Cartoonist Arif freed

Cartoonist Arifur Rahman was freed from jail Thursday night, hours after a Dhaka court had ordered his release, a senior prisons official said. Dhaka magistrate Ismat Ara made the order to free Arif, a former cartoonist of Bangla-language daily Prothom Alo, who faces charges of hurting religious sentiments.

bdnews24.com
Published : 20 March 2008, 08:56 AM
Updated : 20 March 2008, 08:56 AM
Dhaka, March 20 (bdnews24.com)—Cartoonist Arifur Rahman was freed from jail Thursday night, hours after a Dhaka court had ordered his release, a senior prisons official said.
Deputy inspector general of prisons Major Shamsul Haider Siddiqui said Arif was freed at 7.30pm when jail authorities received the court order.
Dhaka magistrate Ismat Ara made the order Thursday to free Arif, a former cartoonist of Bangla-language daily Prothom Alo, who faces charges of hurting religious sentiments.
The latest court order came approximately two months after the High Court declared Arif's detention illegal.
The cartoonist's arrest and detention since last September has also earned criticism from local and international rights groups.
Plaintiff Md Jane Alam, also the officer-in-charge of Tejgaon Police Station, has not appeared before the magistrate's court since the end of November, 2007.
Tejgaon police sub inspector Md Abdur Rouf submitted a report to the court Thursday in which he mentioned that the plaintiff has been in East Timor since Nov 28—the reason he could not appear in court.
The counsels for the plaintiff were also absent in court Thursday.
The magistrate said: "The plaintiff has not appeared in court despite repeated notices to probe the charges against the accused."
"After reviewing an appeal by the defendant for his release the court thinks his (Arif's) plea can be approved."
Security officials arrested Arif on Sept 18 after hard-line Islamic groups protested against one of his cartoons that they claimed mocked the Prophet Muhammad.
Authorities charged the young cartoonist with "hurting the religious sentiments of the people" and ordered 30 days' detention.
Arif's detention was later extended by three months.
The government confiscated all copies of the now-defunct satire magazine of Prothom Alo titled Alpin in which the cartoon was printed.
Amid a protest by Islamic groups, Prothom Alo's editor and publisher apologised for printing the cartoon, and fired the cartoonist.
On Feb 4, the High Court ruled Arif's detention illegal and ordered his immediate release.
In January, human-rights watchdog Amnesty International demanded Arif's release, terming him "a prisoner of conscience".
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