New York, August 26, 2004Two unidentified assailants stabbed
the editor of the Marathi-language daily Mahanagar outside his
office in Mumbai on the evening of August 24. The Committee to Protect
Journalists (CPJ) is investigating whether the attack was related to Sajid
Rashid's work as a journalist.
The men approached Rashid, 48, as he was leaving his office and stabbed
him twice, according to the Express News Service. Rashid was rushed to
the local KEM hospital where he was in stable condition, the Press Trust
of India news service reported. Police have launched an investigation
into the attack, and are looking at recent articles written by Rashid
to see if they are connected to the attack.
Rashid is affiliated with Muslims for Secular Democracy (MSD), a progressive
local organization, and has spoken out against the so-called "triple talaq"
system, a local Muslim custom relating to divorce whereby a man can divorce
his wife simply by uttering "talaq" three times, according
to local press accounts.
In July, Rashid and other MSD members approached the Indian Muslim Law
Board to discuss the "triple talaq" custom, according to the Express
News Service.
Rashid has written extensively on the "triple talaq" issue, and
received threats earlier this month that he reported to local police,
according to Indian press accounts.
The newspaper is known for its independent stance, according to local
journalists, and has been attacked several times.
On June 24, militant members of the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata
Party (BJP) stormed Mahanagar's offices, shouting BJP slogans and
expressing anger at Mahanagar's editorial line, which they said
was anti-BJP, according to the paper's editor-in-chief, Nikhil Wagle.
In July, police arrested nine suspects and charged them in connection
with the attack, but there have been no convictions, according to local
journalists.
In 1996, hundreds of activists from the Hindu nationalist Shiv Sena party
stormed the newspaper's offices after the paper published criticism of
Shiv Sena leader Bal Thackeray.

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