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		Second blogger hacked to death this year 
		in Bangladesh 
		
		 
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		[March 30, 2015] 
		By Ruma Paul 
		  
		 DHAKA (Reuters) - A blogger was hacked to 
		death by machete-wielding assailants in the Bangladesh capital Dhaka on 
		Monday, the second attack in five weeks on a critic of religious 
		extremism in the Muslim-majority South Asian nation. 
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			 Washikur Rahman, a secular blogger, was attacked by young 
			religious students on a busy street in the center of Dhaka on Monday 
			morning, a police official said. 
			 
			"Police on duty near the spot caught two attackers red-handed with 
			three machetes as they were fleeing the scene after the incident," 
			police official Humayan Kabir told Reuters. 
			 
			The killing comes just weeks after U.S. secular blogger Avijit Roy 
			was hacked to death while returning with his wife from a book fair 
			in Dhaka. His wife, Rafida Bonya Ahmed, suffered head injuries and 
			lost a finger in the Feb. 26 attack. 
			 
			The attacks come amidst a period of political turmoil in the 
			country, with the government and main opposition group locked in a 
			months-long standoff that has created a sense of deepening 
			insecurity across the country. 
			  In recent years, a string of secular-minded writers have been 
			targeted by religious militants in Bangladesh as the government has 
			tried to crackdown on hardline Islamist groups seeking to create a 
			Sharia-based state in the nation. 
			 
			Blogger Ahmed Rajib Haider was killed in 2013 near his home in Dhaka 
			after he led a protest demanding capital punishment for Islamist 
			leaders convicted of war crimes during Bangladesh's war for 
			independence. 
			 
			In 2004, Humayun Azad, a secular writer and professor at Dhaka 
			University, was also attacked by militants while returning home from 
			a Dhaka book fair. He later died in Germany while undergoing 
			treatment. 
			 
			
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			Roy's wife, Ahmed, blamed her husband's murder in February on 
			religious fanatics, and accused police on duty of not doing enough 
			to stop the attack. 
			 
			Roy's father also told reporters last week that "apparently no 
			progress" had been made in resolving the case. 
			 
			Mohammad Habibur Rahman, secretary of the Bangladesh Police 
			Association and Superintendent of Police of Dhaka, said the police 
			had been unfairly criticized over their handling of the crime. 
			 
			"There are plenty of examples where our police force come forward to 
			save people, risking their own lives," he said. 
			 
			Media group Reporters Without Borders rated Bangladesh 146th among 
			180 countries in a ranking of press freedom last year. 
			 
			(Writing by Krista Mahr; Editing by Jeremy Laurence) 
			
			[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
			reserved.] 
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