Government Sentences Bangladeshi Activists to Prison for an Unfavorable Report

Government Sentences Bangladeshi Activists to Prison for an Unfavorable Report


Two prominent human rights activists who have tracked extrajudicial killings ⁣and disappearances in Bangladesh were sentenced on Thursday to two years in prison, ‌raising alarm about a new escalation in ​quashing dissent.

The ‍Dhaka⁢ Cyber ‍Tribunal, a court in⁢ the capital city, found ‌Adilur Rahman Khan ⁣and ASM​ Nasiruddin Elan guilty of spreading misinformation under the country’s information​ technology​ act. The law‌ grants wide-ranging powers of arrest and prosecution when ​dealing with anything the government finds defamatory.

It‍ was ‌the latest example ⁣of a widespread campaign by ⁣Prime Minister ‍Sheikh Hasina to use the judiciary, among other institutions that she has⁢ largely captured in her 14 years at the helm, to harass and⁣ bog down dissenting⁢ voices as she ⁣firms her‍ grip over the nation of 170 million ahead of the next election. The country’s courtrooms ⁤are crowded with⁣ members of the opposition, ‍activists and‍ journalists ‌enmeshed in​ an increasingly Kafkaesque⁣ judicial system.

The ⁣case against Mr. Khan and Mr. Elan, leaders of the⁤ human rights group Odhikar, stems from a fact-finding report by ‌their group about a brutal ‌episode a decade ago in ⁤Dhaka. The ⁣report,⁢ released in 2013, found that the police had committed ​grave ⁤abuses in clearing a rally organized by a hard-line Islamist organization.

The organization,‌ Hefazat-e-Islam Bangladesh, had brought the ⁤city to⁤ gridlock in May of that​ year with‍ a protest against comments and cartoons it ⁢considered offensive to the‍ Prophet Muhammad. In response, the police staged⁤ a ​late-night crackdown,⁤ cutting off⁣ electricity⁣ and⁢ unleashing violence. Opposition ​parties alleged a ​death toll in the hundreds, while reports in international news media estimated between a dozen and ⁢50 people. Odhikar’s⁤ report said it‍ had⁤ found the names of 61 people who‌ were killed.

Soon‍ after the​ report’s ‍release, Ms. Hasina’s government detained ‍both ⁤the activists, holding Mr.‌ Khan for 62 ​days⁢ and Mr. Elan for 25 days and calling‌ their report ⁣distorted⁢ and defamatory under the country’s information⁢ technology law. Ms. Hasina’s officials‌ maintained that no one ​was killed during the operation,​ and she⁣ told ⁣the Parliament that members ‌of Hefazat-e-Islam ⁤Bangladesh had faked deaths “by using red dye.”

In a‌ joint letter, ‍more than 30 international human rights organizations, including Human Rights Watch ⁢and Amnesty⁣ International, called the conviction of the two activists “retaliation for⁢ their ⁣work documenting ‌human⁢ rights violations in Bangladesh” and asked for their release.

The organizations said that ⁤while the‍ government had waged ⁣a⁢ continuing campaign of harassment against the ‍activists​ and Odhikar — including blocking⁢ access to funds and not renewing ‌the group’s registration — ‌the ⁢2013 case was revived recently after the United States imposed sanctions on officials ‍of the Rapid Action Battalion, the elite⁣ paramilitary force that is accused of‍ many human rights abuses. Bangladesh officials have blamed…

2023-09-15 04:34:46
Link from www.nytimes.com

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