Home Latest News Bangladesh Hangs Extremist Leader Over 2005 Blast

Bangladesh Hangs Extremist Leader Over 2005 Blast

by AFP
Minhaj Ahmed Rafi

Minhaj Ahmed Rafi

Asadul Islam of the Jamayetul Mujahideen Bangladesh was one of seven militants convicted of bombing that left two judges dead.

Prison authorities in Bangladesh’s Khulna city on Sunday executed a senior Islamist extremist whose banned group has been linked to the murder of foreign hostages, police said.

Asadul Islam, 42, a leader of the outlawed Jamayetul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB), was hanged for his role in a 2005 blast that killed two judges. Bangladesh has recently blamed the JMB for a July 1 attack on an upmarket Dhaka café in which 22 people, mostly foreign hostages, were shot and hacked to death.

“He was hanged to death at 10:30 p.m. in Khulna jail,” Khulna Police Commissioner Nibhas Chandra Majhi told AFP, adding that there was heavy security around the jail to prevent any violence.

Islam, also known as Arif, was one of seven senior JMB officials, including founding leader Shaikh Abdur Rahman, sentenced to death for a bomb attack on a minibus that killed two lower court judges on Nov. 14, 2005. Six of the men, including Rahman, were executed in March 2007 by a military-backed caretaker government as part of a nationwide crackdown on Islamic extremists.

Arif was sentenced in absentia and was not detained until July 2007. He has been held in Khulna jail ever since. In August the Supreme Court dismissed his final appeal. His execution comes as Bangladeshi security forces push a deadly new crackdown against Islamist extremists following the café attack that has shaken the image of Bangladesh as a moderate Muslim nation.

Since July, police have shot dead nearly 40 suspected extremists including JMB’s new leader Tamim Chowdhury, a Canadian citizen of Bangladesh descent who allegedly masterminded the café carnage. As part of the crackdown, Bangladesh’s courts have also fast-tracked prosecution of Islamist extremists, scores of whom were already facing death sentences and languishing in the country’s jails.

Majhi said hundreds of police and the elite Rapid Action Battalion have been deployed in Khulna, the country’s third largest city, and key roads leading to the jails had been blocked to prevent any violence.

A prison official told AFP that Arif had refused to seek presidential clemency—his last chance to stop the hanging—which prompted the authorities to prepare for his execution. “His family including his wife, two little daughters, six sisters and several other relatives came to meet him for the last time just hours before the execution,” he said.

His body has already sent to his village home in the neighboring town of Mollarhat in an ambulance that was escorted by a heavy police security detail.

Founded in the late 1990s by Islamists who fought in the Afghan wars alongside the Taliban, the JMB seeks to impose sharia law on Bangladesh, a Muslim majority but officially secular nation of 160 million people. JMB first shot to prominence in Bangladesh when it conducted a coordinated bombing attack on Aug. 17, 2005, with more than 400 small blasts in 63 of the country’s 64 districts.

Many of those bombs targeted secular courts, which the JMB claims are inspired by Satan. Hundreds of JMB extremists including Rahman, his deputy Siddiqul Islam alias Bangla Bhai were subsequently hunted down by security forces in a massive crackdown.

Since December 2013, Bangladesh has also executed five top leaders of the country’s largest Islamist party and a senior opposition official for atrocities connected to the country’s war of independence against Pakistan in 1971. Their trials and executions have triggered the country’s deadliest political violence, with more than 500 people killed in clashes with police and thousands of Islamists arrested.

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