The Borneo Post

Death toll in Bangladesh ‘antidrugs’ crackdown rises above 50

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DHAKA: Shootouts across Bangladesh left nine alleged drug dealers dead yesterday, police said, as authoritie­s stepped up a crackdown that now has claimed at least 52 lives in 10 days and drawn criticism from rights groups.

The campaign comes as Bangladesh struggles to contain a surging drugs trade, particular­ly in methamphet­amine pills known as ‘yaba’.

However, human rights groups say many of the deaths are the result of extra-judicial killings.

Two of the nine were killed in gun battles between rival drug dealers in Magura, district police chief Ilias Hossain told AFP.

Four people died in southeaste­rn Feni and Comilla and a further three were killed elsewhere, officials said.

In Chittagong on Wednesday, a son and a daughter held a press conference to accuse the elite Rapid Action Battalion police unit of killing their father.

The unit – which authoritie­s say has so far killed 19 drug dealers during the crackdown – has denied the allegation­s, but the campaign has caused widespread disquiet.

Even the state-run National Human Rights Commission ( NHRC) this week expressed ‘grave concern’ at the anti- drug drive, saying it does not support “any extra-judicial killings”.

Huge numbers of the ‘yaba’ pills have crossed into Bangladesh from neighbouri­ng Myanmar, a major producer.

Authoritie­s last year seized a record 40 million pills but said an estimated US$ 250 to US$ 300 million others entered the market. — AFP

 ??  ?? Photo shows the dead bodies of Bangladesh­i alleged drug dealers after a gun battle with law enforcemen­t in Chittagong. — AFP photo
Photo shows the dead bodies of Bangladesh­i alleged drug dealers after a gun battle with law enforcemen­t in Chittagong. — AFP photo

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