Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 14th June 2026, 4:46 PM
A controversial arbitration tribunal, known locally as a salish, has reportedly bypasses formal judicial processes by issuing a settlement of 20 lakh BDT to resolve a fatal assault. The incident, which took place in the remote Sonabaluya area within the Paratali Union of Raipura Upazila under the Narsingdi district, involved several influential local figures, including an active Union Parishad (UP) member. The arbitrators allegedly absolved the primary murder suspects of all accountability in exchange for the financial penalty.
According to testimonies provided by local residents, the dispute originated on 29 May over the picking of Kadamba flowers (Kadam phool). An argument erupted between Sajal Miah, the son of Mobarak Miah from Sonabaluya village, and Moktar Hossain, a resident of the same locality. The confrontation rapidly escalated into physical violence when Moktar Hossain and his associates reportedly struck Sajal Miah on the head with wooden sticks, inflicting critical injuries.
Sajal Miah sustained a severe, bleeding wound to the left side of his skull during the physical attack.
He was initially rushed to the Raipura Upazila Health Complex by family members seeking immediate emergency medical intervention.
Following a preliminary medical assessment, attending doctors noted the severity of the neurological trauma and advised that the patient be transferred to a specialized facility.
Sajal Miah was subsequently admitted to the National Institute of Neurosciences and Hospital in the capital city of Dhaka.
He remained under intensive care at the specialised hospital in Dhaka for a continuous period of 14 days. Despite receiving medical treatment for his head injuries, Sajal Miah succumbed to his wounds and passed away on 12 June. His body was transported back to his native village, where his mortal remains were buried in a local graveyard on Saturday night.
Following the death of Sajal Miah, allegations emerged that the accused perpetrator, Moktar Hossain, along with his associates, launched a campaign of intimidation against the grieving family. The suspects exerted various forms of pressure on the victim’s relatives, explicitly obstructing them from visiting the police station to lodge a formal first information report (FIR).
In an attempt to permanently suppress the criminal incident, a local arbitration meeting was hastily convened and concluded before the victim’s body was even laid to rest. The salish was led directly by Paratali Union Parishad Member Yusuf Miah. During this unauthorised tribunal, the UP member and several local influential figures arbitrated the murder case, imposing a financial fine of 20 lakh BDT on the perpetrators as a condition for absolute settlement, whilst strictly advising the family against pursuing legal action.
The elder sister of the deceased, Jasmine, expressed her profound distress over the community’s response to her brother’s killing.
“Moktar Hossain brutally killed my brother by striking him on the head,” Jasmine stated. “The UP member and the local people have settled the entire matter in exchange for twenty lakh BDT. However, we have not yet received any of this money in our hands. Will I get my brother back in exchange for twenty lakh BDT? If my brother were alive, he could have earned much more than this. His life had only just begun.”
Following the public disclosure of the illegal settlement, visits to the locality revealed that the accused, Moktar Hossain, and his family members had completely absconded from their residence.
When questioned regarding the event, Paratali UP Member Yusuf Miah explicitly admitted to organizing and executing the arbitration to settle the murder allegation for 20 lakh BDT.
“I, along with a few local individuals, came together to resolve the matter through mutual settlement,” Yusuf Miah confirmed. However, when pressed by reporters to explain whether an arbitration council possesses any legal authority under state law to settle a capital offense such as murder, the public representative failed to provide any legally satisfactory response.
The Officer-in-Charge (OC) of Raipura Police Station, Mujibur Rahman, confirmed that no official case has been filed with the police department regarding the incident so far. OC Mujibur Rahman stated that under the penal code of Bangladesh, a murder case is absolutely non-compoundable and cannot be legally resolved through out-of-court compromises or financial settlements. He assured that law enforcement officials would establish immediate contact with the victim’s family and initiated that strict legal actions will be taken as soon as a formal complaint is registered.
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