Bangladesh arrests editor for 'defaming' minister

Editor arrested after posting that his life was in danger and the minister should be "held responsible" if he died


Afp August 18, 2015
Bangladeshi security personnel stand guard outside the main prison in Dhaka. PHOTO: AFP

DHAKA: Bangladesh police said Tuesday they had arrested a senior journalist for "defaming" a government minister on Facebook, the latest in a series of cases that have sparked concern over freedom of speech.

Probir Sikdar, editor of an online news portal, was arrested in Dhaka on Monday after posting that his life was in danger and that the minister should be "held responsible" if he died.

Read: Bangladesh arrests Briton over blogger murders

The 55-year-old journalist was taken to the central town of Faridpur, where he was charged under a controversial law and remanded in custody for three days.

"Sikdar was sued under the Information and Communication Technology Act of Bangladesh for defaming a minister on social media," Faridpur police chief Jamil Hasan told AFP.

Rights activists held demonstrations against his arrest in Dhaka, demanding the government scrap Section 57 of the Information and Communication Technology Act, which criminalises publishing information online that could "prejudice the image of the state".

"This section of the Internet act is draconian and conflicts with Bangladesh's identity as a democratic nation," activist Imran H Sarker told AFP.

"It should be abolished as soon as possible to defend the freedom of speech."

A Bangladeshi court last week convicted a publisher of a leading newspaper and his deputy for contempt of court over criticism of a judge.

Read: Bangladesh newspaper head convicted for criticising judge

In a separate case last week the editor of a pro-opposition newspaper was sentenced to three years in jail for failing to declare his assets, in what his supporters said was an attempt to silence a critic of the government.

Activists also say the government has not done enough to stem the killings of secular bloggers, four of whom have been hacked to death since the start of the year in Muslim-majority Bangladesh.

Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan Kamal defended Sikdar's arrest, saying the journalist should have gone to police rather than posting on Facebook.

But the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), a New York-based media rights group, demanded Sikdar's immediate release.

"Jailing journalists for publishing threats made against them further undermines confidence in Bangladesh's legal system," said CPJ Asia Program research associate Sumit Galhotra.

COMMENTS

Replying to X

Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.

For more information, please see our Comments FAQ