Suspect in bloody cafe attack among 3 killed by police
NEW DELHI — Police in Bangladesh killed three suspected militants Saturday, including an alleged mastermind of a major attack on a cafe last month that left 20 people dead.
Police sharpshooters raided a two-story house in Narayanganj district near the capital, Dhaka, after receiving a tip that Tamim Chowdhury, a Bangladeshi-born Canadian, and others were hiding there, top counterterrorism official Monirul Islam said.
Police say Chowdhury is one of two masterminds of the attack on a popular restaurant in Dhaka on July 1 that that killed 20 people, including 17 foreigners.
The militants belonged to the banned group Jumatul Mujahedeen Bangladesh, or JMB, said Bangladesh’s police chief A.K.M. Shahidul Hoque.
Chowdhury is also suspected to be behind a July 7 attack on an Eid gathering outside Dhaka marking the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, he said. Four people died in that assault, including two police officers.
Police said they found guns, ammunition and meat cleavers in the apartment where the men were holed up. The men also set off explosions to destroy their computers and other evidence, said Sanwar Hossain, a senior police officer.
“We heard explosions inside the apartment and we understood that they were destroying evidence,” Hossain said. “When we felt that they would not surrender, we made our final push and killed them.”
Bangladeshi police have been conducting raids across the country to pursue those behind the attacks.
The Islamic State group claimed responsibility for the restaurant attack, but authorities have denied the claim, saying it was the act of the JMB and that Islamic State has no presence in the Muslim-majority country.