New York, August 26, 2003Earlier this month, Hiramon Mondol,
a correspondent for the daily Dainik Prabarttan, in Khulna, a town
in southwestern Bangladesh was brutally assaulted by the police before
being taken into custody, and jailed on theft charges.
Fearing reprisal from an August 3 article he wrote that accused police
and security forces of stealing highly prized and valuable fish from
local fishermen, Mondol went into hiding for a few days, said local
journalists. On August 8, after police pressured his family for his
whereabouts, the journalist went to a police and security forces joint
task force camp. While there, the police beat Mondol with rifles and
hockey sticks, said the sources, before taking him into custody.
Mondol received medical treatment for his wounds, but has since been
transferred to the district jail in Khulna and charged with theft under
a strict new law that denies bail to defendants.
Local journalists and Mondol’s family say the attack was directly
related to Mondol’s article about the police, and that the charges
against him are false.
Meanwhile, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) is investigating
at least six other attacks on journalists in Bangladesh during recent
weeks that have been reported in the Bangladeshi press.
“Violent attacks on journalists in Bangladesh are occurring with
alarming frequency,” said CPJ executive director Ann Cooper. “The
brutal assault on Hiramon Mondol must be investigated; he should be
released from prison immediately and those responsible should be brought
to justice.”

|