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2
December 2005
Reporters
Without Borders voiced deep concern today about
a dramatic deterioration in the security situation
in Bangladesh and its impact on the press after
three journalists were injured in an Islamist
bombing, two reporters were beaten by police,
a newspaper correspondent was threatened by the
head of a madrassa and a ministers supporters
made a bonfire of copies of an independent daily,
all in the past 10 days.
Despite
government assurances that security is improving,
the increase in attacks and bombings is exposing
the press and public to new risks, the press
freedom organisation said. This is partly
a result of the attitude of the current government
which, instead of combating these extremist excesses,
has preferred to crack down on the journalists
and human rights activists who issued warnings
about this new threat.
Starting
with the most recent, the incidents of the past
10 days are as follows:
A
member of the Islamist movement Jamayetul Mujahideen
Bangladesh set off a bomb outside a public building
in Gazipur, north of Dhaka, on 1 December, killing
at least one person and injuring about 30 others,
including three journalists who were covering
a demonstration. The three reporters were Nazrul
Islam Badami, the correspondent of the daily The
New Nation, who was very badly hurt, and Belal
Hossain of the BSS news agency and Aminul Islam
of the local newspaper Ajker Janata, who
also had to be hospitalised.
A
group of supporters of housing minister Alamgir
Kabir made a bonfire with dozens of copies of
the daily newspaper Janakantha on 28 November
after it ran a story about a physical attack by
Kabir on one of the newspapers reporters.
The
principal of a madrassa in the southern town of
Lohagora made death threats on 27 November against
Maruf Samdani, the local correspondent of the
national daily Prothom Alo, after the newspaper
ran a story about alleged embezzlement by the
principal.
Channel
I television reporter Mahbub Matin was beaten
by police while covering a demonstration by the
opposition Awami League on 21 November and had
to spend the next six days in hospital, where
plain-clothes police kept him under close surveillance.
Matins cameraman, Jahid Hasan, was also
injured during the demonstration. Matin told journalists
he thought the attitude of the police was strange.
He also questioned the seriousness of the enquiry
into his beating, since the policemen who hit
him were the ones in charge of the investigation.
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