Matiur Rahman Chowdhury
Editor |
Journalist |
Full Name: Matiur Rahman Chowdhury
Affiliation: Manabzamin
Current Position: Editor-in-chief
Place of Birth: Bangladesh
Home District: Habiganj
Nationality: Bangladeshi
Profile:
Matiur Rahman Chowdhury is a Bangladeshi journalist, editor and talk-show host. He is the editor-in-chief of the Manab Zamin, a Bengali language tabloid newspaper. Chowdhury also reports for Voice of America (Bangla) as a correspondent. He has hosted a late night talk-show, Ajker Sangbadpatra, on Channel i, a privately owned broadcast channel, since 2005. He also hosted another political chat-show, called Frontline, on Banglavision, before it was suspended citing "technical problems". However, several journalists including Chowdhury claimed that authorities were behind the closure.
Chowdhury was born in Nabiganj of Habiganj district. He was elected the vice president of Moulvibazar College student union. He was associated with Bangladesh Chhatra League, the student wing of Bangladesh Awami League and acted as the organization’s central books and publications secretary. He participated in Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971 and was tortured by the Pakistan Army in his native Moulvibazar District.
Chowdhury began his career in journalism as a correspondent with Daily Banglar Bani, co-founded and edited by Sheikh Fazlul Haque Mani, a nephew of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, Bangladesh's founding father, shortly after the country became independent, according to an article he wrote for Manab Zamin. Having obtained the university degree, he soon became a staff reporter at Daily Banglar Bani. In 1974, he was fired from the paper allegedly on the instruction of the authorities.
Chowdhury later worked at Purba Desh, Daily Desh Bangla as a chief reporter, and then at The Sangbad. In 1980, his press accreditation was allegedly revoked by the government. In 1982, he joined The Daily Ittefaq, where he worked as its diplomatic correspondent for 10 years. He covered the Gulf War for Ittefaq from Hafar Al-Batin, Saudi Arabia.
As the first Bangladeshi journalist, Chowdhury covered 1990 FIFA World Cup and five subsequent tournaments (the most for any Bangladeshi journalist), interviewing the likes of Diego Maradona, Paolo Rossi and John Barnes among a host of others.
In the early nineties, Chowdhury joined Ajker Kagoj as associate editor but resigned shortly afterwards. In 1994, he founded Bangla Bazar Patrika as its editor. In 1995, he wrote an article in the vernacular daily implicating BNP politician Morshed Khan, then a special adviser to Prime Minister Khaleda Zia, in a banking scandal. In response, Khan brought a case against Chowdhury, resulting in his arrest and subsequent bail.
In 1997, Chowdhury founded Manab Zamin as its editor-in-chief. In 2000, the tabloid ran the transcript of an implicating phone conversation between Hussain Muhammad Ershad, a former president, and a High Court judge, Latifur Rahman, who was overseeing the former's graft case. The publication of the recording triggered a judicial investigation. The court, however, held Chowdhury for contempt of court and awarded him six months of prison sentence, which was stayed on appeal.
Chowdhury serves as treasurer of the Newspaper Owners' Association of Bangladesh (NOAB) and a member of Editors' Council, an organization of newspaper editors in the country. In addition, Chowdhury is a member of the governing body of Association for Social Advancement, a micro-credit financing organization. He was an editor for the now-defunct Bangla Bazar Patrika, a broadsheet newspaper based in Dhaka.
On 9 March 2020, Chowdhury and 31 others, was sued by a ruling Awami League lawmaker for a story his newspaper ran about a sex ring operated out of a luxury hotel in Dhaka, triggering responses from Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and other press organizations. He maintained that the story did not have any reference of the said lawmaker. The high court later granted him bail.
Chowdhury published three books: Inside Politics, Palashi Theke Baghdad, Kutnitir Andarmahal.
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