The
Obaidul Quader exposé triggered a call for investigations from
Transparency International Bangladesh, an anti-graft watchdog. The minister subsequently claimed that he had received the watches as gifts. In January 2020,
Netra News published a report accusing Tabith Awal, a candidate of the opposition
Bangladesh Nationalist Party in Dhaka mayoral elections, of failing to "disclose ownership of a foreign company in his affidavit to the Election Commission of Bangladesh." Following the publication of the report,
AHM Shamsuddin Chowdhury Manik, a controversial justice of
Supreme Court of Bangladesh, filed a petition to the high court challenging Awal's candidacy. However, the high court rejected the petition and allowed Awal to contest in the election. On 21 March 2020,
Netra News published a leaked preliminary research report prepared by a group of Bangladeshi and U.S.-based researchers led by Malay Kanti Mridha of
BRAC University predicting that Bangladesh faced up to 500,000 deaths in the COVID-19 crisis without any government interventions. The story led the university to launch an internal investigation against Mridha, a move that was condemned by academic freedom activists. The website also subsequently accused the university of "[attempting] to restrict access" to the report by forcing document hosting website
Scribd to remove it on copyright grounds from the latter's website despite having previously claimed that it had not authorized the report. On 28 March 2020, the platform leaked a United Nations interagency memo, which predicted up to 2 million deaths in Bangladesh from COVID-19 in a "no-intervention" scenario. Bangladesh's foreign minister,
AK Abdul Momen, criticized the leak of the memo, calling it "a total violation of the UN charter." and
The Australian.
Netra News in May 2020 published an investigative story alleging that Bangladesh's military intelligence hired and employed hackers and online trolls to go against dissenting activists on Facebook. The report was cited by
Freedom House in the Bangladesh chapter of its Freedom on the Net 2020 report. In December 2020, Facebook announced that it took actions against a Bangladeshi hacker group. In 2022, Netra News exposed how Rapid Action Battalion's intelligence wing abducted
Ilias Ali. The report claimed that the close associates of Ziaul Ahsan was responsible for the enforced disappearance of the former lawmaker. On 21 March 2025, in the context of discussions sparked by a Facebook post from former anti-discrimination student leader
Hasnat Abdullah concerning the
Bangladesh Army, Netra News published a report. The report included a statement from the army's
Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR). Quoting this report,
Prothom Alo published an article in its online edition titled ''"Hasnat's statement is 'an extremely ridiculous and immature collection of stories': Army HQ tells Netra News"''. == Harassment ==