The Palm Beach Post

Police kill militant tied to bakery attack

- Julfikar Ali Manik and Nida Najar

DHAKA, BANGLADESH — A Canadian man suspected of having planned a July attack on a bakery in Dhaka that left 22 people dead was killed in a shootout with the Bangladesh­i police Saturday, officials said.

The man, Tamim Ahmed Chowdhury, a 30-year-old Canadian citizen of Bangladesh­i descent, was one of three militants killed in the raid outside Dhaka, the capital, the officials said.

B a n g l a d e s h i a u t h o r i - ties have said Chowdhury planned the July 1 assault on the Holey Artisan Bakery, a restaurant popular with expatriate­s and middle-class Bangladesh­is.

S o me a n a l ys t s b e l i e ve Chowdhury acted as a coordinato­r for the Islamic State in Bangladesh and northeaste­rn India. The Islamic State has claimed responsibi­lity for several recent attacks in Bangladesh, including the assault on the bakery.

Bangladesh­i police, however, identified Chowdhury as the leader of a new branch of a domestic terrorist group, the Jama’atul Mujahedeen Bangladesh, and the government initially denied that the bakery attack had been carried out by members of foreign groups.

Later, officials acknowledg­ed that the attackers might have had links to such groups, including the Islamic State.

The shootout Saturday morning to o k pl a c e at a t hree - s tor y house i n t he Narayangan­j district near Dhaka, after police received a tip that the militants were hiding there, said AKM Kamrul Ahsan, a spokesman.

They were given a chance to surrender, but attacked the police with guns and grenades, at which point the police opened fire, said a police official, Inspector General AKM Shahidul Hoque, in televised comments to reporters Saturday. Both officials said Chowdhury was among the militants killed.

The police had offered c a s h b o u n t i e s o f a b o u t $ 2 5,0 0 0 t h i s mont h f o r informatio­n leading to the arrest of Chowdhury and for another militant, Syed Mohammad Ziaul Haque, who was suspected of being involved in recent killings of secular writers.

Chowdhury’s name was on a list of 10 high-value suspects released by the Bangladesh­i authoritie­s last month after the bakery attack, an 11-hour siege carried out by five militants who were eventually killed by soldiers. Analysts said Chowdhury and two other Bangladesh­i expatriate­s on that list could have been acting as links between local and internatio­nal extremist groups.

The bakery siege was the most deadly in a series of attacks carried out by Islamist militants in Bangladesh over the past several years.

Off i c i al s s ai d t hey suspected Chowdhury was also behind a July 7 bombing at Bangladesh’s largest prayer gathering for the Eid al-Fitr holiday, which killed four people: two police officers, a civilian and a militant.

Home Minister Asaduzz a man Kha n s a i d S a t u rday in televised remarks to reporters that the identities of the two militants killed with Chowdhury would be released after an investigat­ion, but that one of them appeared to be Chowdhury’s right-hand man.

 ?? AP ?? Bangladesh­i police inspect a two-story house in Narayangan­j, on outskirts of Dhaka, on Saturday after a raid. Police said they killed a militant they believe planned an attack on a popular Dhaka restaurant.
AP Bangladesh­i police inspect a two-story house in Narayangan­j, on outskirts of Dhaka, on Saturday after a raid. Police said they killed a militant they believe planned an attack on a popular Dhaka restaurant.

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