Crime & Justice

Bangladesh teenage girl detained over blasphemy gets bail

Dhaka, Feb 17 (EFE).- A Bangladesh court Thursday granted bail to a teenage girl detained at a correction center for more than 15 months over alleged blasphemy.

Police arrested Dipti Rani Das,17, on Oct.28, 2020 from northern Dinajpur district for a Facebook picture showing a woman holding the Islamic holy book Quran in between her thighs.

“The judges observed that she was eligible to get bail under children act,” said defense lawyer ZI Khan Panna.

The girl faces up to seven years in jail as police have booked her under the controversial Digital Security Act on charges of “hurting religious sentiment” and “advancing to deteriorate law and order.”

International rights group Amnesty International in last November urged Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to release Dipti.

“You cannot be not concerned by such forms of punishment that seizes critical, formative years of a child’s life simply for a Facebook post,” Amnesty South Asia Campaigner Saad Hammadi said.

“Instead of providing protection, we have a teenage girl languishing at a correction facility for more than a year. Deepti Rani Das should be in school, not in detention.”

The human rights group called on the government to urgently repeal or substantially amend the 2018 Digital Security Act and end the crackdown on the right to freedom of expression.

Bangladesh had imprisoned at least 433 people under the DSA as of July 2021 on allegations of publishing false and offensive information online, Amnesty said.

It said a high court bench granted Dipti bail on May 11 after a lower court denied it three times.

However, an appeal by the local administration chief got a stay order on bail.

Amnesty also urged Bangladesh authorities to ensure the security of Dipti, her family, and other members of minority groups in Bangladesh from communal or politically motivated attacks.

Mob violence is not uncommon in Muslim-majority Bangladesh over actions allegedly causing hurt to religious sentiments.

At least six people lost their lives in violence when mobs ransacked over 100 Hindu temples in October after a social media post showed the Muslim holy book placed on the knee of an idol of the Hindu monkey god Hanuman. EFE

am/ssk

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