The Borneo Post

Bangladesh parliament passes controvers­ial digital security law despite protests

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DHAKA: Bangladesh’s parliament on Wednesday passed a controvers­ial digital security act despite protests by journalist­s who say the law will severely curb media freedom in the country.

The new law, which according to a draft carries heavy jail sentences for secretly recording government officials or spreading ‘negative propaganda’ using a digital device, was approved by a voice vote, parliament­ary spokesman Mohammad Kamal told AFP.

Post and telecommun­ications minister Mustafa Jabbar, who placed the bill, told parliament the law would help fight digital crime and protect people’s lives and assets, The Daily Star newspaper said.

Hundreds of journalist­s have staged demonstrat­ions against the law in recent months and editors have said the law poses serious threats to freedom of expression and media in the country.

This week the Sampadak Parishad, a council of top editors, urged authoritie­s not to pass the law, saying it would seriously curtail democracy in Bangladesh.

The council raised concerns over some sections of the law but a parliament­ary standing committee which scrutinise­d the draft act only made minor changes.

Matiur Rahman Chowdhury, the editor-in- chief of Bengali daily Manobjamin and a member of the council, expressed his shock at the passage of the law, saying it was ‘very unfortunat­e’.

“This law will make independen­t journalism very difficult in the country,” he told AFP.

According to a draft of the Digital Security Act 2018 approved by the cabinet earlier this year, a journalist could be convicted of espionage for entering a government office and gathering informatio­n secretly using an electronic device, an offence that would carry a 14-year jail sentence.

It also provides for a life sentence for spreading ‘negative propaganda’ about the country’s war of independen­ce or its founding leader Sheikh Mujibur Rahman using a digital device.

Media rights groups in Bangladesh and the Internatio­nal Federation of Journalist­s ( IFJ) have already condemned the bill.

Last month top journalist and activist Shahidul Alam was arrested during massive student protests in the capital Dhaka for making ‘ false’ and ‘ provocativ­e’ statements on Al Jazeera and Facebook Live.

He is being investigat­ed for allegedly violating Bangladesh’s already stringent internet laws enacted in 2006.

Rights groups, UN rights experts, Nobel laureates and hundreds of academics have called for the immediate release of the 63-year- old, who says he has been beaten in custody. — AFP

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