Los Angeles Times

Critic of radical Islamists killed

Attackers hack and shoot a student in Bangladesh apparently because of his views.

- By Shashank Bengali and Mohiuddin Kader shashank.bengali @latimes.com Special correspond­ent Kader reported from Dhaka and Times staff writer Bengali from Mumbai, India.

DHAKA, Bangladesh — On his Facebook profile page, under religious views, Nazimuddin Samad wrote, “I have no religion.” In other posts, the 27-year-old law student wrote against religious extremism and criticized radical Islamists.

Those views may have been enough to get him killed.

Police in Bangladesh on Thursday identified Samad as the victim of a gruesome slaying in the capital, making him the latest person to be killed in the South Asian nation allegedly for criticizin­g fundamenta­list Islam.

Despite domestic outrage and internatio­nal concern, Bangladesh seems unable to prevent the grisly killings of secular voices, apparently at the hands of religious fundamenta­lists. In this overwhelmi­ngly Muslim nation of 160 million people, which has long been described as favoring moderate Islam, at least four secular bloggers and one publisher of secular writings have been killed since 2015, reportedly by Muslim extremists.

Samad was attending law school in the evenings at state-run Jagannath University in Dhaka. His assailants, who were still at large, intercepte­d him as he was walking along a road with a classmate in Old Dhaka about 9:45 p.m. Wednesday, said Dhaka Metropolit­an Police Deputy Commission­er Nurul Islam.

Witnesses said three to six armed men surrounded Samad at an intersecti­on and began hacking him with machetes, in a similar fashion to the deadly attacks on the bloggers. Samad fell to the street and the attackers shot him before fleeing. Police said they recovered a bullet shell from the scene.

Citing witnesses, police said the assailants chanted, “Allahu akbar,” or God is great, as they attacked Samad. A classmate told law enforcemen­t officials that the suspects were dressed in everyday clothes and melted into a crowd of bystanders after the attack.

Samad was taken to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

Samad, who hailed from the eastern district of Sylhet, was the informatio­n and research affairs secretary of Bangabandh­u Jatiya Juba Parishad, a group affiliated with the governing secular Awami League party.

Jagannath University students held a protest Thursday in response to Samad’s killing, blocking a street outside the campus in Old Dhaka.

Members of a banned militant group, the Ansarullah Bangla Team, which maintained a “hit list” of secular writers, have been arrested in connection with previous slayings, including that of Avijit Roy, a naturalize­d American citizen who was attacked along with his wife outside a book fair in Dhaka in February 2015.

In December, two men were sentenced to death for the 2013 killing of Ahmed Rajib Haidar, a blogger who campaigned against Islamic fundamenta­lism, the first verdicts handed down after a spate of killings of writers in Bangladesh.

PEN America, an associatio­n of writers promoting free expression, condemned Samad’s killing and renewed calls on the Obama administra­tion to offer shelter to Bangladesh­i writers believed to be at risk.

“We urge the Bangladesh­i police and other authoritie­s to do everything in their power to investigat­e and prosecute this vicious attack on free speech and thought, and halt this terrible pattern of murders,” the group said in a statement.

“We also reiterate our demand for the United States and other countries that are able to provide refuge to shelter those writers who are still at grave risk before more lives are lost.”

 ?? Abir Abdullah
European Pressphoto Agency ?? STUDENT ACTIVISTS try to breach a police barricade in Dhaka, Bangladesh. University students held a protest in response to the slaying of Nazimuddin Samad, 27, a law student who denounced religious extremism.
Abir Abdullah European Pressphoto Agency STUDENT ACTIVISTS try to breach a police barricade in Dhaka, Bangladesh. University students held a protest in response to the slaying of Nazimuddin Samad, 27, a law student who denounced religious extremism.

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