Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Photo the Bangladesh army cannot stand

By John Sudworth
BBC News, Dhaka                                                                                                    

It is an image that has caused the army much embarrassment

  

If a single image can sum up the thorny mess into which Bangladesh has once again stumbled, then this perhaps is it.

A sandaled demonstrator in mid-air kick and a hatless army officer in terrified retreat.

In the background, bystanders hurry away. Out of shot, a military vehicle burns and the security forces are in danger of losing control to the angry mob.

The photo gives a momentary glimpse of just how bad things got during three days of violent protest that rocked cities across Bangladesh last week.

But the picture is significant for another reason. As we found out on the first night of the curfew imposed to contain the trouble it was an image that deeply upset the Bangladeshi rank and file.

Student protester

Student protests quickly turned into a full-scale riot

Its publication was seen as a humiliation, every bit as great as if that flying sandaled foot had been aimed at the behind of the army chief himself.

Shortly after the curfew came into effect on Wednesday night, the BBC team was out filming.

No one was sure whether the media would be allowed to move freely.

Dhaka’s streets, normally a round-the-clock festival of noise, were deserted.

Road blocks and checkpoints were being manned by the paramilitaries and the army was on patrol.

‘Wrong message’

Sure enough our presence was soon noticed.

Two army jeeps pulled up sharply and a young officer jumped out. We were ordered to drop the camera as he radioed back to his base.

It’s a very unfortunate situation when teachers are being interrogated and actually taken away in the middle of the night
Sanjeeb Hossain, son of detained professor

After a tense stand-off the message was relayed that we could continue filming “as long as we didn’t give the wrong message to the country”.

But in true Bangladeshi style the officer and I were soon the best of friends.

In the middle of a deserted city I was invited to sit on the kerb with him, while his troops waited restlessly in their trucks.

He offered me a smoke and then, with his arm round me, he told me of his time training in the UK, of his sense of duty and his love of his country.

He told me of the dark forces at work behind the rioting.

And most of all he told me how he hated that photo, and how irresponsible it had been of the newspaper to publish it.

We shook hands and parted on good terms. But then I have a white face and an international press card.

Masud Parvez

Masud Parvez says he was badly beaten by the army

It’s impossible to know whether it was this same officer and the same troops, but on that same evening a group of Bangladeshi journalists were left in little doubt about what the army thought about the role of the media.

Masud Parvez was one of a group of reporters from a national internet news service standing outside their office.

Two army jeeps pulled up and the reporters identified themselves as local newsmen.

“So what,” came the reply.

Masud was given a prolonged beating on the steps of his office. He has an injury to his hand where he tried to fend off a rifle butt.

Some soldiers hit him with hockey sticks that they’d been carrying for exactly this kind of occasion.

Deepening rift

“I told them we were journalists from bdnews24.com. But despite giving our identity they started hitting us,” he told me.

Police confronting rioting students

The protests brought the country to a halt

“It was a terrible experience. I can’t make you understand how scared I was at the time.”

Masud is just one of a number of reporters and cameramen beaten by the security forces over the period of the curfew.

The Bangladesh Federal Union of Journalists puts the number at 30 or more.

Of course none of this can be blamed on a single image. But the photograph, and the reaction to it, gives a wider sense of a deepening rift between the military-backed authorities and civil society.

The army top brass has blamed what it calls evil forces and political opportunists for prolonging last week’s rioting.

Five senior university professors, all distinguished academics, have been picked up by the army and detained.

One of them, Professor Anwar Hossain, is general secretary of the Dhaka University Teachers’ Association.

His son, Sanjeeb, was at home when the army called in the early hours of the morning.

“It takes on a very sinister tone,” he tells me.

“The teachers of Dhaka University are considered the heart and soul of this nation.

“It’s a very unfortunate situation when teachers are being interrogated and actually taken away in the middle of the night.”

An unknown number of students are also in custody. We visited one address, very close to where the photograph was taken, shortly after an army raid.

A dozen or so students had been arrested, and we saw clear evidence that a number of people had been interrogated and harshly beaten.

‘Retribution and arrests’

This government came to power in January with the backing of the military on a wave of popular support vowing to reform politics and stamp out corruption.

But its reputation has been tarnished. A slum demolition programme, an attempt to exile two former prime ministers and its inability to contain the spiralling cost of food have all added to a growing sense of frustration.

Many newspapers have taken the view that the violence last week was a genuine expression of anger and frustration, rather than the work of shadowy forces of evil.

“Instead of retribution and arrests we suggest that dialogue be opened between teachers and students on the one hand and the caretaker government on the other,” read one newspaper editorial this week.

Meanwhile, military intelligence units appear to be using media images to find and arrest those involved in the violence.

As for the photo that so upset the army, luckily for him at least, the protester doing the kicking is difficult to identify.

But they are looking for him.

Both the editor who published the image, and the photographer who took it, have been visited and questioned by the army.

Curtsey: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/6966467.stm

 

Posted by Bangladesh Young Journalists Forum at 12:30:11 | Permalink | Comments (2)

Saturday, August 25, 2007

Instruction to cooperate with newsmen

The government has instructed all concerned engaged in maintaining law and order to remain alert about harassment of media men during the curfew hours and asked them to extend all-out cooperation to the journalists and media men in discharging their professional duties.

According to a PID handout last night, the government said its attention was drawn to a news report published in different dailies and broadcast through electronic media that the media men were harassed while discharging their professional duties during the curfew hours, which was “undesirable and regrettable”.

The government has also asked the law enforcement agencies to remain vigilant against any possible recurrence of such incident, the handout added.

Source: The Daily Star
Posted by Bangladesh Young Journalists Forum at 12:32:36 | Permalink | No Comments »

Bangladesh media body protests brutal attack on journalists

By Shafiq Alam
 

DHAKA — Bangladesh’s top media association on Friday said at least 30 journalists were brutally beaten up by security forces after student unrest prompted a curfew in six cities.

Troops and police roughed up the journalists despite the military-backed government’s assurances that the press would not face restrictions under an indefinite curfew which began on Wednesday.

The government said on Friday it was temporarily suspending the curfew imposed after three days of disturbances in the country which has been under emergency rule since January.

“At least 30 reporters and photographers were brutally beaten up by security forces during the curfew hours on Wednesday and Thursday,” said Manjurul Ahsan Bulbul, president of Bangladesh Federal Union of Journalists.

“It’s a brutal attack on the country’s freedom of press and freedom of speech and we demand the government refrain from using these tactics,” he said.

“Some of the journalists were hospitalized after the beatings while one was jailed,” he said, adding the assaults were carried out even though journalists showed identification cards.

The military-backed government, in power since January, announced the indefinite curfew to quell three days of rioting that had spread from Dhaka to a number of other cities, despite an emergency ban on street demonstrations.

The unrest began at Dhaka University where students demanded the army withdraw from the campus. The government has accused mischief-makers of hijacking the protests.

The media body’s protest came as the government ordered two private television channels — 24-hour news channel CSB News and ETV channel — to refrain from airing “provocative” news items about student unrest.

“It is essential to impose a ban on such activities immediately for protecting public interest,” a government statement said, adding breach of the order would be a punishable offence.

Anyone breaching the emergency laws can face up to five years in jail.

The journalists’ federation president said most talk shows and political discussion programs had been stopped while newspapers were told to black out some news.

“The freedom of newspapers has been curtailed,” Bulbul said.

A chief reporter at a leading Bengali daily said on condition of anonymity they had been receiving instructions from Bangladesh’s defense intelligence agency on what to write since the curfew was imposed.

“We’re told to black out news on student unrest, political statements and news items that can cause disruption,” he said.

On Friday, the independent English-language daily, the New Age said in a front-page “apology” to its readers that it had to cut its number of pages to 12 from 20 because assaults on its journalists had left them short of staff.

Source : Agence France-Presse
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/breakingnews/world/view_article.php?article_id=84540


 

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Tuesday, August 21, 2007

BCL assaults six newsmen at DU

DU Correspondent

Six journalists of different national dailies were assaulted by a group of activists of the Bangladesh Chhatra League on the Dhaka University campus on Sunday.

Campus sources said around 20 activists of the DU unit of the BCL attacked the six journalists in front of the Dhaka University Central Students Union building at about 1:30pm.

The BCL activists swooped on the journalists as they requested the BCL activists to make a queue, instead of violating rules, for collecting lunch items at the DUCSU cafeteria, the sources said.

The assaulted journalists are Arup Kumer Shaha, staff reporter of Jaijaidin, Palash Sarkar, DU correspondent of Jaijaidin, Mazharul Anwar Shipu, DU correspondent of Daily Janakantha, Habibullah Mizan, staff reporter of New Nation, Anu Anwar, DU correspondent of Prothom Alo and Khomeni Ihsan, DU correspondent of Banglabazar Potrika.

The attackers included Wasim Jewel, a BCL leader and activists Roni, a third-year student of English department, Ershad, second-year student of the history department and Shamimm and Tipu of the political science department.

Khomeni Ihsan on behalf of the victims filed a case with the Shahbagh police station in connection with the incident.

When contacted, the university proctor Professor Aka Firoz said the authorities will immediately take steps against those involved in the incident.

Source: The New Age
See the same news in The New Nation
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Saturday, August 11, 2007

Asia Energy’s pleasure trip for Bangladeshi journalists

As a last effort to obtain green signal from the government over the Phulbari Coalfield issue the Asia Energy Corporation (Bangladesh) Pty Ltd has organised a pleasure trip for some journalists who report on energy issues to entice them to write in favour of the company.

Some 7 to 8 reporters will leave Dhaka for Frankfurt on August 4 for a four-day trip led by Asia Energy’s Media and Communication specialist Mahmud Hafiz, a former energy reporter of a vernacular daily.

During the trip Bangladeshi journalists will visit the coal plants of the Rheinisch-westfalisches Elektrizitatswerk AG (RWE AG), a German based coal extracting and electricity producing company. Asia Energy will sponsor the expenses of the trip.

One of the members of the trip yesterday said, ” It seems that Asia Energy is geting the green signal from the government immediately. Energy Secretary and other high officials of the government are in favour of the company.”

The government cancelled the coal exploration deal with the Asia Energy following a mass demonstration in Phulbari, Dinajpur where scores of people died as the law enforcing agencies opened fire.

Most of the citizens in the country opposed the deal with the Asia Energy, as country’s interest was not saved in the agreement

The government expert commitee on Phulbari Coalmine project finally suggested the government not to sign further deal with the Asia Energy saying the agreement of mine exploration was signed illegally in terms of royalty.

Source: The New Nation

Link: http://nation.ittefaq.com/new/get.php?d=07/08/02/w/n_ztvv

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Thursday, August 9, 2007

Citizens’ body denounces reports favouring open-pit mining

Demands coal policy should drop the method

http://www.newagebd.com/busi.html#1

The Bangladesh Economic Association’s citizens’ commission on oil, gas and coal issues on Wednesday denounced recent reports in a number of newspapers about the ‘benefits’ of the open-pit mining system and demanded that the idea of using that method should be dropped from the coal policy.
‘Those [reporters] who were taken to Germany are under the illusion that they are experts. Some of them even wrote that the open-pit mining method is good even before visiting the coal-fields in Germany,’ said Abul Barakat, general secretary of the association, at a meeting held to exchange opinions on the draft coal policy at the National Press Club.
Referring to the news reports on German mining, Barakat said, ‘It seems that those [reports] are involved in the ploy to loot our energy resources. As we have learnt from the experts, the open-pit mining method is not feasible in Bangladesh.’ 
Quazi Kholiquzzaman Ahmad, president of the association, proposed that the concept of open-pit mining should be totally dropped from the draft coal policy.
‘After going through the news reports on open-pit mining in Germany, it seems that someone else has written the reports for the reporters,’ said Professor Nurul Islam of the BUET.
He told the meeting that one of the reports said that German company RWE, which is a consultant of Asia Energy, was a home-grown company of Germany and has been mining successfully over the years.
‘So we should also wait for a home-grown company to be established for mining our coal successfully. We should develop state-run companies that can mine. If we look at India, we will see that the state-run Coal India owns most of the coal-fields there,’ he said.
Regarding open-pit mining in Germany, Professor Islam said that the density of population there is only 237 persons per square kilometre, whereas in Bangladesh it is as much as 1,079! 
He, however, said a state-owned organisation should be formed to launch a pilot project on open-pit mining. 
‘We should immediately go for extraction of coal from more fields by underground mining. We should set up a state-owned company, Coal Bangla, which will launch a pilot project on open-pit mining. If we find that method feasible, we will use the open-pit system in the future according to our need,’ he said. 
Sheikh Md Shahidullah, convener of the committee to protect oil, gas, mineral resources, power and port, said that if the country uses the open-pit mining method at the moment, it will be forced to export coal because of the huge cost of coal extraction. 
Commission members Justice Golam Rabbani, Rafidul Islam and Golam Mortaza were present on the occasion, along with others.
The economic association’s leaders will submit their recommendations today to the advisory committee that was formed by the government to finalise the draft coal policy.


Punishment for dubious Asia
Energy deal demanded

Professor Nurul Islam, who was the convener of a technical committee formed by the government to scrutinise Asia Energy’s scheme to develop the Phulbari coal-field, on Wednesday demanded that the government punish, as per the existing law, the people who were involved in striking the extremely questionable deal with the dubious company.
Professor Islam, for the first time, made public some important contents of the report of the technical committee on the company’s development scheme on Wednesday at a views-exchange meeting, and termed the government’s agreement with the company ‘illegal’.
Other speakers at the meeting on the proposed coal policy, organised by the Bangladesh Economic Association, also demanded that the government cancel the agreement with Asia Energy. 
‘As per the existing mining Act, people involved with any illegal agreement should get a punishment of four years’ imprisonment. There is rule of law in the country. The contract with Asia Energy was signed in contravention of the legal aspects, so the rule of law should be enforced in this case as well,’ said Professor Islam, who is also the director of BUET’s Institute of Appropriate Technology.
He criticised the role of a section of bureaucrats who were ignoring the report of the committee that was formed in November 2005 by the government to scrutinise Asia Energy’s work-plan to develop the Phulbari coal-field. 
Although the committee submitted its report in June 2006, no government has taken any steps yet to implement the recommendations of the report.
‘When we found that the contract with Asia Energy was illegal, they [a section of the bureaucrats] claimed that the committee did not have the jurisdiction to comment on the legality of the agreement. A number of the committee’s members (mostly government officials) also gave a note of dissent in this regard,’ said Professor Islam.
He said that the major irregularity took place when the government signed an agreement for the Phulbari coal-field with Australian company BHP (which later handed the field over to Asia Energy) in 1994.
He said that when the agreement with BHP was signed on August 8, 1994, the mining rules had a provision that the government would get a royalty of 20 per cent but the agreement stipulated that the government would get only 6 per cent royalty.
‘The government on July 10, 1994 signed an agreement with Petrobangla that stipulated that the government would get 20 per cent royalty. Although the agreement with BHP was signed in August, the mining rules were changed in December 1994, incorporating the provision of 6 per cent royalty,’ he said, quoting the committee’s report.

Curtsey- The New Age

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