Bangladesh alerts India about Dhaka cafe attack mastermind
BY Agencies3 Aug 2016 3:57 AM IST
Agencies3 Aug 2016 3:57 AM IST
“We have alerted the Indian security agencies against his (Tamim Chowdhury’s) possible escape to India to evade the arrest,” Bangladesh Police chief AKM Shahidul Hoque told PTI. He said a massive manhunt is underway to track down Bangladeshi-Canadian Chowdhury as he is suspected to be the mastermind of the recent terrorist attacks in the country.
Hoque said during his recent New Delhi visit accompanying Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan, he alerted the chiefs of National Investigation Agency (NIA) and CBI against Chowdhury and “Indian security agencies are looking for him as well”.
“Chowdhury could be the key-operative of (Syria-based) IS in Bangladesh,” he said, but quickly added that no proof of IS link to the recent terror attacks were found so far, reiterating the government’s stance on the issue.
A newspaper earlier reported that Chowdhury appeared as the leader and main financier of a reorganised Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB) while Bangladesh earlier attributed the two attacks to the outfit.
Hoque, however, said a reconstituted JMB, which he preferred to call “neo-JMB”, was identifying them as IS operatives in Bangladesh.
A senior officer at the police headquarters supplemented Hoque, saying the new outfit, mostly led by close relatives of the original outfit, adopted a revised philosophy for the outfit three years ago which was inclined to that of IS.
Independent security analysts earlier said JMB or neo-JMB was inclined to IS while another banned outfit called Ansarullah Bangla Team was ideologically linked to al-Qaeda.
The police chief s comments came days after Bangladesh identified Chowdhury as the mastermind of the July 1 terrorist attack on a Dhaka cafe. Police earlier this week said a security raid on a terror hideout last week provided them the clue to detect him as the architect of the recent Islamist assaults adding that he returned home from Canada three years ago.
A police officer familiar with the investigation earlier said evidence gathered from the scene of the July 26 overnight security raid at Dhaka s Kalyanpur area, when nine presumed militants were killed, led police to identify Chowdhury, believed to be in his mid 30s.
The July 1 attack on the Holey Artisan restaurant left 22 people including an Indian girl and two police officers dead, while the July 6 assault on an Eid congregation at northern Sholakia killed 2 policemen and a woman.
The family members of the five militants, who were shot dead in a gunfight with security forces at the Artisan, have not come forward to claim their bodies.
Attackers’ bodies still in morgue a month on
The bodies of five Islamists behind a deadly attack on a Bangladesh cafe have still not been claimed a month later, police said on Monday, as tens of thousands took to the streets to protest against extremism.
Relatives of the men have spoken of their shock and horror at learning of their involvement in the siege in Dhaka’s Gulshan neighbourhood, in which 20 hostages were killed -- many of them hacked to death. On Monday tens of thousands of university and college students across the country stood in silence and formed human chains in front of their schools.
“No terrorism, we want peace. We want life without fear,” read one banner at a women’s college in Dhaka. Authorities have launched a nationwide campaign to shame those behind the attacks.
Clerics at the mainly Muslim country’s more than 300,000 mosques have been asked to give sermons on why Islam forbids killing.
Police said the bodies of nine other men allegedly from the same group who were shot when police launched a raid on a militant hideout on July 26 are also still being stored at a state hospital.
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