Warrant against prominent editor: Bangladesh’s Editors’ Council expresses concern

The council in a statement said the arrest warrant for the prominent editor was “an attempt to intimidate and harass the press and the journalists concerned.” The Sampadak Parishad (Editors’ Council) Monday expressed deep concern over the recent events surrounding the issuance of arrest warrant against Prothom Alo Editor and Publisher Matiur Rahman and five […]

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An Indian vendor arranges newspapers reporting the US-Bangla Airlines plane crash in Nepal at a newspaper stand in Siliguri on March 13, 2018. Forty-nine people were killed when a Bangladeshi plane crashed and burst into flames near Kathmandu airport on March 12, in the worst aviation disaster to hit Nepal in nearly three decades. Officials said there were 71 people on board the US-Bangla Airlines plane from Dhaka when it crashed just east of the runway and skidded into a nearby football field. / AFP PHOTO / DIPTENDU DUTTA

January 21, 2020

The council in a statement said the arrest warrant for the prominent editor was “an attempt to intimidate and harass the press and the journalists concerned.”

The Sampadak Parishad (Editors’ Council) Monday expressed deep concern over the recent events surrounding the issuance of arrest warrant against Prothom Alo Editor and Publisher Matiur Rahman and five of his colleagues.

The council in a statement said the arrest warrant for the prominent editor was “an attempt to intimidate and harass the press and the journalists concerned.”

Following is the full statement:

While thanking the honourable High Court for granting bail, the Sampadak Parishad expresses its deep concern at the recent events surrounding the issuance of arrest warrant against Matiur Rahman, editor and publisher of Prothom Alo; Anisul Hoque, associate editor; and four staff members of the daily in connection with the accidental death by electrocution of school student Naimul Abrar Rahat and subsequent house raids by police.

While the cause of justice, for which we have full respect, could have been equally served by issuing a summon to Matiur Rahman and others, especially when the former was not even present on the occasion, the move to arrest the prominent editor and his colleagues clearly signals an attempt to intimidate and harass the press and the journalists concerned. We have also noticed with alarm the unusual haste with which the arrest warrants were issued and the police going into action.

These moves have added to the already restrictive atmosphere within which the media in Bangladesh are forced to function at the moment due to the operation of anti-free press laws like the Digital Security Act, ICT Act, etc. including the defamation laws. The rising misuse and abuse of these laws have also caused the media to suffer from regular harassment and self-censorship. We are forced to express the fear that under present conditions it is becoming increasingly difficult for the media to fulfill its constitutionally guaranteed role.

We demand that Matiur Rahman and all others be guaranteed full protection under the law and their media institutions not be forced to suffer from any form of harassment.

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