Los Angeles Times

A deadly place to blog

In Bangladesh, three writers have been slain since February for views on religion. Islamists say the men insulted their faith.

- By Mohiuddin Kader and Alexandra Zavis alexandra.zavis @latimes.com Twitter: @alexazavis Special correspond­ent Kader reported from Dhaka and Times staff writer Zavis from Los Angeles. Staff writer Shashank Bengali in Mumbai, India, contribute­d to this rep

DHAKA, Bangladesh — The slaying of a third secular blogger in as many months has set a chilling pattern in Bangladesh, a country long associated with a culture of moderation and free expression.

Machete-wielding assailants followed Ananta Bijoy Das on Tuesday morning when he left his house in the northeaste­rn city of Sylhet and hacked him to death, police and friends said.

Das wrote for MuktoMona, the blog founded by Avijit Roy, a U.S. citizen who was killed in a similar attack outside a book fair in the Bangladesh­i capital, Dhaka, in February. Another writer who protested Roy’s killing on social media, Washiqur Rahman, was struck down on a Dhaka street in March.

Activists lay blame for the killings on ultraconse­rvative Islamists who have gained prominence recently in the overwhelmi­ngly Muslim country. They have complained about the slow pace of investigat­ions and have accused authoritie­s of allowing a culture of impunity to take hold.

Although successive government­s have cracked down on hard-line Islamist groups, Bangladesh­i politics have become intensely polarized, leading to what one regional expert described as a “governance vacuum.”

The political turmoil appears to have emboldened Islamist extremists, including a new Al Qaeda affiliate that is claiming responsibi­lity for at least two of the killings.

Who were the victims of these attacks?

Roy, 42, was a champion of atheism and outspoken critic of Islamists. A Bangladesh­i, he moved to the U.S. in 2007, gained citizenshi­p and worked as a software engineer in the Atlanta area. He wrote several books and founded the website Mukto-Mona, which means “free mind” in Bengali. Friends said his writings had made him the target of frequent death threats. But he returned regularly to his homeland to attend the annual book fair where he was killed Feb. 26.

Rahman, 26, worked for a travel agency and wrote satirical pieces about religion on Facebook and other sites. An admirer of Roy, he paid tribute to the slain blogger with a post on his Facebook page that read: “#iamavijit and words cannot be killed.”

Das, a banker in his 30s, was a “relentless writer” on science and rationalis­m, according to an activist colleague, who requested anonymity to shield himself from reprisals. Das wrote the preface to a book written by Roy and also helped organize a new publicatio­n called Jukti, which means “logic,” the friend said.

Have other writers been targeted?

There have been a number of attacks on secular academics and writers over the years. The recent deaths followed the 2013 killing of Ahmed Rajib Haider, a blogger who was hacked to death with machetes in Dhaka.

Who is responsibl­e for their deaths?

Last week, Al Qaeda’s affiliate in South Asia claimed responsibi­lity for several killings of “blasphemer­s” in the region, including Roy and Haider.

A local militant group, Ansar al-Islam Bangladesh, said that Al Qaeda in the Indian Subcontine­nt had also claimed responsibi­lity for the attack on Das, according to the SITE Intelligen­ce Group, which monitors such groups online. But there was no immediate statement to that effect from Al Qaeda.

Police say they believe the attacks were carried out by homegrown militants who may have received training from the terrorist network. A local radical group, the Ansarullah Bangla Team, also claimed responsibi­lity for Roy’s death.

Al Qaeda’s leader, Ayman Zawahiri, announced in September that the organizati­on was expanding into the Indian subcontine­nt “to raise the flag of jihad” and bring Islamic rule to the region.

About 90% of Bangladesh’s 160 million people are Muslim and its legal system is partially based on Islamic law, but it is governed as a parliament­ary democracy.

Have there been any arrests?

Seven university students have been charged in Haider’s killing, along with the leader of the Ansarullah Bangla Team, Jashimuddi­n Rahmani.

Police arrested two students who were overpowere­d by bystanders at the scene of Rahman’s killing, but another suspect escaped.

A militant Islamist who allegedly threatened Roy on social media was also arrested but has not been charged.

Roy’s family has criticized the pace of the investigat­ion. His widow, Rafida Ahmed Bonya, who was seriously injured in the attack that killed Roy, this week accused the government of being “afraid of the extremists.”

“Is Bangladesh going to be the next Pakistan or Afghanista­n?” she asked in an interview with Voice of America.

Why has Bangladesh become a killing ground for bloggers?

The slain bloggers were targeted for their secular views, which Islamists said insulted their faith.

“The rise of this extreme form of violent Islam is occurring at a moment when Bangladesh­i politics have become extremely polarized, and in a sense creating a governance vacuum,” Alyssa Ayres, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, told a

House panel last month.

Opponents of Prime Minister Sheik Hasina Wajed have launched public strikes and engaged in street battles with security forces that have left more than 120 people dead since January.

The protests were timed to mark the first anniversar­y of a disputed election that brought Wajed and her Awami League party to power. A major opposition party, the Bangladesh Nationalis­t Party, boycotted the 2014 vote because it did not take place under a neutral caretaker government. Its leader, Khaleda Zia, a former prime minister, is now demanding that Wajed step down and that fresh elections be called.

The BNP is backed by the country’s largest Islamist party, Jamaat-e-Islami, which has a student wing that is regularly accused of street violence, Ayres said.

Government forces have responded by arresting thousands of opposition activists and cracking down on the media.

Adding to the fractious environmen­t is a tribunal seeking justice for atrocities committed in Bangladesh’s 1971 war for independen­ce from Pakistan. Activists said the four slain bloggers took part in or were supportive of a movement known as Shahbag, which sought the death penalty for Islamist leaders accused of war crimes.

 ?? A.M. Ahad
Associated Press ?? ACTIVISTS in Dhaka, Bangladesh, protest the killing of Ananta Bijoy Das. A colleague said the blogger was a “relentless writer” on science and rationalis­m.
A.M. Ahad Associated Press ACTIVISTS in Dhaka, Bangladesh, protest the killing of Ananta Bijoy Das. A colleague said the blogger was a “relentless writer” on science and rationalis­m.

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