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May 24, 2002 |
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BANGLADESH
Reporters Without Borders protested today against a one-month jail
sentence imposed on Matiur Rahman Chowdhury, chief editor of the daily
paper Dainik Manabzamin, for contempt of court. "To avoid more sentences like this, we urge that the offence be abolished and the law amended to drop prison terms for media offences." Ménard noted that the UN Special Rapporteur for Freedom of Expression has described sending someone to prison for expressing an opinion as being "out of proportion to the offence." Chowdhury was found guilty of contempt by the High Court on 20 May and as well as the jail sentence was fined 2,000 takas (40 euros). His wife Mahbuba Chowdhury, the paper¹s publisher, was fined 2,000 takas too. Former president Hussain Mohammad Ershad was jailed for six months, also for contempt of court. The three defendants have appealed against the verdicts, so the sentences have not yet been applied. The court¹s two judges said Chowdhury had committed the contempt by publishing a secret conversation between Ershad and Justice Mohammad Latifur Rahman, in which Ershad had tried to get a favourable verdict in a case involving himself. The court criticised the sensational media coverage of a scandal involving a senior judge (Latifur Rahman), who resigned after the conversation appeared in Dainik Manabzamin and three other papers. It was the first time since the return of democracy in 1990 that a newspaper editor had received a prison sentence for a press offence. The editors of 15 of Bangladesh¹s main daily newspapers put out a statement on 22 May supporting the independence of the press and the courts and declaring their solidarity with Chowdhury. © Reporters Without Borders 2002 |
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