Английская Википедия:Information and Communication Technology Act, 2006

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The Information and Communication Technology Act, 2006 is an Act passed by the Jatiya Sangsad in 2006 to encourage and regulate ICT services in Bangladesh.[1][2][3] Cybercrimes in Bangladesh are tried under the Information and Communication Technology Act.[4] The act was strengthen through an amendment in 2013.[5] The law was controversial due to parts which were viewed as threatening freedom of speech and its section 57 was replaced with the controversial Digital Security Act.[6][7][8]

History

Information and Communication Technology Act was passed in 2006 by the Bangladesh Nationalist Party-Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami government.[9] On 20 August 2013, the Information and Communication Technology Act, 2006 was amended through the passage of an ordinance which was passed by the parliament of Bangladesh on 9 October.[10] The amendment allowed the police to detain suspects under the act without warrants and increased the jail time.[11] The amendment also removed the requirement for law enforcement to seek prior approval from the government before filing cases under the act.[12] The amendment was criticized for potential for violation of human rights.[13] Iftekharuzzaman, director of Transparency International Bangladesh, criticized the act while Shahdeen Malik said the amendment would drag Bangladesh back to the "mediaeval age".[14]

Prominent cases

Criticism

The law was criticized for not defining liabilities of domain holders.[1]

Section 57

Section 57 of the Information and Communication Technology Act, 2006 drew criticism from writers and journalists for the potential impact on Freedom of Speech in Bangladesh.[10] This was the most used section of the act by Bangladesh Police to file cases.[10] The act made it illegal to post material online that is provocative, defamatory, or "hurt religious sentimentality".[16] Jyotirmoy Barua criticized the act saying it was used Bangladesh Police and the Awami League to silence dissent.[16] In four months of 2017, 21 journalists were sued under the act.[11] From 2013 to 2017, a minimum of 700 cases were filed under the act with the Cyber Tribunal.[11]

The Section was replaced by the Digital Security Act, 2018.[9] The act has been criticized for curbing free speech in Bangladesh.[19][20][21] The Digital Security Act has been criticized by the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights.[22]

References

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