After Sheikh Hasina took over power following the 2008 general election, many cases of both official and unofficial suppression of journalists and media outlets during the sixteen consecutive years (2009âÂÂ2024) of Sheikh Hasina's authoritarian rule were reported. Since 2014, Numerous journalists were systematically and judicially punished for challenging her views. In 2021, Reporters Without Borders gave a negative assessment of Hasina's media policy for curbing press freedom in the country.
Mahfuz Anam, the editor of The Daily Star, faced 83 lawsuits filed by members of the Bangladesh Awami League in various courts across the country between 2016 and 2017.
In April 2016, Shafik Rehman, a senior Bangladeshi journalist and former speech writer for opposition leader Khaleda Zia, was arrested in Dhaka by plain-clothed police officers on allegations of involvement in a plot to assassinate Sajeeb Wazed Joy, the son of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina. He was sentenced to seven years in prison in 2023.
Journalists Sagar Sarwar and Meherun Runi were killed in their Dhaka residence on 11 February 2012, while their five-year-old son was present in the home. Thirteen years after the incident, the case remains unsolved.
The national daily newspaper Amar Desh was forcibly shut down in 2013. Its editor, Mahmudur Rahman, was charged with sedition and accused of publishing a leaked conversation that allegedly led to the resignation of the chief judge of a war crimes tribunal. In 2018, journalist Mahmudur Rahman was assaulted in the courtyard of a Kushtia Upazila courtroom by members of the Bangladesh Chhatra League, the student wing of the ruling party.
Mushtaq Ahmed, a Bangladeshi writer and cartoonist, was arrested on 6 May 2020 under the Digital Security Act (DSA) for a series of social media posts that allegedly criticised the governmentâÂÂs handling of the COVID-19 pandemic. Police charged him with spreading âÂÂfalse rumoursâ online, defaming the image of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, and âÂÂhurting the spirit of the 1971 Liberation War.â He was denied bail six times while awaiting trial. Ahmed died in police custody on 25 February 2021, prompting widespread criticism from human rights organisations and press freedom groups, including the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), which condemned his detention and called for accountability.
On 5 August 2018, Photojournalist Shahidul Alam was arrested for making what authorities described as âÂÂprovocativeâ comments in an Al Jazeera interview about student protests that had gripped Bangladesh for more than a week. According to reports, at around 10 p.m. that evening, at least 20 plain-clothes police officers raided Alam's home in Dhaka, several hours after the interview was broadcast. The following day, he was charged under Section 57 of BangladeshâÂÂs Information and Communication Technology Act, a law that criminalizes electronic communication deemed to âÂÂdeprave or corruptâ the image of the state. He was released after spending 107 days in prison.
On April 17, 2021, Rozina Islam, a senior female reporter of the Bangladeshi daily Prothom Alo, went to the Health Ministry office in the Bangladesh Secretariat for COVID-19 related reporting. She was confined in the ministry for five hours and her cell phones were seized. She was allegedly harassed and assaulted during her detention at the secretariat. She was then arrested from the Ministry for alleged theft and taking photographs of sensitive state documents. Sibbir Ahmed Osmani, Deputy Secretary of the Health Services Division, filed a case against her around midnight of April 17, 2021 with Shahbagh police station under the Official Secrets Act. She was jailed in Dhaka Kashimpur Women's Central Jail amid widespread protests. A virtual hearing for her bail was held on May 20, 2021, later the court announced the decision would be delayed to May 23, 2021, and on that day she was granted a conditional bail after being imprisoned for 7 days.