Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Suspect in deadly cafe siege killed in Bangladesh

Police kill 3 militants in shootout, including reported terror organizer

- By Saad Hammadi and Annie Gowen

The Washington Post

DHAKA, Bangladesh — Police in Bangladesh killed three suspected militants in a shootout Saturday morning, including the Canadian citizen identified as a key organizer of the deadly terrorist attack on a Dhaka cafe last month.

Tamim Ahmed Chowdhury, 30, was among those killed during an exchange of gunfire in the Narayangan­j neighborho­od near the capital of Dhaka, according to Monirul Islam, chief of the counterter­rorism unit.

Mr. Islam said police received a tip that a small group of militants had been sheltered in a residentia­l building in the neighborho­od and that they cordoned off the area just after midnight, with the two sides exchanging gunfire.

The suspects were killed by special operations team about 10 a.m., he said. The police found grenades, pistols and AK22 assault rifles at the apartment.

Mr. Chowdhury, 30, was a naturalize­d Canadian citizen who graduated from the University of Windsor in 2011, officials said. He returned to Bangladesh in late 2013 from the United Arab Emirates.

Officials have said that Mr. Chowdhury helped the attackers with safe houses and weaponry and accompanie­d them as they made their way to the upscale cafe-bakery the evening of July 1. Ultimately, militants killed at least 22 people, including several foreigners, and two police officers, in the overnight siege.

Mr. Islam said Chowdhury’s arrest was a major milestone because he was responsibl­e for radicalizi­ng the youths involved in the cafe attack as well as others who attacked worshipers July 7 at an Eid celebratio­n.

“This is a significan­t progress for our counterter­rorism drive because Tamim was responsibl­e for collecting finances and later distributi­ng them, recruiting and radicalizi­ng members of elite families,” Mr. Islam said.

Authoritie­s said Mr. Chowdhury is a leader of Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen Bangladesh, a new branch of the domestic terrorism outfit that produced the cafe attackers and is affiliated with the Islamic State.

Since 2013, authoritie­s say, more than 50 terrorist attacks have been carried out by extremists in Bangladesh, the Muslimmajo­rity nation of 160 million. Those include killings of secular bloggers and publishers by machete-wielding assailants as well as the slayings of several foreigners, gay rights activists and members of minority religious groups.

Although the Islamic State and al-Qaida claimed responsibi­lity for many of those attacks, officials in the country had long denied that global terrorist networks had carried out the carnage, blaming local militants.

After the sophistica­ted operation at the Holey Artisan cafe and bakery, however, they have cast a wide net to search for dozens of missing Bangladesh­i men who may have been radicalize­d overseas. U.S. Secretary of State John F. Kerry is set to travel to the country Monday to discuss cooperatio­n on a variety of issues, including security.

Earlier this month, authoritie­s in Dhaka had announced a $25,000 reward for Mr. Chowdhury as well as another man, Syed Mohammad Ziaul Haque, the leader of the local militant group that carried out hacking deaths of bloggers and other intellectu­als.

The safe house where Mr. Chowdhury was killed Saturday could potentiall­y provide a “treasure trove” of informatio­n for investigat­ors about his activities, according to terror analyst Animesh Roul, executive director of the Society for the Study of Peace and Conflict in New Delhi, India.

More important, Mr. Chowdhury’s death provides a key window in a growing threat for Bangladesh - affluent members of the diaspora who were radicalize­d overseas returning home to Bangladesh to wage jihad in their home country. Mr. Roul said Bangladesh is particular­ly vulnerable because of its large diaspora in such places as Britain and Canada.

Mr. Chowdhury was radicalize­d among other young men in Calgary, Alberta, and the province of Ontario in Canada, Mr. Roul said. Nibras Islam, a student at a Malaysian university, was one of the Dhaka cafe attackers. Authoritie­s in 2014 arrested a British citizen of Bangladesh­i origin in Dhaka suspected of recruiting for the Islamic State.

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