Bangladeshi auto driver sues over movie mobile mix-up

November 01, 2017 01:52 pm | Updated 02:08 pm IST - Dhaka

THRISSUR,16/09/2012.A man talking his mobile phone against the backdrop of a mobile tower in Thrissur, Kerala. The environment ministry has issued an advisory asking the department of telecommunications not to permit new mobile towers within one- kilometre radius of existing ones to prevent the impact of electromagnetic radiation (EMR) on birds and bees. It also suggested location-wise GIS mapping of all cell phone towers to help in monitoring the population of birds and bees in and around the mobile tower area and wildlife protection area.Photo:K_K_Mustafah.

THRISSUR,16/09/2012.A man talking his mobile phone against the backdrop of a mobile tower in Thrissur, Kerala. The environment ministry has issued an advisory asking the department of telecommunications not to permit new mobile towers within one- kilometre radius of existing ones to prevent the impact of electromagnetic radiation (EMR) on birds and bees. It also suggested location-wise GIS mapping of all cell phone towers to help in monitoring the population of birds and bees in and around the mobile tower area and wildlife protection area.Photo:K_K_Mustafah.

A Bangladeshi auto-rickshaw driver is suing for damages after his phone number was used in a movie, leading to a barrage of calls from female fans of the film’s star that he says nearly destroyed his marriage.

Ijajul Mia told AFP on Wednesday that he had received hundreds of calls every day since the release of Rajniti in June, in which the country’s top movie star Shakib Khan is seen giving the number to his girlfriend.

“The use of my number in the movie made my life completely miserable,” he said.

“Every day I got hundreds of of calls from mostly female fans of Shakib Khan. They would say ‘Hello Shakib, I am your fan. Do you have two minutes to talk to me?’”

Mr. Mia said he had been asked to leave his family home since the movie’s release and his new wife had threatened to leave him.

He argued that he couldn’t take a new number because his clients knew the old one and he would lose business.

“I am a newly married man with one daughter. When these calls started coming, my wife thought that I was having an affair,” he said.

One fan even travelled 500 kilometres to see him after learning where he lived.

Now Mr. Mia wants to sue Mr. Khan, who also produced and directed the movie, for damages of five million taka ($60,975).

His lawyer M. A Majed said he had filed the suit this week, but the district judge was initially hesitant to accept it.

“The judge ordered an investigation after we submitted evidence showing how these phone calls have almost destroyed the life of Ijajul,” Mr. Majed told AFP .

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