Mozammel Hossain, wearing bulletproof jacket and helmet, is seen in Dhaka, Bangladesh, on February 16, 2021. Hossain and four other defendants were sentenced to death for the 2015 killing of blogger Avijit Roy, and another was sentenced to life in prison. (AP/Mahmud Hossain Opu)

Bangladesh court sentences 5 to death, 1 to life in prison for murder of blogger Avijit Roy

New York, February 16, 2021 — In response to a Bangladesh court’s sentencing today of five people to death for their involvement in the 2015 murder of blogger Avijit Roy, and another to life in prison, the Committee to Protect Journalists issued the following statement:

“We welcome the guilty verdicts against those involved in the brutal 2015 murder of blogger Avijit Roy. Impunity has long perpetuated a cycle of violence and fear in Bangladesh,” said Aliya Iftikhar, CPJ’s senior Asia researcher. “However, we do not support the death penalty and urge Bangladesh to hand down humane sentences to these defendants on their appeals.”

The court sentenced Syed Mohammad Ziaul Haque, Akram Hossain, Abu Siddique Sohel, Mozammel Hossain, and Arafat Rahman to death by hanging, and Shafiur Rahman Farabi to life imprisonment, according to news reports. The six defendants were all members of the banned militant outfit Ansar al-Islam, and killed Roy for being a “secular writer,” according to those reports.

Haque and Akram are in hiding and were sentenced in absentia, while the others are in custody, according to the BBC, which stated that lawyers for the defendants plan to appeal the verdict.

Earlier this month, Haque, Mozammel Hossain, Akram Hossain, and Sohel, as well as Moinul Hasan Shamim, Md. Abdus Sabur, Khairul Islam, and Md. Sheikh Abdullah, also Ansar al-Islam members, were sentenced to death for the 2015 killing of Roy’s publisher Faisal Arefin Dipan, according to news reports.

Roy was a writer who criticized religious fundamentalism on his blog, Mukto-Mona (Free Mind); he was stabbed to death while leaving a book fair in Dhaka in 2015, according to CPJ research.

[Editors’ note: This article has been corrected to include additional defendants who were sentenced in Dipan’s case.]