New York, September 30, 2003Hiramon Mondol, a local correspondent
for the daily Dainik Prabarttan, was released from jail
and exonerated from extortion charges on September 20 by the Magistrate
of the Special Tribunal Act in Khulna, a town in southwestern Bangladesh,
according to local news reports.
Police and security forces brutally attacked Mondol with hockey sticks
and rifles on August 8 after he wrote an article accusing them of stealing
fish from local fishermen, said local journalists. Police then arrested
Mondol and formally charged him with extortion under the Speedy Trial
Act, which denies bail to defendants.
Local journalists and Mondol's family said that the attack was directly
related to Mondol's article about the police, and that the charges against
him were false.
Mondol's trial began on September 1. Although police produced several
witnesses to testify against Mondol, local press reports alleged that
the police pressured the witnesses into providing false testimony. Charges
against Mondol were dropped after police failed to make a convincing
case against him.
"Hiramon Mondol's release from jail and his exoneration from these trumped
up extortion charges, mark a rare victory for journalists in Bangladesh,"
said Ann Cooper, executive director of the Committee to Protect Journalists
(CPJ). "We are relieved that Mondol is free, but call on those responsible
for attacking him and fabricating these charges against him to be held
accountable."
