Mithu's story
After Tipu Sultan, come
forward to help courageous journalist Mithu.
After getting viciously beaten
by the ruling class, the case of Mithu is a repeat affair
of Tipu Sultan from a three years ago. He was left for
dead. His right hand had been crushed and he has neurological
problems from having been beaten on the back of his
head with a chaapaati. The attack was seen as areprisal
for his reporting on the local MPs' attoricities on
the local people. He is going to India for
treatment. However, he does not have enough to sustain
the medical help. He has sold some of his properties
to get the money which is not enough and he still needs
additional $3000-$5000. Drishtipat representatives met
him recently in Dhaka and seeing his plight has decided
to raise some fund for him. Read below the accounts
of two Drishtipat members on this issue and lend a helping
hand.
-- Asif Saleh
Mithu's Story
- By Zafar Sobhan
Last week I met Shafiul
Huq Mithu, the Pirojpur correspondent of the Dainik
Janakantha, at a gathering held for the visiting CPJ
(Committee to Protect Journalists) delegation. I am
afraid that there was little pleasure in the meeting
for Mithu. He was in too much pain. His right arm was
in a cast and lines of distress were etched into his
face. He held a glass of water in his left hand and
explained that he wouldn't be eating because his right
arm was still shattered and useless.
At home, he is hand-fed by his family, but he was too
embarrassed to ask anyone at the reception to perform
this function for him, and did not feel comfortable
eating with his left hand. He would eat when he got
home.
Mithu had been attacked and left for dead by three
hired killers on December 28. The killers repeatedly
beat him around the head and body with pipes and other
blunt instruments, breaking his right arm in several
places and knocking him unconscious. He was only saved
by the intercession of passers-by who heard his cries
for help and happened on the scene, causing his assailants
to flee before they could complete their grisly assignment.
Even though the attack on Mithu took place almost two
and a half months ago, he is still wracked with pain.
His right arm is far from fully healed and he is hoping
to raise enough money to be able to travel abroad to
have it properly fixed. The bones are so shattered that
simply putting his arm in a cast and waiting for it
to mend, as he has done, will not be sufficient if he
wishes to ever regain full use of his right arm again.
Mithu still suffers from blinding headaches due to
the severity of the blows that he received to the back
of his head, and complains genteelly of the pain he
still has all over his body due to the brutality of
the beating that he received. Such was the ferocity
of the attack on him that there is little doubt that
his assailants were intending to kill him. The charge-sheet
that has been framed against his assailants charges
them with attempted murder.
Mithu's case is instructive. He has long been a bold
and courageous voice speaking out against injustice
and oppression. His writing had been specially critical
of local MPs Delwar Hossain Saidee and Shahidul Huq
Jamal. Back in July 2003, Mithu was one of seven journalists
in Pirojpur district who received death threats from
an unnamed group for his writing.
On December 17, 2003, Mithu filed a story on the plight
of the minority community living on the riverine island
of Chor Baniari.
The minority community of the island has been farming
rice and raising fish there since the 1940s despite
periodic attempts by various factions to have them dispossessed
and to take over their land. Back in 1994, one local
minority landowner was murdered and over a dozen minority
households were burned to the ground in efforts to intimidate
and terrorise the local minority population.
Mithu's piece detailed the continuing perils of the
minority community on the island who live under constant
threat of violence and warnings to leave the area. Mithu's
piece specifically focused on the efforts of a gang
of hoodlums under the alleged command of a man named
Mujibur Molla and supported by the local BNP to seize
by force 85 acres of minority-owned land.
Mithu reported how a group of over a hundred gangsters
landed on the island and forcibly took over 20 acres
of land and looted fish from ponds owned by members
of the community. When the locals attempted to resist
them, they were severely beaten, resulting in eight
locals, including six women, being hospitalised with
serious injuries. In the aftermath of this incident,
Mithu reported, the members of the island's minority
community did not dare leave their homes and were bracing
themselves for another attack.
It was in reprisal for this report as well as his other
writings antagonistic to the Jamaat and the BNP, that
Mithu believes he was targeted.
In the days following the publication of his piece,
Mithu noticed that he was being tailed by ruling alliance
activists. Local ruling alliance activists Akram Molla,
Chowra Kamal, Reazuddin Rana and Moulana Shafiq repeatedly
sought him out and threatened him. Local political leaders,
including MPs Shahidul Huq Jamal and Delwar Hossain
Saidee, spoke virulently against his writings at public
meetings.
This is the background to the brutal attack Mithu suffered
on December 28. As he left the Pirojpur Press Club late
that night, he once again spotted Akram, Chowra Kamal
and Rana tailing him for a short time before disappearing.
He was set upon by his assailants shortly afterwards.
One of his assailants, a locally well-known hired goon
by the name of Russell was apprehended at the scene
of the crime by the public who had rushed to the scene
on hearing Mithu's cries for help. Russell was immediately
taken into custody, but no charges were framed against
him until this week. The police superintendent claimed
that he was powerless to act as he was under extreme
pressure from influential local politicians.
It was not until after Mithu had met with the CPJ delegation,
and they had mentioned his case at a press conference
and publicised it in their report that, his three assailants
were finally officially charged with attempted murder
earlier this week. Despite the fact that he was caught
at the scene of the crime, had been identified by Mithu
and countless eye-witnesses, and has spent the last
two and a half months in police custody, Russell was
not officially charged until this week. His two accomplices,
Arun and Kamal, whom he has identified, have yet to
be arrested by the police, who claim to be unaware of
their whereabouts, despite reports that Kamal is moving
around freely and has been spotted at political meetings
and functions in the past two months.
It remains to be seen whether the case against Russell,
Arun and Kamal will come to anything. The government
does not have much of a track record in aggressively
prosecuting attacks on journalists. Nor is the police
making any discernible effort to get to the bottom of
who was ultimately behind the attack on Mithu. Despite
his statements on the matter as to the threats he had
received prior to his attack, and the other persuasive
corroborating evidence for who might have ordered his
killing, the police have shown no enthusiasm for expanding
the scope of their investigation to pursue the real
culprits.
Mithu is a brave man. He tells me that the violence
he has suffered will not keep him from writing the stories
that he believes the public needs to know. But who knows
how many other newsmen have been silenced, either through
violence meted out to them in reprisal for their writing,
or by the threat of violence. The freedom to print stories
that might be critical of the government, or cause it
embarrassment, is a fundamental right, and is crucial
to the effective functioning of a democracy. If the
media is not permitted to bring stories of official
misconduct to the public eye or is intimidated into
not pursuing stories by the threat of reprisal, then
there is no mechanism left to ensure the accountability
of the government for its actions.
Zafar Sobhan is an Assistant Editor of The Daily Star
The Expendable Bengalis
Iffat Nawaz
“If Tipu and Mithu can’t get justice who
will?” said Abi Wright Asia Program
Coordinator of the Committee to Protect Journalists
(CPJ) during a phone
interview with Drishtipat. Abi along with a few of her
CPJ colleagues
visited Bangladesh this spring. CPJ visited Bangladesh
after the death of
Manik Saha, the attack on Shaiful Haque Mithu and the
past reputation of
Bangladesh’s treatment towards journalists.
Our focus of discussion was mainly around Shaiful Haque
Mithu’s case, the
Pirojpur correspondent of the Dainik Janakantha. Mithu
who was attacked and
left for dead by three hired killers on December 28,
2003. The attackers
continually beat him around the head and body with pipes
and other sharp
devices. Mithu’s right arm was broken in several
places, the pain knocked
him unconscious. If it wasn’t for passers-by who
overheard Mithu’s help for
cries, Mithu’s would have been no more. The assailants
fled as passers-by
interrupted the assignment to kill.
Today Mithu is struggling with severe damages in his
right arm and splitting
headaches constantly visits him due to his head injury.
Mithu is in need of
justice and financial support, both of which are scarce.
His assailants are
no where near to being punished. Awami Leage and BNP
have offered him some
support; they were busy pointing fingers at each other,
playing the blame
game. Both parties gave Mithu’s case momentary
attention and looked away
when the voices quieted down pressing for justice.
What led Mithu to be attacked was his story on Janakantha
on December 17,
2003, on the plight of the minority community living
on the riverine island
of Chor Baniari. Mithu’s story depicted the harassment
on the people of
Chor Baniari by local thugs under the order of a man
named Mujibur Molla and
assisted by the local BNP.
Mithu is still waiting for justice as his story is
starting to become less
of the hype and more of the past to Bangladesh’s
government and media. Abi
Wright pointed out how important it is that Drishtipat
and other human
rights organizations initiate awareness campaigns for
Shaiful Haque Mithu
and others like him, others who have been punished for
expressing the truth,
for using their basic rights.
I asked Abi what makes Bangladesh different from other
countries when it
comes to attacks towards journalists. She said “it
is not that other
countries don’t face such problems but what makes
Bangladesh different are
the frequency of attacks and the extent of the violence.”
The attackers are
not there to give just a threat but they are there to
hurt and kill them
brutally. This is what assures Bangladesh’s reputation
as the most violent
country in Asia for journalists.
It is co-incidental that during Abi’s stay in
Dhaka the attack on Professor
Humayon Azad took place. Abi mentioned during a student
protest against this
attack in the Dhaka university campus few more journalists
covering the
story were beaten badly by JCD goons and sent to the
hospitals. The chief
photographer from Prothom Alo Mr. Firoz Chowdhury was
badly injured, 15 JCD
members surrounded him, smashed his digital camera,
he had wounds in his
shoulder, back and chest. Abi and her colleagues visited
him at the hospital
to experience the result of unjustified cruelty towards
Bangladeshi
Journalists.
Abi Wright has prepared an article for the magazine
“Dangerous Assignments”
on Shaiful Haque Mithu which will be published on June
1st 2004. She is
eager to help Drishtipat’s campaigns concerning
Shaiful Haque Mithu and
attacks against journalists. To feel the pain and protest
the harassment of
fellow colleagues in the other side of the world is
what I find commendable
about Abi. Where being Bangladeshis we do not worry
about such atrocity
happening to other Bangladeshis. If you ask a common
Bangladeshi about such
attacks against journalists they will not be able to
give you proper
information or names as to them it is an everyday occurrence,
we ponder on
it for a glimpse of second and the next moment our memories
get taken over
by another transgression, another shameful attack.
Let us not get immune to violence, let us not make a
life, a body so
expendable, and let us take a step before we are stepped
all over.
Update
on Nov 25. 2004
A valiant journalist was losing
the battle after being hacked by the
influential people he was writing against. He needed
urgent help
and Drishtipat raised about $3000 from individual donations
and
donations from other non profit orgs. Drishtipat core
member Iffat
Nawaz coordinated the effort and we are happy to let
you know that
after successful treatment in India, Mithu has gone
back to work in
Pirojpur.
Our good wishes are with him and many thanks to Iffat
for
coordinating this successful effort.
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