Bangladesh |
Madrasa textbooks purged in Bangladesh to curb extremism |
2017-11-16 |
[ENGLISH.ALARABIYA.NET] The theory and practice of Jihad, or Islamic holy war, will no longer be taught in school or college classrooms in Bangladesh, which houses the fourth-largest Moslem population in the world and is grappling with rising religious extremism. Prime Minister Shiekh Hasina’s Awami League government has ordered madrasas, or traditional Islamic educational institutions, to drop certain chapters from textbooks, which will be distributed in 2018 to prevent impressionable youth from falling prey to fanaticism. In July 2016, home-grown bully boyz stormed the Holey Artisan Bakery in Dhaka’s diplomatic enclave and bumped off 22 Italian, Japanese, American, Bangladeshi and an Indian hostage heralding the arrival Islamic State ...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allaharound with every other sentence, but to hear the pols talk they're not reallyMoslems.... -backed terrorism in the South Asian country hemmed in by India and Myanmar. Congratulating the government for revising the syllabus, Professor Anisuzzaman, President of Bangla Academy and one of the country’s most respected writers with a string of awards and laurels, said "it’s inconceivable how that concept crept stealthily into the curriculum in a democratic nation whose Constitution is based on the rule of law". The 70-year-old intellectual who reportedly figures on fundamentalists’ hit-list said that madrasa textbooks should have been "cleansed" long ago but "it’s better late than never". Curbing radicalization According to leading Bangladeshi newspapers like Dhaka Tribune and Daily Star, the administration was spurred into action by the high-powered National Committee on Militancy Resistance and Prevention (NCMRP) tasked with curbing radicalization of young Bangladeshi men and women. Madrasa textbooks define the concept as "fight against the enemies of Islam", which according to NCMRP fanned "slow radicalization" and "encouraged them to join violent groups in the country and abroad to fight the "enemies of Islam." Abdullah Yousuf, principal of Alia Madrasa in Noakhali, told Dhaka Tribune: "To be fair to Islam, what's prescribed by our religion and holy warrior activity are entirely different and the government must send a clear message to the students to distinguish between the two". Amid hectic preparations to welcome Pope Francis in Dhaka from November 30 to December 2, Theophil Norkek, secretary of Catholic Bishops’ Justice and Peace Commission, backed the government. "The Hasina regime has taken a good decision and I guess it is intended to eradicate radicalism and to help students become moderate Moslems. The concept has been widely misinterpreted to brainwash Moslems into regarding people of other faiths as enemies of Islam". Since the gruesome Bakery massacre, Bangladeshi security forces have killed roughly 100 holy warriors, often in cold blood, and incarcerated Drop the heater, Studs, or you're hist'try! hundreds to curb terrorism in the essentially secular and liberal country. A big source of worry is the induction of educated youth from affluent backgrounds into krazed killer outfits like the Jamaatul Mujahedin Bangladesh (JMB) and Ansarullah Bangla Team (ABT). Dhaka clearly hopes that purging textbooks will curb the growth of fanaticism sullying the image of a centuries-old religion as glorious and peace-loving as Islam. |
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Bangladesh |
JMB in action with hidden patronization |
2007-01-11 |
Suicide squad members of banned Islamist terror group Jamaatul Mujahedin Bangladesh (JMB) were arrested at Narayangang district with huge quantity of explosive gel, manufactured grenades, weapons and jihadist pamphlets. The news of a huge cache of explosives that law enforcers recovered from Islamist militants on Monday will be stacked atop a growing mound of evidence that Islamist militancy is alive and well in Bangladesh. This development makes two crucial points. It gives lie to the claim made by the immediate-past government of the BNP-led alliance that last years arrests of the militants ideological kingpins broke the back of their outfits. There are reasons to believe the claim was made to avoid addressing the phenomenon of militancy, in favor of a series of arrests and arms recovery, as this was politically expedient for elements within their fold. Secondly, the recent haul proves that the militants continue to be well funded and are politically active. It is important to note that these were not improvised explosive devices, but professionally manufactured grenades. Among the recovered items was also a booklet a Jihad training manual the contents of which have not been revealed to the press, but are nonetheless not difficult to surmise. In this respect, we unequivocally accuse the state of granting shelter to the militants, through the patronage of some powerful actors within the state machinery, as well as the willful myopia of those who choose to do nothing. Although there have been periodic arrests of Islamist militants over the past year, both the immediate-past government and the present-day caretaker government are window-dressing the militancy issue as a law and order problem, when in fact it is a political problem that has been smoldering over the past decade and may at any time flare up into a movement that will challenge the legitimacy of the state itself. We believe the government lacks the political will to investigate not only the causes of the rise of Islamist militancy in Bangladesh but also their sources of international funding, and their reach within the bureaucracy. It is also alarming that the judicial process that was to see the six arrested militants including Siddiqul Islam aka Bangla Bhai and Shykh Abdur Rahman brought to justice still remains incomplete because of pending paperwork. We believe this inaction speaks clearly of the governments intransigence in striking the militancy issue at its heart. This paper has from the very beginning warned that much of the fodder for Islamist militancy is created by the failure of the state to ensure fundamental rights and opportunities to its youth. The governments refusal to investigate the nature of foreign money coming into Bangladesh to fund Islamic schools and institutes is also a key failure that is facilitating the rise of these militants. The blood spilled by the spate of suicide bombings and targeted assassinations by Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh is still fresh in the national psyche. We demand that the government act in the interest of the majority and not powerful lobby groups by cracking down on militancy through a wide array of political actions. We have already had a first taste of what the future holds for us, if we fail to act. JMBs rise was initially patronized by several influential members of the former past government. Last year, there had been new alarming information on the list of patrons of Islamist militants. According to information, a judge in countrys lower judiciary with proven track of JMB connection is continuing to grant bails to notorious members of this group as well trying to create a legal window for the convicted JMB kingpins in getting legal benefit from the higher judiciary. Momammed Momin Ullah, Metropolitan Session Judge in Dhaka openly denounces any existence of Islamist militancy in Bangladesh and says that, any such allegation is a creation of enemies of the country. |
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Bangladesh |
97 arrested in connection with Bangla bombings |
2005-12-03 |
Police have detained a total of 97 people over two days in connection with three bombings earlier this week in Bangladesh, which killed 14 people. Eighty-five people were detained Friday night, and another 12 on Saturday, according to police headquarters in Dhaka. Also, the mayor of the city of Sylhet, about 192 kilometers (120 miles) northwest of Dhaka, escaped assassination Friday night after two grenades thrown at him failed to explode, authorities said. And a bomb was discovered at a school east of Dhaka. On Thursday, Bangladeshi police said they had arrested the suspected bomber believed to be responsible for a deadly explosion that killed at least one person and injured 10 others at a police checkpoint in Gazipur, near a group of attorneys protesting a suicide bombing in Gazipur earlier this week. The suicide bombing Tuesday at Gazipur's court library and another in the port city of Chittagong killed at least 13 people and wounded scores more, police said. Authorities believe all the incidents are linked to the banned Islamic militant group Jamaatul Mujahedin Bangladesh. |
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Afghanistan/South Asia | |||
JMB cadres held secret meet at Azampur mosque after Aug 17 | |||
2005-09-21 | |||
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He was brought in the capital from Tangail. "I, along with Abdullah, another JMB member, held a meeting in a mosque at Moinartek in Azampur in Uttara to frame out the attack and to examine our preparation. JMB member Zahid also took part in the meeting and conducted a short briefing about the bomb explosion," Masud confessed. "After the briefing, Zahid gave me a packet containing bombs. On September 17, I planted the bomb in front of Rajuk Trade Centre at Khilkhet which was exploded at around 10-55 am," the young militant narrated. Masud hails from village Uttarpara in Kaliakoir upazila under Gazipur district and is a second year student of Alim department in Gazipur Millat Madrasa. His (Masud) father Mohammad Aftab Uddin is a teacher of a local madrasa. Masud was arrested from his village home following the confessional statement of his grilled cousin - Mamunur Rashid - another JMB member. Earlier, Rashid was nabbed by intelligence officials from Tangail. Masud told the reporters that after the explosion he left the city and went to Gazipur where he stayed for a few days. "My parents do not know about my involvement with the JMB," Masud claimed. Masud also confessed that he was introduced with Junaied, another JMB member, in 2002.
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4 Jama'atul Mujahedin Bangladesh bigs held at airport | ||
2005-08-25 | ||
Immigration police yesterday arrested four suspected Islamist militants trying to board flights bound for Dubai and Saudi Arabia at Zia International Airport (ZIA).
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