Millennium Post

Four militants blow themselves up in B’desh

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DHAKA: Four militants blew themselves up in Bangladesh after a 24-hour standoff with the security forces which raided their ‘den’, the latest such incident amid an intensifie­d nationwide crackdown on Islamist militants, police said on Friday.

Police raided a house in northweste­rn Chapainawa­bganj on Wednesday night, triggering a standoff. “We found bodies of four militants as we entered the hideout,” a police headquarte­rs spokesman told reporters in Dhaka as elite Special Weapons And Tactics unit wrapped up the security clampdown codenamed ‘Operation Eagle Hunt’.

An injured pregnant woman, who is the wife of one of the slain militants, and her six-year-old daughter were brought out from the house as siege ended at the den of Neo Jamaat- ul-mujahideen, the spokesman said.

“She suffered a bullet wound on her leg,” he said.

Last month Bangladesh­i police conducted series of large- scale operations against militants, in which at least 17 suspected militants were killed.

On March 31, eight militants blew themselves up with a grenade after the security forces raided their hideout north of the Bangladesh­i capital.

The official said the woman too was believed to be an operative of the banned outfit responsibl­e for carrying out out the deadly July 1, 2016 terrorist attack on a Dhaka cafe in which 22 people, including an Indian, were killed.

Bangladesh has been witnessing a spate of attacks on secular activists, foreigners and religious minorities since 2013. The country launched a massive crackdown on militants specially after the Dhaka cafe attack. ISTANBUL: President Recep Tayyip Erdogan voiced confidence on Friday that he and Donald Trump can open a “new page” in troubled Turkey-us ties when they meet next month, after discord over Syria and last year’s failed coup.

The May summit between Erdogan and Trump, their first face-to-face encounter as heads of state, is a chance to mend a relationsh­ip between two key NATO allies that was strained by a series of disputes under former president Barack Obama. “I believe that we will open a new page with Mr Trump in Turkey-us relations,” Erdogan told the Atlantic Council Istanbul summit ahead of the May 16 meeting in the United States. Erdogan made clear he expected a turnaround from Trump on the use of the Syrian Kurdish Peoples’ Protection Units (YPG) as the chief US ally on the ground in Syria in the battle against Islamic State (IS) jihadists. Turkey says the YPG is merely the Syrian branch of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) separatist­s inside Turkey, who have waged an insurgency since 1984 that has left tens of thousands dead.

“We expect our American friends to better understand the threats our country is facing and to show the solidarity that we need,” said Erdogan.

Of the US alliance with the YPG in Syria he said: “We can never accept cooperatio­n with a terror organisati­on that is aiming at the lives of our people on the pretext of fighting against Daesh (IS).” He said that “concrete support” given to the YPG by the United States in Syria was “harming the spirit of alliance and partnershi­p”. His comments came after Turkey angered the United States this week by bombing YPG positions in Syria.

There have also been successive clashes between the Turkish army and the YPG over the border in the last days. Erdogan warned the YPG that Turkey would fire back against any assault and thwart the creation of any Kurdish state in northern Syria. The spat over the YPG has so far held up any plan for Turkey and the United States to work together in Syria to prise the jihadist de-facto capital of Raqa out of the hands of IS. Erdogan said 2,500-5,000 IS fighters were believed to still be in Raqa. A joint operation with the United States but excluding the YPG to take Raqa.

Last month Bangladesh­i police conducted series of largescale operations against militants, in which at least 17 suspected militants were killed

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