Award-Winning Photojournalist Jailed For Photographing Refugee Camp

Abul Kalam is most well-known for his photography centered on documenting the life of refugees from Myanmar in Bangladesh. On December 29, he was arrested and allegedly beaten for photographing the controversial transfer of refugees to a remote island camp.

According to The Guardian, Bangladesh had begun moving Rohingya refugees from camps in Cox’s Bazar to a remote island in the Bay of Bengal, which had come under criticism from international rights activists. Those activist groups, such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch (HRW), called out the transfer as against the will of those refugees and in defiance of safety and security concerns for those individuals.

Rohingya refugees are those who have fled the ethnic cleansing taking place in Myanmar and those activist groups are claiming that the refugees are either being bribed or intimidated into moving to the remote island.

The Bangladesh government has assured that there is no reason to be alarmed by the refugee transfers but has also denied independent inspection of the island. Government officials also state that no one is being forced to relocate to the island. Amnesty International has alleged that there is a lack of human rights safeguards in place on the island and the knowledge of the kinds of access to healthcare and freedom of movement for those on the island is also unknown.

Kalam set out to photograph the controversial transfer of refugees when he was arrested and allegedly beaten by Bangladeshi police. He has been detained since December 29th. The reaction of police to his presence further calls into question the validity of the government’s statements regarding the well-being of refugees and the status of the controversial camp.

Multiple Bangladeshi and international rights activists and journalists sent a letter to the Bangladesh government demanding Kalam’s release, who they claim was not in violation of any laws and was simply documenting a well-known controversy.

Kalam has been granted bail and is likely to leave prison on Tuesday, a week after his arrest, after the Magistrate Court in Ukhiya, Cox’s Bazar apparently gave in to the calls for his release.

“Under Bangladesh’s laws, a person in custody must be produced in court within 24 hours of being taken under arrest, but that was not the procedure followed in Abul Kalam’s case,” the Dhaka Tribune reports.

Kalam is himself a 28-year refugee of Myanmar, which links him personally with the events unfolding in the region. Kalam’s work is widely published and he recently won two awards in the Rohingya Photography Competition.

Kalam’s situation is one of many like it through history, where photographers set out to document events and are punished for it. The idea of being a documentary photojournalist is glamorous, but the reality of the career is obviously much more dangerous. Luckily, it appears that Kalam will be able to continue his work after tomorrow.

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