Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Bangladesh attackers spare Muslim captives

Recite from Quran, hostages were told

-

DHAKA, Bangladesh — The hostages were given a test: recite verses from the Quran, or be punished, according to a witness. Those who passed were allowed to eat. Those who failed were tortured and slain.

The dramatic, 10-hour hostage crisis that gripped Bangladesh’s diplomatic zone ended Saturday morning with at least 28 dead, including six of the attackers, as commandos raided the popular restaurant where heavily armed attackers were holding dozens of foreigners and Bangladesh­is prisoner while hurling bombs and engaging in a gunbattle with security forces. The victims included 20 hostages, mostly foreigners, and two Bangladesh­i police officers.

The attack marks an escalation in militant violence that has hit the traditiona­lly moderate Muslim-majority nation with increasing frequency in recent months, with the extremists demanding the secular government set up Islamic rule. Most previous attacks have involved machete-wielding men singling out individual activists, foreigners and religious minorities.

But Friday night’s attack was different, more coordinate­d, with the attackers brandishin­g assault rifles as they shouted “Allahu Akbar” (God is Great) and stormed the Holey Artisan Bakery in Dhaka’s Gulshan area while dozens of foreigners and Bangladesh­is were dining out during the Ramadan holy month.

The gunmen, initially firing blanks, ordered restaurant workers to switch off the lights, and they draped black cloths over closed-circuit cameras, according to a survivor, who spoke with local TV channel ATN News. He and others, including kitchen staff, managed to escape by running to the rooftop or out the back door.

But about 35 were trapped inside, their fate depending on whether they could prove themselves to be Muslims, according to the father of a Bangladesh­i businessma­n who was rescued Saturday morning along with his family.

“The gunmen asked everyone inside to recite from the Quran,” the Islamic holy book, according to Rezaul Karim, describing what his son, Hasnat, had witnessed inside. “Those who recited were spared. The gunmen even gave them meals last night.”

The others, he said, “were tortured.”

Detectives were questionin­g his son and his family along with other survivors as part of the investigat­ion Saturday, as scattered details of the siege emerged. Authoritie­s were also interrogat­ing one of the attackers captured by commandos in the dramatic morning rescue.

The Islamic State group claimed responsibi­lity, saying it targeted the citizens of “Crusader countries” in the attack, warning that citizens of such countries would not be safe “as long as their warplanes kill Muslims.”

On Saturday, the Amaq news agency, affiliated with IS, published photos of five smiling young men each holding what appear to be assault rifles and posing in front of a black IS flags whom the agency identified as the attackers, according to the SITE Intelligen­ce Service, which monitors jihadi online activity. They were identified by noms de guerre indicating they were all Bangladesh­is. Amaq said the fighters used “knives, cleavers, assault rifles and hand grenades.”

The 20 hostages killed included nine Italians, seven Japanese, three Bangladesh­is and one Indian, government sources said. The White House confirmed Saturday that a U.S. citizen was among the hostages killed, but did not release any further identifica­tion.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Hosne Ara Karim, whose son and daughter-in-law were rescued from a restaurant that was attacked by heavily armed militants, waits for them Saturday in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Hosne Ara Karim, whose son and daughter-in-law were rescued from a restaurant that was attacked by heavily armed militants, waits for them Saturday in Dhaka, Bangladesh.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States