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Suicide
bombers kill 9 in Bangladesh
Foreign Desk Report
DHAKA—Nine people were killed and 65 wounded by suspected suicide
bombers in two Bangladesh cities on Tuesday, apparently the latest in a
wave of attacks by militants fighting to turn the country into a sharia-based
Islamic state.
Police said three people, including two officers, were killed and 15
wounded by blasts at a checkpoint outside a court building in the port
city of Chittagong. They said the third person who died was believed to
be the bomber.
Another blast, in a court complex in Gazipur — 30 km (20 miles) north of
the capital, Dhaka — killed six people and wounded nearly 50, police
said. Local hospital sources said the wounded included lawyers. Lawyers
said the militants were apparently trying to scare legal professionals
before courts began trials of hundreds of detained Islamists for
suspected involvement in recent blasts.
“The bombers apparently turned more violent as we set up checkposts
trying to reinforce security at court premises,” said Majedul Huq,
police commissioner in Chittagong. He said the blasts were probably the
work of suicide bombers, who had explosives strapped to their bodies or
hidden in bags. Bangladesh has been hit this year by a wave of bombings
blamed on militants demanding Islamic law in the mainly Muslim
democracy. In an immediate protest, hundreds of lawyers took to the
streets of Dhaka, Chittagong and other cities, calling for government
action to prevent further attacks.
At least 30 badly wounded people have been rushed to the Dhaka Medical
College Hospital from Gazipur, doctors said. Witnesses in Gazipur said a
suspected suicide bomber walked into the court complex wearing a black
robe that disguised him as a lawyer. “In a few minutes, a big blast
shook the whole complex sending lawyers and their clients screaming and
running for their lives,” a witness told reporters. “The government is
fully determined to crush the militants at all costs and restore peace
in the country,” said Abdul Mannan Bhuiyan, a senior minister in charge
of the home ministry.
“Security has been further tightened and the ongoing drive to root out
the suicide bombers has been further intensified.” The Islamists killed
two judges in the coastal town of Jhalakathi on November 14 and
threatened to kill more, including Supreme Court judges. Bombs exploded
in three district courts outside Dhaka last month, killing two people
and wounding more than a dozen, while 500 small bombs went off across
the country on August 17, killing two people and wounding about 100.
Bangladeshi police have acknowledged since those attacks the presence of
home-grown potential suicide bombers. They say a 2,000-strong “suicide
squad” has been formed from members of Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen and two
other banned groups, Jagrata Muslim Janata Bangladesh and Harkatul
Jihad. |