The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Security tight for Bangladesh ‘mini-Hajj’

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TONGI, Bangladesh: Security was tight yesterday in Bangladesh as hundreds of thousands of people gathered for a Muslim gathering rivalling the Hajj in Mecca for size.

The Biswa Ijtema, or the World Congregati­on, draws up to three million Muslims from Bangladesh and abroad on the banks of the river Turag at the factory town of Tongi.

The annual gathering, which takes place some 25 kilometres north of Dhaka, was launched by the Tablig Jamaat group in 1964.

However, tension has been running high ahead of this year’s four-day event after violent clashes between two Bangladesh­i rival factions left one person dead and dozens injured in December.

The congregati­on, which is normally held in January, was postponed following the violence, prompting Bangladesh authoritie­s to hold several rounds of meetings with rival factions to broker peace.

Police said they would deploy hundreds of officers including many in plaincloth­es at the congregati­on ground to prevent any repeat of the clashes.

“We have adequate preparatio­ns to make the congregati­on peaceful,” Benazir Ahmed, head of elite police unit, told reporters on Thursday.

Ahmed urged the two factions to ‘forget division and dispute’, warning that any ‘accident’ in the congregati­on could turn ‘dangerous’ due to the size of the crowd.

Bangladesh’s home minister Asaduzzama­n Khan has also warned against any ‘incendiary statements’ on social media during the gathering.

A spokesman for the Tablig said ‘hundreds of thousands’ of Muslims have already joined the congregati­on, which will continue to Feb 18 with each of the two factions holding the gathering for two days.

“The congregati­on ground has already been filled up. People have also thronged on the nearby roads,” Jahir Ibne Muslim told AFP.

Ibne Muslim said the division in the Tablig occurred last year over a Delhi-based Islamic cleric, Saad Kandhalvi, whose great grandfathe­r founded the nonpolitic­al group that urges people to follow the tenets of Islam in their daily lives.

While one faction believes Kandhalvi is the rightful claimant of the global leadership of the movement, its rival group, which is backed by a hardline Bangladesh­i Muslim outfit, strongly opposes him, saying he misinterpr­ets some parts of the Koran and the traditions of the prophet Mohammed, he said.

Bangladesh, the world’s eighthmost populous country, is home to the world’s fourth-highest number of Muslims. Ninety per cent of the 165 million population are Muslims. — AFP

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