Times of Oman

Academics stage rally in Dhaka to protest attacks

Despite the climate of fear caused by the attacks that follow the killings of four secularist bloggers this year, writers turned out in large numbers for the rally in Dhaka

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DHAKA: One-thousand Bangladesh­i authors and teachers marched through the streets of the capital on Tuesday, asserting their right to free speech days after a suspected extremist group attacked writers and publishers critical of extremist militancy.

On Saturday, a publisher was hacked to death in his office in Dhaka by men wielding sharp weapons, hours after similar attacks on two writers and another publisher.

Despite the climate of fear caused by the attacks that follow the killings of four secularist bloggers this year, writers turned out in large numbers for the rally in Dhaka.

“No one is safe. First they killed bloggers. Now they are targeting publishers.

“Soon they will attack anyone who is progressiv­e-minded,” said Khaledur Rahman, an author who is himself facing a death threat.

A branch of Al Qaeda claimed responsibi­lity for the attacks but police said they had not been able to verify that claim.

Ansarullah Bangla Team

Police joint commission­er Monirul Islam said investigat­ors were looking closely at a home-grown group called Ansarullah Bangla Team (ABT) as the latest attacks bore the hallmarks of earlier killings of bloggers for which it took responsibi­lity.

The little-known extremist group has vowed to kill their critics.

“They just tell these youth that the bloggers are the enemies of Islam. Nobody has read the blogs. They just blindly follow what the ABT says,” said a police investigat­or.

Tensions have risen in Bangladesh since Hasina ordered extremist leaders suspected of atrocities during the 1971 war of independen­ce from Pakistan to be put on trial for war crimes.

Her rivals say Hasina is settling political scores by hunting down members of the Jamaate-Islami, an ally of the main opposition group head by former prime minister Khaleda Zia.

The latest conviction of former opposition minister Salauddin Quader Chowdhury for war crimes has reignited protests that the trials are politicall­y motivated.

US Senator Patrick Leahy in a letter to the Bangladesh embassy in Washingto said Chowdhury was denied the opportunit­y to present evidence to the war crimes tribunal that he was out of the country at the time of the alleged offences.

 ?? — AFP ?? DEMONSTRAT­IONS: Bangladesh­i demonstrat­ors gather during a nationwide strike called by secular activists to protest against attacks on bloggers and publishers in Dhaka on Tuesday.
— AFP DEMONSTRAT­IONS: Bangladesh­i demonstrat­ors gather during a nationwide strike called by secular activists to protest against attacks on bloggers and publishers in Dhaka on Tuesday.

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