Banking pioneer challenges sacking

Muhammad Yunus takes legal action after his removal as head of micro-lender Grameen Bank by Bangladesh’s central bank.

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Muhammad Yunus, the Bangladeshi Nobel laureate, has launched a legal battle against his removal from the post of managing director of the pioneering microlender Grameen Bank, which he founded, according to his lawyers.

The filing came a day after the central bank ordered him out of his post at the bank on the grounds that he had overstayed as head of operations in violation of the law.

Yunus petitioned Bangladesh’s high court to reverse the government order. Sara Hossain, a lawyer, said Yunus challenged the decision as illegal.

The court was to hold a formal hearing later on Thursday.

Yunus, 70, set up Grameen Bank and has been its managing director since 2000.

Lauded abroad by politicians and financiers, he has been under attack from the government of Hasina Wajed since late last year, after a Norwegian documentary suggested that Grameen Bank was dodging taxes.
   
Yunus has denied any financial irregularities, and Grameen Bank has said Yunus will remain in his post.

The government owns a 25 per cent stake in the bank, while the remainder is owned by its borrowers.

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Source: Al Jazeera, News Agencies

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