The Manila Times

Bangladesh ‘in denial’ over jihadist attacks – analysts

- BY ABHAYA SRIVASTAVA AFP PHOTO AFP

NEW DELHI: A slaughter of foreign on the frontline of the global war on terror despite government efforts to portray a campaign of attacks as the work of domestic opponents, according to analysts.

Several dozen people have been killed by jihadists in Bangladesh in the last two years, the victims including mainly local atheist bloggers, Hindus, gay activists and liberal academics.

But while those attacks generated few column inches beyond Bangladesh, this weekend’s hostage siege in a Dhaka cafe led news bulletins around the world, attracting the kind of attention its perpetrato­rs had long been craving.

Analysts said the choice of venue, target, timing and method of killing were all designed to maximize publicity for jihadists who were well aware of the outrage that greeted recent massacres in Orlando and Paris.

Eighteen of the 20 civilians who were killed in the Holey Artisan Bakery were foreigners. Nearly all were hacked to death with machetes, even though the hostage-takers had

The attack was even more shock - end of Ramadan, with survivors describing how the hostage-takers made clear their targets were nonMuslims, separating locals from the foreigners.

Around 90 percent of Bangladesh’s 160 million people are Mus

“By hacking people to death... they wanted to show the world that

A Bangladesh­i official examines a body believed to be of one of the attackers at an upscale cafe in Dhaka on July 2, after a bloody siege at the restaurant came to an end. Bangladesh began observing two days of national mourning on July 3 after 20 hostages were slaughtere­d at a restaurant packed with foreigners in a terrifying escalation of a campaign of attacks by Islamist extremists. they can go to any extent for jihad,” said K G Suresh, a senior fellow at New Delhi’s Vivekanand­a Interna

“Once they attack a restaurant night their message is clear who they want to go after. By sparing Muslims, they wanted to send out the message that they are only against Westerners.”

According to the monitoring group SITE, the Islamic State organizati­on claimed responsibi­lity for the attack, which it said had targeted “citizens of crusader states”.

But Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s secular government has long insisted neither IS nor Al-Qaeda have gained a foothold in Bangladesh despite both groups claiming many previous attacks.

That line was reiterated by Home Minister Asaduzzama­n Khan, who gunmen killed at the end of the siege were members of Jamaeytul Mujahdeen Bangladesh, a domestic group that has been banned for a decade.

He denied any link with IS but analysts said that stretched credibilit­y.

Taj Hashmi, a Bangladesh­i who teaches security studies at the Austin there could be “no ambiguity” that the attack was the work of IS.

“Bangladesh must admit that internatio­nal Islamist networks are actively engaged in killing people in the country and they are not through yet,” said Hashmi.

Mubashar Hasan, an expert on political Islam at Dhaka’s Liberal but was the latest in a line that stretched back to the bombings in New York and Washington on Sept. 11, 2001.

“This is Bangladesh’s 9/11. Bangladesh has now entered into the global

Critics have said the violence stems from the government’s refusal to allow its opponents to operate freely in the political mainstream.

‘Lack of democracy’

Bangladesh’s main Islamist party has been banned and most of its leaders have been arrested or else executed after recent trials over their role in the 1971 war of independen­ce from Pakistan.

Opposition leader Khaleda Zia is facing a string of court cases for her role in violent anti-government protests.

Zia’s party boycotted the 2014 general election after Hasina refused to allow it to be overseen by a neutral caretaker government as in the past, and Hasan said growing extremism was an inevitable consequenc­e.

“A dysfunctio­nal state and lack of democracy made it fertile ground for terrorism,” said Hasan.

The columnist Zafar Sohban urged the government to end “its state of denial”.

“It cannot continue to bury its head in the sand about the clear and convincing evidence of transnatio­nal links to domestic terror groups and operations,” he wrote in the Dhaka Tribune.

Subhash Agrawal of the Delhi consultanc­y, said the recent arrests of thousands of Bangladesh­is that the government says was organized to eradicate extremism had been counter-productive.

“She has been focusing on her political opponents and going after Begum Khaleda Zia’s people while turning a blind eye to the alarming political and social polarizati­on “Arresting so many people is simply stupid.”

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