The Digital Security Act: The Tool Of Abuse In Bangladesh

0
1099

Sanctions 

The administration of President Joe Biden recently clamped restrictions on a few key officials of the Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) and the Police of Bangladesh. Phil Robertson of Human Right Watch (HRW) commented that the “RAB deserved to be sanctioned years ago because it had been a de facto death squad, operating with impunity for years in Bangladesh.” Yet, better late than never.  

The corrupt former army chief of the country, General Aziz Ahmed, also came under the US sanctions. In February 2021, Al Jazeera, a reputed international media house, released the first installment of its very authentic reports detailing high stakes corruption by the Prime Minister and her army chief. One wondered, when the former general faced the ax, why not his mentor? 

The Coalition for Human Rights and Democracy in Bangladesh (CHRD Bangladesh) expressed its happiness at the sanctions and requested the US administration to strengthen and expand the scope of sanction so that other stalwarts in the command chain of abuse that originated from the Prime Minister, could also be penalized.     

The US sanctions are seen as a token, a touch on the tip of the huge iceberg. Most democracy and rights organizations, including the US based HRW, felt it was too little, too late. They were unanimous on the demand that the scope be widened to include the source and make the actions truly effective.  

From outside the country, the extent of abuse of the people’s democratic and fundamental rights is difficult to be seen or felt. Even though the Annual Country Reports and almost all international watch groups regularly point them out, the real suffering to the people is hard to be gauged, because they are prevented from speaking the truth under various draconian laws.  

 The Digital Security Act  

Much of the human right violations are committed under the Digital Security Act (DSA), a law designed to control the media and freedom of expression, in reality, preventing any criticism of the government. Newspapers and journalists cannot report on government corruption, forced disappearances and extrajudicial killings. Under the act, people are punished for even posting petty parody lines against the Prime Minister, her family members or her government. Many languish in detention centers.     

The DSA provides absolute power with impunity to investigate anyone whose activities are deemed suspicious, a subjective element in a fascist regime. The law often forces the country’s Telecommunication Regulatory Commission to remove or block any internet information that is deemed offensive to the ruling authority. 

“The new Digital Security Act is a tool ripe for abuse and a clear violation of the country’s obligations under international law to protect free speech,” said Brad Adam, director of the New York based Human Rights Watch. 

Most observers believe that Sajeeb Wazed Joy, the US living son of the Prime Minister, is the architect of the DSA. He serves as an Adviser to his mother for Information and Communication Technology (ICT), the mothership of the DSA. The objective of the draconian law was to keep his mother’s authoritarian hold unchallenged.  

The Dhaka based Asian Age reported how Joy vehemently defended the DSA and came down heavily on the Sampadak Parishad (Editors’ Council), which opposed the proposed law on the ground that it was “against freedom of expression guaranteed by the constitution.” In his Facebook post, Joy intimidated the Council members to be enemies, who wanted to “malign the government with false propagation.” He thought that the country would land in trouble if the editors were allowed to criticize his mother, Sheikh Hasina. He further explained that the DSA intended to prevent defamation of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, his grandfather, and the spirit of the liberation war. In saying so, he totally ignored the fact that Mujib collaborated with the Pakistan military against the independence of Bangladesh and willingly surrendered to it in 1971, when Joy was born in Dhaka under military care.  The UN’s Human Rights Committee on International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) openly denounced the DSA saying that penalizing the expression of opinions about historical facts is contrary to the country’s obligation to the ICCPR.  Comparing the Act with Europe’s Holocaust Denial Law, Joy branded its opponents as Islamic fundamentalists.  

Amnesty International (AI) determined that the DSA was worse than its predecessor, the ICT, which had arrested more than 1,200 people in five years before 2018, when the DSA came into effect. AI asserted that the DSA criminalized almost all forms of freedom of expression. In response, an enraged Joy had the audacity to discredit the highly respected AI by saying that it was “no longer a human rights organization.” He insisted that all antigovernmental news was mere propaganda. To the contrary, the Scroll, an online media, asserted, “…. perhaps the most potent of Bangladesh’s propagandists is Sajeeb Wazed Joy.”  

After the US sanctions, Joy immediately challenged it by posting in his Facebook a list of the US violations of so-called human rights. That speaks of the extent of the Prime Minister’s son’s support for the rights abusers in Bangladesh, even though he was enjoying the benefits of a good life in the US for many years.    

The European International Coalition for Freedom of Rights ICFR) filed in the International Criminal Court at The Hague to investigate Bangladesh’s “crimes against humanity.” The ICFR submission stated, “The Government has systematically and systemically sought to increasingly repress opposition to its rule, through murder, torture, forced disappearances, arbitrary imprisonment, persecution and other inhumane acts.”

 Weapons Against Dissidents 

In 2017, Chief Justice of the country was ousted and forced to leave the country in the most undignified manner for refusing to endorse a legal provision as per the wishes of the regime. After the sacked judge wrote the story in his memoir, he was quickly criminalized and sentenced in absentia to a 11-year prison term on two corruption charges, which the former judge strongly denied. Netra News, a Sweden based online media, wrote that the story “encapsulates the end of the independence of the judiciary in Bangladesh.”  

While the DSA and other draconian laws put many people behind bars in the country–-some mysteriously disappearing–– a few manage to escape the ugly hands of the RAB and the Police and live difficult lives abroad. However, some of their relatives back home pay the price. Housewife Nusrat is one such victim, being the sister of Dr. Kanak Sarwar, a dissident TV presenter in New York. Netra News explained how she was framed and arrested on false accusations. The woman is in detention where doses of torture are routine. This was how, reported Netra News, the regime “uses the law courts as a weapon” to punish critics.    

The CHRD Bangladesh makes the request again that the US sanctions not only be firmly enforced but also its scope be widened to include other areas of violations, as well as the people at home and abroad in the command channel responsible for the dangerous violations of human and democratic rights in Bangladesh. Reportedly, Dhaka requested Washington to withdraw the sanction. The Coalition firmly believes that the Biden administration will not fall for it. The US knew what it had initiated after years of investigation and cannot back out from its position. In fact, the expectation is to widen the sanctions given the extent of the abuses of rights in Bangladesh, where the people see no remission to their sufferings even after the sanctions.