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Statement on arrests in Bangladesh blogger murder cases

  • post Type / General news
  • Date / 18 August 2015

three-arrests-bangladesh-sm

The International Humanist and Ethical Union (IHEU) is urging caution and some skepticism in reacting to reportage on the process of justice in Bangladesh.

A further arrest has been in connection with two of the Bangladeshi blogger murders in 2015, according to reports. Touhidur Rahman, 58, was said to have “told” police he was a British citizen, and it has established in a press conference in Bangladesh in the past few hours that he had dual British and Bangladeshi citizenship. He was reportedly arrested alongside two “active members” of Ansarullah Bangla Team, named as Sadek Ali, Aminul Mollick.

The IHEU has previously urged caution regarding information coming from Bangladesh media and authorities on the killings. Any genuine progress is of course to be welcomed, and arrests based on good evidence should be followed by fair trials; however the IHEU remains cautious as to the nature of the disparate are long-awaited arrests. It should be noted that:

  • the arrests since Niloy Neel’s murder are said not to relate to this case but to previous cases of the murders of Avijit Roy and Ananta Bijoy Das;
  • information on why any of these new individual arrests were made, on what evidence, how or even whether they are linked to any of the other individual arrests, is very scarce;
  • some individuals previously arrested in connection with the murders and “paraded” for the media have subsequently been released without charge;
  • no individual held in conjunction with any of the blogger murders has been convicted or even put on trial;
  • the infamous Rapid Action Battalion (which as a reputation as a government “death squad”) have variously arrested disparate individuals in connection with the murders of Ahmed Rajib Haider (only this year, though he was killed in 2013) and the case of Washiqur Raham (when two men were caught at the scene). In these cases the authorities are quick to “parade” those arrested, photographing them flanked by police figures and exhibited in the media. (The same thing was also done when bloggers were arrested for ‘hurting religious sentiments’ in 2013.) However none has come to trial. (Unlike the bloggers’ cases, which were heard within months and the four bloggers sent to jail under the country’s quasi-blasphemy laws against ‘hurting religious sentiments’.)

The burden is on the Bangladeshi authorities to demonstrate, fairly and lawfully, that any of these arrests is credible and justiciable.

Responding to the news, Andrew Copson, President of the International Humanist and Ethical Union (IHEU), said: “If there is sound evidence that these individuals, including a Briton, are responsible for the brutal, mindless murders of Avijit and Ananta then they must face trial and justice without delay. Humanists are living in a culture of fear and intimidation in Bangladesh, certain that more lives will be taken simply for expressing a view opposing the Islamists.

“The Bangladeshi Government must do more to protect all its citizens from brutal fundamentalist thugs who would kill another human being for daring to think outside the confines of dogmatic religion. If it is true that a Briton is responsible, then it is clear that the UK government must also do more to combat any culture of impunity developing here for Islamists operating globally and visiting their violence on the humanist citizens of other states.”

[This article was updated 27 August, to make the emphasis of the story clear with a new opening sentence.]

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