correspondent
Bagerhat DC visits ailing UNB correspondent Bisnu
Newly appointed deputy commissioner of Bagerhat district Mohammad Azizur Rahman visited ailing UNB district correspondent Bisnu Proshad Chakrabortty at his Shaltala residence in the town on Monday.
The deputy commissioner inquired about his overall health condition and assured him of providing better treatment.
Read:Cyclone Yaas: 4,470 fish enclosures inundated in Bagerhat
Bisnu was admitted to Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University (BSMMU) in the capital on March 16 for better treatment after he fell sick in January.
Later, he got discharged from the hospital and was taking treatment from his residence following the advice of the physicians on April 5.
Bisnu developed various symptoms, including high fever, shortness of breath, headache and chest pain, after receiving the first dose of coronavirus vaccine on February 7 at Bagerhat Sadar Hospital.
Read:Impact of cyclone Yaas: Child drowns, 5000 families stranded in Bagerhat
He was first treated at Bagerhat Sadar Hospital and then shifted to Khulna Medical College Hospital (KMCH).
An expert medical board, formed to treat him, conducted various tests but failed to diagnose any specific disease.
Later, Bisnu took treatment at home under the supervision of the health department.
Bagerhat Civil Surgeon Dr. KM Humayun Kabir, said “The doctors are providing medical treatment to Bisnu with sincerity and still none can identify his disease. He will further taken to BSMMU where doctors will take final decision about his treatment.”
Read: Bagerhat teens held for 'raping' seven-year-old
The Health authorities are inquiring about his condition round the clock, he said.
Besides, Bagerhat Press Club authorities have submitted a memorandum to the Prime Minister through the deputy commissioner seeking better treatment of Bisnu.
3 years ago
BBC correspondent leaves China amid safety concerns
A veteran BBC correspondent whose coverage angered China has left the country amid concerns for his safety, the BBC and a journalist organization said.
The BBC said Wednesday that John Sudworth had relocated to Taiwan and would continue to be the British public broadcaster's China correspondent.
The Foreign Correspondents' Club of China said that Sudworth had left last week “amid concerns for his safety and that of his family.”
The organization said Sudworth’s wife, Yvonne Murray, a correspondent for Irish broadcaster RTE, had left with him.
“John’s work has exposed truths the Chinese authorities did not want the world to know,” the BBC said in a statement posted on Twitter.
The BBC declined further comment.
Sudworth has reported from China for nine years. He won a George Polk Award last year for his reporting on internment camps for Muslims in the Xinjiang region. China says the camps were vocational training centers and denies any abuses.
China has held a series of news conferences to deny reports by the BBC and other foreign media of human rights violations in Xinjiang.
Also read: China bans BBC news broadcasts
The Foreign Correspondents' Club said Sudworth left after months of attacks including videos posted online by state media that used videos of him obtained from Chinese police cameras.
“Over the last few years the pressure and threats from the Chinese authorities as a result of my reporting here have been pretty constant,” Sudworth told BBC radio. “But in recent months they have intensified, the BBC has faced a full-on propaganda attack not just aimed at the organization itself but at me personally, across multiple Communist Party-controlled platforms.”
The Global Times, a state-owned newspaper, reported that Sudworth, “who became infamous in China for his many biased stories distorting China’s Xinjiang policies and COVID-19 responses, has left the Chinese mainland and is now believed to be hiding in Taiwan.”
State media have reported that residents in Xinjiang are preparing to sue BBC over its reports on the region.
Also read: EU calls on China to reverse ban on BBC World News channel
“This is an entirely private action, and has nothing to do with the Chinese government,” Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said Wednesday. “Nor have we heard of any Chinese government department threatening him. If John Sudworth believes that his report is fair and objective, then he should be brave and respond to the lawsuit instead of being afraid.”
Sudworth's departure comes amid a chill in relations between China and Western nations including Britain over alleged human rights abuses in Xinjiang and Beijing’s restrictions of political freedoms in Hong Kong.
Pressure on foreign journalists working in China has increased in the past year. China expelled 18 journalists working for The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post in 2020. Most were in response to U.S. moves to force Chinese state media to reduce their staff in America.
3 years ago