The Sunday Guardian

3,000 held in bangla crackdown

The attacks, including on two Hindus in the last week, have alarmed the world community.

- AGENCIES

DHAKA: Authoritie­s have rounded up about 3,000 criminal suspects, including a few dozen believed to be Islamist radicals, in a nationwide crackdown aimed at halting a wave of brutal attacks on minorities and activists in Bangladesh, police said Saturday.

The attacks — including on two Hindus in the last week — have alarmed the internatio­nal community and raised questions about whether Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s secular government can maintain security for minorities in the Sunni Muslim-majority country.

Police and paramilita­ry soldiers fanned out across the country Thursday night, raiding suspected militant hideouts and detaining about 1,600 people by Friday night, police said. The majority of those detained, however, are described as petty criminals.

Only 37 of them are suspected to be radical Islamist militants, according to police spokesman Kamrul Islam. Those include three charged with alleged membership in the banned militant outfit Jama’atul Mujahideen Bangladesh.

None of those arrested is believed to be a high-level operator who might have organised or ordered attacks, police said. All the detainees are being held in jail.

Hasina’s government has faced criticism for failing to prosecute suspects for at least 18 killings carried out over the past two years. Victims include atheist bloggers, foreign aid workers, university professors, gay rights activists and religious minorities including Hindus, Christians and Shia Muslims. Hasina had announced the anti-militancy campaign after the wife of a police superinten­dent was shot and stabbed to death on June 5 as she was waiting with her son at a bus stop.

The victim had been an ardent campaigner against Islamist militants, and her murder stunned the country’s establishm­ent, many of whom considered the victim as one of their own.

Speaking to Parliament on Wednesday, Hasina vowed to root out radicals bent on spreading terror and violence in a bid to restore the country to Islamic rule.

“If they think they could turn Bangladesh upside down, they are wrong,” she said. “They will be exposed to justice in the soil of Bangladesh and their patrons will also not be spared.”

The attacks have followed a pattern: A group of young men wielding knives or machetes approach their victim as his or her guard is down, perhaps while strolling down the street or relaxing at home. The attackers spew hateful language, then hack and stab at the victim before disappeari­ng, often without a trace.

Many victims are killed with a machete blow to the back of the neck. Authoritie­s have arrested some suspects in some of the 18 attacks, mostly low-level operatives accused of following orders to carry out attacks, but none has been prosecuted.

Police have said they are waiting until investigat­ions are complete before taking any suspects to court.

Amnesty Internatio­nal has criticised the government for inaction, saying it is creating a culture of impunity. It also said authoritie­s are failing to address increasing numbers of reports of people receiving threats. “The brazen announceme­nt by violent groups that they will continue targeting those they perceive as ‘insulting Islam’ should shake the Bangladesh­i authoritie­s out of their complacenc­y,” Champa Patel, the right’s group’s director in South Asia, said in a statement.

“Ignoring the problem is not a solution. The authoritie­s must categorica­lly condemn these killings, carry out a prompt, thorough, impartial and transparen­t investigat­ion, deliver justice for the victims, hold the perpetrato­rs accountabl­e, and protect those still under threat.”

Nearly all the attacks have been claimed by transnatio­nal Islamist extremist groups, including the militant Islamic State group and various affiliates of Al Qaeda.

The killing Friday morning of a Hindu ashram worker in northern Bangladesh was also claimed by the IS, according to the SITE Intelligen­ce Group, which monitors jihadist activity online and cited the Amaq News Agency.

Hasina’s government, however, says transnatio­nal terror groups have no presence in the South Asian nation of 160 million. It blames the attacks on domestic groups aligned with political opposition parties, though it has presented no evidence of such a campaign and the opposition denies the allegation­s.

On Friday, the opposition BNP party said it was worried the government campaign against extremists would lead to efforts to suppress opposition parties.

“The crackdown is a strategy which the government earlier used to suppress the people’s movement. We fear that they will again oppress the opposition in the name of conducting a crackdown,” BNP Secretary General Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir said.

Hasina’s government has faced criticism for failing to prosecute suspects for at least 18 killings carried out over the past two years. Victims include atheist bloggers, foreign aid workers, university professors, gay rights activists and religious minorities including Hindus, Christians and Shia Muslims.

 ?? AFP ?? Bangladesh­i men form a human chain in protest against the killing of 62-year-old Hindu monastery worker Nityaranja­n Pande, who was hacked to death in Pabna on Friday. Pande’s murder was the latest in a series of such attacks on religious minorities in...
AFP Bangladesh­i men form a human chain in protest against the killing of 62-year-old Hindu monastery worker Nityaranja­n Pande, who was hacked to death in Pabna on Friday. Pande’s murder was the latest in a series of such attacks on religious minorities in...

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