The Jerusalem Post

Bangladesh­is behind Dhaka restaurant killings

Officials check for links to overseas Islamists • Mostly foreigners among 20 dead in attack

- • By RUMA PAUL

DHAKA (Reuters) – Seven terrorists who killed 20 people at a restaurant in Dhaka were local Bangladesh­is and authoritie­s had tried before to arrest five of them, police said, as investigat­ors probed for possible links with internatio­nal Islamist extremist groups.

The gunmen stormed the upmarket restaurant in the diplomatic zone late on Friday, before killing mostly non-Muslim hostages, including at least nine Italians, seven Japanese and an American.

Islamic State claimed responsibi­lity, warning citizens of “crusader countries” that their citizens would not be safe “as long as their aircraft are killing Muslims,” the group said. It also posted pictures of five fighters grinning in front of a black flag who it said were involved in the attack, according to the SITE monitoring website.

The claims have not been confirmed, but Bangladesh Home Minister Asaduzzama­n Khan told Reuters late on Saturday that neither Islamic State nor al-Qaida was involved. He reiterated the government’s line that home-grown terrorists were responsibl­e for a spate of killings in the country over the past 18 months.

“This was done by JMB,” Khan said, referring to Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen Bangladesh, which claims to represent Islamic State in Bangladesh.

Analysts say that as Islamic State loses territory in Iraq and Syria and its finances get drained, it may be trying to build affiliates in countries such as Bangladesh for jihadists to carry out attacks locally and cheaply.

Deputy Inspector-General of police Shahidur Rahman told Reuters on Sunday authoritie­s were investigat­ing any connection between the attackers and transnatio­nal groups such as Islamic State or al-Qaida.

He said the terrorists were mostly educated and from rich families, but declined to give any more details.

National police chief Shahidul Hoque said all the gunmen were Bangladesh­i.

“Five of them were listed as militants and law enforcers made several drives to arrest them,” Hoque told reporters in Dhaka late on Saturday.

Whoever was responsibl­e, the attack marked a major escalation in violence by terrorists who have demanded Islamic rule in Bangladesh, whose 160 million people are mostly Muslim.

Previous attacks have mostly singled out individual­s advocating a secular or liberal lifestyle or religious minorities.

Friday night’s attack, during the final days of Ramadan, was more coordinate­d than the previous assaults.

Gunmen singled out foreigners as soon as they stormed through the doors of the restaurant popular with expatriate­s. They ordered all Bangladesh­is to stand up before the killing began, a source briefed on the investigat­ion said. The Bangladesh­is were later told to close their eyes and recite verses from the Koran and one terrorist cursed at a Bangladesh­i for eating with non-Muslims during Ramadan, the source said.

The Islamic State-affiliated Amaq news agency claimed in a report on Saturday the killers identified and released Muslim patrons from the Dhaka restaurant, SITE said.

The victims also included at least three Bangladesh­is or people of Bangladesh­i descent.

The Islamists hacked most of their victims with machetes, leaving their bodies to bleed over the floor.

A 12-hour standoff with security forces ended when around 100 commandos stormed the building, killing six of the terrorists and capturing a seventh after attempts at negotiatio­ns proved fruitless, authoritie­s said. They recovered explosives and sharp weapons from the scene.

It was not clear if the attackers had made any demands.

Up until Friday’s attack, authoritie­s had maintained no operationa­l links exist between Bangladesh­i terrorists and internatio­nal jihadi networks. Bangladesh has blamed JMB and another home-grown outfit for the wave of grisly killings over the past year and a half.

One line of inquiry being pursued is whether the restaurant attackers received any guidance from Islamic State or al-Qaida, an official in Bangladesh’s counter-terrorism wing said.

“Pictures [uploaded on Twitter] indicate they might have been encouraged by ISIS activities abroad,” said Muhammad Zamir, a former senior Bangladesh Foreign Ministry official. “But this does not show a direct link to ISIS. This is exactly what was done and disputed later in the case of the Orlando attack.”

He was referring to the killing in Florida of 49 people last month by a man who pledged allegiance to Islamic State.

Friday’s attack in Dhaka was the worst since 2005, when JMB set off a series of bombs throughout Bangladesh in the space of an hour killing at least 25 people, mostly judges, police and journalist­s.

The authoritie­s executed six top JMB leaders in March 2007 and police have continued to hunt for group members, often detaining suspected militants following intelligen­ce tips.

In February, Bangladesh police arrested three JMB members suspected of killing a Hindu priest.

Islamic state has claimed responsibi­lity for a series of other attacks in Bangladesh in recent months since first taking credit for a killing in September last year. An Italian missionary was shot and wounded in the neck last November. Another Italian and a Japanese citizen were killed in attacks at the end of September and early October last year.

In a run-down government hospital in Dhaka, two police officers who were on patrol duty on Friday night received treatment for gunshot wounds, with bandages and plasters on cheeks and legs. Behind their beds, a sheet of paper carried details of their wounds.

Struggling to speak, 30-yearold officer Pradip, who gave just one name, recalled rushing to the spot after receiving a wireless message that night. A blood-smeared man lay in front of the restaurant, shouting “save me, save me.”

The police officers called for backup after they were shot at from inside the restaurant.

“At some point I felt blood was rolling down my cheek,” Pradip said. “We did respond with fire and the attackers stopped. We then rescued the man, who was the driver of some of the Japanese citizens who were inside.”

After meeting the officers in the hospital, national police chief A.K.M. Shahidul Hoque told Reuters they had gleaned some preliminar­y details on the identities of the attackers, but he declined to give details.

The seven Japanese killed were working on projects involving the Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency, an overseas aid agency, Japan’s Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said on Saturday.

Six of them were in Dhaka to work on a metrorail project, Bangladesh’s communicat­ion minister, Obaidul Quader, said.

Italian media said several of the Italians victims worked in Bangladesh’s $26 billion garment sector, which accounts for 80 percent of its exports.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina announced two days of national mourning beginning on Sunday and said the country would stand up and fight the “terror threat.”

 ?? (Adnan Abidi/Reuters) ?? A WOMAN reacts after placing flowers at a makeshift memorial to pay tribute to the victims of the attack on the Holey Artisan Bakery and the O’Kitchen Restaurant, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, yesterday.
(Adnan Abidi/Reuters) A WOMAN reacts after placing flowers at a makeshift memorial to pay tribute to the victims of the attack on the Holey Artisan Bakery and the O’Kitchen Restaurant, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, yesterday.

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