Top authors urge Bangladesh govt to halt blogger attacks

Petition has been signed by over 150 authors, some of them having won top literary awards


Afp May 22, 2015
A Bangladeshi social activist pays his last respects to slain blogger Avijit Roy who was hacked to death in Dhaka on February 26, 2015 ©Munir Uz Zaman (AFP/File)

DHAKA: Leading authors, including Booker prize winners Margaret Atwood and Yann Martell, called on Bangladesh's government Friday to put an end to a spate of deadly attacks on atheist bloggers.

Three bloggers have been hacked to death by suspected militants since February, with the latest victim, Ananta Bijoy Das, attacked with machetes during morning rush hour in the city of Sylhet earlier this month.

In a petition published in the London-based daily The Guardian, 150 authors called on Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and her government "to do all in their power to ensure that the tragic events of the last three months are not repeated, and to bring the perpetrators to justice".

"We are gravely concerned by this escalating pattern of violence against writers and journalists who are peacefully expressing their views," said the petition.

"Freedom of expression is a fundamental right under Bangladesh's constitution and under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights."

Bangladesh is an officially secular country but more than 90 percent of its 160 million population are Muslim.

The country has seen a rise in attacks by religious extremists in recent years, with the attacks on the bloggers drawing widespread criticism that a culture of impunity has been allowed to flourish.

Signatories include leading Indian authors Amitav Ghosh and Rohinton Mistry along with the Irish writer Colm Toibin and Norway's Karl Ove Knausgaard.

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