United States Agency for International Development (USAID)
Govt to sit with stakeholders on possible changes to DSA: Law Minister
Law, Justice and Parliamentary Affairs Minister Advocate Anisul Huq on Monday reiterated that the Digital Security Act 2018 was not aimed at repressing freedom of speech or freedom of the press.
The minister said those at an event styled ‘Shaping of third sector - Laws and Policies’ in the capital’s Hotel Sonargaon on Monday.
United States Agency for International Development (USAID), International Center for Not-for-Profit Law (ICNL) and Counterpart International jointly organised the event on the occasion of the submission of some recommendations by civil society for the amendment of two acts in particular: The Foreign Donations (Voluntary Activities) Ordinance-2016 and DSA-2018.
The recommendations were put forward for discussion at today’s event.
“There was the need for a law to recognise some crimes being committed through digitalisation and advanced computerisation,” the law minister said, adding that no one can say, and no one has ever said the DSA was unnecessary.
He also noted that the Law Ministry is not the Line Ministry for the DSA, hence he wasn’t privy to how much stakeholder discussion or engagement took place during the drafting stage.
“I don’t know what discussions were held with the stakeholders when the act was being drafted,” he said.
Acknowledging the misuse of the DSA, the law minister said: “It is sad but true that I saw many misuses and abuses of the act after its enactment.”
“Many file cases under the DSA from the tendency of implicating and landing someone in jail for a few days,” Huq said, touching on one of the ways of misuse.
Going forward, the law minister said no case filed under the DSA would be accepted until a cell formed for verifying the allegations accepts its validity.
He also said the process to introduce amendments to any act, to the law, must not rely on random demands, and must exhaust the options of delivering better results through changes in the rules. Only then should it proceed to an amendment. That process is now underway in the matter of DSA, he said.
“We will sit with you all to discuss the DSA, it will be better if we sit once before Ramadan,” Huq said.
TIB Executive Director Dr Iftekharuzzaman, Manusher Jonno Foundation Executive Director Shaheen Anam, Dhaka University’s Professor CR Abrar and lawyer Jyotirmoy Barua, among others, were present at the event.
1 year ago
Advanced Covid clinical management course launched for doctors
A web-based advanced Covid-19 clinical management course has been launched for Bangladeshi doctors considering the Covid-19 situation.
Health Minister Zahid Maleque on Monday night launched the course, developed by Brown University, USA, based on their internationally renowned course curricula.
The course is aligned with Bangladesh’s national case management and critical care guidelines, and was reviewed and endorsed by a working group of national experts under the leadership of the Directorate General of Health Services (DGHS).
Read:Pfizer, Sinopharm shots to start June 19: Health Minister
This free self-learning, pre-recorded course with videos and interactive modules is meant for doctors in Bangladesh who are involved in Covid-19 clinical case management.
It is developed with support from the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), the US government’s leading development agency.
Zahid Maleque thanked everyone involved in the development of this online course.
“In recent days, we’re witnessing an escalation of Covid-19 cases. To address this, and as part of our preparedness, this collaborative training course will help all government and private physicians working at the sub-district, district, and tertiary level hospitals to have the best evidence-based clinical knowledge on Covid-19 in Bangladesh," he said.
3 years ago