Bangladesh editors warn of ‘fight for survival’ as mob violence targets media

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Bangladeshi police stand guard in front of the burnt office of the Daily Star newspaper.

Bangladeshi police stand guard in front of the burnt office of the Daily Star newspaper.

PHOTO: EPA

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Bangladesh’s top media editors warned on Dec 22 that threats against journalists have escalated into a fight for survival after the killing of a prominent youth leader triggered violent attacks on newspaper offices last week.

Mr Sharif Osman Hadi, 32, a leading figure in the 2024 student-led uprising that toppled longtime prime minister Sheikh Hasina, was shot in the head by masked assailants in Dhaka while launching his campaign for February’s parliamentary election.

He died on Dec 18 in a Singapore hospital.

His killing

sparked widespread protests

that spiralled into arson and vandalism targeting major media outlets and cultural institutions. Offices of The Daily Star and Prothom Alo

were among those attacked

.

Assailants accused the newspapers of “serving the interests of India and Sheikh Hasina”, allegations editors strongly denied.

Hasina

fled to India

after her ouster and remains in New Delhi despite Dhaka seeking her extradition.

At a protest meeting organised by the Editors’ Council and the Newspaper Owners’ Association of Bangladesh, The Daily Star editor Mahfuz Anam said journalists were receiving explicit death threats.

“On social media, we have seen messages saying journalists of The Daily Star and Prothom Alo should be hunted down and killed in their homes,” Mr Anam said. “Freedom of expression is no longer the main issue. Now it is about the right to stay alive.”

Bangladesh ranks 149th out of 180 countries in the World Press Freedom Index. Rights groups say continued attacks on journalists and activists could further shrink civic space ahead of the election.

Editors’ Council president and New Age editor Nurul Kabir, who was assaulted while trying to rescue colleagues, accused the attackers of attempting to burn journalists alive inside their offices.

Bangladesh is governed by an interim administration led by Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus and is

due to elect a new Parliament

on Feb 12. The interim government blamed the violence on fringe elements and vowed full justice for the attacks.

The police have identified 31 suspects and arrested nine in connection with the assaults, Mr Yunus’ press office said on Dec 22. REUTERS

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