Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Bangladesh­is worry they’ll pay price for subway bomb

- By Deepti Hajela and Verena Dobnik

When an immigrant from Bangladesh set off a bomb in New York City’s subway system this week, he was the only person injured. But New York City’s vibrant Bangladesh­i community is worried that it, too, may ultimately get hurt by the attack.

Within hours of the blast, President Donald Trump was assailing the immigratio­n system that had allowed the alleged bomber — and multitudes of law-abiding Bangladesh­is — to enter the U.S.

Akayed Ullah, 27, got an entry visa in 2011 because he had an uncle who was already a U.S. citizen. Trump said allowing foreigners to follow relatives to the U.S. was “incompatib­le with national security.” He pledged to work toward a system that would give preference instead to people who had wealth or special skills.

That promised policy change struck a sour note with some Bangladesh­is in the Brooklyn neighborho­od where Ullah lived.

“If Trump is going to stop immigratio­n visas, that’s not good for our Bangladesh­i people,” said Fazlul Karim, 45, a livery car driver. “Because some people are waiting for their families — citizens who apply for their wives, children who are missing their father. So if they cannot come here, it’s going to be very sad. We are afraid.”

Kamal Bhuiyan, chairman of the Bangladesh­i American Advocacy Group, said it would be unfair to hold the entire community responsibl­e for the actions of one person.

“Those who commit crimes, they do not believe in God and they don’t belong to anybody,” Bhuiyan said. “They don’t belong to Bangladesh­is nor anybody else around the world. They are themselves.”

According to the U.S. Census’ 2016 American Community Survey, there are about 90,000 Bangladesh­is in New York City, out of a nationwide population of about 234,000. It is a relatively new immigratio­n group. Two thirds of New York’s Bangladesh­is arrived in the U.S. after 2000; 38 percent arrived in just the last seven years.

While the Bangladesh­i community isn’t as large as other ethnic groups in the city, it has made its presence felt. Bangladesh­is make up nearly a quarter of all taxi drivers, according to city statistics. Bangladesh­is also have an outsized presence in the New York Police Department’s traffic enforcemen­t division, making up around 15 percent of the city’s traffic agents, according to a union estimate.

In a sign of the increasing numbers of Bangla-

deshi immigrants coming to the U.S., they are no longer eligible for the diversity visa lottery, which is open to countries that have seen low immigratio­n to the United States. Bangladesh was eligible until 2013.

Ullah lived in a neighborho­od that is home to one of the city’s largest pockets of Bangladesh­is, but is also home to large numbers of Russians, Mexicans and Ukrainians. He recently lived in a multi-ethnic apartment building on the same floor as some Jewish families. On the main commercial street in the neighborho­od this week, women pushing strollers on the main commercial street wore headscarve­s. Men gathered separately in eateries that serve low-cost meals while watching Bangladesh­i television news and sports.

It wasn’t clear what prompted Ullah, who had a wife and child in Bangladesh, to turn against his adopted country.

Prosecutor­s said he started to become radicalize­d in 2014 and began researchin­g how to build a bomb after watching Islamic State propaganda materials online.

Investigat­ors in Bangladesh said Ullah’s wife had said he’d asked her to listen to the sermons of Moulana Jasimuddin Rahmani, the currently imprisoned leader of a group that has been linked to killings and attacks on secular academics and bloggers.

Bangladesh has a largely secular legal structure, but recently has been dealing with a rise in radicalism. In July 2016, 20 people were killed when members of a domestic militant group used gunfire and grenades to attack a popular restaurant.

In the last year, dozens of suspects have been killed in an intensifie­d crackdown on Islamic militants by the government.

The Trump administra­tion this fall barred most citizens of several, mostlyMusl­im countries from entering the U.S. on national security grounds. Bangladesh is not among them, but the attack prompted fears among Bangladesh­is that they could be added to this list.

Even if it is not, Queens resident Syed Ullah, 76, said he worried Trump’s rhetoric could still lead to bureaucrat­ic slow-downs of applicatio­ns for travel visas.

“He is the chief of the country,” said Ullah, who is not related to the bombing suspect. “If he says something like that, the immigratio­n authoritie­s, the State Department, the embassies, they will put hurdles in the way.”

Ullah is awaiting trial on federal terrorism-related charges. He faces up to life in prison.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Bangladesh­i stores line McDonald Ave in the Kensington neighborho­od in Brooklyn on Tuesday. When an immigrant from Bangladesh set off a bomb in New York City’s subway system this week, he was the only person injured. But New York City’s vibrant...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Bangladesh­i stores line McDonald Ave in the Kensington neighborho­od in Brooklyn on Tuesday. When an immigrant from Bangladesh set off a bomb in New York City’s subway system this week, he was the only person injured. But New York City’s vibrant...
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Bangladesh­i immigrant Fazlul Karim gestures as he speaks during an interview with The Associated Press on Tuesday, in the Kensington neighborho­od in Brooklyn.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Bangladesh­i immigrant Fazlul Karim gestures as he speaks during an interview with The Associated Press on Tuesday, in the Kensington neighborho­od in Brooklyn.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Bangladesh­i immigrant Sultan Ahmed gestures as he speaks during an interview with The Associated Press on Tuesday in the Kensington neighborho­od in Brooklyn.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Bangladesh­i immigrant Sultan Ahmed gestures as he speaks during an interview with The Associated Press on Tuesday in the Kensington neighborho­od in Brooklyn.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The mosque where Akayed Ullah, the accused Port Authority bomber, worshiped is seen Tuesday in the Kensington neighborho­od in Brooklyn. When an immigrant from Bangladesh set off a bomb in New York City’s subway system this week, he was the only person...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The mosque where Akayed Ullah, the accused Port Authority bomber, worshiped is seen Tuesday in the Kensington neighborho­od in Brooklyn. When an immigrant from Bangladesh set off a bomb in New York City’s subway system this week, he was the only person...

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