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Academics, writers, artists urge Bangladesh #FreeShahidulAlam

Academics, writers, artists urge Bangladesh #FreeShahidulAlam

Shahidul Alam being taken to court. Star file photo. Daily Star

 

We, academics, journalists, artists, writers, and photographers at various universities and media institutions strongly condemn the detention and torture of our colleague the photojournalist and activist Shahidul Alam in Dhaka and urge the Bangladesh authorities to release him immediately.

Some two dozen plainclothes policemen picked up Alam, 63, from his home on the night of 5 August 2018. They smashed CCTV cameras, confiscated mobile phones of witnesses, and dragged Alam into a van. He was produced in court the following day, barely able to walk. According to a friend who was present, Alam said they washed and ironed his bloodied clothes before he came to court.

Shortly before being picked up, Alam had given a live interview to Al Jazeera TV contextualising the ongoing student protests in Bangladesh, catalysed when a speeding bus killed two students. Thousands of peaceful student protestors are demanding the bus driver be tried and punished, and safeguards put in place to prevent such accidents. Over 115 students were injured over the weekend. Alam was also assaulted, and his video camera smashed. At least five other journalists were injured, one of whom had to be hospitalized for head injuries.

Alam in his interview and social media posts said that the police allowed machete-wielding thugs to attack the students and even joined them in the attacks. A police official reportedly stated that Alam, 63, was being investigated for “giving false information to different media and for provocative comments.”

On Monday, Alam was charged under Article 57(2) of the draconian Information, Communication and Technology Act, for social media posts the government claims are spreading unrest.

Shahidul Alam’s detention underlines the growing crackdown on dissenting voices in Bangladesh, in a pattern that is visible elsewhere too. The court denied him bail and gave the  police a seven-day remand. This was subsequently reduced and the court ordered that Shahidul be sent to a hospital and given an immediate medical exam and treatment. However, he is still at the Detective Branch and has not been moved to hospital.

We find it deplorable that this eminent citizen of Bangladesh, a recipient of Shilpakala Padak, the country’s highest national award for the arts, is being treated like this. Alam is the founder of Drik Picture Library and Pathshala South Asian Media Institute, known globally for documenting the rights of the vulnerable and poor and for his consistent expose of human rights abuses. An honorary fellow of the Royal Photographic Society and visiting professor at Sunderland University, he has chaired the World Press Photo jury among other honors. A new media pioneer who introduced email to Bangladesh, his book My Journey as a Witness is “the most important book ever written by a photographer” to quote John Morris, former picture editor of Life Magazine.

We urge the Bangladeshi authorities to:

Signed:

 

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