Islamist militants in Bangladesh kill 20
foreigners before commandos end siege
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[July 02, 2016]
By Serajul Quadir
DHAKA (Reuters) - Islamist militants
shouting "Allahu Akbar" attacked an upscale cafe in the Bangladeshi
capital, killing 20 foreigners inside, before police stormed the
building on Saturday and rescued 13 hostages, officials said.
The attack, claimed by Islamic State, marks a major escalation in
a campaign by militants over the past 18 months that had targeted
mostly individuals advocating a secular or liberal lifestyle in
mostly Muslim Bangladesh.
Six gunmen were killed during the police operation and one was
captured, Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina said in a TV broadcast.
All 20 victims were foreigners, the spokesman for the Bangladesh
army said. Colonel Rashidul Hasan said he could not yet confirm the
nationalities of those who had died, most of whom were killed by
"sharp weapons".
Many people in the expatriate community in Bangladesh work in the
country's $25 billion garment sector.
The army concluded an operation to clear the cafe after a 12-hour
siege that began when gunmen stormed the restaurant on Friday night.
Two police were killed in the initial assault.
The 13 hostages that were rescued included one Japanese and two Sri
Lankans, the army said.
One Japanese man was among those rescued and taken to a Dhaka
hospital with a gunshot wound, a Japanese government spokesman said.
Seven Japanese were unaccounted for.
An unknown number of Italians were among the hostages who were
killed, a source at Italy's foreign ministry said on Saturday. Seven
Italians were in the cafe when the attack started, including several
working in the garment industry, Italian media have reported.
Islamic State posted photos of what it said were dead foreigners
killed in the assault.
Gowher Rizvi, an adviser to Hasina, told Reuters security forces had
tried to negotiate with the gunmen.
SPORADIC GUNFIRE
The hostage crisis began when security guards in the Gulshan
district of Dhaka, popular with expatriates, noticed several gunmen
outside a medical center, Rizvi said. When the guards approached,
the gunmen ran into a building housing the restaurant, packed with
people waiting for tables, he said.
Ali Arsalan, co-owner of the restaurant, said that his staff told
him the attackers yelled "Allahu Akbar" (God is Great) as they
stormed the building that is split between a bakery and the
O'Kitchen Restaurant.
Police said the assailants exchanged sporadic gunfire with police
outside for several hours after the gunmen attacked the restaurant
around 9 p.m. on Friday.
A police officer at the scene said that when security forces tried
to enter the premises at the beginning of the siege they were met
with a hail of bullets and grenades that killed at least two of
them.
Television footage showed a number of police being led away from the
site with blood on their faces and clothes.
A cafe employee who escaped told local television about 20 customers
were in the restaurant at the time, most of them foreigners. Some 15
to 20 staff were working at the restaurant, the employee said.
The rescued Japanese man was eating dinner with seven other
Japanese, all of whom were consultants for Japan's foreign aid
agency, the Japanese government spokesman said. He did not know what
happened to the others.
[to top of second column] |
Army soldiers stand on a road near the Holey Artisan restaurant
after Islamist militants attacked the upscale cafe in Dhaka,
Bangladesh, July 2, 2016. Mahmud Hossain Opu/Handout via REUTERS
SPATE OF MURDERS
The hostage crisis marks an escalation from a recent spate of
murders claimed by Islamic State and al Qaeda on liberals, gays,
foreigners and religious minorities.
A Hindu priest was hacked to death on Friday at a temple in
Jhinaidah district, 300 km (188 miles) southwest of Dhaka.
Both Islamic State and al Qaeda have claimed responsibility for many
of the killings, although local authorities say no operational links
exist between Bangladeshi militants and international jihadi
networks.
Bangladesh security officials say two local militant groups,
Ansar-al-Islam and Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen, have been behind the spate
of violence over the past 18 months. Ansar pledges allegiance to al
Qaeda, while Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen claims it represents Islamic
State.
"The bottom line is Bangladesh has plenty of local, often
unaffiliated, militants and radicals happy to stage attacks in
ISIS's name," said Michael Kugelman, South Asia associate at The
Wilson Centre in Washington D.C., using an acronym commonly used for
Islamic State.
Islamic State had claimed more attacks in Bangladesh than in
Pakistan or Afghanistan, he said.
The restaurant assault also comes after Bangladesh hanged an
Islamist party leader, Motiur Rahman Nizami, on May 11 for genocide
and other crimes committed during a 1971 war of independence from
Pakistan. That has drawn an angry reaction and some scattered
violence from supporters. Nizami, 73, was a former legislator and
minister during opposition leader Khaleda Zia's last term as prime
minister.
Foreign diplomats and human rights groups have warned that
Bangladesh's ongoing war crime tribunals and the government's
pressure on the Bangladesh Nationalist Party have created a backlash
domestically, according to Brad Adams, Asia director at Human
Rights Watch.
"They need to maintain legal political space for Jamaat and the BNP
so that they don't drive people into the shadows and violence,"
Adams said in a telephone interview, cautioning that it's not known
whether that dynamic and the bloodshed in Dhaka were related.
(Additional reporting by Krishna Das and Rupam Jain in New Delhi,
Isla Binnie in Rome, Melissa Fares in New York and Stanley White in
TOKYO; Writing by Bill Tarrant; Editing by Nick Macfie)
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