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Bangladeshi-American becomes the first Muslim woman to be nominated as US federal judge

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President Joe Biden on Wednesday nominated eight new judges, including Nusrat Jahan Choudhury, a civil rights lawyer, who will become the first Bangladeshi- American and Muslim woman to serve on the federal bench.

Choudhury, legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois, to serve as a federal judge in the Eastern District of New York, which has courthouses in Brooklyn and Central Islip.

She had previously worked since 2008 at the national ACLU, including as deputy director of the ACLU Racial Justice Program. If confirmed, she would be second Muslim American to ever serve as a federal judge.

Biden’s latest judicial nominees included Arianna Freeman, a federal defender in Philadelphia who if confirmed to the 3rd US Circuit Court of Appeals would become the first Black woman to serve on that court.

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The eight nominees brought to 81 the number of federal appellate and district court picks Biden has made since taking office a year ago. The majority of his nominees have been women or people of colour, reflecting his emphasis on diversifying the bench.

He has also pushed to diversify the bench in terms of judges’ professional backgrounds. The progressive group Demand Justice said that with Freeman’s selection, Biden has nominated more public defenders than any past president.

On Wednesday, he also nominated Natasha Merle, the deputy director of litigation at the civil rights organization NAACP Legal Defence and Educational Fund, to serve in the Eastern District of New York.

Biden’s picks included Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher litigation partner Jennifer Rearden, who was previously tapped by former Republican President Donald Trump, to serve in the Manhattan-based Southern District of New York.

Rearden was nominated in 2020 by Trump after she expressed interest to Senator Kirsten Gillibrand and was vetted by Senator Charles Schumer’s judicial screening panel. Both are New York Democrats. The nomination expired before she could be confirmed.

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In California, Biden nominated Fresno County Superior Court Judge Ana Isabel de Alba to serve in the Eastern District of California and Robert Huie, a former prosecutor and lawyer at Jones Day, to serve in the Southern District of California.

Biden nominated Tiffany Cartwright, a partner at MacDonald Hoague & Bayless, to serve as a judge in the Western District of Washington, and moved to elevate US Magistrate Judge Nina Nin-Yuen Wang in Colorado to a district court position.

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Bangladesh’s Press at a Crossroads: Between Promises of Reform and the Shadows of Repression

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By Md Mojahidul Islam Dheow

Bangladesh’s press is at a crossroads. A year after the mass uprising of 2024 promised a fresh dawn for the country’s long-troubled media, journalists still move under a heavy cloud of political, institutional, and psychological pressure. Across the nation, more than 250 cases have been filed against reporters in the last 12 months—not all for crimes of substance. Some are clear attempts to stifle critical reporting; others stem from something as ordinary as a social media post. The message is unmistakable: those who challenge authority face serious consequences.

Legal reform has offered a glimmer of hope with the newly debated Section 173A of the CrPC, 1898, which allows an accused to be discharged during investigation if a high-ranking police supervisor finds insufficient evidence. But the question remains: will this tool be used impartially—or selectively, to shield the powerful and punish dissenters?

The dangers facing journalists were made starkly clear on August 7, when Asaduzzaman Tuhin was killed while on duty. Just a day earlier, Anwar Hossain was assaulted while reporting on extortion at a Gazipur CNG auto-rickshaw stand. These incidents are not isolated—they are part of a pattern of violence and intimidation aimed at silencing the press.

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Even the newly crafted Cyber Security Ordinance (CSO) 2025—intended to replace repressive predecessors like the Digital Security Act (DSA) 2018 and the Cyber Security Act (CSA) 2023—retains troubling elements. While some contentious sections have been removed, Section 42 still allows the use of repressive tools drawn from the ICT Act 2006, the Evidence Act 1872, and the CrPC. Vague phrases such as “public confusion,” “threats to national security,” and “anti-state acts” remain undefined, enabling broad crackdowns on civil liberties, journalism, and political opposition.

Beyond the legal framework lies a deeper crisis. Corporate influence and editorial compromises have long weakened investigative journalism in Bangladesh. The media’s role as a pillar of democratic accountability has eroded, with many outlets beholden to owners’ political and commercial interests. With no substantial institutional reform since the change in government, the press remains vulnerable to regulatory harassment, licensing obstacles, and punitive taxation whenever coverage strays from the “approved” line.

Two proposed reform measures—the Journalists’ Protection Ordinance 2025 and the National Media Commission Ordinance 2025—once promising, are stalled in bureaucratic limbo. The “one house, one media” policy, intended to prevent individuals or organizations from owning multiple outlets, remains unrealized despite the Media Reform Commission’s advocacy.

Even the Bangladesh Press Council risks becoming yet another instrument of state control unless its mandate is reimagined to prioritize journalist protections. Political divisions within journalist unions and media organizations further weaken any unified stance for press freedom. Ownership patterns skew licensing and content toward vested interests, while dissenting voices are punished through regulatory harassment or punitive audits. Inside newsrooms, self-censorship grows as fear of legal trouble and professional retaliation suppresses candid reporting. Whistleblowers remain silent, and investigative journalism is increasingly replaced by risk-averse coverage.

What Bangladesh needs is a national framework for self-regulation that binds all outlets: an internal editorial code of conduct, a grievance redressal mechanism, anti-harassment policies, and straightforward complaint resolution processes. A transparent, independent media ombudsman should adjudicate defamation claims and public complaints. Only with genuine independence, accountability, and a clear commitment to journalist safety can the industry rebuild trust and integrity.

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Beyond reform, there is an urgent need for immediate protection and practical empowerment of reporters in the field. The proposed Journalists’ Rights Protection Ordinance 2025 aims to codify such protections, with penalties of up to five years’ imprisonment and substantial fines for violence against journalists. It would:
(a) defend journalists from violence, threats, and harassment;
(b) shield sources and protect newsroom independence;
(c) guarantee the right to work without fear;
(d) ensure safe reporting environments within media organizations;
(e) safeguard good-faith reporting; and
(f) establish clear complaint, investigation, and trial procedures.

The ordinance mandates that fines can be directed as compensation to the harmed journalist and holds both individuals and, when applicable, organizations accountable for failing to prevent or address abuses.

If implemented effectively, it could mark a turning point. But enforcement requires a judiciary capable of handling cases efficiently and free from political influence. Authorities must be bound by law to protect journalists, safeguard newsroom neutrality, and defend those who publish information in the public interest.

The current moment is pivotal. Real reform demands more than laws on paper—it requires political courage, institutional independence, and a mature democratic culture. Journalists must unite beyond political divides, media owners must shed partisan agendas, and the state must commit to protecting the very people who hold it accountable.

Time is slipping away. Each delay erodes public trust, silences more journalists, and buries more truths. If Bangladesh is to have a democracy worthy of the name, it must build a press that is free, secure, and independent—not as an ornament of democracy, but as its beating heart.

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Investigation: Hasina’s ‘Shoot Directly’ Order and Its Deadly Consequences

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On the morning of July 27, 2024, Sheikh Hasina stood silently at the podium of the National Institute of Traumatology and Orthopedic Rehabilitation (NITOR), commonly known as Pongu Hospital, in Dhaka.

For nearly 14 seconds during her eight-minute emotional speech, the former prime minister remained silent. A visible pain marked her face, reflecting the weight of the bloodshed that had occurred since July 16, when police forces fatally shot Abu Sayed in Rangpur with lethal weapons. That day, five more lives were lost amidst violence in Dhaka and Chattogram.

By the time Hasina addressed the crowd at NITOR, the death toll across the last two weeks had reached at least 162, many of whom had been shot with military-grade weapons by state security forces, according to The Daily Star’s investigations.

“I seek justice from my fellow citizens. What crimes have I committed to deserve this?” 77-year-old Hasina asked after visiting some of the injured at the hospital.

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“I don’t want any mothers to lose their children like this. I’ve lost my parents; I know the pain… So many lives have been lost, so many families shattered. Who is responsible for all this?…” she began, but then, overcome with emotion, she left the stage in tears, unable to finish her words.

This heartfelt public address sharply contrasts with what was happening behind the scenes. An investigation by The Daily Star reveals that a state-sponsored machinery for mass violence had already been put into motion.

Just nine days earlier, on the evening of July 18, 2024, a phone rang inside the ousted prime minister’s residence, Gonobhaban, and Sheikh Hasina answered. On the line was Sheikh Fazle Noor Taposh, then the mayor of Dhaka South City. What followed was a startling disclosure of a lethal plan.

“We are now doing things differently. We are capturing photos with drones, and sending helicopters to several places,” Hasina told Taposh.

“Wherever they [the state forces] see gatherings, from the sky… I am getting it done from above, already started in several areas… already underway,” she said, while Taposh repeatedly pressed for launching a large-scale arrest campaign.

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WB to provide $250m loan to modernise five public sector functions

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The World Bank (WB) would provide US$250 million funds to facilitate improving transparency, accountability, and efficiency of some key government agencies in Bangladesh.
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The WB board on Saturday approved the loan to support the ongoing reform initiatives of the interim government, aimed at modernising crucial public sector functions.

These are essential for improving data transparency, domestic revenue mobilisation, public investment management, public procurement, and financial oversight, according to a statement issued on Saturday.

Under the Strengthening Institutions for Transparency and Accountability (SITA) project, five key government agencies – the Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics (BBS), the National Board of Revenue (NBR), the Planning Division, the Bangladesh Public Procurement Authority (BPPA), and the Office of the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) – would reform their operational activities.

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The project is expected to streamline operations and improve service delivery within the five agencies and enhance access to reliable public statistics, crucial for transparent and accountable decision-making and policy formulation.

It will help modernise tax administration and increase tax compliance, thereby improving much-needed revenue mobilisation and fiscal sustainability.

The WB loan will also help improve the efficiency and accountability of public spending, ensuring that resources are utilised effectively for the benefit of all citizens.

It will develop a second generation of electronic government procurement (e-GP) and broaden its scope. The project will also help strengthen and digitise public audit.

Gayle Martin, the World Bank’s Interim Country Director for Bangladesh, on Saturday said: “The investment will leverage digitisation of business processes to help improve transparency and reduce corruption, by supporting Bangladesh in modernising public institutions capable of serving an emerging economy.”

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This project will help improve the quality and accessibility of public services and thus enhance public trust in government institutions, she added.

According to the statement, the Bangladesh government and the WB are also preparing a development policy credit scheduled for the bank’s board discussion later this month.

Such credit is expected to support transparency and accountability in domestic revenue mobilisation, the banking sector, data production and dissemination.

Souleymane Coulibaly, World Bank Lead Country Economist and Task Team Leader for the project, said: “This project and the proposed development policy credit would be complementary and provide the government both the necessary hardware and software for improving public financial management and public service delivery.”

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Editor : Jashim Uddin ; Publisher: Rafiqul Alam Address: Bengal Centre (6th floor), 28 Topkhana Road, Dhaka-1000, Bangladesh Ph :+8802-7124586 e-mail:dailyfrontlinebd@gmail.com Copyright © 2020 Daily Frontline. Bangladesh Independent Daily.