The killings have
gone unpunished … secular activists protest against the murder of blogger Niloy
Chakrabarti in Dhaka earlier in August.
Niloy Chakrabarti was only the latest atheist
blogger to be hacked to death in the country this year. The government
crackdown on ‘blasphemers’ has sent others into hiding.
What is the future for the country’s liberal
writers?
In
February 2015, Avijit Roy and his wife, Rafida Bonya Ahmed, travelled from
their home in Atlanta, Georgia, to Dhaka, the capital Bangladesh.
This was their home town, and they were attending the annual Ekushey book fair,
which runs all month. They had been unable to attend in 2014 because Roy had
received death threats after the publication of his book The Virus of Faith,
which criticised religion.
The
couple were familiar with controversy. They ran a Bengali-language web forum
called Mukto-Mona,
or Free Minds, promoting rationalist thought, and had been threatened by
Islamic fundamentalists. During their trip to Dhaka, they avoided being out
late at night, varied their routines and checked in regularly with relatives.
For the first 10 days, the strategy seemed to work.
On
26 February, they attended a series of events at the University of Dhaka, where
the book fair is held. They left in the evening, walking back to their car
through a crowded and well-lit area. Suddenly, they were surrounded by a group
of masked men with machetes. Ahmed doesn’t remember what happened next, as the
knives rained down upon them. There were hundreds of people around, including
police officers. They did not step in. After the attack, a young journalist
intervened and drove them to the hospital. Ahmed survived, severely injured. It was too late for Roy, who died during
the drive.
“We
knew the risks,” Ahmed told me when we met in central London four months after
the attack. She is a small woman in her 40s with short, cropped hair, wide eyes
and a youthful face. Because of the attack, she is missing a thumb. “Avi was
there on his own in 2012, and he was pretty open and nothing happened, so we
were not ready for this. Our daughter” – a student – “says we underestimated
the situation. We thought, OK, there could be protests, there could be people
yelling and screaming – but not this.” She pauses, struggling with herself. “We
knew, we knew how dangerous it could be.”
Ahmed’s
scalp and neck also bear scars; she was stabbed repeatedly in the head. She is
quick to laugh, but says her thoughts are “scattered” by the heavy medication.
She gets tired quickly because of the head injuries.
Roy,
who held dual US and Bangladeshi nationality, was the most prominent atheist
writer to be attacked in Bangladesh, but he was not the first – or the last. On
30 March, a month after Roy’s murder, another blogger, Washiqur Rahman Babu, was set upon by a group of masked assailants.
On 12 May, Ananta Bijoy Das, who wrote for Mukto-Mona on rationalism and
science, was attacked in his hometown of Sylhet. On
7 August, men with machetes broke into the Dhaka home of Niloy Chakrabarti, a blogger who used the
pen name Niloy Neel. All three men died.
The
four murders in 2015 were brutal and happened in quick succession, prompting
police action. Three people have been arrested – including
a British citizen, Touhidur Rahman – over the deaths of Avijit Roy and Ananta
Bijoy Das. But the violence goes back further. It began on 15 January 2013,
when atheist blogger and political activist Asif
Mohiuddin was on his way to work and was attacked from behind by a
group of men with machetes. “I [thought] I would die,” he tells me over Skype
from his new home in Germany. “But somehow I survived.” He spent weeks in
intensive care, and still finds it difficult to move his neck. “I think I will
carry this problem all my life.”
A month later, another
blogger critical of Islamic fundamentalism, Ahmed Rajib Haider, was attacked in the
same way outside his house in Dhaka. He did not survive. In August 2014,
someone broke into the Dhaka home of TV personality Nurul Islam Faruqi, who had
criticised fundamentalist groups on air, and slit his throat. A humanist
academic, Professor Shafiul Islam, who had pushed for a ban on full-face veils
for students, was murdered near Rajshahi University in west Bangladesh in
November.
These
brutal crimes have gone unpunished; arrests have not led to prosecutions. The
government appears unwilling, or unable, to stand with atheists. Instead, in an
attempt to appease Islamists, it has ramped up its own actions against
“blasphemous” bloggers. Secularists are terrified. Many have stopped writing
altogether, some have left the country and others are desperately seeking an
exit. Who is behind these attacks on atheists, a tiny subset of the
Muslim-majority population? And can Bangladesh’s secular tradition survive in
the face of such violence?
Bangladesh was born out of the partition of
India in 1947, when it was labelled East Pakistan, officially part of the new
homeland for the Muslims of the subcontinent. The independence movement began
in the 1950s, and came to a head with the bloody 1971 war of independence,
which saw genocide of liberation forces by West Pakistan. The war brought to
the forefront tensions within Bangladesh.
On
one side were Islamists, who supported West Pakistan, arguing that it was an
affront to Islam for Bangladesh to declare independence. On the other were
secularists who wanted a state free of the religious strictures and economic
marginalisation they suffered as part of Pakistan. The latter group won the
battle of ideas, and the country’s constitution guaranteed secularism as a
founding principle.
It
didn’t last. Power was seized by the military in 1975 and, as had happened in
Pakistan, a process of Islamisation began. In 1977, military leaders removed
secularism from the constitution and declared Islam the state religion. This
remained the case until 2010, when the supreme court restored the principle of
secularism. Islam remained the state religion. This
fractious history points to an unresolved question: what is the true identity
of Bangladesh? Perhaps unsurprisingly for a debate born out of such violence,
it is a polarising subject.
‘The government was officially recognising
the fundamentalist message’ … Asif Mohiuddin was attacked by men with machetes
in 2013. He survived and then was imprisoned twice. He now lives in Germany.
“There
is a rationalist intellectual tradition that goes back to the 19th century,”
says Dr Sumit Ganguly, professor of Indian Civilisations at Indiana University.
“There was already a cultural consensus about an openness to the world, a
certain cosmopolitanism, reflected in the work of prominent writers.” But, he
explains, this secular tradition did not exist in isolation. “There was always
a strain of bigotry, of closed-mindedness – Hindus and Muslims were
contemptuous of each other. During Bangladesh’s earlier heritage as East
Pakistan, various forms of bigotry were actively promoted by the state.”
During
the years, that conservative segment of the population has been empowered by
periods of religious-minded military rule. One of the two main parties, the
Bangladesh National Party (BNP), is allied with religious groups. The other,
the Awami League, is secular. But, as religion has become an ever more
sensitive topic, they too have capitulated to the religious lobby.
It
was against this backdrop that a small but committed community of secularist
bloggers began to emerge in the mid-2000s. The first Bengali-language public
blogging platform, somewhereinblog.net, was launched in 2005.
But gradually, some noticed an increasing volume of religious material.
“Day
by day, I saw the Islamisation of blogs,” says Mohiuddin. “In Bangladesh, Islamic
groups control the mainstream media and TV channels – and they were trying to
control the blogs as well.” He and other writers started their own sites,
contributing to each other’s blogs and starting Facebook discussions on
history, philosophy, science, law and feminism. Some posts were explicitly
critical of the government; others dealt with religious texts. “I criticised
many verses of the Qur’an and the Bible because I thought those verses were not
compatible with modern society,” says Mohiuddin.
It
was through this virtual group of Bangladeshi atheists that Roy and Ahmed first
made contact. They began to speak on the phone, discussing their ideas, how
they both came to atheism. His background was Hindu, hers Muslim; he had
abandoned faith at 19, she had at 13. Both came from liberal families who
accepted their non-belief. On the phone, she teased him that he’d discovered
atheism so late. They debated ideas and swapped stories about their family
lives. They soon met and became a couple. “That marriage was a lot of work,”
she says. “We grew and changed all the time and we didn’t agree on everything –
but we were committed.”
When
they first met in 2001, Roy had recently established Mukto-Mona as a small
Yahoo forum. In 2002, Ahmed helped him set up the first Mukto-Mona website.
Mukto-Mona became one of the central points for Bangladesh’s small community of
atheist writers. They grew close; Ahmed describes Bijoy Das, murdered three
months after her husband, as “a little brother”. She had recently come out of
the intensive care unit when she heard about his death. “Every time I went to
Bangladesh, I would give him the bus fare to go home, because he was a
student,” she says. “I just lost my whole recovery when I heard about him.”
The
scars of the 1971 war of independence have recently been reopened, drawing to
the surface the tension between Islamists and secularists. In 2010, the Awami
League began a war crimes tribunal aimed at bringing the perpetrators of mass
killings to justice. From the outset, it was controversial. Critics saw it as
political score-settling by Sheikh Hasina, prime minister and head of the Awami
League, for the slaughter of her father in the military coup of 1975.
Many
bloggers were vocal supporters of the tribunal. The trial came to a head in late 2012 and
early 2013, and it was at this point that fundamentalists turned their
attention to atheist writers.
In
January 2013 Mohiuddin was knifed, and in February Haider was killed. Both were
active in the Shahbag protest movement, comprised of
secularists supportive of the war crimes tribunal. After the attacks, thousands
took to the streets, calling for justice for Mohiuddin and Haider. “This is
where the tension [reached] a new level,” says Sumit Galhotra, Asia researcher
for the Committee
to Protect Journalists. “But Bangladesh was already on this
trajectory. Throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, there were authors who had to
flee the country, long before the current crisis.”
It
did not take long for Islamists to form counter-protests, calling for the death
penalty for blasphemers and atheists. Protests descended into violent clashes.
Islamist fundamentalists published a hit-list of 84 bloggers. Many had used
pseudonyms; now they were outed. Newspapers ran inflammatory articles about
non-believers. Many went into hiding, fearful of vigilante attack. Mohiuddin
took to covering his face with a mask when he left the house.
The
group leading the counter-protests, Hefazat-e-Islam, issued a 13-point list of
demands. Among other hardline demands apparently inspired by the Taliban, it
called for punishment for the leaders of the Shahbag movement. Rather than
defending the right to freedom of expression, Hasina capitulated. In April
2013, four bloggers from the list distributed by Islamists were arrested. One
of them was Mohiuddin, who had been attacked with machetes three months
earlier.
“I
was very angry when the government started arresting secular bloggers,” he
says. “They were officially recognising the fundamentalist message – these
people are atheists and they have to be killed. We had problems now from
Islamic groups and the so-called secular Awami League.”
Prison
was a dangerous place for Mohiuddin. His name and photograph had been in
newspapers, and Islamist groups had incorrectly labelled him the leader of the
country’s secular bloggers. “The first day I was in prison, all the prisoners
shouted that in the morning they will cut me into pieces. I thought, this is
the end of my life, and tomorrow morning they are going to kill me.” At one
point, he was placed in a cell with two of the men who had attacked him. They
were unrepentant.
Mohiuddin
was in jail for three months, accused of criticising Islam and the prophet. He
was bailed for a month before being imprisoned again for nine days. After that,
he went to Germany to take up a scholarship. He plans to remain in Europe for
several years, until it is safe for him to return home. “They are still looking
for me. Just a few days ago I got threats. It has become very normal for me,
but I still have to take care. I don’t share my location anywhere.”
Niloy Chakrabarti claimed
officers ignored threats weeks before he was hacked to death in his Dhaka flat,
the fourth such murder this year
Read more
Mohiuddin’s
ordeal neatly crystallises the double threat faced by bloggers – Islamist
violence on the one hand, and official repression on the other. The crisis
faced by atheist writers is unfolding against a backdrop of a wider clampdown
on press freedom. “It’s been a really bad time for the media,” says Galhotra.
“Sheikh Hasina’s government has been going after anyone reporting critically on
her.” The editor of Amardesh, an opposition newspaper, is
behind bars, while two TV news channels affiliated with the
opposition remain off-air. Some Islamist bloggers have been arrested.
While
tension about the war crimes tribunal has now died down, violence against
atheist writers has surged. “One of the reasons is that Bangladesh has allowed
a culture of impunity to flourish over the years,” says Galhotra. Arrests have
been made after the four murders this year, but given that those charged with
Haider’s killing in 2013 have still not stood trial, relatives are not hopeful.
The attack on Roy and Ahmed this year gained international attention, but the
Bangladeshi government made no comment. Eventually, in May, Hasina’s son, Sajeeb Wazed, spoke to Reuters:
“Our mother offered private condolences to Avijit’s father. But the political
situation in Bangladesh is too volatile for her to comment further … given that
our opposition party plays that religion card against us relentlessly, we can’t
come out strongly for him. It’s about perception, not about reality.”
The
impact on Bangladesh’s close-knit group of secularist bloggers has been
drastic. Many have stopped writing. Mohiuddin bears the scars of this battle of
ideas on his body; when he wakes up each morning, he has to stay still for 20
minutes before he can move his neck. But he is most distressed by the loss of
his work. When the government banned his blog, they deleted all its content
from the server. “I cannot live my life without writing. I am breathing, so I
have to write. I was very upset for that blog. I have to start everything from
the beginning.”
Ahmed speaks about her husband in the present tense, and is grieving her loss. “It’s a process. I am still under treatment. It’s going to take a while. I feel nothing any more, absolutely nothing.”
Throughout
their relationship, the couple gave each other handwritten letters. Ahmed’s
last letter to Roy was written on 12 February, two weeks before he died. In it,
she remembered that, when they first met, she criticised him for neglecting
books because he was too focused on the internet. “I wrote to him and said,
‘Now you read so much more, and I have slowed down. You encourage me and remind
me that I need to get back to that. I guess that’s the strength we have, that
we encourage each other.’”
Her
phone bleeped with messages from Mukto-Mona’s international network of
moderators, determined to keep the discussion going. But the public space for
Bangladesh’s atheist writers and activists is closing all the time.
A longer version of this piece appears in the Autumn 2015
edition of New Humanist magazine. See newhumanist.org.uk
Photograph: Muni Uz Zaman/AFP/Getty Images
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