Reportedly, leading newspapers in Bangladesh have expressed
frustration over a media environment in which a major investigative report
leveling allegations against senior leaders and key institutions in the country
had been met with “silence” in the domestic press.
Editorials in The Daily Star
and The Dhaka Tribune noted that media outlets had widely reported on the
government response to an Al Jazeera report published on Monday, without
describing allegations it contained.
“We are facing the absurd situation of publishing the
government response without publishing what the government is responding to. So
far, we have neither carried what the Al Jazeera reported nor any synopsis of
it,” The Daily Star wrote in its Wednesday editorial.
The Tribune’s editorial, meanwhile, said the nation’s
Digital Security Act “has had a chilling effect on Bangladeshi media.”
“The silence of the Bangladeshi media in this instance has
been all-encompassing and deafening,” the Tribune wrote.
“The reason for our silence is simple: The current state of
media and defamation law in Bangladesh, and how it is interpreted by the
judiciary, makes it unwise for any Bangladeshi media house to venture into any
kind of meaningful comment on the controversy.”
The nation’s Digital Security Act “contains language
proscribing reporting that is so broad in its scope and threatens such
draconian consequences that no responsible editor can take the chance of
publishing reports that might even conceivably fall into its purview.”
A BenarNews review of at least 10 prominent Bengali- and
English-language news portals on Wednesday found that they all based their
reports on news releases from the Foreign Ministry and the army, while none of
them included Al Jazeera allegations.
The 1st February report by Qatari-based television network
Al Jazeera alleged that Bangladesh Army Chief Gen. Aziz Ahmed kept close links
with his two foreign-based brothers who are on the run from justice after being
convicted of the 1996 murder of a rival political leader.
The Al Jazeera documentary linked Aziz to corrupt deals with
at least one of his brothers, who the report said had been able to travel to
Bangladesh to meet with the army chief despite being a fugitive.
The report said that Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina had
previously hired Aziz’s brothers Haris and Anis Ahmed as bodyguards when she
was opposition leader. It alleged that the Ahmed clan’s fortunes “have been
long intertwined with that” of Hasina.
It claimed that the military had secretly purchased
surveillance equipment manufactured by an Israeli company, even though
Bangladesh does not recognize Israel and forbids nationals from traveling there
or engaging in commerce with Israelis.
The Bangladesh foreign ministry and army dismissed the
allegations contained in the documentary and accompanying stories.
The Bangladesh foreign ministry in a statement on Tuesday
described the report as “false and defamatory” and “anti-Bangladesh
propaganda.”
It however, did not specifically address any of the charges
leveled against Aziz Ahmed in the report.
“The report is nothing more than a misleading series of
innuendos and insinuations in what is apparently a politically motivated ‘smear
campaign’ by notorious individuals,” it said, linking them to the “extremist
group” Jamaat-e-Islami, one of the largest Islamic parties in Bangladesh.
The Bangladesh Army said the surveillance equipment had been
procured from Hungary for an army contingent deployed in a U.N peacekeeping
mission, and that the Al Jazeera allegation was based on “false information.”
The Daily Star editorial praised the government for its
“mature decision” not to block Al Jazeera’s report or “its spread on social
media.”
It also expressed frustration over the lack of reporting in
the domestic media on allegations that it said raised questions about the
security of the country and the integrity of its institutions.
“There are people who served the PM at various times,
especially during her days of struggle, who are now taking full advantage of
her sense of gratitude and indulging in influence-peddling for payment in some
of our highly sensitive areas,” The Daily Star said.
“There is reference to our purchase of sensitive listening
devices from Israel, a country that we do not recognize. There are also the
issues of false passports, NID cards and bank documents that should be looked
into, especially as they involve institutions on whose integrity and honesty
our security depends.”
Considered by many the leading English-language newspaper in
Bangladesh, The Daily Star has a circulation of 44,000 and an editor who faces
dozens of criminal charges over its journalism.
Mahfuz Anam faces 81 criminal charges filed since 2016, one
of his lawyers told BenarNews.
“All of the cases were criminal in nature such as defamation
and others. Currently, the courts have issued stay orders on the cases,”
Chaitanya Chandra Halder said.
Mahfuz Anam turned down a request to be interviewed for this
article.
Passed in 2018, the Digital Security Act empowers police to
make arrests on suspicion and without a warrant. Fourteen of its 20 provisions
do not allow for bail, so that whenever an accused is brought before a
magistrate, he or she is almost automatically sent to jail.
A media advocacy group, the Committee to Protect Journalists
(CPJ), said that the Bangladesh media’s decision to self censor was not
surprising, while the draconian law requiring it reflected the government’s
fear of a free press.
“By and large we are seeing how much of a chilling effect
the Digital Security Act has had in Bangladesh,” Aliya Iftikhar, senior CPJ
Asia researcher, told BenarNews.
“In the past year, we have seen dozens of frivolous DSA
cases filed against journalists, and many of them have been detained for months
at a time under the draconian law, for no reason other than they dared to
publish critical reports. So it is not surprising that after seeing numerous
colleagues in jail, the media in Bangladesh is choosing to self-censor,”
Iftikhar said.
“The Bangladesh government is showing its weakness with its
constant fear of a free press.”