martedì 8 gennaio 2013

Bangladesh newspaper editor at risk .


Bangladeshi editor Mahmudur Rahman is facing sedition charges over interviews among government officials which were published in his newspaper.Bangladeshi editor Mahmudur Rahman is facing sedition charges over interviews among government officials which were published in his newspaper.
© Amnesty International
The Bangladeshi authorities must refrain from harassing and prosecuting newspaper editor Mahmudur Rahman, Amnesty International said today.

Mahmudur Rahman has been threatened with prosecution for publishing a Skype conversation between the then chairman of the Bangladeshi court, the International Crimes Tribunal and a Bangladeshi legal expert.

After being warned that he could be arrested anytime he has not left his newspaper’s offices since 13 December 2012 except for a brief trip to the court on 8 January to seek anticipatory bail. The court has not yet granted this.

“Everyone, including Mahmudur Rahman, has the right to freedom of opinion and to seek, receive and impart information through any media,” said Abbas Faiz, Amnesty International’s Bangladesh researcher. “He has been previously detained and tortured for publishing articles in the public’s interest.”

He added: “A full report on the Skype conversation had already been published by the UK magazine The Economist and also posted on the YouTube website.”

There was no legal ban on the publication of that material in Bangladesh during the time that Amar Desh was publishing it from 9 to 13 December 2012.

The newspaper stopped publishing the reports on 13 December 2012 when a court injunction banned Bangladeshi newspapers from publishing them. It was after the court injunction that the government obtained a court order from a High Court bench, which required the police to take “necessary action” against Rahman on the basis of the allegation that he had committed sedition by publishing the Skype conversation.

The government of Bangladesh must ensure that everyone, in particular journalists and editors, are free to express their views and opinion peacefully without being harassed, intimidated, detained or tortured.
 

Nessun commento:

Posta un commento