05 April
2013
IFJ Calls
for Release of Four Arrested Bloggers in Bangladesh
Media
Release: Bangladesh
April 5, 2013
The
International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) joins partners and associates in
Bangladesh in calling for the release of four men arrested on charges of
posting blog content offensive to religious principles.
According to information received from
the IFJ’s partners under the South Asia Media Solidarity Network (SAMSN),
Subrata Adhikari Shuvo, Russel Parvez and Mashiur Rahman Biplob, were arrested
late on April 1 and remanded to seven days for interrogation the following day.
On April 3, Asif Mohiuddin was arrested and remanded to three days in police
custody the following day.
Political tensions have been running
high in Bangladesh for two months, since spontaneous youth protests erupted in
the capital city of Dhaka after a tribunal constituted to try alleged war
criminals from the country’s 1971 war of liberation, turned in a guilty verdict
against an accused member of the Islamic party, the Jamaat-e-Islami (JEI), but
was then seen to have delivered too lenient a sentence.
The protesters occupied a prominent
square in Dhaka city where they continue to
demonstrate, even as the movement has spread to other parts of the country and
escalated its demands to a possible ban on the JEI.
The Islamist party has retaliated by
accusing the demonstrators of insulting the majority faith of Bangladesh in
their slogans and their frequent blog-posts. Some of the blogspot content
alleged to have been posted by the demonstrators is believed to have been
doctored by the political party, to strengthen its case. Counter demonstrations
by the JEI have been fired upon by the police, resulting in a number of deaths.
The arrest of the four bloggers is seen
as an effort by the ruling Awami League party to neutralise the
counter-mobilisation by the Islamist party.
Journalists in Bangladesh are
disturbed by these developments and by the government’s stated intent to
monitor blog content and initiate criminal action against alleged offenders.
The IFJ joins journalists and other free
speech advocates in Bangladesh
in calling on the authorities to release the four youths in custody and work
towards an understanding with journalists and civil society groups on the broad
parameters of the right to free speech, which is guaranteed by the constitution
of Bangladesh .
For further information contact IFJ
Asia-Pacific on +612 9333 0919
The IFJ represents more than 600,000
journalists in 131 countries
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