The court has ordered everyone to act “responsibly” while granting bail to Prothom Alo’s Senior Reporter Rozina Islam in a case filed under the Official Secrets Act, 1923.
On Sunday, Dhaka Metropolitan Magistrate Baki Billah granted the bail on two conditions: a Tk 5,000 bond and the surrender of her passport, reports bdnews24.com.
“The judge said in the bail order that everyone has specific responsibility towards the state, society and the judiciary,” Ashraf Ul Alam, one of the defence lawyers, said after the court proceedings.
“In future, the media and everyone else must act responsibly. None of our actions should tarnish the image of the state.”
The hearing of Rozina’s bail appeal began on Thursday, but the judge deferred his decision to Sunday.
During Sunday's hearing, the prosecution did not object to the bail to Rozina on the condition of surrendering her passport, Public Prosecutor Abdullah Abu said.
The interim bail will be effective until Jul 15, the date for the next court appearance. The detective police, an agency that probes the case, will have to submit an investigation report on that day. Police sought a court order to send the two mobile phones, confiscated from Rozina, to the forensic lab for investigation.
On May 17, Rozina was confined to a room of the Secretariat’s Health Services Division for more than five hours over allegations of spiriting away important government documents and taking photos of the papers.
Rozina denied any wrongdoing. Her colleagues said she might have been targeted because of her reports on alleged irregularities in the health ministry amid the coronavirus pandemic. Her family also complained that she was physically harassed while being held at the secretariat.
On May 18, a Dhaka court turned down a police plea to interrogate Rozina in their custody.
Rozina’s petition for bail was first heard by the court on May 20. The court deferred its decision on the bail to Sunday after the prosecution and defence disagreed on the addition of new evidence to the first information report, a police document that sets criminal justice in motion.