Syed Shemul Parvez :
Although almost eight months have passed, the incident of Doctor Kazi Sabira Rahman alias Lipi, who was brutally murdered at her residence in Kalabagan on May 31, the clue of the murder remains uncovered. Despite the help of his relatives, tenants and modern technology for a long time, the police have not been able to find out any clue thereof.
Though, the case was transferred to the Police Bureau of Investigation (PBI) from the police, they are yet to find any ‘breakthrough’ in their probe into the murder of physician Kazi Sabira Rahman although several months have elapsed after the incident.
PBI Chief (DIG) Banaj Kumar Majumder has said there is no progress yet. “We have to do various things to unravel the mystery. However, no one has been identified so far. Until the killer is identified, we will say that the case has not progressed much, PBI Chief said.
About eight months have passed since this murder. But there is mystery in every part. Many times the investigators thought that the motive of the murder was going to be identified, but then it got no result. And in this way, Dr Sabira issue is stuck in the web of mystery.
Before renting the house in Kalabagan, Sabira lived in another flat on Bashiruddin Road in the same area.
Dr. Sabira’s second husband is former banker Shamsuddin Azad. He lives with his first wife and one child at his home in Shantinagar. Dr. Sabira’s first husband’s name is Dr. Obaidullah. After Obaidullah’s death in 2003, she married Shamsuddin Azad in 2006.
Sabira used to live at her mother’s house on Green Road before renting a separate house in Kalabagan where her first child Ahmed Tajwar and second daughter live with their grandmother.
But the questions arise that why she lives alone without husband-children even left the mother’s home?
However, Sabira’s first child Ahmed Tajwar claimed that they had no quarrel with their mother.
According to Tajwar, after the corona infection, Sabira started living in a separate house for the safety of her children. Tajwar also claims that there was no conflict with the stepfather.
Earlier, Officer-in-Charge (OC) of Kalabagan Police Station Paritosh Chandra Das, told the New Nation that victims’ relatives were questioned more than once about the cause and who was involved in the incident. But no evidence of involvement in the killing could be obtained from them.
On May 31, police recovered the body of Sabira from her flat in the city’s Kalabagan area. Sabira worked at the radiology department of the capital’s Green Life Hospital.
Following the incident, police detained three people – Kaniz Subarna, who shared the flat with Sabira, one of Subarna’s friends, and Ramzan, a security guard of the building – for questioning.