City
Epaper

Bangladesh: Awami League raises alarm over rising attacks on journalists

By IANS | Updated: February 27, 2026 12:40 IST

Dhaka, Feb 27 Bangladesh’s Awami League expressed grave concern over a sharp rise in criminal cases, arrests, intimidation ...

Open in App

Dhaka, Feb 27 Bangladesh’s Awami League expressed grave concern over a sharp rise in criminal cases, arrests, intimidation and physical attacks against journalists across the country since the political transition on August 5, 2024, citing reports by domestic and international watchdogs.

The party highlighted warnings from media groups that the trend risks eroding press freedom at a critical political juncture in Bangladesh.

“When Bangladesh underwent political transition on 5 August 2024, journalists were on the streets documenting protests, clashes and uncertainty. Months later, many found themselves not just reporting the news - but becoming part of it,” said the Awami League.

Citing a report published by Transparency International Bangladesh (TIB), the party noted that between August 5, 2024 and November 1, 2025, at least 1,073 journalists and media workers were affected by attacks, threats, detention, legal action or harassment across 476 documented incidents.

The Awami League also referred to a public statement by Bangladesh’s Editors’ Council on February 25, urging the newly formed Tarique Rahman-led Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) government to withdraw what it called “false and harassing cases” against journalists filed since August 2024.

“These cases are seriously obstructing journalists’ professional activities and damaging the independent environment of the media,” read the statement, which was signed by Editors' Council President Nurul Kabir and General Secretary Dewan Hanif Mahmud.

According to the Awami League, editors of several Bangladeshi media houses highlighted that incidents, combined with criminal litigation, have created an environment where journalists increasingly weigh legal consequences before publishing sensitive stories.

“Inside newsrooms, editors describe heightened self-censorship and caution. Journalists report frequent court appearances, financial strain from legal defence, and uncertainty about professional security. Media analysts warn that the cumulative effect may be long-lasting - not only affecting reporters but narrowing public access to independent information,” the Awami League detailed.

As Bangladesh continues to navigate its post-transition political landscape, the party added that observers reckon the handling of these cases would remain a defining test of democratic accountability and media freedom.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

Other SportsCommonwealth Sports delegation visits India to review Ahmedabad 2030 Commonwealth games preparations

BusinessGold ETF inflows decline in March as Middle East tensions weigh in

BusinessWhat It Actually Feels Like to Have Full Camera Control Without a Camera

NationalMP observes Nari Shakti Vandan fortnight to create awareness about Women’s Reservation Act

BusinessMaiden Forgings Limited: FY26 Business and Operational Update

International Realted Stories

InternationalJeffrey Epstein Introduced Melania to Donald Trump, First Lady Denies Claim

International"Act of war": Trump's former advisor Mike Flynn on claims that Iran used China-supplied missiles via Pakistan to target US carrier

InternationalPakistan's sugar glut exposes policy gaps amid economic strain

InternationalStrategic blowback: How Pakistan’s Taliban war enabled ISKP’s revival

InternationalPakistani forces suffer heavy losses in ambush, drone strikes by Baloch armed group