Police officers detained Abdul Haque, a member of Jamaat-e-Islami, on suspicion he was involved in Islamic State propaganda in Dhaka yesterday.

AFP, DPA
Dhaka


Bangladesh police have arrested a suspected Islamist for sending death threats to prominent secular academics, as the country reels from rising extremist violence, officers said yesterday.
Police accuse Abdul Haque, a former teacher at an Islamic seminary, of threatening noted academics and writers in the name of the Islamic State (IS) group and local banned outfit Ansarullah Bangla Team (ABT).
“He sent death threats via telephone and text messages using a fake IS identity,” police spokesman Monirul Islam said, adding that prominent secular intellectual Anisuzzaman, historian Muntasir Mamun and writer Mohammed Zafar Iqbal were among the targets.
Tensions are running high in Bangladesh after a series of killings of secular bloggers and a publisher as well as the murders of two foreigners.
Secular writers, academics and bloggers have received death threats in the wake of the killings, while some have fled overseas fearing for their lives.
Police have stepped up a search for those behind the threats as well as security of those targeted after a hitlist was published on the Internet of 153 names.
Tuesday night’s arrest came as police announced a Bangladeshi man has also been detained for spreading IS
propaganda on the Internet.
The government says the jihadist group has no presence in Bangladesh and instead accuses the opposition of trying to destabilise the country.
The country of 160mn mainly moderate Muslims has been known for its religious tolerance.
But Bangladesh has been plagued by unrest in the last three years, and experts have warned that a long-running political crisis has radicalised opponents of the government.
Security was stepped up across the country after two top opposition leaders were hanged on Sunday following their conviction for war crimes committed during the 1971 independence conflict against Pakistan.
Authorities fear violent protests by supporters of the opposition leaders.
Leader of minority forum attacked: Unidentified assailants armed with a machete on Tuesday wounded the leader of a religious minority forum in central Bangladeshi district of Faridpur, police said.
Alok Sen, 40, general secretary of district unit of Bangladesh Hindu-Buddhist-Christian Unity Council, was attacked in front of his home in the district, 60km west of the capital Dhaka.
Police officer Nazim Uddin said it was not clear who carried out the attacks.
Sen was rushed to a local hospital and then to a hospital in Dhaka, he said.
Police citing Sikha Sen, wife of the victim, said two youths aged between 22 and 25 years carried out the attacks as soon as Alok Sen approached the road in front of his home.
The attackers left as local residents rushed to the scene.


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