Rozina Islam – Radio Free https://www.radiofree.org Independent Media for People, Not Profits. Wed, 03 May 2023 14:55:41 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://www.radiofree.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/cropped-Radio-Free-Social-Icon-2-32x32.png Rozina Islam – Radio Free https://www.radiofree.org 32 32 141331581 CPJ joins call for Bangladesh authorities to end crackdown against journalists and online critics https://www.radiofree.org/2023/05/03/cpj-joins-call-for-bangladesh-authorities-to-end-crackdown-against-journalists-and-online-critics/ https://www.radiofree.org/2023/05/03/cpj-joins-call-for-bangladesh-authorities-to-end-crackdown-against-journalists-and-online-critics/#respond Wed, 03 May 2023 14:55:41 +0000 https://cpj.org/?p=284836 On World Press Freedom Day, Wednesday, May 3, the Committee to Protect Journalists joined five civil society organizations in a statement calling on the Bangladesh government to end the harassment of journalists and protect media freedom ahead of the national elections scheduled for January 2024.

The statement calls on the Bangladesh government to immediately suspend the use of the draconian Digital Security Act pending its repeal or amendment in line with international human rights law. The DSA has repeatedly been used against journalists in retaliation for their work on topics including governmental policies, corruption, and illicit business practices.

The statement notes the March arrest of Shamsuzzaman Shams, a correspondent for the newspaper Prothom Alo, under the DSA and the subsequent DSA investigations opened into Shams, Prothom Alo editor Matiur Rahman, executive editor Sajjad Sharif, an unnamed camera operator, and other unidentified people in connection to Shams’ reporting on price hikes. Shams has since been released on bail.

The statement expresses concern regarding the weaponization of other laws against journalists and the media, noting the ongoing investigation of Prothom Alo special correspondent Rozina Islam under the colonial-era Official Secrets Act and the penal code in apparent retaliation for her reporting on alleged government corruption and irregularities in the public health sector at the outset of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Read the full statement here.


This content originally appeared on Committee to Protect Journalists and was authored by Committee to Protect Journalists.

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CPJ, rights groups call on Bangladesh to cease harassment of Rozina Islam in public letter https://www.radiofree.org/2023/02/27/cpj-rights-groups-call-on-bangladesh-to-cease-harassment-of-rozina-islam-in-public-letter/ https://www.radiofree.org/2023/02/27/cpj-rights-groups-call-on-bangladesh-to-cease-harassment-of-rozina-islam-in-public-letter/#respond Mon, 27 Feb 2023 02:00:00 +0000 https://cpj.org/?p=265799 Sent by email

Mr. Asaduzzaman Khan, MP
Minister of Home Affairs
People’s Republic of Bangladesh
minister@mha.gov.bd

Mr. Zahid Maleque, MP
Minister of Health and Family Welfare
People’s Republic of Bangladesh
minister@mohfw.gov.bd

Dear Ministers Khan and Maleque,

We, the undersigned press freedom and human rights groups, write to seek your leadership in ensuring an immediate end to the harassment of Bangladeshi journalist and human rights defender Rozina Islam. Islam faces an ongoing investigation under the colonial-era Official Secrets Act and the penal code in apparent retaliation for merely exercising her right to freedom of expression through her reporting on alleged government corruption and irregularities in the public health sector at the outset of the COVID-19 pandemic. If formally charged and convicted under the Official Secrets Act, Islam faces up to 14 years in prison, or a death sentence. Islam was arbitrarily detained for seven days in May 2020, when a health ministry official filed the complaint accusing the journalist of taking photos of official documents in the ministry’s secretariat, leading to the ongoing investigation.

Since her release on bail, Islam has been routinely summoned for court appearances, many of which have been unduly delayed and rescheduled in violation of her right to a fair trial as guaranteed under Article 14 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), to which Bangladesh is a state party. In August 2021, the Bangladesh Financial Intelligence Unit asked banks to provide transaction details of any accounts held by Islam, in an apparent move to further intimidate the journalist.

Islam continues to face unlawful restrictions on her right to freedom of movement in violation of Article 12 of the ICCPR. She was granted bail on the condition that she surrender her passport, imposing an effective travel ban despite the fact that there is no provision for conditional bail in the Code of Criminal Procedure. In January 2022, a Dhaka court temporarily permitted the return of her passport for six months. Since then, however, Islam has been obliged to request her passport from the court whenever she plans to travel abroad.

After 14 months of investigation, the detective branch of the Dhaka police submitted its final report to court in July 2022, and called for the case against Islam to be dropped due to lack of evidence. Seven months later, in January 2023, the health ministry official filed a naraji (no-confidence) petition against the detective branch’s report, in response to which the court directed the Police Bureau of Investigation to further investigate Islam. We are deeply disturbed by a government official’s use of a naraji petition to prolong the investigation of a journalist under a national security law, particularly given that police have failed to produce a charge sheet or present any concrete evidence indicating that she has committed a crime.

Islam’s work, for which she received the United States Department of State’s Anti-Corruption Champions Award in 2022, is a public service, not a crime, and should be protected under Sections 4 and 5 of the Disclosure of Public Interest Information (Protection) Act.

We urge the authorities to fully respect and protect the human rights of journalist and human rights defender Rozina Islam, including her right to a fair trial, and to immediately cease all forms of judicial harassment against her, facilitating the return of her passport from judicial custody, and ensuring that she is not subjected to further retaliation for her work.

Signed:

Amnesty International

Anti-Death Penalty Asia Network

Capital Punishment Justice Project

Coalition For Women In Journalism

Committee to Protect Journalists

CIVICUS: World Alliance for Citizen Participation

Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma

Free Media Movement

Front Line Defenders

International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH), within the framework of the Observatory for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders

International Federation of Journalists

International Women’s Media Foundation

Overseas Press Club of America

Pakistan Press Foundation

PEN America

PEN Bangladesh

PEN International

Reporters Without Borders

Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights

South Asian Journalists Association

World Organisation Against Torture (OMCT), within the framework of the Observatory for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders


CC: Mr. Anisul Haq
Minister of Law, Justice, and Parliament
People’s Republic of Bangladesh
secretary@lawjusticediv.gov.bd

CC: Mr. A.K. Abdul Momen, MP
Minister of Foreign Affairs
People’s Republic of Bangladesh
fm@mofa.gov.bd


This content originally appeared on Committee to Protect Journalists and was authored by Madeline Earp.

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‘Completely unclear’: Mushtaq Ahmed’s lawyer seeks answers on how the Bangladeshi writer died in jail https://www.radiofree.org/2022/02/28/completely-unclear-mushtaq-ahmeds-lawyer-seeks-answers-on-how-the-bangladeshi-writer-died-in-jail/ https://www.radiofree.org/2022/02/28/completely-unclear-mushtaq-ahmeds-lawyer-seeks-answers-on-how-the-bangladeshi-writer-died-in-jail/#respond Mon, 28 Feb 2022 23:01:56 +0000 https://cpj.org/?p=170742 One year after renowned Bangladeshi writer Mushtaq Ahmed died in jail, the circumstances of his death remain murky. While an investigative committee formed by the Home Ministry claimed he died of “natural causes,” his former lawyer Jyotirmoy Barua believes that Ahmed may have died of health issues that arose after alleged torture. 

In May 2020, the Rapid Action Battalion, an elite unit of the Bangladeshi police under U.S. sanction since last year for gross human rights violations, detained Ahmed and cartoonist Kabir Kishore from their Dhaka residences and accused them of violating the Digital Security Act (DSA). A first information report, which opens a police investigation, accused Ahmed, Kishore, and four others of running the popular Facebook page “I am Bangladeshi,” which featured political and social commentary on COVID-19.

Kishore told CPJ after his release last March that during the first days of his detention, authorities tortured him by repeatedly beating him in the head before taking him to a Rapid Action Battalion office. There, he found Ahmed and learned that he had been abused too. Ahmed “told me he was tortured by electric shock,” Kishore told CPJ. (It is not possible for CPJ to independently verify the allegations, but they are in line with details of abuse in custody in Bangladesh.)

Denied bail at least six times, Ahmed was in legal limbo for much of his detention. According to the DSA, authorities should have completed their investigation within 60 days, or sought an extension from a court. But his lawyer said that didn’t happen on time – authorities only filed a charge sheet after nine months of detention. 

He languished in jail for more than nine months before he suffered a heart attack, reports said, and died on February 25, 2021; his family claims there was a three-hour delay before he was admitted to the hospital, according to the United Nations

CPJ emailed the offices of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan, Law Minister Anisul Haq, Attorney General Abu Mohammad Amin Uddin, and Dhaka Metropolitan Police Commissioner Md Shafiqul Islam, for comment but did not receive any reply. Khandaker Al Moyeen, the director of the legal and media wing of the Rapid Action Battalion did not respond to CPJ’s request for comment sent via messaging app.

Barua, who represents formerly detained journalists Shafiqul Islam KajolJamal Mir, and Mahtabuddin Talukdar, spoke to CPJ via video call about Ahmed’s alleged torture and death, the reaction inside Bangladesh, and the dangers of the law used to detain Ahmed and Kishore. 

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Lawyer Jyotirmoy Barua says his client Mushtaq Ahmed died “for freedom of expression.” (Photo: Jyotirmoy Barua)

How did you find out about Mushtaq’s death?

I saw a Facebook post by one of my lawyer friends. I was very surprised that jail authorities did not directly communicate with me or family about his death. It was completely unexpected. [I had expected that] in a couple of days, he was going to be released on bail. 

In January 2021, I filed an application before the High Court division for bail for Mushtaq and Kishore. Due to the long list of cases, I had to wait for more than two months to get the matter heard. Mushtaq died on 25 February 2021. Subsequently, I managed to get the matter heard and Kishore was released on bail on 4 March 2021.

What was the reaction inside Bangladesh?

The reaction inside Bangladesh was furious. There were protests. Before Mushtaq’s death, I was one of the only people demanding the repeal of the Digital Security Act. After Mushtaq’s death, there was a radical change. More people, civil society organizations, and human rights defenders started asking for repeal of the law because it was so draconian that a writer like Mushtaq died in jail. 

The unfortunate thing is that earlier police seized his personal gadgets, computer, and mobile phones. On behalf of his wife, we filed an application before the International Crimes Tribunal of Dhaka to return those things because they are not relevant in the case. But surprisingly, the judge refused without giving any proper reason as to why those items should be kept in the custody of the police. That evidence cannot be used against the other accused because these criminal allegations are a matter of personal liability. We are going to file another application before the High Court division on that issue.

What is your reaction to the Home Ministry’s March 2021 report that Mushtaq died of “natural causes”? 

As Mushtaq’s lawyer, I expected that an independent inquiry should have been conducted into his death and the report should be published for public scrutiny. But now, other than some [basic details] the state provided to some newspapers, we do not know what is in that report. 

I am not aware of any other health complications that Mushtaq experienced besides some difficulties with his eyes. He never mentioned that he was feeling seriously bad; otherwise, I would have filed an application for medical support.

The cause of death itself remains unclear. Kishore alleged that Mushtaq was tortured. If Mushtaq was not released, if he was not exposed otherwise by any other events between his arrest and his death, then the torture and death should be considered connected events. In a case of death like this, if we consider this as a kind of homicide, then the causation is quite a serious issue. The people who tortured him under the custody of the state should have been made liable for his death. 

As soon as Mushtaq died, his body was handed over to the family and they had to complete the burial process straight away. We were so surprised that we could not even think straight at that time. The state said they conducted an autopsy report after he died, but his family and I did not see such a report. It could be torture. It could just have been a heart attack. Without access to the autopsy report or Home Ministry report, the death of Mushtaq remains completely unclear to us, even until today.

Law Minister Anisul Haq recently acknowledged that the Digital Security Act has been “misused and abused” and said that journalists would no longer face immediate arrest after a complaint is filed against them under the law. Are these actions enough to ensure that journalists will not face legal retaliation for their work? 

I have been dealing with cases of journalists for the last couple of years. Especially during the COVID-19 period, journalists were the worst victims of the DSA. Jamal Mir and Mahtabuddin Talukdar were in jail for more than one year under DSA cases. They were denied bail many times. 

After Mushtaq’s death, there was a reasonable conclusion that the use of the DSA was too harsh.

Although the Law Minister said repeatedly that a journalist will not be arrested immediately after a case is filed against them, actually the process is the other way around. In most cases, journalists are abducted or detained illegally having no case against them. If the police do not bring them in front of a magistrate after 24 hours, the detention becomes illegal under the Code of Criminal Procedure. Then, after two or three days, or a month later, they are implicated in the case under the DSA. In Mushtaq and Kishore’s case, they were picked up from their houses [and allegedly tortured] before a [first information report] was filed against them. [The first information report filed against Ahmed claimed he was arrested on May 5, when his wife told The Daily Star that he was in fact detained a day earlier.]

With regard to the DSA, I do not use the term “abused.” The law in itself is so vague, ambiguous and draconian that if someone uses it, that in itself is abuse. That is why we are calling for the law to be repealed.

What other mechanisms has the government used to target journalists?

Whether you speak about the DSA, the Official Secrets Act [a colonial-era law under which journalist Rozina Islam was detained in connection with her reporting on the COVID-19 pandemic], or the Bangladesh penal code, these are tools in hands of the state. The application of laws like the DSA and Official Secrets Act are about power. It is about how politicians are threatening the people of this country. People are being abducted, taken away forcefully from their residence without legal authority.

How should the world remember Mushtaq?

Mushtaq should be remembered as a writer and successful entrepreneur. He died for freedom of expression. Journalists should remember him as an icon, and continue raising their voices against violations of human rights and civil rights. They should not stop. They should not be afraid of any persecution because people are always there to stand by them. People should remember him as a fighter. He died fighting for his rights and the people of the country.


This content originally appeared on Committee to Protect Journalists and was authored by Sonali Dhawan/CPJ Asia Researcher.

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Bangladesh authorities order banks to disclose information on 12 journalists’ accounts https://www.radiofree.org/2021/09/28/bangladesh-authorities-order-banks-to-disclose-information-on-12-journalists-accounts/ https://www.radiofree.org/2021/09/28/bangladesh-authorities-order-banks-to-disclose-information-on-12-journalists-accounts/#respond Tue, 28 Sep 2021 17:49:12 +0000 https://cpj.org/?p=135342 Washington, D.C., September 28, 2021 — Bangladesh authorities must immediately drop their investigations into the bank accounts of 12 members of the press and commit to allowing the media to operate freely and independently, the Committee to Protect Journalists said today.

On August 11, the Bangladesh Financial Intelligence Unit, a government agency responsible for investigating money laundering and terrorist financing, ordered all scheduled banks to provide details of any accounts associated with Rozina Islam, a senior correspondent for the daily newspaper Prothom Alo, according to news reports and a person familiar with the case, who spoke to CPJ on the condition of anonymity, citing fear of reprisal. Islam is under investigation for allegedly photographing documents at the country’s Health Ministry without permission.

“Scheduled banks” refer to the 61 banks that are controlled and supervised by the government-owned Central Bank of Bangladesh.

Separately, on September 16, the Bangladesh Financial Intelligence Unit ordered banks to provide such information for an additional 11 journalists, according to various news reports and Muhammad Abdullah, city editor of The Daily Amardesh and president of a group within the Bangladesh Federal Union of Journalists, who spoke with CPJ via messaging app. The 11 journalists named in the September 16 order are also all executive members of several different journalist trade organizations, according to those news reports.

Authorities have not disclosed any reason for the order targeting those journalists, according to Abdullah, who said the reason behind the probe remains unclear.

“The Bangladesh Financial Intelligence Unit’s investigation of the bank accounts belonging to a dozen prominent journalists looks suspiciously like selective law enforcement aimed at intimidating the independent press,” said Steven Butler, CPJ’s Asia program coordinator. “Authorities should immediately drop these investigations, cease harassing journalists, and commit to allowing the media to operate openly and freely.”

According to the news reports and Abdullah, the 11 journalists are:

  • Farida Yasmin, senior subeditor of the privately owned Bengali-language newspaper The Daily Ittefaq and president of the National Press Club of Bangladesh
  • Elias Khan, special correspondent with the privately owned news outlet The Daily Amardesh—which has been prevented from publishing a print edition since 2013 and whose website was blocked domestically in 2020—and general secretary of the National Press Club of Bangladesh
  • Kader Gani Chowdhury, senior reporter with The Daily Amardesh and president of a group within the Dhaka Union of Journalists
  • Muhammad Abdullah, city editor of The Daily Amardesh and president of a group within the Bangladesh Federal Union of Journalists
  • Mohammad Shahidul Islam, subeditor of the privately owned Bengali-language daily newspaper The Daily Sangram and general secretary of a group within the Dhaka Union of Journalists
  • Sajjad Alam Khan Tapu, business editor of the privately owned news channel Jamuna TV and president of a group within the Dhaka Union of Journalists
  • Nurul Amin Rokon, news editor of the privately owned Bengali-language daily newspaper Daily Asia Bani and secretary general of a group within the Bangladesh Federal Union of Journalists
  • Molla Jalal, editor of the privately owned Bengali-language news website NNB and president of a group within the Bangladesh Federal Union of Journalists
  • Abdul Majid, special correspondent of the privately owned Bengali-language daily newspaper The Daily Samakal and secretary general of a group within the Bangladesh Federal Union of Journalists
  • Mursalin Nomani, senior reporter with the state-owned news agency Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha and president of Dhaka Reporters Unity, a local journalist training and press freedom group
  • Mosiur Rahman Khan, senior reporter with The Daily Samakal and general secretary of Dhaka Reporters Unity

Hasan Mahmud, the minister of information and broadcasting, told reporters at his office that the government can ask anyone for their bank details, and “if someone is transparent, there’s no reason to be worried about it,” according to The Dhaka Tribune.

The person familiar with Islam’s case said the August 11 order stemmed from an ongoing investigation by the Dhaka Metropolitan Police into a complaint filed by the country’s Health Ministry. On May 17, authorities arrested Islam for allegedly taking pictures of official documents at its Dhaka office, as CPJ documented at the time. She was released on bail on May 23, according to reports.

Islam has frequently reported on alleged corruption and mismanagement of the health sector’s COVID-19 response.

The ministry accused Islam of violating Sections 3 and 5 of the Official Secrets Act and Sections 379 and 411 of the penal code; if charged and convicted, she could face up to 14 years in prison or the death penalty, according to those laws.

On September 19, the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate Court in Dhaka rejected Islam’s request for the return of her two mobile phones and press identification card, which were seized during her arrest, and her passport, which was seized as a condition of her release on bail, according to news reports and the person familiar with the case.

Health Minister Zahid Malek did not respond to CPJ’s request for comment regarding Islam’s case sent via email.

CPJ emailed Md. Masud Biswas, executive director of the Bangladesh Financial Intelligence Unit; Md. Shafiqul Islam, commissioner of the Dhaka Metropolitan Police; and Ferdousi Shahriar, the deputy chief of mission at the Embassy of Bangladesh in Washington, D.C., for comment on the 12 investigations, but did not receive any replies.


This content originally appeared on Committee to Protect Journalists and was authored by Committee to Protect Journalists.

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CPJ sends letter to Bangladesh authorities over harassment of journalist Rozina Islam https://www.radiofree.org/2021/09/28/cpj-sends-letter-to-bangladesh-authorities-over-harassment-of-journalist-rozina-islam/ https://www.radiofree.org/2021/09/28/cpj-sends-letter-to-bangladesh-authorities-over-harassment-of-journalist-rozina-islam/#respond Tue, 28 Sep 2021 15:42:03 +0000 https://cpj.org/?p=135289 Mr. Anisul Huq
Minister of Law, Justice, and Parliamentary Affairs
Ministry of Law, Justice, and Parliamentary Affairs
People’s Republic of Bangladesh
secretary@lawjusticediv.gov.bd

CC: Mr. Asaduzzaman Khan
Minister of Home Affairs
Ministry of Home Affairs
People’s Republic of Bangladesh
WhatsApp +880 1711-541569
minister@mha.gov.bd

Dear Minister Anisul Huq,

The Committee to Protect Journalists, an independent non-governmental organization that champions press freedom around the world, writes to request that you drop legal proceedings against Prothom Alo journalist Rozina Islam and order the immediate return of items that were confiscated from her, including two cell phones, her passport, and her government-issued identity card.

On May 17, 2021, authorities arrested Islam, an award-winning investigative journalist specializing in covering health care issues, including alleged corruption at the Ministry of Health. Authorities held her for over five hours without any clear legal basis after she was accused of taking pictures of official documents lying openly on a desk at the Ministry of Health. She was subsequently jailed for seven days, after which she was granted bail under the colonial-era Official Secrets Act, and was ordered to surrender her passport.

We have a number of concerns about authorities’ treatment of Islam. Use of the Official Secrets Act, which allows for up to 14 years in prison or the death penalty upon conviction, is an inappropriate and extremely disproportionate legal remedy for Islam’s alleged actions. Charging journalists under this law only serves to discredit law enforcement in Bangladesh and strengthens the case that these charges are less about enforcing the law than seeking revenge against a journalist known for exposing corruption in the Ministry of Health.

In addition to these charges, Islam is being severely and unjustly punished. The government’s refusal to return her identity card makes it impossible for her to work as a journalist. The seizure of her cell phones hinders her work and severely undermines press freedom, given the sensitive reporting information contained on those devices, and compromises her personal security. The confiscation of her passport makes it impossible for her to accompany her husband for necessary medical treatment abroad. In another move aimed at intimidating Islam, last month the Financial Intelligence Unit asked banks to submit all account and transaction information involving the journalist.

This is pure harassment, and it needs to stop. We urge you to drop the charges against Islam and return her documents and devices immediately. The government of Bangladesh should not be creating obstacles for journalists who are merely doing their jobs.

Yours sincerely,

Steven Butler

Asia Program Coordinator
Committee to Protect Journalists


This content originally appeared on Committee to Protect Journalists and was authored by Committee to Protect Journalists.

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Bangladeshi authorities arrest journalist Rozina Islam under Official Secrets Act https://www.radiofree.org/2021/05/17/bangladeshi-authorities-arrest-journalist-rozina-islam-under-official-secrets-act/ https://www.radiofree.org/2021/05/17/bangladeshi-authorities-arrest-journalist-rozina-islam-under-official-secrets-act/#respond Mon, 17 May 2021 21:54:05 +0000 https://cpj.org/?p=103557 New York, May 17, 2021—The Committee to Protect Journalists today called on Bangladeshi authorities to immediately release journalist Rozina Islam, withdraw the investigation into her, and to stop arresting journalists under the Official Secrets Act.

Islam, a senior correspondent for the daily newspaper Prothom Alo, was arrested today after the Health Ministry filed a complaint against her under the colonial-era Official Secrets Act, according to news reports. She was accused of taking pictures of official documents under sections 3 and 5 of the Official Secrets Act, and under sections 379 and 411 of the penal code, and could face up to 14 years in prison and the death penalty if charged and convicted, according to the laws. Islam is being held at the Shahbagh police station in Dhaka, the capital, Sajjad Sharif, managing editor of Prothom Alo, told CPJ in a phone call.

“We are deeply alarmed that Bangladesh officials detained a journalist and filed a complaint under a draconian colonial-era law that carries ridiculously harsh penalties,” said Aliya Iftikhar, CPJ’s senior Asia researcher. “Bangladesh police and authorities should recognize that Rozina Islam is a journalist whose work is a public service and should immediately drop the case against her and allow her to go free.”

According to the Dhaka Tribune, Islam went to the Health Ministry in Dhaka around 3:30 p.m. today fora meeting with the health services secretary. Islam had been reporting on corruption and mismanagement in the health sector for the past month, Sharif told CPJ.

Islam was initially detained at the Health Ministry, located in Dhaka’s secretariat building—which houses several government offices—for more than five hours before being taken into police custody, Sharif told CPJ. The Dhaka Tribune reported that according to the police complaint, an on-duty police officer saw Islam in the office of Md Saiful Islam Bhuiyan, the personal secretary to the secretary of Health Services Division. Bhuiyan and Additional Secretary Kazi Jebunnesa Begum questioned and searched Islam, and allegedly found files and saw photos of documents on her phone, the Dhaka Tribune reported, citing the police complaint.

Islam denied taking any files from the room, according to the Dhaka Tribune.

According to the news reports, Islam fell ill and fainted during her detention at the secretariat.

Sharif told CPJ that her arrest was likely in retaliation for her reporting on alleged corruption.

The officer in charge of the Shahbagh police station declined to comment when reached by CPJ via phone. Maidul Islam, spokesperson for the Health Ministry, did not immediately respond to CPJ’s request for comment sent via email.


This content originally appeared on Committee to Protect Journalists and was authored by Committee to Protect Journalists.

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