-3.3 C
New York
Monday, December 8, 2025
HomeNewsBangladesh vows to amend controversial security laws, but activists wary

Bangladesh vows to amend controversial security laws, but activists wary

Date:

Related stories

Second Indian national dies after Albany house fire

Highlights: Two Indian nationals have died after a house...

India’s defense minister says ‘Operation Sindoor’ was deliberately restrained

Highlights: Rajnath Singh says the armed forces had the...

US defense bill for 2026 seeks stronger strategic partnership with India

Highlights: The 2026 US defense policy bill calls for...

Supreme court to review landmark birthright citizenship case

Highlights: Supreme Court to determine the constitutional scope of...

Mamta Singh makes history as first Indian-American elected to public office in Jersey City

Highlights: Mamta Singh becomes the first Indian American elected...

Bangladesh’s government said Monday it would overhaul controversial security laws the opposition says are being used to stifle dissent but rights groups feared it could result in the same “repressive features”.

Opposition parties accuse Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina of using the 2018 Digital Security Act (DSA) to crack down on dissenting voices and have vowed to scrap it if they win elections slated for January.

Justice minister Anisul Huq said Monday cabinet had approved changes, which include a reduction in punishments in a bid to “prevent some misuse and abuse”.

“We have reduced the penal provisions,” Huq told reporters.

He said its name would be changed to the Cyber Security Act and that the punishment for defamation would be changed from jail to a fine.

- Advertisement -

Amnesty International said it welcomed the move to change the act, which it called “a draconian law which was weaponised by the ruling party and its affiliates to stifle dissent and thwart freedom of expression online”.

But it also voiced caution and said the new act should “not rehash the same repressive features”.

Human Rights Watch has said the “vague and overly broad measures” of the DSA had been used to “harass and indefinitely detain” activists and journalists.

One study by the Centre for Governance Studies, a Bangladesh think tank, found that the law was used to charge more than 1,500 people between January 2020 and September 15, 2021, including scores of journalists, teachers, politicians and students.

Bangladesh’s next general election is due before the current parliament’s term expires in January.

The opposition has called for Hasina to step down and for the polls to take place under a neutral caretaker government. Hasina has rejected the demand as unconstitutional.

Western governments have expressed concern over the political climate in Bangladesh, where the ruling party dominates the legislature and runs it as virtually a rubber stamp.

(AFP)

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories