GIJN opens submissions for 2026 Sigma Awards in data journalism Najam Sethi to debut new show on Dunya News Former editor urges China's media restraint amid Japan diplomatic row UN alarm over India's media crackdown after Pahalgam attack Australian teens seek High Court block on under-16 social media ban Shalimar Recording Company to terminate all staff How AI and data tools are transforming investigative journalism Global extremism threatens women journalists, warns IFJ Lahore journalists reported missing after by-election coverage Digital rights report exposes rising AI‑abuse in Southeast Europe GIJN opens submissions for 2026 Sigma Awards in data journalism Najam Sethi to debut new show on Dunya News Former editor urges China's media restraint amid Japan diplomatic row UN alarm over India's media crackdown after Pahalgam attack Australian teens seek High Court block on under-16 social media ban Shalimar Recording Company to terminate all staff How AI and data tools are transforming investigative journalism Global extremism threatens women journalists, warns IFJ Lahore journalists reported missing after by-election coverage Digital rights report exposes rising AI‑abuse in Southeast Europe
Logo
Janu
Newsroom

Secular blogger hacked and shot to death in Bangladesh

 JournalismPakistan.com |  Published 9 years ago

Join our WhatsApp channel

Secular blogger hacked and shot to death in Bangladesh

NEW YORK - Unidentified assailants attacked blogger Nazimuddin Samad with sharp weapons and then fatally shot him in Dhaka Wednesday night, according to news reports. The Committee to Protect Journalists calls on the Bangladeshi government to determine the motive for the killing, and to take immediate steps to bring his attackers to justice.

"Bloggers like Nazimuddin Samad are vital to ensuring a diversity of views. But one by one, extremists are silencing these voices, while the government looks on," said CPJ's Asia program senior research associate, Sumit Galhotra. "This climate of impunity threatens not only bloggers, but the very fabric of Bangladesh's democracy. The government should take immediate steps to apprehend Samad's murderers and safeguard vulnerable bloggers."

Samad, a law student, was walking home when at least three assailants killed him, then fled the scene. The 26-year-old blogger had written critically on the social media website Facebook about Islamism and the issue of whether the Bangladeshi constitution should include Islam as a state religion, according to reports. He was also affiliated with the Gonojagoron Moncho, an activist group that called for capital punishment for accused war criminals in the country. No arrests were immediately made, reports said.

Police, citing witnesses, told reporters that the assailants shouted "Allahu Akbar" (God is great) during the murder.

Islamist militants claimed responsibility for hacking to death at least four bloggers and one publisher in 2015, CPJ research shows. To date, authorities have not convicted anyone for those murders. A Dhaka court in December 2015 convicted eight people in connection with the 2013 murder of blogger Ahmed Rajib Haider. - By Committee to Protect Journalists

 

Dive Deeper

Najam Sethi to debut new show on Dunya News

Najam Sethi to debut new show on Dunya News

 November 26, 2025: Najam Sethi will host a new prime-time show on Dunya News following his departure from Samaa TV, signaling a key move in Pakistan’s competitive media landscape.

Shalimar Recording Company to terminate all staff

Shalimar Recording Company to terminate all staff

 November 26, 2025: Shalimar Recording and Broadcasting Company (SRBC) will cease operations and terminate all personnel by Nov 30, 2025, as ordered under court-supervised liquidation, affecting hundreds of employees.

Newsroom
AI videos reshape political communication worldwide

AI videos reshape political communication worldwide

 November 27, 2025 AI-generated videos are rapidly transforming political communication, raising concerns over misinformation, verification challenges, and evolving regulatory responses across major digital platforms.


GIJN opens submissions for 2026 Sigma Awards in data journalism

GIJN opens submissions for 2026 Sigma Awards in data journalism

 November 26, 2025 GIJN has opened submissions for the 2026 Sigma Awards, inviting journalists worldwide to submit their best data journalism projects published in 2025.


Former editor urges China's media restraint amid Japan diplomatic row

Former editor urges China's media restraint amid Japan diplomatic row

 November 26, 2025 Former Global Times editor urges restraint in China’s state media coverage of Japan, highlighting censorship, social media deletions, and challenges for independent journalism.


UN alarm over India's media crackdown after Pahalgam attack

UN alarm over India's media crackdown after Pahalgam attack

 November 26, 2025 UN experts raise alarm over Kashmir crackdown, citing mass arrests, media restrictions, and social media blocks that threaten journalists and freedom of expression.


Australian teens seek High Court block on under-16 social media ban

Australian teens seek High Court block on under-16 social media ban

 November 26, 2025 Two Australian 15-year-olds have filed a High Court challenge to block the upcoming under-16 social media ban, arguing it violates constitutional protections for political communication and digital participation.


Popular Stories