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Bangladesh
Removal of sculptures sparks protests
2008-10-17
Various political and socio-cultural organisations yesterday condemned the removal of the five sculptures of bauls (folk singers) in front of the Zia International Airport (ZIA). They urged the people to launch movement against the fundamentalists who are posing threats to Bengali culture and heritage.

Meanwhile, Bimanbandar Golchattar Murti Protirodh Committee that forced the authorities concerned to remove the sculptures said the government has to begin the task of erecting a hajj minar by October 23 in place of the sculptures removed on Wednesday. They also demanded removal of Mahbub Jamil, special assistant to the chief adviser, for taking initiative to erect the sculptures.

Committee Chairman Mufti Nur Hossain Nurani, also the chairman of Khatme Nabuwat Andolon, at a press conference at a city restaurant said if the government fails to meet their demands they would hold a grand rally at the north gate of the hajj camp on October 24.

The Roads and Highways Department (RHD) and Civil Aviation Authority of Bangladesh (CAAB) were forced to remove the five sculptures in the face of protests of the Murti Protirodh Committee on Wednesday.

"We will not accept anything but a hajj minar at that place and its design must be finalised upon our consent," said Mufti Nur Hossain. He said all khatibs across the country will bring out processions from mosques today demanding punishment of those who took the initiative to erect the sculptures in front of ZIA.

Sculptor Mrinal Haque said the task of erecting the sculptures began about three and a half months back. Almost 50 percent work of the project had been finished at a cost of Tk 50 lakh, said Mrinal, who was supposed to sign an agreement with United Commercial Bank Ltd on Wednesday for getting funds.

A CAAB official said they removed the five sculptures of bauls holding ektara on instructions of the ministry concerned.

Ain O Salish Kendra in a statement expressed concern over the removal of the sculptures and said such incidents raise questions about the present government's commitment to protecting Bengali culture, upholding non-communal spirit and democratic values.

Workers Party of Bangladesh President Rashed Khan Menon and its General Secretary Bimal Biswas in a joint statement also condemned the removal of the sculptures. They said the present caretaker government has compromised with the fundamentalists on various issues but the people will thwart all attacks on the Bengali culture.

Bangladesh Udichi Shilpi Gosthi, Charan Sangskritik Kendra, Jaybangla Sangskritik Oikya Jote and Bangladesh Students' Union also condemned the incident.
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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
Bangladeshi Ahmadiyyas say they face threats
2006-06-24
DHAKA - Bangladesh’s small Ahmadiyya Muslim community said on Saturday it feared attacks on their mosques, homes and people in the country by groups demanding they be declared non-Muslims. “We are very worried about our safety in the face of continuing threats and intimidation,” said Ahmed Tabshir Chowdhury, a senior Ahmadiyya leader.

“Generally we are happy over the measures the government has so far taken to protect us against vandalism ... but we fear the bigots may launch sudden attacks on us, beyond their announced programmes,” he said.
Sucks to live in a backward country, doesn't it.
The Ahmadiyyas number only about 100,000 among Bangladesh’s 140 million people, 87 percent of whom are Sunni Muslims. Sunnis refuse to accept the Ahmadiyyas as Muslim because they do not believe Prophet Mohammad (may his gummas heal) was Islam’s last prophet, and have urged the government to formally declare them non-Muslims.

Last year the government banned Ahmadiyya publications, saying it was necessary to cool down protests and reinforce peace and safety.

On Friday, police prevented activists of Khatme Nabuwat, an umbrella organisation of radical Muslims, from attacking an Ahmadiyya mosque near Dhaka’s international airport. The group threatened to regroup and storm the mosque again later.
"We shall have Dire Revenge!™"
“We have conveyed our concern to the authorities and urged them to reinforce security,” said Tabshir. Police said security around all Ahmadiyya installations had been tightened.
"Please don't let them kill us!"
A few months ago, an entire village in eastern Bangladesh rose in protest after a Ahmadiyya woman was buried at a Muslim graveyard. Police eventually convinced the villagers not to dig up her body, but told the Ahmadiyyas not to try it again.
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Bangladesh
Trishal bigots barred from capturing Ahmadiyya mosque
2006-02-12
Law enforcers foiled an attempt of the anti-Ahmadiyya zealots to capture Dhanikhola Ahmadiyya mosque in Trishal in Mymensingh on February 10. The fanatics however hung a signboard on a tree at Boilor Bazar, about two kilometres off Dhanikhola, asking Muslims not to say prayers at the Ahmadiyya mosque. No untoward incident took place during the agitation. The bigots have been agitating for the last two and a half years demanding that the government should declare Ahmadiyyas non-Muslim.
They can then be oppressed and despoiled even more than they are now.
A large number of panicked locals left their houses as the International Khatme Nabuwat Movement, Bangladesh had announced to capture the mosque and hang a signboard branding the mosque merely as a place of worship and asking Muslims not to "mistake it for a mosque".
If it's not a mosque, then you can burn it down and make off with the silverware.
Over 500 members of police, Rapid Action Battalion, Armed Police Battalion and Bangladesh Rifles were deployed at 19 points a few hours before the capture bid, which was scheduled to start after Juma prayers. Over 4,000 Nabuwat leaders and activists gathered at Trishal Nazrul College after the Juma prayers. Before marching to Dhani-khola, the leaders asked the local administration not to intervene in their "peaceful programme". They threatened that they would create a 'Karbala'-like situation if the law enforcers bar them from observing their programme.
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Bangladesh
Bigots ask Babar to quit over police action
2005-12-25
Anti-Ahmadiyya bigots yesterday demanded resignation of State Minister for Home Affairs Lutfozzaman Babar and passing of a censure motion in parliament for Friday's police attacks on its activists. The International Khatme Nabuwat Movement, Bangladesh also demanded an unconditional apology from the government for the attacks. It has threatened to topple the government if their demand of declaring Ahmadiyyas non-Muslim was not met. Meantime, an unknown caller on Friday night threatened to demolish the Ahmadiyya complex in Nirala Residential Area in Khulna.

"The main obstacle to our target is Jamaat-e-Islami," said president of the organisation Mahmudul Hasan Mamtazi yesterday. Some pro-Jamaat police officials were behind the Friday's attacks that left at least 50 activists injured, he claimed. Mamtazi, who is leading the countrywide anti-Ahmadiyya campaigns for over two years, was addressing a rally in protest against Friday's incidents at Baitul Mukarram National Mosque's north gate in the city. At least 57 people including seven policemen were injured in the city on Friday as IKNMB bigots locked in sporadic clashes with the cops. The stretch between the mosque's north gate and south gate turned into a battlefield for over an hour.

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
Riot on schedule, you might say...
At least 57 people including seven policemen were injured in the city yesterday as anti-Ahmadiyya zealots locked in sporadic clashes with the police, turning the downtown area from the north gate of Baitul Mokarram to its south gate into a battlefield for over an hour.
A quick reminder: the Ahmadiyyas are rejected by the Wahhabs and Salafists because the Ahmadi branch of The Religion of Peace rejects the doctrine of jihad by the sword. For those of you keeping score at home.
The skirmishes erupted when the police barred a band of International Khatme Nabuwat Movement, Bangladesh (IKNMB) activists from marching towards Dhaka Central Jail to hold a 'voluntary imprisonment' programme in the afternoon demanding a law declaring the minority Ahmadiyyas non-Muslim. The IKNMB has been running a hate campaign for over two years to press home the demand.
And the government's done not a thing to suppress them...
The agitators threatened to start from today branding all Ahmadiyya mosques as 'places of worship for Qadianis' and cautioning people not to 'mistake them as mosques'. They said they will also list and excommunicate the Ahmadiyyas across the country. The law enforcers in the city yesterday also foiled the attempt of another anti-Ahmadiyya fanatic group, Khatme Nabuwat Andolon Bangladesh (Knab), to march to Bakshibazar to lay siege to Ahmadiyya headquarters there. The police kept the Knab activists confined in front of the north gate of Baitul Mokarram National Mosque putting up barricades on the east and the west side of the gate.
I don't suppose they considered baton charging them, did they?
The Knab demonstrators left the area after handing over a signboard they had intended to put up at the Bakshibazar Ahmadiyya mosque, branding it as a mere 'place of worship', to the police, asking them to do the job in their stead. But the police dismissed the request.
"Piss off! (Nazis! I hate those guys!)"
"No question arises of putting up the signboard there. The signboard will remain in our custody," Dhaka Metropolitan Police (DMP) Commissioner SM Mizanur Rahman told the press. "We will not tolerate any attack on the Ahmadiyyas," he affirmed.

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.

The IKNMB activists started gathering in the city's Muktangan yesterday in the noon. About 1,000 IKNMB members clad in panjabi, pajama and topi from different parts of the country occupied the road between Paltan and the Zero Point to hold a pre-announced rally. They made a podium by putting two trucks together. A group of some 40 IKNMB activists took position in front of the podium, posing as handcuffed prisoners with the upper part of their body bare and hands tied in front with rope. IKNMB leaders speaking at the rally stressed the need for branding the Ahmadiyyas non-Muslim and enacting a law towards this end. As the participants chanted slogans like 'Qadianis [Ahmadiyyas] are Kafir' and 'let's set fire to their dens', their leaders continued with delivering instigating speeches. "The government has betrayed the Touhidee Janata [monotheist people] by showing indifference to our demand. Now we have no demand from the government. It's time to implement our demands ourselves," IKNMB President Mahmudul Hasan Mamtazi told the rally.

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, splitting the mob into two groups.
Well, that makes me feel a little better...
One group of the demonstrators rushed to the south gate of Baitul Mokarram Mosque, while the police continued charging baton on the other group standing in front of Muktangan, injuring at least 30 of them. The IKNMB group at the south gate of Baitul Mokarram started throwing brickbats at the police. The agitators vandalised five vehicles including a police van and an oil lorry. As the police chased them, they backtracked to the east gate of the mosque, with the police chasing them up the stairs. At least 20 IKNMB activists were hurt this time, while seven policemen were injured in the zealots' attack.

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.
"Starting any time, now..."
Asked why the government does not take any permanent step against the anti-Ahmadiyyas, the state minister said, "Steps can be taken against them under the existing laws, if they hold any programme. We are now burdened with bombings across the country and have our attention focussed on solving this issue."
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Bangladesh
Bangla: Ahmadiyyas fear for their lives
2005-12-21
The Bangla branch of the Jamaat-e-Islami, Qazi's gang, is a component of Zia's government. The JI got its big boost in Pakland proper by having the Ahmadis declared non-Muslim, a process that included some old-fashioned pogroms. The hysterical flap over the passport religion column last year was so no Ahmadis could sneak into Mecca, being non-Muslims and all.
The Ahmadiyya community, a religious sect, demanded security of their lives and properties on Monday, three days ahead the Islamic zealots set deadline to announce them non-Muslims. The bigots under the banner of International Khatme Nabuwat Movement had set the December 23, 2005 deadline a year ago asking the BNP-led alliance government to face a dire consequence if failed to declare the Ahmadiyyas, also known as Qadiani, non-Muslims. They also threatened to lay siege to the Ahmadiyya Muslim Jamaat, Bangladesh’s central mosque in Dhaka on December 23.

‘The government’s submissive policy to the zealots has put our lives at stake and now we have none but Allah to seek help,’ the acting national emir of the Muslim Jamaat, Mir Mobashsher Ali, told a news briefing at the Jamaat’s central office in the city’s 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 ‘perceived from experience’, but no step was taken yet. They said they were stunned as the government had allowed the religious bigots to conduct ‘ultra-fundamentalist programme’ like cordoning mosque when a drive against the extremists, terrorists and bomb attackers was going on. ‘The programme would lead to a communal anarchy in the country’.

‘We have no reservation on anyone’s 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,’ Mobashsher said. ‘Bitter experiences recall that the programmes of cordoning Ahmadiyya mosque were excuses for attacking the mosques, residence and members of the community.’ 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. ‘We urge the administration to ensure safety and security of the lives and properties of the community members ahead of the zealots’ programme,’ he said and demanded inquiry into all attacks on Ahmadiyya community and its mosques.
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Afghanistan/South Asia
Anti-Ahmadiyya moves engineered by Jamaat and 'foreign hand'
2005-05-02
A top Ahmadiyya leader yesterday said that Jamaat-e-Islami, a key component of the ruling coalition, is the brains behind the countrywide Khatme Nabuwat movement to ban the sect. "Originated in the undivided India, Jamaat is trying to establish the ideology of its leader Syed Abul Ala Moududi to brand us non-Muslim," said Prof Meer Mobashwer Ali, Ahmadiyya Nayeb National Amir. He also claimed they have evidence that a neighbouring Muslim country has been using its agencies to incite hatred towards the Ahmadiyyas in Bangladesh.

"Moududi's ideology, which became Jamaat's principles in Pakistan, had succeeded in creating situations that led to violence against Ahmadiyyas, and grabbing state power and implementing sharia law there," Prof Mobashwer told the media in an interview yesterday. "They are following the same ideals here in Bangladesh to attain the same goal." The Ahmadiyya leader noted that the recent atrocities on the Ahmadiyyas are part of a design plotted by a top leader of Islamic Oikya Jote, who wants to drive a hard bargain with the BNP in the next parliamentary election. Continues Prof Ali: "Bangladesh is not Pakistan where the fundamentalists succeeded in labelling us as non-Muslims. Our country came into being on the basis of a liberal cultural heritage having no room for bigotry."

The Ahmadiyya issue has been put forth to jeopardise the very base of the nation, he said, adding, "Our people are not orthodox, they are rather simply pious and moderate." He criticised the major political parties for not lending the Ahmadiyyas support during the recent spate of attacks on them, and said, "No major political party stood by us fearing loss of votes, although none of them ideologically supports violence against any particular sect." "Ours is a non-political, peace-loving, and totally religious community. We seek help of Allah and Allah only for our safety, security and protection. We believe that we are close to Allah and He will never fail to glorify his ardent followers."

BDNEWS, meanwhile, reported yesterday that Prof Mobashwer had claimed to have evidence that Pakistan has been using its intelligence -- Inter Services Intelligence -- through its high commission in Dhaka to help bigots run the anti-Ahmadiyya campaign. The news agency, however, said Pakistan High Commission Press Minister Sajida Iqbal Syed 'dispelled the allegations and said the Pakistan mission has no involvement with such activities'. "Pakistan does not believe in interference in other country's internal affairs," BDNEWS quoted Sajida as saying.
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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.
"Hrarrr! Loot the infidels! Hrarrr!"
Supporters of the anti-Ahmadiyya outfit, which has long been campaigning for a government move to declare the sect non-Muslim, had a signboard posted on the local Ahmadiyya complex. It reads 'A place of worship for the Ahmadiyya Community, Sundarban Bazar' and it advises Muslims not to mistake the place as a mosque. Ahmadiyyas in Sundarban Bazar were in a panic, as the police did not yet take any measures to ward off further attacks on the sect, said locals. They also alleged that physicians did not attend in a timely manner to the injured, who were undergoing treatment at Shymnagar Hospital.

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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Afghanistan/South Asia
Black day on 14th against omission of religion column
2005-01-05
Jammat Ahle Sunnat and Tehreek Tahaffuz Khatme Nabuwat (TTKN) will observe black day on January 14 to protest the omission of religion column from passports. This decision was taken at a meeting chaired by Maulana Allah Wasaya Qasim, the TTKN chairman, said Syed Shahid Hussain Gardezy, the TTKN secretary, on Tuesday. He said that the protest would continue until the government re-inducts the column. He said that the main demonstration would be held in Bhatti Chowk in Lahore at 2pm and all district and tehsil councils of the tehreek have been directed to hold demonstrations on January 14.
"My religion! I can't remember what religion I am!"
"Whyn't you look in the religion column on your passport, Chaudry?"
"IT'S NOT THERE!"
Does anyone know if Protest Warrior has a chapter in Lahore?
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Afghanistan/South Asia
Biography of the late Mufti Mohammad Jamil Khan
2004-10-18
The mufti was from the Binori Town madrassa complex in Karachi, which is the theological center for all the Deobandi political and Jihadi groups. He and his peers are the ones who give religious legitimacy to the Jihad in Afghanistan and Kashmir, as well as the apostisation of heretics within Pakistan.
Mufti Mohammad Jamil Khan's murder was the most high-profile in the recent spate of sectarian killings. The life of Mufti Mohammad Jamil Khan was a classic model of a Deobandi aalim, to be emulated by other Deobandi ulema. Hence, a high value target for the assassins. His death has deprived the Deobandi community of a leading aalim. He was born in 1953 in Karachi and did Daura-i-Hadith (course in the science of hadith) at the Jamia Uloom Islamia at Binori Town in Karachi in 1974. He also did a special two-year course to become a mufti. He was the spokesman and a member of the Almi Majlis Khatme Nabuwat of which he became a member in 1974. He fully participated in the anti-Ahmediya agitation in 1974 and was arrested during the movement. He also served as the central Information Secretary of the Jamiat Ulamae Islam (Fazlur Rehman) for some time.
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