A prominent Bangladeshi lawyer who fought the state's case in a high-profile murder trial against extremists has disappeared, police said on Sunday, with grave fears for his safety.
Ratish Chandra Bhowmik, a respected prosecutor and champion of minority rights, has not been seen since he left his home in Rangpur early Friday morning.
His disappearance comes a fortnight after seven militants from the Jamayetul Mujahideen Bangladesh were sentenced to death for murdering the caretaker of a Sufi shrine in November 2015.
Bhowmik led the case that saw nearly a dozen hardliners from the homegrown extremist group convicted for killing the caretaker because they considered him a heretic.
Lawyers in the northern Bangladeshi city have staged protests calling for information about their colleague.
"We are concerned and worried," said Abdul Malek, a lawyer who represented the state with Bhowmik in the trial against the militants.
Bhowmik, a Hindu and leading cultural activist, also led the state's prosecution against five JMB extremists sentenced to death for the murder of 66-year-old Japanese farmer Hoshi Kunio in 2015.
Rangpur regional police chief Khandaker Golam Faruque told AFP that Bhowmik had refused the offer of an armed escort during the high-profile trials.
"There was no threat against him. His family filed a complaint about his disappearance on Friday night," Faruque said.
JMB regrouped after the execution of its founder and top leadership in 2007 and has been blamed for a wave of attacks on religious minorities, atheist bloggers and foreigners in recent years. 
In July 2016, suspected JMB militants stormed a Dhaka cafe and massacred 22 hostages, including 18 foreigners, in an assault claimed by the Islamic State group.
Bangladesh has been waging a campaign against JMB and other homegrown militant outfits in the wake of the attacks. 
Security forces have shot dead more than 70 alleged militants in a crackdown since the cafe assault.
Hundreds of suspected Islamists have also been arrested, and scores have been sentenced to death.
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