bangladesh
Awami League party who turned into a fierce political rival.
She is the only inmate in Dhaka Central Jail that was built under British colonial rule and declared abandoned in 2016.
Last month, authorities turned a room of the jail into a court - a move her lawyers said was illegal.
Her party boycotted the 2014 election in which Hasina returned to power but is expected to contest the election due in December.
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SOURCE: Al Jazeera and news agencies
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