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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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February 16, 2016
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Selling
Books "Offensive" to Muslims Lands 3 Bangladeshis in Jail
by IPT News • Feb 16, 2016 at
11:19 am
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The arrest of three people during a book fair in Bangladesh Monday may
be an indication that Islamist violence and intimidation, sadly, can work.
Publisher Shamsuzzoha Manik could face as much as 14 years in prison if convicted of violating Bangladesh's Information and Communication
Technology Act by selling books which might offend Muslims. Two of Manik's
associates also were arrested, and police shut down their booth at the
annual Dhaka book fair. They are being held for questioning.
One of the books, Islam Bitorko (Islam Debate), has a chapter
described as focusing on sexual perversion in Muslim thought.
"We've read the book and found that it has gravely hurt religious
sentiments," Deputy Police Commissioner Abdul Baten said. More than 80 copies of the book were seized
Monday.
Other books seized include one about Mohammad's
teaching on jihad, one on women's roles in Islam and one on atheism versus
theism.
Their presence directly defied organizers' instructions "not to
showcase such controversial books in the fair stalls which would hurt
people's religious sentiments, Shamsuzzaman Khan, director of the Bangla
Academy, the sponsor of the book fair, told Agence France Presse. "It was an unforgivable
crime."
Bangladesh is supposed to be a secular state that follows a form of
British common law. But in arresting Manik and his colleagues, the state is
imposing blasphemy laws on commercial publishing. This crackdown on
"offensive" books comes after a half-dozen Bangladeshi writers
were murdered by Islamists in 2015. That includes American
Avijit Roy, who was hacked to death during last year's Dhaka book fair.
It also follows an open threat by a group calling itself Khelafat
Andolon (Caliphate Movement) that it would attack the book fair if Manik
was not arrested, AFP reported.
Roy, like the others who fell victim to the Islamist violence, faced
direct threats before they were murdered. But they refused to yield to the
intimidation and vowed to continue their free-thinking and critical
analysis toward religion.
Monday's arrests only make Islamist threats more potent and add to the
chilling effect on free speech for Bangladesh's people.
Related Topics: Free
Speech, Islamist
Censorship | IPT News, free
speech, Islamist
censorship, Bangladesh
bloggers, Shamsuzzoha
Manik, blasphemy
laws, Avijit
Roy, Khelafat
Andolon, book
fair, Abdul
Baten, Free
Speech, Islamist
Censorship
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