[The Committee to Protect
Journalists (CPJ) sent the following open letter
today to Prime Minister Khaleda Zia, drawing her attention to a recent
series of attacks and threats against journalists in Bangladesh. For
more
information, please contact CPJ Asia program coordinator Kavita Menon
in New York at +1-212-465-9344 ext. 140.]
July 23, 2003
Her Excellency Khaleda Zia
Prime Minister, People's Republic of Bangladesh
Office of the Prime Minister
Dhaka, Bangladesh
Via Facsimile: 011-880-1-811-3244
Your Excellency:
The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) is greatly alarmed by
a series of
recent threats and attacks against journalists in Bangladesh and
urges your
government to take immediate action to ensure that these crimes
are prosecuted vigorously.
On July 20, members of a criminal gang in the capital, Dhaka, brutally
assaulted Shafiq Shaheen, a reporter for the national Bengali-language
daily Manabzamin. The attack appeared to come in reprisal for an
article Shaheen had written one week earlier about the gang's illegal
activities in Dhaka's Dhanmondi neighborhood. Shaheen lives in Dhanmondi
and is the newspaper's regular stringer in the area.
On July 13, Manabzamin published an article by Shaheen detailing
an extortion scheme carried out by a group of local thugs. On July
20, members of this gang-who live in Dhanmondi and were easily recognized
by the reporter-stopped Shaheen on the street, slapped and kicked
him, and then took him to a house occupied by a man named Nuruzzaman
Ripon, who is believed to be the group's leader, according to CPJ
sources. There, they beat Shaheen with hockey sticks, striking blows
all over the reporter's head and body and causing severe injuries
to his back and legs.
Shaheen's relatives, who live nearby, summoned the police, who
arrived on the scene and initially arrested Shaheen along with several
of the gangsters. Once police confirmed that Shaheen was a journalist,
they released him, but they also released his assailants. The reporter's
relatives took him to a hospital for treatment.
The journalist's colleagues told CPJ that they are seriously concerned
about
Shaheen's safety, both while he is hospitalized and afterward, when
he will
return home to Dhanmondi. Manabzamin filed a criminal complaint
identifying
four of Shaheen's assailants, including the suspected gang leader,
Ripon.
Police arrested Ripon on July 20 but released him one day later,
according to Manabzamin. Dhanmondi police have refused to say why
or on whose
order he was released, according to CPJ sources. The whereabouts
of the four
identified suspects are currently unknown.
On July 19, unidentified gunmen fired on Mokter Hossain, a longtime
correspondent for the national Bengali-language daily Prothom Alo,
at his home in the northern district of Natore. Hossain was not
injured, and his assailants fled the scene.
While the precise motive of the attack remains uncertain, Hossain
and his colleagues believe that it was carried out in retaliation
for his work as a journalist. Before opening fire, the assailants
asked Hossain whether he worked for Prothom Alo. During the last
year, Prothom Alo has run a number of Hossain's articles from Natore,
including reports that certain local politicians shelter and even
serve as patrons to gang members and other criminals, according
to CPJ sources.
Hossain continues to fear for his safety, and sources told CPJ
that
family
members have advised him not to leave his house. Police have opened
an
inquiry into the shooting, but Prothom Alo is considering sending
one
of
their own correspondents to the area to conduct an independent
investigation.
On July 9, nearly identical death threats were mailed to seven
journalists
in Pirojpur, a district in southern Bangladesh. The handwritten
letters,
sent along with a piece of white cloth that some journalists took
to
represent death shrouds, were received by Arif Mostafa of the daily
Prothom
Alo, Muniruzzaman Nasim of the daily Ittefaq, Shafiul Huq Mithu
of the
daily
Janakantha, Fashiul Islam of the daily Manabzamin, Abul Kalam Azad
of
the
newspaper Dainik Janata, Zahirul Huq of the newspaper Dainik Dinkal,
and
Golam Kibria of the newspaper Dainik Purbanchal.
"You will have to pay very dearly for causing obstruction
to our
activities
and forcing us to go into hiding," the letters said, according
to the
English-language newspaper The Daily Star. "You have no right
to live
for
causing damage to the class struggle."
Though the message conveyed in the letters seemed to suggest the
involvement of leftist militants, the reporters targeted believe
the threat may
have come from a local businessman angered by recent articles alleging
that
he used strong-arm tactics to secure a road-building contract from
the
government. Police are investigating the case, and plainclothes
officers are
providing security to the journalists.
As an independent organization of journalists dedicated to defending
our
colleagues worldwide, CPJ strongly urges Your Excellency to make
the prosecution of attacks against the press a priority for your
administration. Local journalists tell CPJ that police seldom adequately
investigate such attacks, with the result that criminals apparently
believe they can target journalists with impunity.
CPJ respectfully asks to be kept informed about the progress of
efforts to prosecute those responsible for the threats and assaults
outlined above. We
also request information about any other steps Your Excellency takes
to curb
the high incidence of attacks against the press in Bangladesh.
We thank you for your attention to these urgent matters and await
your response.
Sincerely,
Ann K. Cooper
Executive Director
CC:
Bangladesh Centre for Development, Journalism, and Communication
Media Watch
Commonwealth Journalists Association
South Asian Journalists Association
American Society of Newspaper Editors
Amnesty International
Article 19 (United Kingdom)
Artikel 19 (The Netherlands)
Canadian Journalists for Free Expression
Freedom Forum
Freedom House
Human Rights Watch
Index on Censorship
International Center for Journalists
International Federation of Journalists
International PEN
International Press Institute
Lorne W. Craner, United States Assistant Secretary for Democracy,
Human
Rights, and Labor
The Newspaper Guild
The North American Broadcasters Association
Overseas Press Club
Reporters Sans Frontières
Sergio Vieira de Mello, United Nations High Commissioner for Human
Rights
The Society of Professional Journalists
World Association of Newspapers
World Press Freedom Committee
==
Committee to Protect Journalists
330 Seventh Avenue -- 12th floor
New York, NY 10001
phone: 212-465-1004
fax: 212-465-9568
e-mail:info@cpj.org
http://www.cpj.org
|