Bangladesh mourns Islamist leader’s death
CONTROVERSIAL CLERIC HAD RESIGNED AS HEAD OF INFLUENTIAL MADRASA JUST A DAY BEFORE HE DIED
TENS of thousands of people gathered to mourn the controversial leader of Bangladesh’s largest Islamist group as his funeral was held last Saturday (19) in a rural southeastern town, police said.
Allama Shah Ahmad Shafi, who had led the hardline Hefazat-e-Islam group since it was formed in 2010, died of age-related complications last Friday (18) in the capital Dhaka. He was believed to be more than a 100 years old.
His death came just a day after an unprecedented revolt involving thousands of students at his highly influential Islamic school, forced him to resign after three decades as its chair.
Shafi made his mark in national politics when he marched tens of thousands of his followers into central Dhaka in May 2013, demanding harsh blasphemy laws and the execution of atheist bloggers.
That rally ended in violence when police evicted his followers from the capital’s main commercial centre. Around 50 people were killed in clashes with security forces – most of them shot dead – in some of the worst political violence the country had ever seen. Around half a dozen bloggers and secular activists were later hacked to death by Islamist extremists.
Last Saturday, after Shafi’s body was brought back to his school in Hathazari outside the port city of Chittagong, vast crowds of his followers rushed to the town to pay their respects.
Local TV stations aired live footage of people, mostly men in religious dress, packing roads and spaces in and around the school.
“Some 150,000 people have already gathered here on the madrasa ground, in the buildings and out on the roads to his funeral prayers,” regional police chief Anwar Hossain said. Shafi’s supporters said the turnout was far higher.
As supreme leader of Hefazat-e-Islam, Shafi oversaw its growth into the south Asian country’s biggest Islamic fundamentalist group with millions of supporters.
Bangladesh is 90 per cent Muslim and Shafi drew on support from seminaries at the tens of thousands of Islamic schools in the nation of 168 million people.
He was seen as a key defender of the faith, but to his critics he was known as the “Tamarind Cleric”, who wanted to roll back the secular character of modern Bangladesh.
Prime minister Sheikh Hasina praised Shafi’s contribution to the expansion of Islamic education in the country in a statement.
Shafi’s unceremonious resignation as head of the madrasa took place last Thursday (17) night after a two-day long demonstration at the school.
Up to 3,000 madrasa students took part in the revolt, a police spokesman said, which was triggered by the sacking of three madrasa teachers, allegedly orchestrated by Shafi’s powerful son Anas Madani. The students also forced Madani’s sacking from the school.