Bangladeshi
secular activists take part in a torch-lit protest against the killing of
blogger Niloy Chakrabarti, who used the pen-name Niloy Neel, in Dhaka on August
8, 2015. © Munir uz Zaman / AFP
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An extremist group in
Bangladesh has published a hit list of bloggers and activists across the globe,
including nine from the UK, which it says will be killed unless its demands are
met. The
Islamic militant group’s list has prompted fears of escalating violence both
within Bangladesh and beyond.
As
well as nine Britons, the list features seven German activists, two from the US
and one each from Canada and Sweden. They are a mixture of Bangladeshi citizens
living abroad, those with dual nationality and citizens of western countries.
The
list was published on the internet by the Ansarullah Bangla Team (ABT), which
is thought to have killed a series of bloggers and activists over the past
18 months.
RT report continues:
Activists
on the list have often been highly critical of extremist religious behavior,
with a particular focus on Islam.
Bangladeshi
officials believe the group could be affiliated to the Ansar ul-Islam
organization which is associated to Al-Qaeda in south Asia, and was launched
almost one year ago.
The
suspected links were reinforced after Al-Qaeda praised the ABT murder of
bloggers, and referred to the extremists charged with the killings as “lions of
the international community.”
Police
in the UK say they have advised the British-based bloggers to take
precautionary measures to ensure their safety. A number of journalists
approached officers after the list was published.
There
are fears, however, that the ABT call to arms could prompt individual lone
wolves to attack the bloggers.
Activists
say are not daunted by the threats. Ananya Azad, a Bangladeshi blogger who has
been exiled to Europe, said she would continue to write.
“Our
weapon is [the] pen, and we can use it without hurting anybody. We just want to
make people conscious about their rights. So that nobody can use them to
fulfill bad intentions,” she told the Guardian.
In
March, an ABT organizer and four supporters were charged with the murder of a
27-year-old blogger in Dhaka, just weeks after an American writer was hacked to
death in the same city.
The
origins of the new list are unclear, with some doubting the legitimacy of the
official statement from ABT. They suggest it may have been compiled elsewhere.
The
ongoing attacks on secular writers has prompted writers in the west to publish
a letter addressed to the Bangladeshi government calling on them “to ensure
that the tragic events … are not repeated.”
The letter was signed by
more than 150 writers including the exiled Indian writer Salman Rushdie.
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