Akramul Islam | Akramul Islam | Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh | Bangladesh | 20060104 | Link | |||
Aminul Islam | Aminul Islam | Juba Sangha | Afghanistan/South Asia | 20050922 | Link | |||
Aminul Islam | Jagrata Muslim Janata | Afghanistan/South Asia | 20050922 | Link | ||||
Asadul Islam | Asadul Islam | Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh | Bangladesh | 20060901 | Link | |||
Asadul Islam alias Arif | Asadul Islam alias Arif | Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh | Bangladesh | 20051226 | Link | |||
Azizul Islam | Azizul Islam | Jagrota Muslim Janata | Afghanistan/South Asia | 20040506 | Link | |||
Azizul Islam | Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh | Afghanistan/South Asia | 20050912 | Link | ||||
Azizul Islam Litu | Azizul Islam Litu | Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh | Bangladesh | 20060317 | Link | |||
Farhadul Islam Tuhin | Farhadul Islam Tuhin | Harkatul-Jihad | Bangladesh | 20060411 | Link | |||
Gul Islam | Gul Islam | al-Qaeda | Afghanistan/South Asia | 20040412 | Link | |||
Hafez Nazrul Islam | Hafez Nazrul Islam | Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh | Bangladesh | 20051206 | Link | |||
Kabirul Islam | Kabirul Islam | Ahle Hadith Jubo Sangha | Bangladesh | 20051224 | Link | |||
Maj.Gen. Zaheerul Islam Abbasi | Maj.Gen. Zaheerul Islam Abbasi | Tablighi Jamaat | India-Pakistan | 20030908 | ||||
Mazharul Islam | Mazharul Islam | Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh | Bangladesh | 20051207 | Link | |||
Moizul Islam | Moizul Islam | Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh | Bangladesh | 20060303 | Link | |||
Noorul Islam | Noorul Islam | al-Qaeda | Afghanistan/South Asia | 20040415 | Link | |||
Nur ul Islam | Nur ul Islam | Taliban | Afghanistan/South Asia | 20040317 | ||||
Nurul Islam | Nurul Islam | Jagrata Muslim Janata | Bangladesh | 20051019 | Link | |||
Nurul Islam | Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh | Afghanistan/South Asia | 20050922 | Link | ||||
Ohidul Islam Babu | Ohidul Islam Babu | Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh | Bangladesh | 20051130 | Link | |||
Rabiul Islam | Rabiul Islam | Jamaatul Mujahidin Bangladesh | Bangladesh | 20060211 | Link | |||
Rabiul Islam | Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh | Bangladesh | 20060515 | Link | ||||
Rafiqul Islam | Rafiqul Islam | Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh | Bangladesh | 20051124 | Link | |||
Rafiqul Islam | Jamaatul Mujahideen of Bangladesh | Bangladesh | 20060304 | Link | ||||
Rashidul Islam | Rashidul Islam | Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh | Bangladesh | 20060901 | Link | |||
Rawnakul Islam Khushi | Rawnakul Islam Khushi | Jamaatul Mujahideen of Bangladesh | Bangladesh | 20060304 | Link | |||
Saiful Islam | Saiful Islam | Hizbul Mujahideen | India-Pakistan | 20030403 | ||||
Shafiqul Islam | Shafiqul Islam | Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh | Bangladesh | 20060331 | Link | |||
Shafiqul Islam | Jagrata Muslim Janata Bangladesh | Bangladesh | 20051226 | Link | ||||
Shahidul Islam | Shahidul Islam | Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh | Bangladesh | 20051226 | Link | |||
Shahidul Islam alias Shahid | Shahidul Islam alias Shahid | Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh | Bangladesh | 20051226 | Link | |||
Shariful Islam | Shariful Islam | Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh | Bangladesh | 20060515 | Link | |||
Siddiqul Islam | Siddiqul Islam | Jamaat-e-Islami Bangladesh | Bangladesh | 20051216 | Link | |||
Siddiqul Islam | Jagrata Muslim Janata | Bangladesh | 20060304 | Link | ||||
Siddiqul Islam | Jamaat-ul Mujahidin Bangladesh | Afghanistan/South Asia | 20050819 | |||||
Siddiqul Islam | Jagrata Muslim Janata Bangladesh | Afghanistan/South Asia | 20050826 | |||||
Siddiqul Islam | Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh | Afghanistan/South Asia | 20050912 | Link | ||||
Siddiqul Islam | Jamaatul Mujaheddin Bangladesh | Bangladesh | 20060616 | Link | ||||
Siddiqul Islam | Jagrata Muslim Janata Bangladesh | Afghanistan/South Asia | 20050903 | |||||
Siddiqul Islam | Jamatul Mujahedeen Bangladesh | Bangladesh | 20060315 | Link | ||||
Sirajul Islam | Sirajul Islam | Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh | Bangladesh | 20051102 | Link | |||
Toriqul Islam | Toriqul Islam | Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh | Bangladesh | 20060228 | Link | |||
Wahidul Islam | Wahidul Islam | Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh | Bangladesh | 20060331 | Link | |||
Wahidul Islam Syem | Wahidul Islam Syem | Jamaatul Mujahidin Bangladesh | Bangladesh | 20060211 | Link | |||
Zaheerul Islam Abbasi | Zaheerul Islam Abbasi | Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan | India-Pakistan | 20060408 | Link | |||
Ziaul Islam | Ziaul Islam | Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh | Bangladesh | 20060104 | Link |
Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
How a Powerful Alliance Between the U.S. and Israel Could Doom Globalism-- The Importance of Trump Meeting Netanyahu |
2025-02-05 |
[Breggin Alerts] by Peter R. Breggin MD President Donald Trump’s meeting today, Tuesday, February 4, 2025, with Israeli Premier Benjamin Netanyahu, is Trump’s first meeting with a foreign head of state. And Trump arranges it in the midst of his incredible campaign to reestablish America First as our national policy. What’s the ultimate importance of this meeting?. At first glance, President Trump is simply reminding the nation and the world that America and Israel are strong allies. Since Israel is a Jewish state, it is also a reminder that Trump stands fast with the Jewish people, as he did in his first term when he became the first U.S. President to acknowledge Jerusalem as the capital of Isreal. This action enraged the hornet’s nest of globalism and antisemitism at the UN, resulting in 128 nations voting for a UN resolution that condemned his action. Only nine nations voted against the resolution. But many question Trump’s support of Israel. Is it driven by the power of the Jewish and Israeli lobby? Is it motivated by the seemingly close ties between our CIA and Israel’s Mossad? Will it lead to increased antisemitism in the U.S. and around the world? In reality, the core of America First and the core of Judaism and Israel have enormous similarities. As I described in my book, Wow, I’m an American: How to Live Like our nation’s Heroic Founders, many of the Founders felt inspired by the Hebrew Bible, especially the Exodus of the Jews to freedom. AMERICA FIRST AND THE JEWISH STATE AGAINST GLOBALISM Although I have been very critical of Netanyahu as a globalist, my hope is that Trump’s America First policies will embolden Netanyahu to establish an Israel First policy in contrast to his earlier promotion of globalism. As Trump declared in his stunning address to the UN in 2017, America First is a policy for all nations in opposition to their destruction by the global predators. Both an independent America and an independent Israel are inherently threatening to the emerging global domination that we call the Western and the Eastern Global Empires, as well as to the less powerful Islamic Global Empire which most immediately threatens Israel. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Suicide bomber kills police officer, wounds another in Iran |
2024-12-30 |
![]() A suicide bomber killed a local police officer and wounded another in a southern Iranian port city, home to a large Sunni Muslim community, local media said Sunday. The hardline Javan Daily, a newspaper close to the country’s powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, said the attacker stopped Capt. Mojtaba Shahid’s car Saturday evening in Bandar Lengeh in the province of Hormozgan before detonating his vest. Shahid’s deputy, who was also in the car, has been hospitalized in critical condition, the paper reported, describing the attack as an act of terrorism. The city, some 1,000 kilometers (620 miles) south of the capital Tehran, has no recent history of terrorism. No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attack, but some local news outlets claimed Ansar al-Furqan, ...the Sunni Arab jihadi/separatist group based along the Iranian border with Pakistan’s Baluchistan province. It’s been a thorn in the Iranian side for the past quarter century... an al-Qaeda-linked Sunni armed group, was behind it.The attack came days ahead of the anniversary of two suicide bombings on January 3 in which nearly 100 people were killed at a memorial in southeastern Iran for top IRGC commander Qassem Soleimani, who was assassinated in Iraq in 2020 by a US drone. Islamic State claimed those two suicide bombings. Related: Hormozgan: 2024-07-08 At least two people killed in Iranian frigate sinking in southeastern Iran Hormozgan: 2024-02-03 Iran president vows against 'bullies' Hormozgan: 2023-02-19 Iran’s new underground air base seen preparing to host advanced Russian fighter jets Related: Ansar al-Furqan: 2023-12-16 Gunmen kill 11 victims, including police officers, injure others during attack on Iranian police station Ansar al-Furqan: 2023-07-09 ‘Army of Justice’ Claims Responsibility for Deadly Attack in Zahedan, Iran Ansar al-Furqan: 2018-12-10 Iran arrests 10 suspects in suicide bombing that killed two |
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Arabia |
‘Houthis are simply insane’: In Tel Aviv, Yemeni activist explains current conflict |
2024-12-29 |
[IsraelTimes] Luai Ahmed fled Yemen for Sweden after rebels rose to power, becoming an activist against Islamic fundamentalism; after Oct. 7, he joined the social media fray against antisemitism Sweden-based Yemeni activist Luai Ahmed, 31, has become something of a celebrity in Israel. As he sits down for this interview in a Tel Aviv café, a woman at a nearby table gestures to attract his attention, pointing at her phone screen and exclaiming: “I was just looking at one of your videos!” An obligatory selfie follows. Ahmed’s fame stems from his prolific social media activity in support of the Jewish state after the Hamas onslaught of October 7, 2023. He has gained over 190,000 followers on Twitter, and many of his videos have gone viral. An October 2024 clip, in which he debated American college students on the war in Gaza while dressed in traditional Yemeni garb, garnered two million views on Twitter. Ahmed fled Yemen in 2014, shortly after the Iran-backed Houthi rebels – an extremist ethno-religious group from northern Yemen, affiliated with Shiite Islam – hijacked the pro-democracy Arab Spring revolution that had erupted in the country in 2011, toppled the government, and took over the capital, Sanaa. Today, the Houthis rule over northwestern Yemen, controlling approximately one-third of the country’s territory and two-thirds of its population of 34 million. Designated as a terrorist group by many in the West, they have condemned Yemen to international isolation, as the country is blacklisted from trading with much of the outside world and from receiving humanitarian aid. Already one of the poorest and least developed countries before the 2014 coup, Yemen appears to be sinking into a never-ending downward spiral.
Indifferent to the plight of civilians under their control, the rebels have for months been firing missiles and drones at Israel, claiming it as a campaign in support of Gaza during the ongoing war there against the Hamas terror group. They have recently stepped up the bombardment, launching five early-morning attacks on central Israel in eight days. On Thursday, the IDF launched a series of airstrikes in Yemen, targeting infrastructure used by the Houthis, including Sanaa International Airport, after several previous attacks on the country. After fleeing Sanaa in 2014, Ahmed, who is openly gay, received refugee status in Sweden and later acquired Swedish citizenship. His family still lives between Yemen and Egypt, and his mother, Amal Basha, is one of the most prominent women’s rights advocates in Yemen. In Sweden, he began working as a journalist for a local publication, writing about Islamic extremism, LGBTQ rights, and the challenges of integrating Muslim migrants into Swedish society. Following the October 7 onslaught, Ahmed was appalled at the celebratory messages among friends and family for the massacre that led to the deaths of some 1,200 people in southern Israel, mostly civilians, and the kidnapping of 251 people. He decided to start producing short clips denouncing Islamist violence and antisemitism. His content caught the attention of pro-Israel advocacy organizations. One such group, Sharaka, a nonprofit promoting people-to-people contact between Israel and the Arab world, invited him to Israel, where he has since become a regular visitor. He recently began collaborating with Builders of the Middle East, a nonprofit social media initiative that promotes tolerance and dialogue in the region. In his frequent interactions with Israelis, Ahmed has come to appreciate the Middle Eastern immediacy and warmth with which people approach him. “Coming from Scandinavia, where the culture is so cold and people are a bit like mummies, Israel feels very familiar to me. I trigger my Jewish friends when I tell them, ‘you guys are basically Arabs, with another religion.’ I say it in many of my videos: Arabs and Jews are cousins, or even brothers and sisters,” he said. In an interview with The Times of Israel on Wednesday, Ahmed discussed his life in Yemen prior to the Houthis’ takeover, the recent escalation with Israel, and his efforts to explain the Jewish state to the world. The interview was lightly edited for clarity and brevity. The Times of Israel: Early this morning, you and millions of others in central Israel were awakened by sirens triggered by a ballistic missile fired by the Houthis – the second night in a row and the fourth in less than a week. Forgive the facile sarcasm, but as a Yemeni in Tel Aviv, did you feel like you were receiving a souvenir from home? Luai Ahmed: [laughs] My Israeli friends are always making fun of me. They tell me, “You Yemenis woke us up again.” I feel the Houthis have become a bit of a joke in Israel, and for a long time, people underestimated them. But to Yemenis, it’s no laughing matter. They want to destroy Israel; that’s their main mission. Death and destruction are their motto. Last week, I made a video addressing the Houthis directly, highlighting how they betrayed the Arab Spring of 2011 by turning it into an Islamic revolution that sank Yemen further into poverty and isolated it internationally. My message was: You’re attacking Israel now, but soon, Israel will retaliate, and you will cry about it. Look at Gaza right now. Do you want to turn Yemen into Gaza? There are millions of Yemen children who are malnourished and living below the poverty line. People have no money, no food, no water, no gas. Instead of focusing on allocating resources to the most vulnerable, the Houthis hand them out to Hashemites, the descendants of the Prophet Muhammad, and the rest is spent on throwing rockets at Israel to kill Jews. How is that going to help Yemen? But to them, it’s a religious war. So where does their obsession with Israel come from? Is it simply religious fervor? I always say that the religions of Yemen are Islam and Palestine. This predates the Houthi takeover. When I was growing up, the Palestinian flag was in every shop, every restaurant, everywhere. There were signs calling to save our Palestinian brothers and sisters, images of women in a hijab crying with their babies. That’s the psychology of Yemenis. Their hate is not only driven by Islam. Most people in Yemen don’t back the Houthis, because they took power by force and worsened the living conditions. However, after the war in Gaza broke out, the Houthis’ support base has expanded, because they attack Israel. People may still see them as a medieval terrorist organization that took over the country by a coup, but they are fighting the evil Jews, and they are the pride of Yemen. I see three reasons for their obsession with Israel. Firstly, they have nothing else going for them; they have not built an infrastructure and are unable to develop the country in any way, shape or form. The only thing they have accomplished is this religious war, and they know that by fighting it, they earn the admiration of much of the Arab world, which is obsessed with Palestine. Another reason is the sheer antisemitism in our society. I’ll give you two examples. There was an ancient Jewish village near the city of Taiz, where my grandmother lived, that had been abandoned after the Jews left Yemen. We were not allowed to come near that village. People believed evil Jewish spirits were still haunting that area. I remember that growing up in Sanaa, I would go to the mosque, and at the end of every prayer, we would recite a series of supplications to God that included, “May Allah destroy Israel, kill the Jews, make the Zionist orphans.” It was absolutely normal for us as children to repeat them. The third reason is that the Houthis are simply insane. They are an extremist religious group willing to sacrifice all of Yemen for the Palestinians and for the destruction of Israel, even though they’ve never met a Palestinian and don’t know anything about Israel. What was it like to grow up in Yemen as a gay man? I knew about myself, but I hid it. I’ll sum up the cultural attitude toward gay people with an anecdote. When I was about 16, before the Houthis took power, I decided to ask a Yemeni what he thought of homosexuals. We were sitting on a bus, and he was holding a gun – all Yemenis have guns. I told him I had a gay friend and asked him what I should do with him. He handed me his weapon and said, “Take this gun and kill him.” When I moved to Sweden, it was hard to explain to Swedish people these complexities. You can’t bring into your country someone from the Middle East and expect them to believe in gay rights and women’s rights. I’ve been writing a lot about these issues. I love Sweden, and I want to save it – to save Europe. So how did your activism for Israel come about? The first Israeli I ever met was in Sweden. One day, I was sitting in a room full of blonde people in a student dorm, and someone walked in, and he looked a bit like me. I went up to him and introduced myself, and he said he was Tal from Israel. My first immediate reaction was physical — I blacked out. Tal said he could make Yemeni food and that he would make me jachnun [a traditional Yemeni pastry eaten by Yemenite Jews on Shabbat]. I was sure he hated me and was just being a manipulative Jew, who would try to earn my trust and then tell the Swedes behind my back that I’m a Muslim terrorist. But he didn’t. Long story short, six months later, he was my favorite person in the student dorm. After October 7, I was so disillusioned by family and friends who hailed Hamas as freedom fighters that I took to uploading videos to my social media, asking: How dare you celebrate or excuse the murder of innocent human beings? One thing is to be critical toward the Israeli government, but this was different. However, the content I make is not your typical hasbara [pro-Israel public diplomacy]. I’ve made videos where I said I’m happy that Sweden recognized the state of Palestine, and I got a lot of backlash. My argument was: There needs to be a Palestinian state, but to get there, we need to deradicalize the mosques and schools so that the Palestinian cause is focused on creating a state for the Palestinians, not on destroying Israel. I’ve also made a video of a trip to the Bedouin town of Rahat in southern Israel and interviewed residents who criticized Israel for the discrimination they suffer in Israeli society. A lot of my followers said I should not have let them say that. But the videos I make with Builders of the Middle East are not hasbara – they are aimed at giving different perspectives. Do you have any hopes for a peaceful future in the Middle East? What I try to explain to Israelis and Jews about the Houthis, the Yemenis, and the Palestinians, is that we are brainwashed into hating Israelis and other groups of people. It starts in the schools and the mosques. I think Israel should do its best to improve its connections with Saudi Arabia and the UAE. It’s important to gain the acceptance of the main key players in the region. In recent years, those two countries have done what the rest of the Middle East should do: Get rid of all the antisemitic rubbish in the textbooks, get rid of the extremism in schools and mosques. Today, at Friday prayers in mosques, imams in those countries get a script of what to read, and everything is about love and coexistence and how beautiful Islam is. If an imam says a single word that’s outside of the script, he goes to jail. It’s an enlightened dictatorship, but that’s what we need. It’s the only way to eliminate the toxicity that has taken over the region and the minds of the people. |
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Africa Horn |
UN slams Kenya over deportation of Turkish refugees |
2024-10-23 |
[Garowe] The United Nations ...an organization which on balance has done more bad than good, with the good not done well and the bad done thoroughly... High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) has slammed Kenya over the deportation of four Ottoman Turkish nationals while expressing 'deep concerns' regarding the incident that could be in breach of various international statutes. According to the government of Kenya, the refugees were repatriated following the request by the government of ![]() . The statement comes after reports of several people being kidnapped in the capital city, Nairobi, on Friday. A British national told the BBC he and several Ottoman Turkish citizens had been kidnapped by masked men. He said he had been released after eight hours when he showed his alleged abductors a copy of his British passport. "UNHCR urges the Government of Kenya to abide by their international legal obligations, and in particular, to respect the principle of non-refoulement [forced return of refugees], which protects asylum-seekers and refugees from any measure that could lead to their removal to a place where their life or freedom would be threatened," UNHCR said. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Kenya said it agreed to Turkey's request to repatriate the refugees because the East African nation has "robust historical and strategic relations" with Turkey, and that it had been assured the refugees would be "treated with dignity". Multiple sources in Ankara say the four men were deported because they are believed to be followers of the Gulen movement, a powerful Islamic community with followers in Turkey and worldwide, whose leader has just died. The Gulen movement runs a network of schools in Kenya and around the world. Known as Hizmet or "service" in Turkey, it was blamed for a 2016 coup attempt and later declared a terrorist organization, BBC reports. Under the UN's 1951 Refugee Convention, refugees should not be returned to a country where they face serious threats to their life or freedom. Turkey has remained silent over the incident, which has been widely condemned. A Kenyan law firm named Mukele and Kakai which said it was acting on behalf of the four men, warned various airlines against ferrying them abroad, maintaining that they were enjoying refugee status in the country. It termed them victims of political victimization. The Kenyan government said it had an "unswerving commitment to the protection and promotion of refugee rights" and was "committed to the privacy and confidentiality of the repatriated individuals". The British national, Necdet Seyitoglu, told the BBC that six other people he knew - all Ottoman Turkish citizens - were also kidnapped in the same manner from different locations in Nairobi. Turkey is often in negative news headlines with President Tayyip Erdogan accused of targeting opposition figures in the country. Turkey has close bilateral ties with the Republic of Kenya, which hosts over 800,000 refugees from across the world. Related: Kenya: 2024-10-16 Somali Forces Repel Al-Shabaab Attack in Bakool Region Kenya: 2024-10-11 Somali Elite Forces To Withdraw from Gedo Region Amidst War On Al-Shabaab Kenya: 2024-10-09 Somali Forces Kill 59 Al-Shabaab with Foreign Support - Ministry Related: Gulen: 2024-10-22 Erdogan's Enemy No. 1 Is Dead, But Behind His Death Lurks the Ghost of an Idea Gulen: 2024-10-22 US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, accused of Turkish coup, dies at 83 Gulen: 2024-09-25 Police in Malaysia have rescued 572 children following an investigation into an Islamic charity group that allegedly operated a child sex abuse ring |
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Afghanistan | |
Afghan Taliban vow to implement media ban on images of living things | |
2024-10-15 | |
![]() morality ministry pledged Monday to implement a law banning news media from publishing images of all living things, with journalists told the rule will be gradually enforced. It comes after the Taliban government recently announced legislation formalising formalising implementation of Shariah law. "The law applies to all Afghanistan [...] and it will be implemented gradually," the front man for the Ministry for the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice (PVPV) Saiful Islam Khyber told AFP, adding that officials would work to persuade people that images of living things are against Islamic law. "Coercion has no place in the implementation of the law," he said. "It's only advice, and convincing people these things are really contrary to sharia (law) and must be avoided." The new law detailed several rules for news media, including banning the publication of images of all living things and ordering outlets not to show disrespect towards the religion, or contradict Shariah law. Aspects of the new law have not yet been strictly enforced, including advice to the general public not to take or look at images of living things on phones and other devices. Taliban officials continue to regularly post photos of people on social media and Afghan journalists have told AFP they received assurances from authorities after the law was announced that they would be able to continue their work. The information ministry did not immediately respond to AFP's request for comment. "Until now, regarding the articles of the law related to media, there are ongoing efforts in many provinces to implement it but that has not started in all provinces," Khyber said. He added "work has started" in the southern Taliban stronghold of Kandahar and the neighbouring Helmand ...an Afghan province populated mostly by Pashtuns, adjacent to Injun country in Pak Balochistan... province, as well as northern Takhar. Before the recent law was announced, Taliban officials in Kandahar were banned from taking photos and videos of living things but the rule did not include news media. "Now it applies to everyone," Khyber said. | |
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Bangladesh | |
Women assaults in Cox's Bazar: What do we know so far? | |
2024-09-16 | |
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The boldness of the attackers, who even bragged about their actions on Facebook, has shocked the public and shown the slow response from law enforcement. WHAT HAPPENED? The incidents came to attention after at least seven different videos surfaced on social media. In each video, a group of men, led by Farokul, harass and physically abuse women in various parts of Cox’s Bazar. In one of the videos, Farokul, armed with a stick, forces a woman to do sit-ups on the beach while holding her ears, verbally abusing her throughout the ordeal. In another video, a woman sitting on a beach chair late at night was approached by the group. The men aggressively questioned her reasons for being on the beach at that hour, ignoring her pleas that she was merely a tourist and had done nothing wrong. Despite her explanations, she was forced to leave. Another woman was seen pleading with coppers near Sugandha Beach, asking them to help her retrieve her mobile phone, which the group had stolen. In a separate instance, a woman is seen being repeatedly beaten with a stick by Farokul as she begs him to stop. The group also intercepted a rickshaw carrying two women, dragging them out of the vehicle. When the women attempted to escape, Farokul and his associates chased them with sticks, further escalating the violence. VIRAL ON SOCIAL MEDIA The perpetrators themselves posted these videos on Facebook, bragging about their actions. Farokul and his group used social media to justify their assaults, labeling the women as hookers and claiming that those criticizing their actions were complicit in immoral activities. Farokul further suggested in his posts that the local administration was supporting their actions, although no official confirmation of this has been made. At one point, Farokul deactivated his Facebook account, but it was soon reactivated, and most of the incriminating videos were deleted. Despite this, several posts remain where he attempted to provide justifications for his group’s behavior. POLICE ACTION Despite clear evidence circulating on social media, local law enforcement did not immediately take action against Farokul and his group. Abul Kalam, assistant superintendent of the Cox’s Bazar Tourist Police, initially said that no formal complaint had been lodged regarding the incidents, though he confirmed that they were aware of reports involving "third-gender individuals" being harassed on the beach. Only after significant public outcry did Cox’s Bazar District Police launch an operation to apprehend Farokul. He was arrested on Friday, and a case was subsequently filed against him at the Cox’s Bazar Sadar Model cop shoppe. | |
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Bangladesh |
Attack on shrines: What is the government doing? |
2024-09-14 |
[DhakaTribune] At least 45 shrines across the country had been attacked and vandalized in recent days A video circulated on social media Thursday evening, showing Rafiqul Islam Madani, popularly known as "Shishu Bokta," calling on local people to participate in the vandalism of a shrine in the Netrokona district on Friday after the Jummah prayer. In the video, he urged that for the sake of Islam, they should destroy the shrine, alleging that drugs and anti-social activities were being practised there. However, the difference between stupidity and genius is that genius has its limits... speaking to Dhaka Tribune on Friday evening, Foyez Ahmed, Superintendent of Police in Netrokona, said: "After watching the video, we took action and prevented any vandalism. What Rafiqul Islam Madani called for did not occur today (on Friday)." The SP noted that Army and police personnel had spoken with both parties and resolved the issue on Thursday night. Not only in Netrokona, but Army and police forces are also working in several other places to prevent attacks on shrines. Despite their efforts, multiple acts of violence have been reported in the last few days across the country. on Friday afternoon, a group of people protested in front of the National Press Club under the banner of "Bangladesh Asheqe Awlia," representing followers of shrines in Bangladesh. During the protest, they claimed that at least 45 shrines across the country had been attacked and vandalized in recent days, and they demanded justice for the vandalism. They also called for increased security for shrines to protect their sites and the lives of shrine followers. |
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Southeast Asia |
Too good to be true? Unpacking Jemaah Islamiyah’s self-declared disbanding |
2024-09-08 |
2024.07.10 [BenarNews] At an event organized last month by the Indonesian counter-terrorism agency (BNPT), Abu Rusydan and 15 other leaders of Jemaah Islamiyah announced their group’s dissolution. JI, the Southeast Asian affiliate of al-Qaeda, had carried out a string of devastating attacks in the 2000s, including Indonesia’s deadliest-ever terror attack — the 2002 Bali bombings. But now it was "ready to actively contribute to Indonesia’s progress and dignity," Abu Rusydan declared as he read from a prepared statement during the event on June 30. This is not the first time that a bully boy group has disbanded itself. The Provisional Irish Republican Army unilaterally broke up in 2005, throwing itself solely into legal activities through its political arm, Sinn Féin. In 2018, the Basque separatist organization ETA also unilaterally disbanded. But Jemaah Islamiyah’s announcement surprised many people, and left others feeling skeptical. There are three interrelated questions that need to be asked about the move by JI: How did we get here? Is this for real? And what does this mean for regional security? HOW DID WE GET HERE? Jemaah Islamiyah, which has its roots in the Darul Islam movement, was founded in Malaysia in 1993, when its two founders, Abdullah Sungkar and ![]() ... Leader of the Indonesian Mujahedeen Council and proprietor of the al-Mukmin madrassah in Ngruki. The spriritual head of Jemaah Islamiya, which he denies exists. Bashir was jugged and then released in the wake of the 2002 Bali bombings, which he blamed on a conspiracy among the U.S., Israel, and Australia. In 2014, as leader of Jemaah Ansharut Daulah (JAD), he pledged allegiance to ISIS. Currently in jug... , were on the run from Suharto’s New Order government in Indonesia. While in Malaysia, they served as a way-station for several hundred gunnies who traveled to Pakistain to join the anti-Soviet jihad in Afghanistan, putting them in direct contact with al-Qaeda. In 1996, a charter (the PUPJI) created the group’s organizational structure and codified JI’s Salafi ideology. At the time, the group also reached an agreement with the Philippine armed separatist organization, the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, to allow al-Qaeda to establish training camps in the southern Philippines. In Indonesia, JI perpetrated terrorist attacks on Christian churches and established two paramilitary organizations to wage sectarian conflict in the Maluku Islands and Central Sulawesi province. Following the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan in October 2001, the al-Qaeda leadership called for diversionary attacks. One of these was the twin Bali bombings that killed 202 people a year later. Between 2002 and 2007, JI perpetrated a major attack almost every year. But each attack left the organization weaker as counterterrorism forces became more adept and better resourced. This led to an ideological split in the organization between proponents of the line of targeting the "far enemy," versus those who wanted to foment sectarian conflict in order to rebuild their depleted ranks. The government legally banned JI in 2008, but allowed it to operate as an entity as long as it refrained from violence. In 2010, more than 100 JI members were swept up, including Abu Bakar Bashir, breaking the organization’s back. JI’s last terrorist act took place that year. Yet, from 2020-2023, Indonesian counter-terrorism efforts were as focused on JI as it was on the pro-Islamic State ![]() Allaharound with every other sentence, but to hear western pols talk they're not reallyMoslems.... umbrella group, Jamaah Ansharut Daulah (JAD). Security forces originally saw JI as an off-ramp for the more radical JAD, but attitudes hardened. In 2019, when counterterrorism police arrested JI’s emir, Para Wijayanto, they were shocked by the group’s size and national reach. Its madrassas and charitable arms had grown, while its corporations and publishing arms had created a steady revenue stream. As many JI members were arrested in 2021 and 2022 as JAD suspects. Indonesian counter-terrorism forces have applied a softer approach. Though seemingly campy, they’ve held mass rallies where former gunnies pledge allegiance to the republic. Former gunnies have established madrassas for the children of incarcerated bully boys, so they are not raised in JI or JAD-run schools, breaking terrorist social networks. They’ve gotten leaders, including the JAD Emir Aman Abdurrahman, who is on death row, and Umar Patek, to publicly renounce violence. Meanwhile the conflict in Poso, which served as a rallying point for all bully boy groups in Indonesia, has been stamped out. Internationally, there has been more cooperation amongst the regional security services. And while ungoverned space and institutional weakness remains in the southern Philippines, bully boy groups are no longer attracting JI and other foreign bully boys. The Moro Islamic Liberation Front continues to implement the grinding of the peace processor and build up institutions that will help the autonomous Moslem region transition to self-governance. There has been an unprecedented sustained attack on the Abu Sayyaf ...also known as al-Harakat al-Islamiyya, an Islamist terror group based in Jolo, Basilan and Zamboanga. Since its inception in the early 1990s, the group has carried out bombings, kidnappings, murders, head choppings, and extortion in their uniquely Islamic attempt to set up an independent Moslem province in the Philippines. Abu Sayyaf forces probably number less than 300 cadres. The group is closely allied with remnants of Indonesia's Jemaah Islamiya and has loose ties with MILF and MNLF who sometimes provide cannon fodder... , which is now fighting for survival. IS THIS FOR REAL? While JI has not been in a position to engage in terrorism, until now, it has never renounced violence. Many in the organization were simply waiting for the right circumstance to resume operations. It’s easy to be cynical about the group’s prepared statement, especially at an event stage-managed by the BNPT. Some of those who were on hand had been arrested and gone through government disengagement programs. To young radicals, they’re sell-outs, and past their prime. The average age of the men who renounced violence was in the late 50s or older. To what degree will younger members follow the leadership and pursue a legal-political alternative? In many ways, this is more promising. JI’s campaign of militancy failed to bring about the establishment of an Islamic State governed by Sharia. Democratic politics have advanced their political agenda more effectively. It’s not that Islamist parties do terribly well at the national level. Indeed, in Indonesia’s 2024 general election, they collectively represented about 20% of the electorate and won 101 of 580 seats. But they are important members of political coalitions, which tend to give them a disproportionate voice. It’s at the local level where we see faith-based parties make their mark, especially in the passage of public policy and Sharia compliant codes, which the majority of provinces and districts now have. Islamist parties are riddled with rivalries and have never formed a cohesive bloc. Perhaps for that reason, JI saw an opening for a tactical shift. In May 2021, JI established the Indonesian People’s Dakwah Party (PDRI). Yet, counter-terrorism forces arrested its founder, Farid Ahmad Okbah, that November for being a senior member of JI. Two others were arrested. The PDRI did not contest the 2024 elections. But it seems likely that with JI’s dissolution, the government will give former members more political space. WHAT DOES THIS MEAN FOR REGIONAL SECURITY? JI’s manpower and locus were largely-Indonesian based, but it remains a Southeast Asian organization. Some affiliates gravitated elsewhere. Darul Islam Sabah, for example, went from facilitating JI and the movement of foreign gunnies in and out of the southern Philippines to working with the JAD and other groups. There has always been more fluidity between Southeast Asian bully boy groups than those in the Middle East or South Asia. Abu Bakar Bashir defected from being pro-al Qaeda to being pro-Islamic State, with large numbers of acolytes, without consequence. As such, many younger gunnies who are committed to using violence to achieve their political aims are likely to defect to other groups. What those groups may be, though, is unclear. The JAD is decimated and leaderless, though to be fair, it was always far more horizontally structured. It has not executed a major terrorist attack since 2019. At present there is no apparent charismatic leader for bully boy Salafists ...Salafists are ostentatiously devout Moslems who figure the ostentation of their piety gives them the right to tell others how to do it and to kill those who don't listen to them... to coalesce around. And while one would expect external events, such as the war in Gazoo ...Hellhole adjunct to Israel and Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, inhabited by Gazooks. The place was acquired in the wake of the 1967 War and then presented to Paleostinian control in 2006 by Ariel Sharon, who had entered his dotage. It is currently ruled with an iron fist by Hamas with about the living conditions you'd expect. It periodically attacks the Hated Zionist Entity whenever Iran needs a ruckus created or the hard boyz get bored, getting thumped by the IDF in return. The ruling turbans then wave the bloody shirt and holler loudly about oppressionand disproportionate response... , to serve as a catalyst, to date it has not. JI still runs a network of madrassas, including some very large ones like al-Mukmin and Pesantren Hidayatullah in Balikpapan. These continue to be ideological incubators and hate factories. It’s hard to see state educational personnel intervene and change their curriculum. But Indonesian security forces have not let up, despite the decline in organizational strength or the tempo of operations. Terrorism will be a persistent but manageable threat in Indonesia. JI’s dissolution makes it more so, providing a legal-political alternative that is more moral, but also proven to be more effective. Zachary Abuza is a professor at the National War College in Washington and an adjunct at Georgetown University. The views expressed here are his own and do not reflect the position of the U.S. Department of Defense, the National War College, Georgetown University or BenarNews. Related: Jemaah Islamiyah: 2024-01-28 Philippine govt soldiers kill 8 suspected Islamic State-linked militants in Mindanao firefight Jemaah Islamiyah: 2024-01-28 Malaysian defendants in Bali bombings to serve about 5 more years Jemaah Islamiyah: 2024-01-07 Experts: Extremist groups spread disinformation online to provoke conflict during Indonesian election |
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Bangladesh |
The case for Sheikh Hasina's extradition from India |
2024-09-08 |
(Asia Times) Ex-Bangladesh leader faces charges of murder, torture and crimes against humanity that can't credibly be tried without her courtroom presence by Raisul Islam Sourav September 6, 2024 Former Bangladeshi prime minister, Sheikh Hasina, fled to India in early August after a mass uprising forced her to step down. Her resignation followed weeks of unrest in which nearly 650 people were killed and many more injured. Since then, at least 94 criminal cases have been lodged against Hasina and her cabinet members, followers and aides. The charges against them range from murder, torture, enforced disappearance and abduction, to crimes against humanity and genocide. Courts do have the authority to hold a trial in Hasina’s absence. But this is unlikely to be fruitful as there will be questions regarding fairness, due process and the motive behind the trial. At the same time, implementing the court’s orders would be tough should Hasina not be present. So, from the moment she escaped Bangladesh, there have been calls to extradite her to stand trial for the crimes that took place under her leadership. But it’s far from certain whether India would hand her over should Bangladesh seek her extradition. Bangladesh can, in theory, request the return of Hasina from India. New Delhi and Dhaka signed an extradition treaty in 2013, which was subsequently amended in 2016 to simplify the process. Both countries were eager for such a treaty. Two of the convicts involved in the 1975 assassination of Hasina’s father, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, who was also the first president of Bangladesh, were at the time hiding in India. Hasina’s government wanted to extradite the men to Bangladesh for execution. Some countries, like Canada, refuse to extradite fugitives if there is a possibility that they will be executed. However, as India also retains the death penalty, extradition was granted irrespective of whether the convicts would face execution on their return. The two men were handed over to Bangladesh in 2020 India, on the other hand, sought the handover of Anup Chetia, the general secretary of the banned United Liberation Front of Assam militant organization. Chetia, who had spent 18 years in prison in Dhaka, was returned to India in 2015. According to the treaty, only crimes punishable by a minimum of one year in prison can be extraditable offenses. The offense must be punishable in both countries. The accusations against Hasina are prosecutable in India, and the punishments for her alleged crimes are also substantial, so she can be extradited on these grounds. Article 10 of the treaty makes it even easier for the requesting country. It states that an arrest warrant issued from a court of law will be sufficient for the extradition without furnishing concrete proof of evidence against the offender. That said, no arrest warrant has been issued for Hasina at the time of writing. However, the treaty itself also contains several provisions that could enable India to refuse an appeal for Hasina’s extradition. It could, for example, decline to return her on the grounds that the offenses are political in nature. It is generally accepted that extradition will be refused for political or military offenses. This is justified by the need for states to remain detached from political conflict elsewhere, while also protecting the right of a state to grant asylum to political refugees. The treaty does stipulate that an attempt to commit murder, manslaughter, kidnap, false imprisonment or incitement to murder shall not be regarded as a political offense. And the charges brought against Hasina so far mostly fall under these categories. But, even then, the treaty says a request can be denied if Indian courts determine that the accusation was not made in good faith or in the interests of justice. Courts may deny extradition if they believe Hasina would face political persecution, unfair trial or inhumane treatment upon her return to Bangladesh. This will not be easy for Bangladesh to disprove. Some of the ministers from Hasina’s government who have been arrested over recent weeks were physically assaulted by apparent bystanders when being taken to court and reportedly did not get the opportunity to be represented by a lawyer. Several murder cases have also been said to be registered out of anger and resentment. Some people, including cricketer and ousted lawmaker, Shakib Al Hasan, have been charged as instigators or abettors when it is unclear whether the actual culprits have been indicted or not. As a result, there are plenty of concerns over Hasina’s security and the fairness of any trial should she be returned to Bangladesh. If Hasina’s safety is not guaranteed, then there is a chance she will be granted political asylum in India or elsewhere. Asylum would render the discussion of her extradition pointless as people with refugee status cannot be extradited. Hasina has successfully obtained political asylum from India before, following the assassination of her father. But her stay in India this time around has become complex. The interim government in Bangladesh has revoked diplomatic passports, including Hasina’s. She is now reportedly trying to seek asylum in one of the UK, United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia or Finland. However, her son, Sajeeb Wazed Joy, has told the press that Hasina has not yet sought asylum anywhere and will "certainly go back" to Bangladesh when elections are declared. The treaty itself cannot guarantee extradition in all cases. In practice, it merely provides a legal framework for mutual cooperation. The ultimate decision may rely more on diplomatic negotiations and the political will of both governments than it will legal arguments. Raisul Islam Sourav is PhD Candidate in legal analytics, University of Galway |
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India-Pakistan |
Plagued with delays, CPEC reaches nowhere in 10 years |
2024-09-05 |
So much for China replacing America as world hegemon, in accordance with prophecy. [KhaamaPress] The China-Pakistain Economic Corridor (CPEC) was launched close to 10 years ago, but it is struggling to meet its envisaged expectations. The CPEC is a crucial part of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), but many of its components have been marred by slow implementation, making them infeasible and unviable. Several thermal power, hydroelectric, transport infrastructure, and special economic zone projects have not become operational yet. The CPEC fiasco was acknowledged by Pak Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal recently. He did not just accept that the CPEC had lost steam but also said that the progress had regressed by at least 10 years.[1] While Islamabad has its own concerns, the Chinese have blamed Pakistain for the delays in CPEC project construction. "Chinese ambassador has complained to me that you have destroyed CPEC and no work was done in the past three years," Saleem Mandviwalla, Deputy Chairman of the Senate of Pakistain, said earlier.[2] Although the CPEC projects looked ambitious, there were problems with implementation due to misgovernance and improper policies, said Pakistain’s former foreign secretary, Aizaz Ahmad Chaudhry. "Signing MoUs does not automatically translate into projects. For that, we need to create a congenial business environment with minimal red tape and fast-track facilitation. Security of foreign investors and investments has emerged as a serious issue," he said.[3] It is not just delays but the CPEC is going to be detrimental for Pakistain as the megaproject can witness delays for another ten years, said Osama Ahmad, a researcher at the Islamabad-based Pak Institute of Peace Studies. "Now, a decade after CPEC was first launched, the initiative has landed in uncharted territory, delivering very little and attracting myriad controversies. Not only have Pakistain’s development projects stalled over the past decade, but CPEC has also exacerbated longstanding tensions in Pakistain’s Balochistan ...the Pak province bordering Kandahar and Uruzgun provinces in Afghanistan and Sistan Baluchistan in Iran. Its native Baloch propulation is being displaced by Pashtuns and Punjabis and they aren't happy about it... province," he said. Some areas regarding the CPEC implementation have become concerning. Tardy decision-making, Pak leaders’ propensity to speak more and perform less, political instability, dynastic politics, domination of the military, and rising debts are among them. Imtiaz Gul, author and head of the Islamabad-based Centre for Research and Security Studies, said "Ten years on, many Chinese expectations associated with CPEC have gone sour — a journey of lofty rhetoric and shallow promises by Pak leaders and less inclination to implementation and reform required for desired economic progress." China and Pakistain have held regular meetings to keep the CPEC on track. However, it's easy to be generous with someone else's money... it failed to produce the intended benefits. Social scientist Dr Muhammad Ali Sheikh highlighted how lack of transparency, unsustainable imports and Chinese dumping, and political indecision obstructed the implementation of the CPEC projects. "These developments considerably slowed down the implementation and expansion of the programme. One decade on since it was announced, the weaknesses in its implementation should also be addressed," said Sheikh, who is a former vice-chancellor of Bloody Karachi ...formerly the capital of Pakistain, now merely its most important port and financial center. It is among the largest cities in the world, with a population of 18 million, most of whom hate each other and many of whom are armed and dangerous... -based Sindh Madressatul Islam University.[4] Ex-Prime Minister Imran Khan ![]() The Great Khan, who ain't the sharpest bulb on the national tree... was said to have put the CPEC on the backburner owing to political differences and allegations of the megaproject being too favourable to China and disadvantageous to Pakistain.[5] Now the poor pace of the CPEC has created problems for Pakistain amid high inflation rates, trade deficits and massive debt, which are exacerbated by the Covid pandemic and unprecedented floods. The CPEC-driven prosperity, employment opportunities, and poverty reduction remain a distant dream for Paks.[6] Despite the first phase of the CPEC failing to achieve its objective, the Pakistain government is talking about the launch of another new phase of the programme. However, it's easy to be generous with someone else's money... there seems no possibility of it since for China, CPEC is solely establishing connectivity between Xinjiang and Gwadar, which serves its geopolitical interests in the Middle East, said economy journalist Khurram Husain. "No such thing is about to happen, and all the noise around a revival of the China-Pakistain Economic Corridor (CPEC) is either wishful thinking (at best) or a way to camouflage what really is going on," he wrote.[7] Related: China-Pakistain Economic Corridor: 2024-04-18 Security forces kill seven terrorists trying to infiltrate Pak-Afghan border in North Waziristan China-Pakistain Economic Corridor: 2023-08-22 China Turns to Taliban to Control ETIM: Exclusive on Bid to Woo Guv of Afghanistan’s Badakshan China-Pakistain Economic Corridor: 2023-05-20 Can the Belt and Road Initiative Succeed in Afghanistan? |
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Bangladesh |
Court slaps travel ban on 14 ex-ministers, lawmakers |
2024-08-30 |
[NEWAGEBD] The Dhaka Metropolitan Senior Special Judge Court on Thursday imposed an international travel ban on 14 former ministers and politicians of the ousted Awami League government in connection with allegations of amassing illegal wealth. Judge Mohammed Ash Shams Joglul Hossain passed the order following a petition submitted by Anti-Corruption Commission deputy director Abu Hena Ashiqur Rahman, said ACC public prosecutor Mahamud Hossain Jahangir. 'Following the order, they cannot leave the country unless the restriction is lifted, he added. The graft suspects are trying to flee the country, the ACC in its petition said, adding that travel bans are needed to prevent them from leaving the country for the sake of a fair probe. Former health minister Zahid Maleque, former social welfare minister Dipu Moni, former education minister Mohibul Hassan Chowdhoury, former food minister Sadhan Chandra Majumder, former industries minister Narul Majid Mahmud Humayun, former state minister for industries Kamal Ahmed Mojumder, former shipping minister Shajahan Khan, former food minister Kamrul Islam, former politicians Mohammad Salim Uddin (Nogaon-3), Mamunur Rashid Kiron (Noakhali-3), Kujendra Lal Tripura (Khagrachari), Kazim uddin Ahmed (Mymensing-11), Noor E Alam Chowdhury (Madaripur-1), and Ziaur Rahman (Chapainawabganj-2). ACC officials said that there were various corruption allegations against the 14 former ministers and politicians, including amassing illegal wealth and money laundering charges. The Anti-Corruption Commission, meanwhile, on Thursday decided to conduct inquiries against a minister and a politician of the ousted Awami League government over allegations of amassing illegal wealth. They are former railway minister Zillul Hakim and former politician Tanveer Imam [Sirajganj-4]. The decision was taken in a meeting of the ACC at its office, said ACC deputy director for public relations Aktarul Islam. |
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Bangladesh | |
8 more murder cases filed against Hasina, aides | |
2024-08-26 | |
...Bangla dynastic politician and now exiled former Prime Minister of Bangladesh. She was President of the Bangla Awami League since the Lower Paleolithic. She is the eldest of five children of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the founding father of Bangla. Her party defeated the BNP-led Four-Party Alliance in the 2008 parliamentary elections. She once before held the office, from 1996 to 2001, when she was defeated in a landslide. She and the head of the BNP, Khaleda Zia showed such blind animosity toward each other that they are known as the Battling Begums. That is probably because Khaleda's late husband was the Pak tool who had Mujib assassinated... and her aides on Sunday, taking the number of cases filed against her to 66 after the fall of her government on August 5 amid a mass uprising led by students. Hasina is accused in 56 murder cases, seven cases of genocide and crimes against humanity, one case of shooting at students and public, one case of abduction, and one case of attacking the motorcade of Bangladesh Nationalist Party chairperson ...Three-term PM of Bangla, widow of deceased dictator Ziaur Rahman, Pak foil, head of the Bangla Nationalist Party, an apparent magnet for corruption ... The first murder case was filed against the fallen prime minister on August 13, more than a week after she had resigned and fled to India. On Sunday, a murder case was filed against Hasina and 48 others for killing Sheikh Ashabul Yeamin, a student of Military Institute of Science and Technology, on July 18 during the movement of the Student Movement Agaisnt Discrimination platform. Victim's uncle Abdullah-Al Kabir filed an application with the Dhaka Senior Judicial Magistrate Md Saiful Islam's court appealing to lodge a murder case against the 49 accused. Accepting the plea, the court ordered the Savar Model police to record the statement of the plaintiff and register the complaint as a First Information Report. Awami League general secretary and former road transport and bridges minister Obaidul Quader and former home minister Asaduzzaman Khan, among others, were made accused in the case. According to the case statement, Yeamin, a student of MIST, was shot from an armoured car while he was attending a peaceful protest rally on July 18. On the same day, a case was filed against 25 people, including Sheikh Hasina, over the killing of auto-rickshaw driver Babu Mollah in the capital during the recent anti-discrimination student movement. Masud Rana, brother in-law of victim Babu Mollah, filed the complaint with the Dhaka Chief Metropolitan Magistrate Court. The court, after recording the statement of the complainant, asked the Hatirjheel police to accept the matter as First Information Report. The other prominent accused in the case include Asaduzzaman Khan, Mohammad A Arafat and Jahangir Kabir Nanak. According to the case documents, Babu Mollah and Masud Rana went for Jumma prayers on July 19 and when they were returning home after the prayers, the police opened fire on them, killing Babu on the spot. A case was filed against Sheikh Hasina and 33 others with Dhaka Metropolitan Magistrate Court for killing online news portal Dhaka Times journalist Mehedi Hasan near Kazla Toll Plaza on the Mayor Hanif flyover in Jatrabari during quota protests on July 18. Rizia Begum, 36, filed the case with the court over the death of her nephew. Dhaka Metropolitan Magistrate Saddam Hossain asked the Jatrabari police to record the complaint as First Information Report. Two other cases were also filed with the same magistrate court, in one of which Babul Mia, 42, filed a case against Hasina and 26 others over killing Jisan in Matuail on July 20. On Sunday, yet another case was filed against Hasina and 27 others over the killing of Md Eusuf Sanowar, a seller of Trading Corporation of Bangladesh products, in the capital during recent student movement on July 20. Mamunur Rashid, brother-in-law of victim Md Eusuf Sanowar, filed the complaint with Dhaka Metropolitan Magistrate Saddam Hossain. The court after recording statement of the complainant, asked the Jatrabari police to accept the matter as FIR. Obaidul Quader and former law minister Anisul Huq were among other accused in the case. A case was filed against 13 people, including Sheikh Hasina and erstwhile Bangladesh Rifles director general Aziz Ahmed, over killing BDR Mutiny accused and the force's former deputy assistant director Abdur Rahim in jail custody. Abdur Rahim's son advocate Abdul Aziz filed the case with the court of Dhaka Metropolitan Magistrate Md Akteruzzaman. A murder case was filed against Hasina and 21 others also on Sunday with the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate Court for killing Jasim Uddin, 35, on July 18 in the capital's Uttara. Related: Sheikh Hasina 08/24/2024 Murder case filed against Shakib, Ferdous Sheikh Hasina 08/22/2024 One who led anti-Pakistan movement met his fate, says PM on Bangladesh unrest Sheikh Hasina 08/22/2024 Tarique Rahman acquitted in sedition case Related: Rounds of bullet 01/18/2023 2 LeT terrorists, who escaped from recent Budgam gunfight, eliminated: Police Rounds of bullet 12/25/2022 Waziristan, Lakki and Bannu trouble spots: police Rounds of bullet 05/31/2022 Oklahoma man, 26, turns himself in after 'killing one and injuring seven when he opened fire at a Memorial Day festival' Related: Shutter gun 11/12/2021 Tales from the RAB Gazette: Youth held with AK-47, LG in Chittagong Shutter gun 02/03/2021 2 JeM terrorists, 4 of their associates held in J&K Shutter gun 12/08/2020 Six suspected supporters of Indonesian cleric killed in a clash | |
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