Bangladesh fast-tracks trials as radical hanged

 

Dhaka / AFP

Bangladesh said Monday it is fast-tracking trials of Islamist extremists, hours after a senior leader of a militant group was hanged for a 2005 blast that killed two judges. Asadul Islam, also known as Arif, was a senior leader of the banned group Jamayetul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB), which the government has blamed for a deadly siege on an upmarket Dhaka cafe on July 1.
Bangladeshi security forces launched a crackdown against Islamist extremists following the cafe attack, which shook the image of Bangladesh as a moderate Muslim nation.
Since July, police have shot dead nearly 40 suspected extremists including JMB’s new leader Tamim Chowdhury, a Canadian citizen of Bangladeshi descent who allegedly masterminded the cafe carnage.
Bangladesh’s courts have also accelerated the prosecution of Islamist extremists, sparking concern among rights activists who say such actions may be politically motivated.
Attorney General Mahbubey Alam told AFP the government was “trying to fast-track all the militant-related cases”, including bomb attacks on a court complex outside Dhaka, a cultural function in a northern town and a new year’s festival in the capital.
Police spokesman A.K.M Shahidur Rahman said there were “at least 64” Islamist extremists on death row and their appeals were being heard in the higher courts. But Human Rights Watch said there was no conclusive evidence the death penalty acted as a deterrent. “When terror attacks happen, governments often feel under pressure to show that they are doing something,” South Asia director Meenakshi Ganguly said.

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