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Secular activist who criticised Islamism killed in Dhaka

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Secular activist who criticised Islamism killed in Dhaka

Nazimuddin Samad, whose family live in London, was hacked to death by at least four assailants after posting on Facebook

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Nazimuddin Samad, 28, had been on a hit list of 84 bloggers drawn up by Islamists in
Bangladesh. He was hacked to death and then shot. Photograph: Facebook

Saad Hammadi in Dhaka,Aisha Gani in London and agencies
Thursday 7 April 2016 16.56 BSTLast modified on Friday 8 April 201612.10 BST


Hundreds of protesters have taken to the streets of Dhaka to demand the capture and punishment of those responsible for the murder of a law student who criticised Islamism on his Facebook page.

About 350 activists from the secular campaigning network Ganajagaran Mancha took part in the demonstration on Thursday after the killing of Nazimuddin Samad in the Bangladeshi capital on Wednesday night.

Samad, 28, had been on a hit list of 84 atheist bloggers that a group of radical Islamists drew up and sent to the Bangladesh interior ministry. His murder was the latest in a series of killings of secular activists and bloggers in the country.

Syed Nurul Islam, the deputy commissioner of the Dhaka Metropolitan police, told Agence France-Presse: “At least four assailants hacked Nazimuddin Samad’s head with a machete on Wednesday night. As he fell, one of them shot him with a pistol from close range. He died on the spot.

“It is a case of targeted killing. But no group has claimed responsibility.” He said police were looking into whether Samad was murdered for his writing.

The Dhaka Tribune said the assailants shouted Allahu Akbar (God is greatest) as they attacked Samad on a busy road near Jagannath University, where he was a law student.

On Thursday, the protesters urged the Bangladeshi authorities to take the killing seriously, accusing them of having fostered a culture of impunity in the past.

Last year, suspected militants hacked to death at least four atheist bloggers and a secular publisher in one of a series of targeted killings in the Muslim-majority country.

Police arrested members of a banned group called Ansarullah Bangla Team over those murders, but none has yet been prosecuted.


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Samad was attacked on a busy road near Jagannath University, where he studied law. Police said he had spent two months in Dhaka. Photograph: Facebook
Maruf Rosul, one of the Ganajagaran Mancha activists, told the Guardian: “The government is creating impunity to all the offences by not bringing the perpetrators to book.

“Instead of pointing blame at different outfits, the government should identify the perpetrators and bring them to justice.”

Samad was known to have been critical of state religion in the Bangladeshi constitution. In the first two lines detailing his religious views on Facebook, he said: “Evolution is a scientific truth. Religion and race are [an] invention of the savage and uncivil people.”

Wafi Chowdhury, a schoolfriend of Samad, said: “Nazim had lived in hostels since grade six and later moved to a shared room after he joined university.”

Samad had deactivated his Facebook account about a month ago at the request of his family, but Chowdhury added: “I remember him telling me he would come back on Facebook soon with a grin.”

Shamir Chandra Sutradhar, an investigations officer at Sutrapur police in Dhaka, told the Guardian: “His stay in Dhaka has been only two months. He lived in Sylhet and most of his family members are in London.”

Tapan Chandra Saha, a police officer in charge of the Sutrapur area, said: “We have not been able to identify any suspect. Nazim was both hacked and shot. We have recovered bullet shells from the spot. He has been hacked on the right side of his head.”


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Samad was described by friends as ‘a loud voice against any social injustice’. Photograph: Facebook
Imran Sarker, who leads Bangladesh’s largest online secular activist group and is the head of the Bangladeshi bloggers association, said Samad had joined nationwide protests in 2013 against top Islamist leaders accused of committing war crimes during the country’s war of independence.

“He was a secular online activist and a loud voice against any social injustice. He was against Islamic fundamentalism,” Sarker said.

Amnesty International said the killing was a reminder that authorities in Bangladesh are failing to protect people exercising their right to freedom of expression.

“There can be no justification for the brutal killing of Nazimuddin Samad, who has apparently paid with his life for nothing but being brave enough to speak his mind,” said Champa Patel, Amnesty’s South Asia director. “This is not just a senseless murder, it is a blatant attack on the right to freedom of expression. The Bangladeshi authorities must categorically condemn these killings and take serious steps to end this horrific cycle of violence. Those responsible for the killings of secular activists must be held to account.”

Mustakur Rahman, 26, became friends with Samad after meeting him at college in Sylhet in 2007. Speaking on the phone from Birmingham, where he now lives, Rahman described his shock and disbelief at Samad’s death. “Everybody was very close [at college]. Suddenly we have lost a very close classmate and it is shocking. I can’t believe it just happened. It’s a loss for us. We lost our friend. His mum lost her child,” he said.


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Bloodstained glass is visible near the spot where Samad was hacked to death. Photograph: AP
“I will remember him forever. He was my friend. I grew up with him. I had so many memories with him. He used to laugh very nicely. He was a very smiley guy. I’ve been remembering his smile.”

Rahman spoke of how Samad inspired him and his classmates to join theBangladesh National Cadet Corps. Samad had been an active member, rising to the position of lance corporal.

Rahman said he had warned Samad about his social media posts, which were critical of Islamism and religion. “Whatever he posted, I would see as fun. But people are taking it seriously and taking revenge,” he said. “As a friend, I warned him about the posts, I don’t want anyone to die early. But he said he can’t change his opinion against any religion.

“He didn’t kill anyone. To me, he’s a good person. He didn’t do anything wrong. He wrote something about a particular religion. I’m a believer, but he wasn’t a believer and maybe he was trying to express what he thinks about religion. It is a free world, why should he be killed?

“So I’m very, very shocked. But in Bangladesh it is a common issue nowadays. So many atheists are being killed … For every single occasion, there is protest. But after there is nothing. There will be protest, we protest, we write on Facebook. But that’s it. No justice is coming out.”

Agence France-Presse contributed to this report

Secular activist who criticised Islamism killed in Dhaka | World news | The Guardian

 
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Bangladeshi atheist activist Nazimuddin Samad who criticised Islamism hacked to death
Hundreds of students have taken to the streets to demand the killers be caught
bangladesh-getty.jpeg

A Bangladeshi policeman stands guard at the site of the murder of a law student, hacked to death by four assailants the night before, in Dhaka on April 7, 2016. AFP/Getty


A liberal blogger who criticised Islamism on his Facebook page has been hacked to death by attackers wielding machetes in Bangladesh.

Nazimuddin Samad is one of the latest victims in a spate of murders by suspected Islamist militants against secular activists.

The 28-year-old postgraduate law student was attacked as he was returning from a class at his university in Dhaka late on Wednesday, police said.

Tapan Chandra Shaha, a police officer, said three or four men attacked Mr Samad with machetes and then shot him after he fell to the ground.

People heard the attackers shouting "Allahu akbar" - God is greatest - as they fled, he said.

Imran H Sarker, convener of the Blogger and Online Activist Network (BOAN) group, said Samad was an outspoken critic of injustice and militancy.

"We found him always a loud voice against all injustice and also a great supporter of secularism," Mr Sarker said.

Mr Samad campaigned for secularism on Facebook and was critical of radical Islamists - and had also posted concerns about his country's laws a day before his murder, his friends told the Dhaka Tribune.

Describing his religious views on Facebook, he stated: “Evolution is a scientific truth. Religion and race are invention of the savage and uncivil people.”

Wafi Chowdhury, a school friend of Samad, told the Guardian: “Nazim had lived in hostels since grade six and later moved to shared room after he joined university.”

He said Mr Samad had deactivated his Facebook account about a month ago at the request of his family “but I remember him telling me he would come back on Facebook soon with a grin”, said Chowdhury.

There is evidence that Mr Samad's attackers had placed the activist on a "hit list" and had discovered his route home by monitoring his movements for some time.

In protest at the murder, hundreds of students from the Jagannath University where Mr Samad studied took to the streets to demand the prompt arrest of the killers.

They blocked roads in and around the university and told reporters that if those behind the earlier murders of bloggers had been punished then Samad would not have been attacked.

Yet police reported that witnesses were reluctant to come forward.

"Even though the spot was crowded at the time of the murder, they are not sharing any information with the police," Shamir Chandra Sutradhar, a police officer, told the Dhaka Tribune.

Bangladesh has seen a wave of militant violence over the past year or so, including a series of bomb attacks on mosques and Hindu temples.

Some recent attacks have been claimed by Isis, including the killing of a Hindu priest, a Japanese citizen, an Italian aid worker and a policeman.

Last year, suspected militants killed five secular writers and a publisher, including a Bangladeshi-American activist.

A banned Islamist militant group, Ansarullah Bangla Team, claimed responsibility for some of the attacks.

Meahwhile, the government denies that Isis has a presence in the Muslim-majority country of 160 million people.

Additional reporting by PA

Bangladeshi atheist activist Nazimuddin Samad who criticised Islamism hacked to death | Asia | News | The Independent


Pity, Bdesh needs to get their house in order and stop these religious elements before they are totally overcome by them. Don't make the same mistakes we made.

This has became almost a monthly affair in Bangladesh, and these killers enjoy enough support and/or sympathy from a significant portion of the Bangladeshi people, that's why Bangladeshi government is going soft on controlling these radicals.
 
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This has became almost a monthly affair in Bangladesh, and these killers enjoy enough support and/or sympathy from a significant portion of the Bangladeshi people, that's why Bangladeshi government is going soft on controlling these radicals.

BD isnt India where radicals get state support and radical lords become PM. Keep your BS out.
 
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BD isnt India where radicals get state support and radical lords become PM. Keep your BS out.

How many writers, activists, professors, bloggers, thinkers these radicals have killed in last one decade? And what action was taken about it? Do I need to dig out the old threads on previous killings to show you how most Bangladeshis here support them or justify these murders? Check out any the comment sections of Bangladeshi online media or Bangladeshi facebook pages on this news, there are more people sympathizing with the murders than condemning it. Calling it BS doesn't hide the facts.
 
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How many writers, activists, professors, bloggers, thinkers these radicals have killed in last one decade? And what action was taken about it? Do I need to dig out the old threads on previous killings to show you how most Bangladeshis here support them or justify these murders? Check out any the comment sections of Bangladeshi online media or Bangladeshi facebook pages on this news, there are more people sympathizing with the murders than condemning it. Calling it BS doesn't hide the facts.

I am not counting, but is BD's radicals score higher than Cow brigade in India?
 
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One has to be specially stupid to publicly criticize religion in an islamic country. I dont know what these blogger achieve by going public. Is the cause good enough to lose your own life?
 
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I am not counting, but is BD's radicals score higher than Cow brigade in India?

Otherwise this wouldn't have been possible:

Declining Hindu population in Bangladesh region
Year Percentage (%)
1941= 28.0
1951= 22.0
1961= 18.5
1974= 13.5
1981= 12.13
1991= 11.62
2001= 9.6

2016= 5-6%??

On the contrary, during the period of 1951-2011 Muslim population in India has grown from 9.93% to 14.23%.

Though such a comparison is not the purpose of the above news, India or Pakistan is not the topic here.
 
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Otherwise this wouldn't have been possible:

Declining Hindu population in Bangladesh region
Year Percentage (%)
1941= 28.0
1951= 22.0
1961= 18.5
1974= 13.5
1981= 12.13
1991= 11.62
2001= 9.6

2016= 5-6%??

On the contrary, during the period of 1951-2011 Muslim population in India has grown from 9.93% to 14.23%.

Though such a comparison is not the purpose of the above news, India or Pakistan is not the topic here.

The main reason for that is that Hindu men are effeminate staying away from wives for one reason or the other. For instance, once a week they need to observe abstinence. They eat all sorts of nonsense leaving out the main powerful diet. So how can they keep up with Muslim virile men and fertile women?
 
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One has to be specially stupid to publicly criticize religion in an islamic country. I dont know what these blogger achieve by going public. Is the cause good enough to lose your own life?

Same argument applies to all the people around the world who stood up against slavery, racism, colonialism, feudalism and all kinds of wrongs in the world. Some call them stupid, some call them heroes....it's the way individuals look at it...

The main reason for that is that Hindu men are effeminate staying away from wives for one reason or the other. For instance, once a week they need to observe abstinence. So how can they keep up with Muslim virile men and fertile women?

You probably missed the 'continuous exodus of minorities from Bangladesh' part.
 
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One has to be specially stupid to publicly criticize religion in an islamic country. I dont know what these blogger achieve by going public. Is the cause good enough to lose your own life?

Maybe they believed in a cause larger than themselves. That's how any change has happened anywhere.
 
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Same argument applies to all the people around the world who stood up against slavery, racism, colonialism, feudalism and all kinds of wrongs in the world. Some call them stupid, some call them heroes....it's the way individuals look at it...



You probably missed the 'continuous exodus of minorities from Bangladesh' part.

Nothing abnormal. Actually more Muslims and low cast left India to live and work in BD. We have a count of 2 mlln so far. So we welcome India building fences.
 
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