Govt. to redraft DSA, omitting some stringent provisions
The government has decided to redraft the Digital Security Act (DSA), annulling some stringent provisions like jail terms on defamation charges, and renaming the law as Cyber Security Act (CSA), law minister Anisul Huq said today.
“The cabinet approved in principle the draft of the new act. There will be no jail term for defamation in the Cyber Security Act, he told reporters at his office at Bangladesh Secretariat.
Huq said the convicts under the proposed CSA would require paying fines only instead of serving jail terms on defamation charges while he called the provision a “significant change”.
“Section 29 (of DSA) has been abolished. The only punishment would be fine, or to suffer jail term of three to six months in default. The maximum punishment in this regard would be an amount of fine of not more than Taka 25 lakh,” he said.
Huq said the proposed CSA suggested a two-year prison term instead five years prescribed in DSA section 28 which was related to publication, broadcast of information in website or in any electronic format hurting one religious values or sentiment.
He said persons to be accused under this particular section could avail bail from the court as well while the DSA made the charges non-bailable.