New York, July 13, 2004The Committee to Protect Journalists
(CPJ) is alarmed by the rapidly growing number of death threats against
journalists and writers throughout Bangladesh. Since July 10, at least
24 journalists and writers have received death threats, all apparently
from Islamic groups who accuse them of being "enemies of Islam" or "acting
against Islam," according to local news reports and CPJ sources.
Journalists in the northeastern city of Sylhet, the southern district
of Barguna, and in the capital, Dhaka, received individual letters on
Saturday, July 10, containing death threats and accusing them of not being
Muslim, calling them "enemies of Islam." The letters also advised them
to "get readyyou will die within a month," according to the English-language
Daily Star.
On Sunday, July 11, an Islamic group calling itself the Mujahideen al-Islam
issued public death threats to newspapers in Dhaka identifying 10 other
individuals as "sinners... among those the Koran ordains to kill," according
to local press reports and CPJ sources. Among the threatened individuals
were Shahriar Kabir and Professor Muntasir Mamun, both known for their
writing against Islamic fundamentalists.
"This unprecedented outbreak of death threats against the press highlights
yet again the pervasive nature of impunity in Bangladesh," said CPJ Executive
Director Ann Cooper. "We call on the government to track down and punish
those responsible for these criminal acts against the journalism community."
Names of threatened journalists
In Syhlet, 15 journalists received threatening letters on July 10,
according to local news reports: local correspondents Ahmed Noor and Partha
Sarathi Das, of the Bangla-language national daily Prothom Alo;
correspondent Liakat Shah Faridi, from the Bangla-language national daily
Jugantar; local correspondent Al Azad, from the Bangla-langauge
Sangbad; local correspondent Ajoy Pal, from the Bangla-language
Bangla Bazar Patrika; local reporter Kamkamur Razzak Runu, from
the Bangla-language daily Ajker Kagoj; and staff reporter Salam
Mashrur, from the Bangla-language daily Janakantha.
Others who received the letters in Syhlet include Shyamol Sylhet
Editor Chowdhury Mumtaj Ahmed, News Editor Abdul Mukit, and staff reporter
Motiul Bari Khuhrshed; Jugobheri Editor-in-Charge Aziz Ahmed Selim
and News Editor Tapash Dash Purokayastho; Ajker Kagoj District
Correspondent Apurbo Dhar; Bhorer Kagoj District Correspondent
Bappa Ghose Chowdhury; and Manavjamin Staff Reporter MA Rahim.
In Dhaka, Prothom Alo crime reporter Parvez Khan and Bhorer
Kagoj local correspondent Ikhtiar Uddin also received death threat
letters on July 10.
In the southern Barguna District, five more journalists were threatened
by an unnamed Islamic group on July 10, according to local news reports
and CPJ sources. Prothom Alo local correspondent M. Jasim Uddin
received a threatening letter containing a small piece of a burial shroud,
according to The Daily Star. The letter also mentioned threats
against the Bangla-language daily Ittefaq local correspondent Abdul
Alim Himu, Jugantor local reporter Anwar Hossain Monwar, Sangbad
local correspondent Chittyaranajan Shil, and Ajker Kagoj local
reporter Hasanur Rahman Jhantu.

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