Govt drafting new policy for online news portals, Yaser tells JS
FE REPORT | Monday, 8 June 2026
The government is formulating a new policy for registration and operation of online news portals to bring greater discipline and accountability in the sector, State Minister for Information and Broadcasting Yaser Khan Chowdhury told Parliament on Sunday.
Responding to a starred question from MP Mostafizur Rahman Babul of Jamalpur-3 during the first day of the second, or budget, session of the 13th Jatiya Sangsad, the state minister said the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting was working on a new regulatory framework to streamline the registration and operation of online news portals.
He also informed the House that the government was reviewing the process of media-listing of district-based newspapers by the Department of Films and Publications (DFP).
"We are examining whether those newspapers were enlisted following due procedures. Action will be taken against anyone found to have been involved in irregularities," he said.
During the session, Cox's Bazar-3 lawmaker Lutfur Rahman expressed concern over the spread of alleged misinformation and misleading content through sections of the media.
In response to a supplementary question from Cumilla-4 MP Hasnat Abdullah, the state minister said journalists accused of legitimising enforced disappearances, killings, vote rigging and mass killings during the tenure of the previous Awami League government were not above the law.
He stressed that while media freedom was guaranteed, anyone involved in activities that undermine democracy or support terrorism would face legal action under existing laws.
During the question-and-answer session, Hasnat Abdullah raised concerns about the role of sections of the media over the past 17 years. He said journalists require professional security, but alleged that some members of the media had helped create public acceptance for enforced disappearances, killings, electoral fraud, bank looting and mass killings during the previous administration. He sought the government's position on the issue.
Referring to the government's zero-tolerance policy, Yaser Khan Chowdhury said no individual -- whether a journalist, politician, businessperson or public servant -- was above the law.
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