Bangladesh police say top militant shot dead

Bangladesh police initiated a massive crackdown on extremists after the cafe siege in 2016


Afp November 06, 2018
Bangladesh police launched a massive crackdown on extremists after the 2016 Dhaka cafe siege, killing more than 80 suspected militants and arresting hundreds more. AFP PHOTO

DHAKA: Bangladesh police said on Tuesday they had killed the chief of Jamayetul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB), an extremist group accused of murdering secular activists and inspiring a cafe siege that killed 22 people.

Khorshed Alam, described as the "emir" of Bangladesh's deadliest militant outfit, was gunned down early Tuesday morning in the northern town of Shibganj, police spokesperson Sonaton Chokraborty said.

"He died before we could bring him to hospital," Chokraborty told AFP of the 38-year-old militant.

Top Bangladeshi militant dies in police custody

Police say Alam emerged after JMB's old guard was weakened by the execution of its former commander Shaikh Abdur Rahman, and five other top chiefs, in March 2007.

He is accused of masterminding a number of attacks across Muslim-majority Bangladesh, including most recently the murder of atheist writer and publisher Shahzahan Bachchu in the central district of Munshiganj in June.

He also spearheaded a daring ambush on a prison van in 2014 that allowed two senior JMB foot soldiers to escape, police said.

In recent years, a splinter faction inspired by JMB's earlier leadership grabbed headlines after five of its young members stormed an upmarket Dhaka cafe in July 2016 and murdered 22 people, including 18 foreigners.

Two suspected militants shot dead in Bangladesh: police

Bangladesh police launched a massive crackdown on extremists since the cafe siege, killing more than 80 suspected extremists and arresting hundreds more.

They included the alleged commanders of the new JMB faction.

JMB was founded by Bangladeshi radicals hardened from fighting in the Afghan civil war during the 1990s.

The returning extremists waged a campaign of violence across Bangladesh — a secular democracy —for nearly two decades, targeting religious minorities, foreign aid workers and liberal writers in bomb and knife attacks.

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