Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
International

Facebook Disables Taslima Nasreen's Account, Writers Question Move

Darpan News Desk IANS, 15 Apr, 2015 12:37 PM
    Controversial Bangladeshi writer Taslima Nasreen's Facebook account was disabled after her posts were reported by Islamic fundamentalists, the author said on Wednesday.
     
    Dubbing the move as "totally unacceptable", eminent writers raised doubts over Facebook's "open" nature and called for safeguards to be put in place.
     
    "Since Tuesday my Facebook account has been disabled. Despite several requests, the Facebook authorities have not revived my account. They have done it to pacify the Islamic fundamentalists who don't want me to share my thoughts on the social media," Nasreen told IANS from New Delhi.
     
    The exiled writer slammed Facebook authorities for denying her the medium to interact with her readers.
     
    "I am banned from entering Bangladesh and West Bengal; my readers can't access my writings because they too are banned. So, I was using Facebook as a media to connect with my readers. But even that is not being allowed."
     
    "The Facebook authorities are not at all concerned with numerous fake accounts that exist on my name, but have all the reservations against my authentic account only to pacify Muslim fundamentalists who don't want me to share my thoughts," added Nasreen.
     
    Nasreen, who incurred the ire of the fundamentalists and had to leave Bangladesh in 1998 after her novel "Lajja" (shame) hit the stands, said her account was deleted on several occasions earlier as well.
     
    "While my account was revived after being disabled several times, but this time I have lost hope. Many of my writings have vanished," said the author whose Facebook profile under the name 'Nasreen Taslima' had more than a lakh followers.
     
    Slamming the move, former Lalit Kala Akademi chairman Ashok Vajpeyi said it infringes upon the concept of freedom of expression.
     
    "Anything that is done to prevent a writer, and that too of Nasreen's stature and position, is totally unacceptable and highly reactionary. It cuts into the very concept of freedom of expression and we must all raise our voice against it," Vajpeyi told IANS.
     
    "They claim to be an open and social media, on the other hand they disable the account of an important writer," said the Sahitya Akademi awardee.
     
    Hindi author Mridula Garg, too, echoed similar views.
     
    "I would certainly say that it was wrong of Facebook to do it. You can't disable or close a profile because the voice is differing from your views."
     
    "Writers survive because of their freedom of expression and Facebook is only one of the mediums for expressing this freedom. Some kind of safeguard should be provided so that it does not behave in an arbitrary and dictatorial manner," she told IANS.
     
    Nasreen was one of the petitioners in a public interest litigation filed against the much-denounced Section 66A of the Information Technology Act. The Supreme Court on March 24 quashed the Section, finding it violative of the freedom of speech guaranteed by the Constitution.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Italy's High Court Acquits Fashion Designers Dolce & Gabbana In Tax Evasion Case

    Italy's High Court Acquits Fashion Designers Dolce & Gabbana In Tax Evasion Case
    MILAN - Italy's highest court has acquitted Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana of tax evasion in a highly publicized case that led the Milan designers to close their Milan stores in protest for several days last year.

    Italy's High Court Acquits Fashion Designers Dolce & Gabbana In Tax Evasion Case

    Obama Wishes All Happy Diwali And Saal Mubarak

    Obama Wishes All Happy Diwali And Saal Mubarak
     President Barack Obama has in video message wished a Happy Diwali and "Saal Mubarak" to all those who celebrate the festival of lights saying it was a reminder that light will ultimately prevail.

    Obama Wishes All Happy Diwali And Saal Mubarak

    Dog 'wasn't to blame for anything:' Spanish woman who beat Ebola mourns for her slain pet

    Dog 'wasn't to blame for anything:' Spanish woman who beat Ebola mourns for her slain pet
    MADRID - The husband of the Spanish nursing assistant who beat Ebola says his wife now knows that authorities killed their dog Excalibur while she was in the hospital and is questioning that decision.

    Dog 'wasn't to blame for anything:' Spanish woman who beat Ebola mourns for her slain pet

    Same-sex marriages now allowed and recognized in Wyoming for first time

    Same-sex marriages now allowed and recognized in Wyoming for first time
    Attorneys for the state filed notice Tuesday morning that they would not challenge a federal judge's ruling striking down a Wyoming law defining marriage as between a man and a woman.

    Same-sex marriages now allowed and recognized in Wyoming for first time

    Pistorius given 5-year imprisonment for girlfriend's death

    South African Paralympian Oscar Pistorius was Tuesday sentenced by a Pretoria court to five years in jail for the culpable homicide death of his...

    Pistorius given 5-year imprisonment for girlfriend's death

    New video: IS militants stone woman to death for adultery

    New video: IS militants stone woman to death for adultery
    Militants of the Islamic State (IS) Sunni radical group released a video Tuesday showing its members stoning a woman to death whom they accused...

    New video: IS militants stone woman to death for adultery