Nayeemul Islam Khan

Nayeemul Islam Khan

Photo of Bangladeshi journalist Nayeemul Islam Khan, 2009.
Born 1958
Nationality Bangladeshi
Education University of Dhaka
Alma mater Comilla Zilla School
Occupation Newspaper editor and journalist
Years active 1982–
Employer Amader Orthoneeti
Known for establishing the modern approach to Bangali-language dailies
Notable work Ajker Kagoj
Home town Comilla
Spouse(s) Nasima Khan Monty
Website nayeemulislamkhan.com

Nayeemul Islam Khan (Bengali: নাঈমুল ইসলাম খান; born 1958) is a media personality in Bangladesh who has been active in Bangladeshi journalism since 1982. He is currently the editor of the Bengali-language daily Amader Orthoneeti.[1][2] He is best known for his introduction of the modern approach of Bengali daily newspapers with the illustrated daily, Ajker Kagoj, launched in 1990. He was also the founding editor of the popular daily Amader Shomoy in 2003. He frequently appears on TV talk-shows since 2007.

Life

Born on 21 January 1958, Nayeemul Islam Khan is from Comilla. He was the eldest among the 6 children of Nurul Islam Khan, a politician and lawyer, and Nurun Nahar Khan, their mother. He studied at the Comilla Zilla School and passed SSC examination, then went to Dhaka University and obtained his B.A and M.A in Mass Communication & Journalism. He married poet and physician Taslima Nasreen in 1990; they divorced in 1991. He worked with the Bangladesh Center for Development and Journalism and married Nasima Khan. In 2007 he joined the Stamford University, Dhaka as an adjunct faculty in the Department of Journalism and Media Studies.

Career in journalism

Nayeemul Islam Khan's debut as an editor was for the short-lived monthly magazine Shomoy that was published for a few months in 1982. His next project was editing Khoborer Kagoj, which made its debut as a weekly in 1987.[3] He is acclaimed as the father of modern approach to the Bengali-language newspaper for his work at Ajker Kahoj, in which he served as editor from its founding 1990 until 1992. In 2002, he re-joined the Ajker Kahoj as advisory editor. That newspaper later closed in 2007. In 1992, he also founded another Bengali-language daily Bhorer Kagoj, which was later edited by Matiur Rahman. Both Ajker Kahoj and Bhorer Kagoj were non-traditional in style and tone. He quit the Bhorer Kagoj in 1992 to run the non-governmental organisation Bangladesh Centre for Development, Journalism and Communication.[4] In 2003, he made an abortive attempt to publish another daily under the title Notundhara.[5] He also started his own daily, Amader Shomoy in 2007 but was removed as publisher by a court order in 2012. It was a four-page daily that cost TK 2.[6]

Attacked

In 2013, Khan and his wife were returning home from a social event on 11 March when his car, which was clearly marked as a car belonging to the media, was attacked with molotov cocktails, one of which hit the car. He and his wife had to go to the hospital for treatment. The source of the attacks is unknown. The International Federation of Journalists believed he could have been targeted as he had been making frequent television appearances. The Committee to Protect Journalists called for quick investigations and demanded the violence directed against journalists be stopped.[2][7][8]

Publications

References

  1. [Amader Orthoneeti has been being published from Dhaka since 2008.]
  2. 1 2 "In Bangladesh, press attacked with explosives". Committee to Protect Journalists. 4 March 2013. Retrieved 14 March 2013.
  3. Khoborer Kagoj published a weekly column by Mymensingh-based poet and gynaecologist Taslima Nasreen.
  4. "Drug traffickers target provincial newspaper "Andoloner Bazar", journalist found dead". IFEX.org. 8 August 2002. Retrieved 18 April 2013.
  5. "Nayeemul no longer publisher of Amader Shomoy". New Age. 9 August 2012. Retrieved 18 April 2013.
  6. Gaydazhieva, Stanislava (13 March 2013). "IFJ speaks in defence of attacked Bangladeshi editor". New Europe. Retrieved 14 March 2013.
  7. "Journalist Naimul Islam Khan injured". bdnews24.com. 13 February 2013. Retrieved 14 March 2013.


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