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Tuesday, 7 June 2016

Bangladesh Hindu priest murdered by militants

Relatives console Shefali Ganguly (C) wife of the Hindu priest Anando Gopal Ganguly (70) who has been hacked to death by suspected militants near Sonakhali canal in Jhenidah in Bangladesh 07 June 2016.
Relatives console Ananda Gopal Ganguly's wife, Shefali (centre)
A Hindu priest has been killed in Bangladesh, in the latest attack by Islamist militants.

The body of Ananda Gopal Ganguly, 70, was found in a field near his temple in western Jhenaidah district. His head had been nearly severed from his neck.

Bangladeshi protesters and former Rajshahi University students protest against the killing of a university professor in Dhaka (29 April 2016)
There have been nationwide protests against the attacks
Separately, police have killed three suspected Islamists in a crackdown on extremists blamed for the murders. Critics say the government is in denial about the killings, most of which have been blamed on or claimed by Islamists.

Two alleged members of the banned Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB) were shot dead in Dhaka when police raided a home in the city - police said unidentified gunmen opened fire on them.


A third - said to have been linked to a recent bombing of an Ahmadiya mosque - was killed in western Rashahi district.

Who is behind the Bangladesh killings?
Is extremism on the rise in Bangladesh?
Lurching from secularism to sectarian terror?

Ananda Gopal Ganguly is the third person to be killed in such an attack in the past two days.

"He left home this morning saying that he was going to a Hindu house to offer prayers," deputy police chief Gopinath Kanjilal told AFP news agency. "Later, farmers found his near-decapitated body in a rice field."

The Middle East-based Islamic State militant group says it carried out the killing, but a government spokesman told the BBC that all the recent attacks were the work of domestic extremists.

On Sunday the wife of a senior police officer investigating the attacks and a Christian businessman were killed. Police say more than 40 people have been killed since January last year in the wave of attacks on those seen by extremists as offensive to Islam.

The government insists that Islamic State does not have a presence in Bangladesh and has tended to blame the opposition and local militant groups.

Critics have accused the government of failing to properly address the violence in Bangladesh.

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