THE
LATEST ASSAULT ON FREE SPEECH IN BANGLADESH
A
recently passed law known as the Digital Security Act 2018 has extraordinary scope. The new law will
allow Bangladeshi authorities to search and detain any person, seize computers
and handheld devices on mere suspicion, without any court-issued warrants, on
charges that may land someone up to 14 years in jail for simple expressions of
views in a digital platform that the authorities may deem defamatory or
subversive.
Prior to this new set of rules, which now awaits ceremonial
confirmation by the country’s president, Bangladesh raised global outcries for jailing
distinguished photojournalist Shahidul Alam for merely speaking to the
international media during an August 2018 student protest demanding road safety
in Dhaka. Within 24 hours of his interview to Al Jazeera, where he
linked the road safety protests to overall lack of democracy and effective
governance in Bangladesh, the country’s security forces arrested Alam and he
has been in jail ever since, despite calls for his release coming from global
luminaries including Nobel laureates and major media and rights organizations.
In
another assault on freedom of expression, Wasim Iftekhar, a barely known young
publisher, was picked up by plain-clothed men, after publishing a book which
simply documents courtroom proceedings and arguments presented by Bangladesh’s
opposition leader Begum Khaleda Zia, while she was going through the country’s
court system on corruption charges.
The
new law, which appears notoriously vague in its definitions of offenses, yet
extremely precise and sweeping in its stipulations for punishments, will enable
Bangladesh to suppress free speech using increasingly draconian means.
The Digital
Security Act allows the arrest of anyone if the police believe
that an offense has been or is being committed, or there is a possibility of
any crime or destruction of evidence.
Another
provision of the law allows for up to 10 years imprisonment for “spreading
propaganda” against Bangladesh’s Liberation War of 1971. Similar punishment
awaits anyone defaming the country’s national anthem or the national flag using
a digital device. Repeat offenders will face the maximum penalty of life
imprisonment.
The
law offers scant definitions for what constitutes “defamation” or “propaganda”
making it difficult to distinguish genuine historical scrutiny from content
produced with the intent to malign historical events.
The
new law states that anyone deliberately publishing or broadcasting anything
that is “attacking, intimidating or insulting” will face three years of jail
time. Similar punishment awaits anyone publishing or broadcasting false
information to defame someone or spread of false information to mar the “image”
(i.e. reputation) of the country.
The
law stipulates seven years in jail for anyone publishing or broadcasting on a
digital platform any content with the intent to hurt religious sentiments and
values. This will further shrink the scope for theological debates in
Bangladesh – a country from where several atheist bloggers, had to flee over
the last five years.
Making
the job of investigative journalism particularly difficult, if not impossible,
the new law allows maximum jail term of 14 years and fines up to US $25,000 for
illegally entering any government building and secretly recording anything with
electronic devices. Espionage charges can be filed under this law against
anyone gaining unauthorized access to any government information, which is
a prerequisite for whistle-blowing exercises against government abuse.
For
a country with $1,700 income per capita, the new law stipulates fines that are
onerous, especially given that the likely offenders will be young opposition
activists. There was a provision for the establishment of a Digital Security
Agency in Bangladesh, with the task of reviewing allegations against
offenders before legal proceedings can start by the police. That provision was
later withdrawn, allowing the police to arrest anyone, without any warrants or
oversight prior to such arrests.
The
international community must do more to dissuade the Bangladesh government from
destroying whatever little freedom of speech the country has left. Amnesty
International has protested the Digital Security Act by
warning hundreds of people had already been arbitrarily arrested in the past
six years under the existing laws, and the new act would further impose
“dangerous restrictions on freedom of expression”.
The
president of Bangladesh must send this act back to the parliament for further
review to address concerns expressed by journalists and rights organizations.
As the third largest Muslim majority country with a population of 170 million,
Bangladesh poses a serious geopolitical risk if the international community
allows the country to plunge from being a less-than-perfect democracy and
become a North Korea styled tyranny.
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