Bangladesh |
Ahmadiyyas point at bigots |
2007-05-08 |
Ahmadiyya Muslim Jamaat, Bangladesh says Islamist organisations that had threatened the Ahmadiyyas on various occasions in the last few years might be behind the three concurrent bomb explosions in Dhaka, Chittagong and Sylhet on May 1. At a press conference at its central office in the city, Ahmadiyya Muslim Jamaat said Alami Majlish-e-Tahfuje Khatme Nabuwat, Khatme Nabuwat Sangrakkhan Committee, International Khatme Nabuwat Movement Bangladesh, Amra Dhakabashi and Jahase Mostaba might be involved in the explosions. The press conference was organised against the backdrop of the ultimatum issued by Jadid al-Qaeda, which asked the Ahmadiyyas to acknowledge by May 10 that Prophet Hazrat Muhammad (SM) is the last and greatest prophet. The Ahmadiyya Jamaat observes that the anti-Ahmadiyya elements have roots in Pakistan and Jamaat-e-Islami Bangladesh endorses these elements from behind the scenes. "We suspect that the above mentioned organisations including the Jadid al Qaeda have the same origin and urge the government to investigate the matter and reveal the facts," said Maulana Abdul Awwal Khan Chowdhury, Naeb Ameer of Ahmadiyya Muslim Jamaat, Bangladesh. It is imperative for the government to find out if there are any similarities between the May 1 explosions and various other militant activities and threats by the anti-Ahmadiyya elements in the last few years, said Ahmad Tabshir Chowdhury, coordinator of public relations division, in his written speech. The anti-Ahmadiyya forces killed seven of its members by bombing one of Ahmadiyya mosques in Khulna in 1999. In 2003, they killed an Imam in Jessore, committed atrocities against the community and set fire to many Ahmadiyya structures all over the country, he said. Ahmad Tabshir said, "We believe that Prophet Hazrat Muhammad (SM) is the last and greatest prophet and there will not be any more advent of any other prophet. The propaganda against our belief therefore is intentional and false and it is due to ignorance." There is only one difference between the Ahmadiyya Jamaat and other sects (Firkas) of the Muslims, he said explaining, "We believe that Hazrat Imam Mahdi (A) has already appeared, but the others are still waiting for His appearance -- an event that was foretold by Hazrat Mohammad (SM)." This difference cannot determine that the Ahmadiyya Jamaat cannot practise Islam, said Naeb Ameer of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Jamaat, adding that this is an artificial crisis imported from Pakistan and it is being imposed on the Ahmadiyyas in Bangladesh. "These elements from Pakistan are spreading the poison of communalism in Bangladesh, which traditionally is known as the land of harmonious co-existence," he said. He also said that the militants are in fact against Islam and the nation. "Please identify the reasons behind the creation of such militant outfits and root out these outfits to uphold the tradition of co-existence here." Asked if there should be any religion-based politics in Bangladesh, Maulana Abdul Awwal said in the context of present day, politics and religion cannot go together..."water and oil cannot mix." |
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Bangladesh |
Khatme Nabuwat to lay siege to Ahmadiyya mosque at Tejgaon |
2006-10-06 |
Anti-Ahmadiyya outfit International Khatme Nabuwat Movement Bangladesh will lay siege to Nakhalpara Ahmadiyya mosque at Tejgaon in the capital after Juma prayers today. The Nabuwat leaders announced the programme Wednesday from a demonstration at Tejgaon after their demand of passing a law in the last session of parliament declaring the Ahmadiyyas non-Muslim went unheeded. "Since the government did not take any steps in this regard, lovers of prophet Mohammad will continue to lay siege to Ahmadiyya dens across the country," a Nabuwat press release said yesterday. |
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Bangladesh | ||
Trishal bigots barred from capturing Ahmadiyya mosque | ||
2006-02-12 | ||
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Bangladesh |
Bigots ask Babar to quit over police action |
2005-12-25 |
![]() ![]() Nazmul Haq, secretary general of the organisation, said nothing can be expected of State Minister of Religious Affairs Mosharref Hossain Shajahan, who "used to act in theatres." Neither the BNP nor the Awami League wants a solution to the Ahmadiyya issue, fearing an end to the political benefits being gained from the crisis, he added. He said Babar is only serving the interests of the Ahmadiyyas by betraying the "touhidi janata" [agitating people], who voted them to power. He demanded that Babar be replaced by someone, who will look after the interests of the "true Muslims". Terming Friday's attacks heinous, Mamtazi vowed to resist any further attacks on anti-Ahmadiyya activists. "The attacks prove we must carry sticks to counter such attacks," he said. Mamtazi said although Jamaat was elected from an Islamic platform, they are yet to table a bill in parliament against the Ahmadiyyas. "Had they raised the issue in parliament, the Ahmadiyyas could have been banned long time ago and we would not have had to suffer the police brutality." IKNMB Nayeb-e-Amir Enayetullah Abbasi warned the government that they it would be deposed before the tenure. "If they continue treating Muslims this way, the barrels of the police and the armed forces will be pointed at them," Abbasi added. |
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Bangladesh | |||||||
Bigots clash with cops, 57 injured | |||||||
2005-12-24 | |||||||
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Anti-Ahmadiyya agitation since 1987 has claimed the lives of eight people. The smear campaign got fresh vigour in November 2003, when the zealots attacked an Ahmadiyya Mosque in Nakhalpara in the city. They have continued the anti-Ahmadiyya campaign since then and have hung similar signboards at four key Ahmadiyya mosques in Chittagong, Khulna, Bogra and Patuakhali. A government ban on the Ahmadiyya publications on January 8 last year further encouraged the religious zealots to carry on with their agenda. ![]() IKNMB Secretary General Nazmul Haque directed the IKNMB members to list the Ahmadiyyas, excommunicate them, bar them from using Islami terms and not allow them burial in Muslim graveyards. The IKNMB leaders claimed the 4-party coalition had come to power banking on the Muslims' votes and threatened that they would not let it come to power again, as it betrayed the Touhidee Janata. After the rally, Mamtazi and Nazmul led a procession towards the Central Jail, but the police, who earlier had erected a barricade at the Zero Point, intercepted them there. As the IKNMB activists attempted to break through the barricade at 4:20pm, the police baton-charged them, ![]()
After the clash, the IKNMB held a short rally in the Muktangan, where it vowed to evict the Ahmadiyyas from Bangladesh. The IKNMB leaders also announced to hold demonstrations across the country and bring out a procession from Baitul Mokarram after the Asr prayers today to protest the police attack. They claimed the police injured some 200 of their activists and picked up 200 others. But, the police said they have not arrested any one. Talking to The Daily Star over telephone yesterday evening, Mamtazi claimed the police also attacked IKNMB supporters at Rahim Metal Jame Mosque in Tejgaon and fired three tear gas cells, injuring three people including him. But, the IKNMB secretary general told The Daily Star no such incident took place. Ten platoons of police were deployed at the Ahmadiyya headquarters yesterday morning to bar Knab zealots from besieging it after the Juma prayers, as they had announced earlier. Law enforcers were also deployed at different city points from Baitul Mokarram to Bakshibazar to check violence. The Knab held a rally at the north gate of Baitul Mokarram after the Juma prayers. Speakers at the rally made a three-point demand including introduction of a law to stop 'insult' to the last prophet, Hazrat Mohammad, and deception in the name of Islam 'being done by the Ahmadiyyas', and declaring them non-Muslim. "Bangladeshis have sacrificed their lives for their language in 1952. Thirty lakh people gave their lives during the Liberation War. Now 60 lakh others will offer their lives to oust the Ahmadiyyas and thus uphold the honour of Islam," Knab Amir Noor Hossain Nurani said. "It has to be decided now whether the price of Bangladesh is more than that of the last prophet," he said, vowing to sacrifice lives in thousands to realise their demands. "The Ahmadiyyas, Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh militants, atheists and Murtads [deviators] are of the same roots," he told intelligence agencies. After the Knab demonstrators failed to break through the police barricade, they held another short rally, where Nurani issued an ultimatum to declare the Ahmadiyyas non-Muslim by the Eid-ul Azha next month. He also announced to besiege the Ahmadiyya mosque at Dhanikhola in Mymensingh on February 10 and another at Jyotondranagar in Satkhira on April 17. Civil society members and rights activists including members of Ain-O-Salish Kendra and Nari Pakkha gathered at the Central Shaheed Minar in the morning carrying the national flag. They later marched to the Ahmadiyya headquarters and stayed there until the afternoon to stop any attack on the Ahmadiyyas by the zealots. There is no room of extremists in the country and they will not be spared, said State Minister for Religious Affairs Mosharef Hossain Shajahan yesterday. "There may be difference of opinion among the followers of a religion, but no-one can attack others for such a difference," he maintained. "We're taking steps against these people and will stop them," he told the BBC Bangla Service yesterday evening.
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Bangladesh | |
Bangla: Ahmadiyyas fear for their lives | |
2005-12-21 | |
![]() âThe governmentâs submissive policy to the zealots has put our lives at stake and now we have none but Allah to seek help,â the acting national emir of the Muslim Jamaat, Mir Mobashsher Ali, told a news briefing at the Jamaatâs central office in the cityâs Bakhshibazar area. Accusing the government of maintaining a double-standard, he said the government had assured them of safety while allowed the zealots to announce or go for fresh programmes against them. Two components of the 4-party alliance government believe that the Ahmadiyyas are non-Muslims, and they are behind the continued attacks on Ahmadiyyas of the past two and a half years, the chief missionary of the Ahmadiyya community, Abdul Awwal Khan Chowdhury, said. The community leaders said they had informed all, including the prime minister and the home minister, of their apprehension âperceived from experienceâ, but no step was taken yet. They said they were stunned as the government had allowed the religious bigots to conduct âultra-fundamentalist programmeâ like cordoning mosque when a drive against the extremists, terrorists and bomb attackers was going on. âThe programme would lead to a communal anarchy in the countryâ. âWe have no reservation on anyoneâs right of holding rally or brining out procession, but it should not be allowed that his/her practice of democracy would violate the rights of others,â Mobashsher said. âBitter experiences recall that the programmes of cordoning Ahmadiyya mosque were excuses for attacking the mosques, residence and members of the community.â As no action has been taken yet in connection with the attack on mosques, residences and members of the community, it inspired the attackers to declare fresh programme to cordon the Ahmadiyya central mosque, he added. âWe urge the administration to ensure safety and security of the lives and properties of the community members ahead of the zealotsâ programme,â he said and demanded inquiry into all attacks on Ahmadiyya community and its mosques. | |
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Afghanistan/South Asia | |
Islamofascists attack Ahmadiyyas again in Bangladesh | |
2005-04-19 | |
50 hurt as bigots attack Ahmadiyyas in Satkhira 10 houses looted Our Correspondent, Satkhira ![]() [Islamofascists have been gaining strength in Bangladesh for years and now make up at least 10% of the population] Religious bigots led by the International Khatme Nabuwat Movement Bangladesh (IKNMB) yesterday attacked the Ahmadiyya [the Ahmadiyya believe the nasty medinan verses of the Koran only applied when people in Arabia worshipped idols; thus they do not believe in violent jihad] community, injuring over 50 people including women and children, and looted at least 10 houses at Sundarban Bazar of Shyamnagar upazila.
Witnesses said that nearly 15,000 IKNMB members brandishing sticks, machetes and darts started marching towards the Sundarban Bazar at about 1:00pm. IKNM Nayeb-e-Amir Mufti Nur Hossain Nurani and central leader Mohammed Muntasir Ahmed led the procession.......Money in cash, ornaments and other valuables were taken away from the houses of GM Sabbir, GM Mobarak Ahmed, SM Wahid, Abdul Mazid Sardar, SM Matiar Rahman, GM Abu Daud, GM Rois Ahmed [these are, I think, all Ahmadiyya elders] and many others. ...Earlier at about 10:00am, the IKNMB held a rally at the Haringar High School premises. no doubt our Islamic apologist experts will say that were it not for the US invasion of Iraq and the Israeli administration of the west bank, this violence would surely cease. | |
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Bangladesh |
Islamists' attempt to raid Ahmadiyya complex thwarted |
2004-08-14 |
Khulna has literally been sitting on a heap of gunpowder until yesterday evening with thousands of frenzied Islamist bigots threatening to pierce through a massive police cordon and destroy Nirala Ahmadiyya mosque complex. Supporters of International Khatme Nabuwat Movement Bangladesh (IKNMB) were standing face to face with security forces cordoning off the area. The situation turned most volatile after Shaikhul Hadith Allama Moulana Azizul Huq, chairman of ruling alliance partner Islami Oikyo Jote (IOJ), issued an ultimatum that any more delay in declaring Ahmadiyyas non-Muslims would simply invite fall of the coalition government. Speaking as the chief guest at a rally of over 30,000 people, Huq said, "The faithful Muslims will crush all Ahmadiyya complexes in the country if adherents of Ahmadiyya Jamaat are not officially declared non-Muslims." Anti-crime Rapid Action Battalion (Rab) and 10 platoons of riot police were deployed in the area from Moilapota crossroads to Nirala Residential Area to thwart the fanatics' attack. Security measures were also beefed up at KDA Avenue and Babri Square where the local chapter of IKNMB organised the rally after the Juma prayers with IKNMB Ameer Moulana Abu Saleh in the chair. Speakers at the really said Ahmadiyyas had been declared non-Muslims in at least 42 countries and demanded of the government to amend the constitution and follow suit or face dire consequences. After the meeting, the Islamist zealots coming from the city and the neighbouring districts started marching towards the Ahmadiyya complex, but were intercepted by security forces at Moilapota crossroads in Sonadanga. Movement of all modes of vehicles including bicycles was prohibited at the crossroads as well as on Sher-e-Bangla Road, Gallamari Road and all lanes and bylanes in Nirala, cutting off road communication between Khulna and Satkhira districts. The mob dispersed at 8:20pm reportedly after the IKNMB leaders had arrived at some sort of understanding with the law enforcing agencies and local administration, the contents of which could not be known immediately. |
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Afghanistan/South Asia |
Islamo-fascists to hold rally against Ahmadiyyas |
2004-08-11 |
Local chapter of International Khatme Nabuwat Movement Bangladesh will hold a rally at Babri Square on August 13 demanding government statement declaring Ahmadiyyas non-Muslim. Gazette notification in respect of banned books and brochures published by Ahmadiyyas is the other demand they will press for. Laying siege to Kadiani mosque at Nirala Residential Area will follow the rally slated for Friday after jum'a prayers. Mohammad Salah, ameer of IKNMB's Khulna unit in a press conference announced the programme yesterday. Speaking at the press conference Saleh said the holy Quran does not entitle Ahmadiyyas to enter the holy Makkah and Madina, wed any Muslim girl and be buried in any Muslim graveyard. |
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Afghanistan/South Asia | |
Bangla: Police allow zealots to storm Ahmadiyya mosque | |
2004-04-17 | |
Religious zealots stormed the Ahmadiyya Mosque in Nakhalpara yesterday and seized the sect's books the government banned on January 8 apparently to calm anti-Ahmadiyya tempers. Police accompanied five demonstrators of the anti-Ahmadiyya International Khatme Nabuwat Movement Bangladesh to the mosque after over 2,000 activists staged a protest procession, the latest in a series of anti-Ahmadiyya demonstrations against the Muslim sect since November last year. Khatme Nabuwat raiders found two books of Bangla interpretations of the Quran and Bukhari Sharif, a Hadith collection -- and handed them over to police. The activists of the outfit gathered at Rahim Metal Mosque in Tejgaon after Friday prayers and Khatme Nabuwat Amir Mahmudul Hasan Momtazi led the procession to the Ahmadiyya mosque. "We appreciate the government for banning Ahmadiyya books, but it did not seize them and declare Ahmadiyyas non-Muslim. It prompted to act on our own," Khatme Nabuwat Secretary General Nazmul Haq told The Daily Star. Accompanied by police officials, including Officer-in-Charge of Tejgaon Police Station Ruhul Amin, the outfit's Nayebe Amir Nur Hossain Nurani and four other leaders went in after law enforcers halted the procession a few yards short of the mosque. Nakhalpara Ahmadiyya Jamaat unit President Qamrul Islam, Imam of the mosque Moazzem Hossain and local Ahmadiyya leader Rafiq Ahmad were present during the raid. Minutes later, the anti-Ahmadiyya activists held a rally at Tejgaon Nabisco intersection with Momtazi presiding. Nazmul Haq, Abul Qashem, Abu Taher and Abdur Rahim Qashemi addressed the rally that scheduled a demonstration for May 29 to seize publications from Ahmadiyya mosques in Chittagong. "They (Ahmadiyyas) are running anti-Islam activities, claiming to be Muslims. They have no right to use Islamic terms for them and identify their places of worship as mosques," Momtazi said. Khatme Nabuwat will hold a rally at the Nabisco intersection on June 11, demanding that the government declare Ahmadiyyas non-Muslim. "The raid shows an ominous sign," said Towhidul Islam, a spokesman for Ahmadiyyas. "The government banned our books under pressure from religious fanatics and police are now accompanying them into our mosques." Another anti-Ahmadiyya group, Khatme Nubuwat Committee Bangladesh, threatened on April 6 to launch a broader movement if the government does not declare Ahmadiyyas non-Muslim by June.
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