Kuwait Times

Bangladesh writer targeted, attacked as ‘enemy of Islam’

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DHAKA: Bangladesh­i investigat­ors said yesterday that a young man accused of stabbing a celebrated secular writer at a seminar had targeted him as “an enemy of Islam”. Saturday’s attack on Zafar Iqbal in the northern city of Sylhet was just the latest in a series of stabbings of secular or atheist authors and bloggers in Muslimmajo­rity Bangladesh. Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, whose government has waged a fierce crackdown on homegrown extremism in recent years, blamed “religious fanatics” for the assault. Iqbal, a longstandi­ng champion of free speech and secularism, remains in a stable condition after being flown to a military hospital in Dhaka with stab wounds to his head. Police detained 21-year-old Faizul Hasan, a former Islamic seminary student, and were investigat­ing any ties to the radical groups. Colonel Ali Haider Azad Ahmed from the elite Rapid Action Battalion unit said Hasan told investigat­ors it was “his duty as a Muslim to resist those who work against Islam”. “He has said Dr Zafar Iqbal was an

enemy of Islam,” Ahmed said. Police said Hasan, whose father was a teacher at an Islamic seminary, may have had links to extremists blamed for attacks on secular and atheist writers in the last four years. Suspected Islamist radicals have killed around a dozen such writers and bloggers, including an American atheist blogger of Bangladesh­i origin. Police have blamed homegrown Islamist extremist group Ansarullah Bangla Team-also known as Ansar-Al Islam and linked to Al-Qaeda in the Indian Subcontine­nt-for most of the attacks. Bangladesh’s government has provided security for top secular writers and activists since Islamist extremists named them in several lists of targets.

‘Religious fanatics’

Iqbal, 64, is a bestsellin­g author and celebrity speaker who regularly appears at campuses nationwide. The US-trained professor teaches at a state university in Sylhet. The attack was swiftly condemned by protesters in Dhaka and Sylhet, who staged torchlit marches and planned further rallies to demand justice later. Hasina urged Bangladesh­is to remain alert to the threat of extremism. “Those responsibl­e for these incidents have become religious fanatics,” she said yesterday. “They think that they’ll go to a heaven, but they will actually go to hell, because no one goes to heaven by killing a human being.”

In recent years Iqbal had supported the execution of top Islamist party leaders-key opponents of Hasina-for their part in war crimes in the early 1970s, despite allegation­s the prime minister was crushing dissent. Bangladesh has been waging a war against extremists in the wake of numerous attacks by radical groups in recent years. In July 2016, militants stormed a Dhaka cafe and massacred 22 hostages, including 18 foreigners, in an assault claimed by the Islamic State group.— AFP

 ??  ?? SYLHET: Zafar Iqbal, activist and bestsellin­g science fiction writer lies on a stretcher at Sylhet MAG Osmani Medical College after he was stabbed in the university campus in Sylhet. — AFP
SYLHET: Zafar Iqbal, activist and bestsellin­g science fiction writer lies on a stretcher at Sylhet MAG Osmani Medical College after he was stabbed in the university campus in Sylhet. — AFP

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