New York, September 14, 2004The Committee to Protect Journalists
condemns the violent attacks by pro-government activists on at least
eight journalists covering demonstrations on the Dhaka University campus
in the capital, Dhaka, last Saturday, September 11.
Members of the ruling Bangladesh Nationalist Party's youth wing, the
Jatiyatabadi Chhatra Dal (JCD), went on a rampage around midday, attacking
opposition student demonstrators with sticks and iron rods, injuring
at least 40 protesters, according to Bangladeshi news reports. Six opposition
organizations were protesting the August 21 assassination attempt on
opposition leader Sheikh Hasina, and calling for the ruling government
to resign.
When journalists took photographs of the violence, members of the JCD
turned on them, beating them, grabbing their cameras, and confiscating
their film, according to the English-language newspaper The Daily
Star.
Journalists injured in the melee included Sahabul Huq Sabu, a reporter
with the Bangla-language daily Ittefaq; Mokarram Hossain Shubho,
university correspondent for the Bangla-language daily Prothom Alo;
photographer Zia Islam, of Prothom Alo; and photographer
Amran Hossain, of The Daily Star. Four others, including photographers
for the English-language daily New Age and the Bangla-language
daily Bhorer Kagoj, were also attacked but not fully identified
in press accounts.
JCD members also attacked the offices of Dhaka University's journalism
department, beating down the door of the chairman, Golam Rahman, and
ransacking the office of senior professor Arefin Siddique, according
to the United News of Bangladesh (UNB), the national news wire service.
Opposition representatives accused the police of standing by while the
JCD attacked the students and journalists, doing nothing to defend them.
Campus groups, including the Dhaka University Journalists Association,
condemned the violence, and called for the arrest and expulsion of JCD
members responsible for the attacks.
The president of the JCD, Shahabuddin Laltu, denied responsibility for
the assaults, claiming that those responsible for the violence against
the journalists were "outsiders," according to the UNB.
Clashes between rival political activist groups frequently break out
on the Dhaka University campus. Tensions have heightened in recent days
in the wake of the grenade attack on Awami League head Sheikh Hasina
as she was leaving a rally in protest of another bomb attack in August.
"We are outraged by the cycle of political violence that continues to
target our journalist colleagues in Bangladesh, who are continually
at risk of physical attack for doing their jobs," said CPJ Executive
Director Ann Cooper. "Authorities must find those responsible for these
acts and bring them to justice."
After an official visit to Bangladesh in March, CPJ reported on a similar
outburst of violence on the Dhaka University campus. To read an analysis
of politically motivated attacks on the Bangladeshi press, read "Suffering
to Tell the Truth: Inside Bangladesh's Culture of Violence" (in
PDF).
