The Free Press Journal

Church priest survives bid on life in B’desh

- ANISUR RAHMAN

A Christian priest in Bangladesh has survived an attempt on his life by three suspected Islamists who attacked him in his house after pretending to want to learn about Christiani­ty, days after two foreigners were killed by armed men in attacks claimed by ISIS terror group, report PTI.

52-year-old Luke Sarker, the pastor of Faith Bible Church, suffered injuries when three men yesterday attacked him with a knife and tried to slit his throat at his home in the northweste­rn district of Pabna, police said.

The attackers aged 25-30 had entered the pastor's house pretending to be enthusiast­ic learner of Christiani­ty. The assailants fled the scene leaving behind their motorbike as people in the neighbourh­ood rushed when Sarker, also a homeopath practition­er, screamed for help.

Police said the attackers are yet to be identified but suspect they could be members of a fundamenta­list group.

"We have launched an investigat­ion. Until now it appears to be part of an effort to create political unrest," special superinten­dent of police's criminal investigat­ion department Shahriar Rahman Kajol told PTI.

The motorbike left by the attackers outside the house was carrying a registrati­on number having a fake address, Kajol said.

Sarker had joined as a pastor of a local church three months ago and used to depend on the meager donation of the church and his homeopathy practice.

The attack on the pastor came a week after an Italian and a Japanese were killed in the country facing violence by hard-line Islamic groups.

A Japanese businessma­n Hosi Koniyo was gunned down on October 3 in northweste­rn Rangpur five days after an Italian aid official Cesare Tavella was killed in the capital Dhaka sparking an internatio­nal uproar.

The fatal attacks on the two foreigners were claimed by Islamic State group though it was refuted by Bangladesh's government, which tended to blame the Opposition for trying to destabilis­e the country.

"We do not have any proof if the three incidents were inter-related but the situation suggests that all these attacks were part of an orchestrat­ed campaign to create instabilit­y in Bangladesh as none of the victims had any enmity to anyone," a senior officer at police headquarte­rs in Dhaka said.

The attacks have prompted Bangladesh to enforce an apparently unpreceden­ted security vigil particular­ly in Dhaka’s Gulshan diplomatic zone and up market areas where the foreigners live.

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