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Bangladesh blocks YouTube in mutiny aftermath

Parveen Ahmed,Associated Press
Monday 09 March 2009 05:40 EDT
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Bangladesh blocked access to the video-sharing site YouTube after it hosted a recording of a tense meeting between the prime minister and army officials following a bloody mutiny by border guards, officials said today.

The insurrection last month claimed 70 lives, shook the two-month-old government of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and raised tensions with the powerful military, which opposed her handling of the incident.

YouTube "has been temporarily blocked," said a senior official with the government's regulatory body that oversees the Internet, the Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission.

The official declined to provide further details and spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.

Zia Ahmed, the telecommunications commission chairman, defended the decision, saying, "Nothing has been done that is beyond the jurisdiction of the government," according to the online news service bdnews24.com.

"The government can take any decision to stop any activity that threatens national unity and integrity," said Ahmed.

The audio clip recorded Hasina defending her decision to negotiate with the mutineers while army officials shouted and jeered, drowning her out and preventing her from speaking.

The clip was being posted on blogs and overseas Web sites that cater to Bangladeshis.

Nasrin Sultana, a manager at Access Telecom Bangladesh Limited, one of the country's major Internet providers, said the site was blocked late Sunday because of an audio clip from the March 1 meeting. Officials at Google Inc., YouTube's parent company, could not be immediately reached for comment.

Military officials and others with knowledge of the meeting said the gathering was tense.

The 26-27 February revolt at the Dhaka headquarters of the Bangladesh Rifles, a paramilitary border patrol force commanded by army officers, left senior army officials furious at Hasina for negotiating with the mutineers instead of ordering an army attack.

The mutiny ended through negotiations, with offers of amnesty and a show of military force. But when dozens of bodies — including those of 56 commanding officers — were discovered dumped into shallow graves or sewers on the sprawling compound, the government rescinded the amnesty for those behind the mutiny. Four other army officers are still reported missing, and presumed dead.

The government and the army have both launched investigations into attack, which apparently began over complaints over pay, perks and promotion prospects.

The government has sought technical and forensic assistance from the FBI as well as from Britain's Scotland Yard. FBI agents arrived Sunday night and will join police investigators.

Police also said yesterday that they have so far arrested 36 suspects out of the more than 1,000 border guards charged in the mayhem.

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