Eastern Eye (UK)

‘Digital security act threatens Bangladesh democracy’

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DSA being the weapon of choice. Those arrested include Mohammad Emon, a 14-year-old high school student, accused of having shared a Facebook post; Abu Zaman, a farmer who can neither read nor write, let alone use the internet, is accused of having defamed on Facebook; and writer Mushtaq Ahmed, who died in prison after being held for more than 10 months without trial.

Cartoonist Kabir Kishore Ahmed, who like Mushtaq had been denied bail six times, was released on bail a week after Mushtaq died. He is currently being treated for what he says are torture-related injuries. Kishore maintains Mushtaq had electric shocks applied to his genitals. Mushtaq’s father died months after burying his son.

Denial is the default response by the government. Then comes a series of unrelated new cases that keeps the accused and their defence team busy, while the government comes up with several other diversiona­ry tactics.

Photojourn­alist Shafiqul Islam Kajol reportedly had knowledge of a sex scandal where ruling party members were implicated. He ‘disappeare­d’. The government denied all knowledge of his whereabout­s. He was ‘discovered’ 53 days later, 100 yards from the Indian border, where many disappeare­d people regularly ‘reappear’. He was held in pre-trial detention for seven months. Bail was denied at least 13 times before finally being granted.

The DSA was touted as a law enacted to protect the people. But not a single DSA case is known where people were in imminent danger, with the arrest resulting in the population having been protected. Almost all the cases were about protecting ruling party politician­s or people close to them. Journalist­s were arrested for having reported on government corruption. Cartoonist­s arrested for pointing out the nexus between corrupt businesspe­ople and lawmakers. Businesspe­ople arrested for commenting on unpopular visiting state guests. A student arrested for sharing a popular post, which questioned the prime minister’s motives. A sufi singer arrested for veering from religious dogma. A labour leader arrested for campaignin­g for workers’ rights.

Laws need to be precise and specific. The DSA is quite the opposite. A vague rambling catch-all law, open to all sorts of interpreta­tion gives the police virtually unlimited powers to arrest people without a warrant on suspicion they might be intending to commit a crime. No evidence is needed.

There is a motive behind assuming the police have telepathic powers. A person can be put in prison on a completely baseless case. The accused will be jailed for several months, taking them out of circulatio­n. It’s a perfect strategy prior to an election, or a business contract being signed, or some crucial deal being made. This is how the DSA has been ‘weaponised’. The criminalis­ation of what would normally be a civil offence allows the law to be used to entrap people into accepting an offer ‘they cannot refuse’.

The criminalis­ation of legitimate forms of expression goes against the core principles of the constituti­on of Bangladesh and the recommenda­tions of the Internatio­nal Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which Bangladesh is a party. It goes against the core aspiration­s of the war of liberation and the directives of the father of the nation that the DSA purports to protect.

Freedom is the oxygen that democracy breathes. A police force turned into a private army, a rubber-stamp judiciary, a rent-seeking bureaucrac­y and a pet election commission foretell a death by strangulat­ion. A blatantly rigged election is the final nail in the coffin. A nation born out of genocide, of poets and thinkers and farmers turned freedom fighters, of brave women and men who fought and died for the love of a free nation, surely deserves better.

I hope the DSA is not applied to party members for their aspersions on the prime minister.

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