Rights group asks govt to probe attacks on newsmen
Unb, New York
A US-based human rights group has asked Bangladesh government to "promptly and impartially investigate violent attacks" against journalists last week allegedly by supporters of the ruling BNP. In a statement yesterday, Human Rights Watch (HRW) expressed concern that no arrests had been made in the case even nine days after the attacks. "The government must show it will not tolerate attacks on the press from ruling party supporters or anyone else," said HRW Asia Deputy Director Sophie Richardson. "Failing to investigate and prosecute violent incidents could encourage similar attacks." On May 29, more than two-dozen BNP supporters allegedly used stones and sticks to attack a group of journalists conducting a peaceful protest in Kushtia. Nineteen people were injured in the incident, including Bangladesh Observer's Editor Iqbal Sobhan Chowdhury who was then the president of the Bangladesh Federal Union of Journalists. Chowdhury told HRW that supporters of local BNP legislator Shahidul Islam had disrupted the protest. "They were throwing stones and chairs and I was hit on the forehead," he said claiming the police did not intervene during the attack. According to Chowdhury, protest organisers had requested for security from local authorities prior to the event.
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