A court in Bangladesh issued an arrest warrant for the editor of the country's top daily newspaper over a cartoon and article deemed offensive to Muslims.
Activists have accused the Bangladesh government of seeking to muzzle its critics, and the warrant came weeks after authorities forced off air a private television station that broadcast a speech by the son of the opposition leader.
Matiur Rahman, who edits the Bengali daily Prothom Alo, was accused of hurting religious sentiment in a case filed last October.
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Rahman did not immediately answer calls for comment.
Prothom Alo is Bangladesh's most widely read newspaper with a circulation of around half a million and has a reputation for being politically neutral.
The charge relates to a cartoon published in 2007 that used the name Mohammed a common first name in Bangladesh and an article published in 2013 that prosecutors say misinterpreted a verse of the Quran.
It comes at a politically sensitive time for Bangladesh, where opposition protests have killed 29 people in recent weeks.