Japanese doctor Kursio Martia, centre, and the Japanese embassy’s chief security officer, third left, walk with Bangladesh police as they inspect the body of Japanese citizen Kunio Hoshi in Rangpur yesterday.

AFP
Dhaka

Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina yesterday dismissed the Islamic State (IS) group’s claim to have killed two foreigners, saying police still had no evidence to confirm the jihadist group was behind the murders.
Her remarks came a day after 66-year-old Japanese citizen Hoshi Kunio was shot dead in northern Bangladesh, the second foreigner to be murdered in the South Asian nation in less than a week.
A 50-year-old Italian, Cesare Tavella, was shot dead last week near Dhaka’s diplomatic zone in another attack claimed by IS.
“We have still not found any involvement (of IS). We have to investigate,” Hasina told reporters at a press briefing in her
office.
“We’ve got no clues. If someone claims responsibility, why should we have to accept it?” she said.
The prime minister added groups such as IS do not operate in the country, saying “our intelligence agencies are active... we will not allow any such activities in Bangladesh”.
Italian aid worker Tavella was shot three times on September 28 by attackers who fled on a motorcycle — an attack the Bangladeshi government described as an “isolated incident” in an
attempt to calm security fears.
Kunio was riding in a rickshaw when he was shot dead by three unidentified attackers riding a motorbike in the town of Kaunia in Rangpur district.
Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan Kamal has rejected any IS presence in the country but said the two killings appeared to be linked.
“I can again say boldly that there is no existence of IS in Bangladesh,” he said yesterday, adding such murders were “an attempt to create instability in the country”.
Police have launched a formal investigation into three unidentified suspects for the murder of Kunio, without naming a particular group, senior police officer Saifur Rahman said.
He said police had also questioned four other people in connection with the inquiry since Saturday as they hunt the key suspects.
Kunio was a frequent visitor to Bangladesh and worked on a farming project in Rangpur, about 300km (180 miles) north of Dhaka.
Kunio’s landlord Jakaria Bala told Bengali daily Prothom Alo that the victim had leased a piece of land in a village near Kaunia town to grow grass for cattle.
Police have stepped up security in the capital’s diplomatic zone with heavily armed officers patrolling key roads and entry points in the wake of the latest murder.
“Security has been boosted for both foreign diplomats and foreigners across the country,” police spokesman Nazrul Islam said.
“Our intelligence unit is also deployed to provide security to any vulnerable targets,” he said.
On Saturday, Islamic State warned of more attacks.
“There will continue to be a series of ongoing security operations against nationals of crusader coalition countries, they will not have safety or a livelihood in Muslim lands,” the group tweeted.
Law enforcement agencies will enforce curbs on multiple pillion riders on motorcycles, Home Minister Kamal said, as both murders involved three people on bikes.
The killings have prompted foreign buyers of the country’s $25bn garment industry to postpone a meeting scheduled on Monday, an official of a trade group said.
“The buyers forum, which represents top global retailers, called off the meeting due to security reasons,” said Mahmudur Rahman, vice-president of the Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA), a group of 5,000 manufacturers.
“In addition, some dozens of foreign garment buyers have also postponed their visits in the wake of the murders and the security alerts issued by the embassies,” he added.
Garments account for 80% of Bangladesh’ annual exports and are the mainstay of the economy. The country is the world’s second largest textile exporter, after China.
Australia postponed their tour of Bangladesh, saying on Thursday they were advised against going ahead with a two-test series that could expose their cricketers to potential militant attacks in the country.
Bangladesh prides itself on being a mainly moderate Muslim country. But the gruesome killings of a series of atheist bloggers this year have rocked the nation and sparked a crackdown on local hardline Islamist groups.
After the murder of the Italian, international schools closed temporarily and Western embassies restricted their diplomats’ movements due to security
concerns.



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