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Bangladesh Arrests Publisher for Books Said to Hurt Muslims


Bangladeshi policemen guard outside a shutdown stall of "Badwip Prokshan," a publishing house at a major month-long book fair in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Feb.16, 2016.
Bangladeshi policemen guard outside a shutdown stall of "Badwip Prokshan," a publishing house at a major month-long book fair in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Feb.16, 2016.

A Bangladeshi court placed a publishing house owner and two other people on remand Tuesday for publishing books alleged to hurt the religious sentiments of Muslims.

Metropolitan Magistrate Amirul Islam Chowdhury made the order after police produced publisher Shamsuzzoha Manik, his office executive Shamsul Alam and printing press owner Taslim Uddin. Police will be questioning Manik for five days, Alam for one day and Uddin for two days.

The arrests followed the shutdown Monday of a stall of the "Badwip Prokshan," the publishing house owned by Manik, at a major month-long book fair in Dhaka.

Six books were seized from the stall, police official Abdul Baten told a news conference.

The arrests were made after some readers complained that the books discussed sex and perversion of Muslims.

They would face up to 14 years in jail if convicted of violating the country's information technology law.

The recent murders of secular bloggers and a publisher who dealt with Islam and criticized Prophet Muhammad in writings and books have drawn attention to freedom of expression in Bangladesh, a Muslim-majority nation of 160 million people that is ruled largely by a secular system based on British common law.

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