Bangkok Post

New protests over writer’s prison death

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DHAKA: Dozens were injured yesterday as Bangladesh­i police fired rubber bullets and tear gas at opposition activists to prevent new protests over the death of a writer in jail, police and a party official said.

Live footage from local television station Channel 24 showed a road and footpath in front of the National Press Club — a favourite protest site in the capital Dhaka — turning into a battlegrou­nd as police beat protesters with batons to disperse them.

Clashes ensued as student activists from the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalis­t Party (BNP) hurled rocks and attacked officers with plastic pipes, prompting police to retaliate by “firing rubber bullets and tear gas”, Deputy Commission­er of Dhaka police Sazzadur Rahman told AFP.

“They did not take any permission [for the protests],” he added, defending the police’s move to clear the protesters.

BNP spokesman Rizvi Ahmed said about 30 student activists were injured in the clashes. Several policemen were also hurt, including an officer who was rushed to hospital.

He said more than 500 protesters were at the press club, trying to form a human chain to protest the death of writer Mushtaq Ahmed, who collapsed in a high-security prison north of Dhaka and died late on Thursday.

He defended the party not having sought permission for the protests at the National Press Club, saying that historical­ly no clearance was needed to hold any rallies there.

“As they stood there for a human chain, [police] baton-charged indiscrimi­nately,” he said.

“It is a murder,” he said of Mushtaq Ahmed’s death. “We think the state is involved.”

Rights groups have demanded a swift probe into the death of the writer 10 months after he was arrested over comments posted on social media.

Ambassador­s from 13 countries, including the United States, France, Britain, Canada and Germany, expressed “grave concern” over the case.

He had been detained under the controvers­ial digital security laws that critics say are used to muzzle dissent.

Premier Sheikh Hasina on Saturday shrugged off criticism of her government’s rights record.

 ?? AFP AFP ?? Policemen clash with the activists of BNP during the third day of protests following the death of Mushtaq Ahmed, a prominent writer and government critic in jail, in Dhaka yesterday.
AFP AFP Policemen clash with the activists of BNP during the third day of protests following the death of Mushtaq Ahmed, a prominent writer and government critic in jail, in Dhaka yesterday.

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