30/04/2016
30/04/2016
In this Dec 14, 2015 file photo, Bangladeshi people hold lighted candles and walk in a rally during Martyrs Day in Dhaka, Bangladesh. The slaying in Bangladesh of a US Agency for International Development employee has intensified US concern that the strategically located South Asian country with traditions of religious tolerance is under threat from Islamic extremists. (AP)WASHINGTON, April 29, (AP): The slaying in Bangladesh of a US Agency for International Development employee has intensified US concern that the strategically located South Asian country with traditions of religious tolerance is under threat from Islamic extremists. Bangladesh’s government denies that transnational jihadist groups have been behind a spate of bloody attacks on secular writers, bloggers, foreigners and religious minorities. But the Bangladeshi branch of al-Qaeda on the Indian Subcontinent claimed Monday’s killing of USAID employee and gay rights activist Xulhaz Mannan.
That claim has not been verified, but it adds to fears that local extremists with international aspirations could enable groups like al-Qaeda and the Islamic State group to gain a foothold in a country wracked by prolonged political turmoil because of a bitter divide between the ruling party and the opposition. The No. 2 US diplomat said Thursday that despite the government blaming the political opposition for the attacks, evidence to date suggests extremist groups, either local or affiliated with IS or al-Qaeda, are responsible for the killings. “This gives us concern about the potential for ISIL or DAESH to take root in Bangladesh,” Deputy Secretary of State Antony Blinken told the House Foreign Affairs Committee, using alternative acronyms for IS. “That is the last thing we want.”
The assaults on minorities and moderates, typically by young men wielding knives or machetes and spewing hateful language, began in 2013 and have increased in frequency in the past year. Among the fatalities was Bangladeshi-American writer Avijit Roy, who was attacked on a street in the capital, Dhaka, in February 2015. Human rights groups fear for others facing militant death threats as the Bangladeshi government has appeared unsympathetic to their plight — perhaps because it does not want to alienate Muslims offended by the atheistic writings of some bloggers.
While authorities have arrested suspects in some of those cases, none has been prosecuted, and authorities have yet to identify the masterminds. The State Department says the US is considering providing sanctuary to some individuals at risk, although it remains unclear whether that will happen. Human rights groups have been calling for that since December
Concern
In February, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper gave an unusual mention to Bangladesh in his congressional testimony on worldwide threats. He said that Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s efforts to undermine the political opposition “will probably provide openings for transnational terrorist groups to expand their presence in the country.”
Hasina has become the country’s dominant force, marginalizing the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party, or BNP, which boycotted the last national elections held in 2014. She has pursued war crimes prosecutions leading to death penalties for several leaders of the fundamentalist Jamaat-e-Islami party, which is allied to the BNP, over alleged involvement in atrocities committed during its 1971 war of independence, when Bangladesh separated from Pakistan.
The opposition denies involvement in the attacks and says it is being scapegoated for security failings. Hasina blamed the opposition for Mannan’s killing, but hours later, Ansar al- Islam, an affiliate of al-Qaeda on the Indian subcontinent, said it had killed the activist and his theater actor friend because they were “pioneers of practicing and promoting homosexuality.”
US officials say they cooperate well with Bangladesh on counter-terrorism and intelligence-sharing, and that despite Bangladeshi denials of the involvement of transnational jihadist groups, in recent months US and Bangladeshi officials have discussed how to alleviate the risk of those groups establishing themselves in the South Asian country.
