Bangladeshi police officers stand guard at the site where an Italian
charity worker was shot to death by attackers in Dhaka, Sept. 29, 2015.
Photo: Getty Images
Police in Gaibandha, Bangladesh, said Thursday
Islamic extremists were likely responsible for Hindu shop owner Debesh
Chandra Pramanik’s recent death — not the Islamic State group.
The 60-year-old Hindu man was found at his shoe store Wednesday with cuts on his neck that suggested he’d been hacked to death, the New York Times reported. Police
initially said Pramanik likely died fighting over money with another
local resident, but then the Islamic State group, or ISIS, took
responsibility for the killing.
Law enforcement rejected the claim Thursday. “We suspect that members of JMB may have killed him,” police chief Ashrfaul Islam told Agence France Presse, referencing Jamayetul Mujahedeen Bangladesh, a local organization of Islamic militants. “We’ve launched raids in the area.”
Jamayetul Mujahedeen Bangladesh launched at the turn of the
century and rose to prominence in 2005, when it organized an attack
across Bangladesh that involved nearly 500 bombs exploding in 63 towns
within 7 minutes, according to GlobalSecurity.org.
The group has also attacked courthouses and shrines with the goal of
“overthrow[ing] the democratically elected government in Bangladesh,” an
official with the National Investigating Agency said last year.
Pramanik’s death followed those of eight others in the
region since April, including a professor, an atheist, a monk and two
activists, AFP reported.
ISIS took responsibility for last week’s hacking death of a
doctor, but police again rejected the connection. “The home-grown
militants visibly are repeatedly trying to prove their links with
international outfits like [ISIS] or the al-Qaeda,” an anonymous
official told Press Trust of India.
Additionally, Home Secretary Rhmatul Munim added investigations have
found “no link of any international group to the incidents in
Bangladesh.”
The National Investigating Agency said in 2015 the Jamayetul
Mujahedeen Bangladesh had been organizing in Assam, Jharkhand and West
Bengal, collecting money, recruiting young members and training
fighters, DNA India reported.
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