Bangladesh arrests 37 'Islamist militants' in crackdown

Police officials said more than 1,000 people were detained after the anti-militant drive was launched

An angry mob of 'Islamist' extremists in Dhaka, Bangladesh. PHOTO: REUTERS.

DHAKA:
Bangladesh police have arrested 37 suspected 'Islamist' militants as part of a nationwide crackdown on 'jihadists', an official said Saturday, following a spate of murders of minorities and secular activists.

Police officials said more than 1,000 people were detained after the anti-militant drive was launched across the Muslim-majority country on Friday, although that number included regular arrests.

Hindu monastery worker hacked to death in Bangladesh

"In the last 24 hours, 37 Islamist militants were arrested. They included 27 members of Jamayetul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB)," A K M Shahidur Rahman, deputy police inspector general told AFP.

"Police have also seized one weapon, explosives and ammunition from their possession," he added.

Nine members of the JMB, a banned militant outfit, were arrested in Rajshahi, Shariful Islam, a police inspector in the northwestern district, told AFP.

Suspected 'Islamists' have carried out several attacks in Rajshahi in recent months, including the killing of a liberal professor in April.

Hindu priest slaughtered in western Bangladesh: police


Police have blamed the JMB for most of the murders of minorities and secular activists in the last three years, which have seen nearly 50 people brutally killed.

The murders have spiked in recent weeks, with a gruesome wave of killings that has spanned from the capital Dhaka to remote parts of the north and coastal south.

On Friday, a Hindu monastery worker was hacked to death in the northwestern district of Pabna.

Also this week, an elderly Hindu priest was found nearly decapitated in a rice field, a Christian grocer was hacked to death near a church and the wife of an anti-terrorism officer was stabbed and shot.

Fourth ‘Islamist’ militant shot dead in Bangladesh

Most of the latest attacks have been claimed either by the Islamic State group or by a South Asian branch of al Qaeda.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's government has, however, blamed homegrown Islamists for the attacks, rejecting claims of responsibility from the international 'jihadist' groups.

The JMB is one of the main domestic militant outfits suspected of the murders, with police shooting dead five members of the group since Tuesday.
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