A top Bangladeshi Sufi folk singer was arrested under a controversial internet law that critics say is used to stifle free speech after alleged anti-Islam comments triggered protests, police said Sunday.
Shariat Sarker, 40, was detained in the central town of Mirzapur on Saturday, local police chief Saidur Rahman told AFP.
A cleric filed a case against Sarker over comments made at a show in December, and he was arrested under the Digital Security Act for “hurting the religious sentiment of Muslims,” Rahman said.
Bangladesh arrests Sufi Muslim singer after protests https://t.co/48djSbpjlU
A top Bangladeshi Sufi folk singer arrested under a controversial internet law that critics say is used to stifle free speech after alleged anti-Islam comments triggered protests, police said on Sunday— Syeda Yasmeen Ali (@yasmeen_9) January 12, 2020
Film of the show was uploaded to YouTube and more than 1,000 Muslim activists and clerics staged a rally to demand the singer’s arrest.
Sarker could face up to 10 years in prison if found guilty at trial.
Journalists and right activists say the Digital Security Act passed in 2018 is a serious threat to freedom of expression in the nation of 168 million people.
Under the Act, anyone can face a life jail term for “propaganda” against the nation and up to 10 years for digital content that “hurts religious sentiments” or “creates unrest”.
Shariat Sarker, 40, was detained in the central town of Mirzapur on Saturday, local police chief Saidur Rahman
Odhikar, a rights group, reported at least 29 arrests last year under the law.
Sarker is well known among the tens of millions of Sufi followers in rural Bangladesh. Music expert Saymon Zakaria said folk singers regularly take liberties when interpreting Islamic legends in a way that may not reflect the official version.
“There should not be literal interpretations of what is said during a performance. Folk singers must have freedom of expression,” Zakaria said.
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Despite holding a prominent place in Bangladesh’s history, more than a dozen Sufi leaders and followers have been killed in recent years by extremist Islamist groups who consider them heretics.