
Sheikh Hasina has been living in India since she fled Bangladesh on August 5 last year in the face of the massive protests. She was earlier declared a fugitive by the court. File
| Photo Credit: The Hindu
Bangladeshâs interim government has warned all print, electronic and online media outlets to refrain from reporting statements issued by âconvicted and fugitiveâ deposed prime minister Sheikh Hasina, citing concerns over national security and public order.
The National Cyber Security Agency (NCSA) in a press release issued on Monday (November 17, 2025) claimed that Ms. Hasinaâs statements may contain directives or calls capable of inciting âviolence, disorder and criminal activitiesâ and disrupting social harmony, The Daily Star newspaper reported.
âWe urge the media to act responsibly in the interest of national security,â the release said.
The agency said it was âdeeply concernedâ that some media organisations were broadcasting and publishing remarks attributed to âconvictedâ and âfugitiveâ Ms. Hasina.
Noting that airing or publishing statements from individuals who are both convicted and fugitive violates provisions of the Cyber Security Ordinance, the agency warned that authorities are empowered to âremove or block content that threatens national integrity, security or public order, promotes ethnic or religious hatred, or directly incites violenceâ.
It further said that using a false identity or illegally accessing systems to spread hate speech, ethnic incitement or calls for violence is a punishable offence, and provides for penalties of up to two years of imprisonment and/or fines of up to Tk 10 lakh.
Emphasising that it respects freedom of the press and expression, the NCSA urged media houses to âavoidâ carrying any âviolent, instigating or criminally provocativeâ statements from convicted individuals and to âremain mindful of their legal obligationsâ.
Ms. Hasina, 78, was on Monday (November 17) sentenced to death in absentia by Bangladeshâs International Crimes Tribunal (ICT) for âcrimes against humanityâ over her governmentâs brutal crackdown on student-led protests last year.
It also handed the death sentence to former home minister Asaduzzaman Khan Kamal on similar charges.
Ms. Hasina has been living in India since she fled Bangladesh on August 5 last year in the face of the massive protests. She was earlier declared a fugitive by the court.
Bangladeshâs Chief Adviser Muhammad Yunus has hailed the verdict, saying the ruling affirmed a fundamental principle, âno one, regardless of power, is above the lawâ.
Commenting on the verdict, Ms. Hasina denied the charges as âbiased and politically motivatedâ and said the judgment has been made by a ârigged tribunalâ established and presided over by an âunelected government with no democratic mandateâ.
Published â November 18, 2025 11:14 am IST



