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Dr Zahid urges journalists not to praise always, criticise also


Published : 16 Jun 2025 08:57 PM

BNP Standing Committee member Prof Dr A Z M Zahid Hossain has said it’s a wrong for media only to praise the government they favour and never point out their faults.

“You (Journalist) all are eager to praise, but none of you dare to criticize,” he said at a discussion at the Jatiya Press Club (JPC) in the capital on Monday.

Pointing out the pacts signed between Bangladesh and India during Awami League regime, he said, “Ten agreements were signed after discussion, but no journalist dares to ask what those agreements were about. That’s not acceptable.”

Bangladesh Federal Union of Journalists (BFUJ) and Dhaka Union of Journalists (DUJ) jointly organized the event marking the ‘Black Day’ for newspapers at JPC’s Zahur Hossain Chowdhury Hall.

DUJ President Shahidul Islam was in the chair and General Secretary Khurshid Alam conducted the event.

The BNP leader further added, “You (Journalist) need to speak the truth. Because of fascist oppression, many have lost their jobs, many have been persecuted. But today, you’re the ones who have survived, while others have vanished. That is your achievement.”

“When you stand with the truth and the people, you may disappear for a moment—but in the long run, you will stay. Otherwise, like fallen fascists, one day you too may have to flee this country,” he said.

National Press Club President Poet Hasan Hafiz, former General Secretary of the Press Club Syed Abdal Ahmed, former Editor of The New Nation Mustafa Kamal Majumder, BFUJ Acting President Obaidur Rahman Shaheen, Secretary General Kader Gani Chowdhury, Assistant Secretary General Bachir Jamal, Vice Presidents AKM Mohsin and Khairul Bashar and others said Sheikh Mujib pinned the last nail in the coffin of the democracy through closing the newspapers.

 Mujib had taken the decision to plunge the nation into darkness. 

On 16 June, 1974, the then Awami League government led by country’s founding president Sheikh Mujibur Rahman decided to shut down all newspapers except two government-run and  two privately owned dailies.

The then government also took over the ownership of the two privately owned newspapers-Daily Ittefaq and Daily Observer to run those as its entities. Due to the closures of many newspapers, hundreds of journalists lost their livelihoods instantly.