[The
murder on Saturday echoed one that took place at Rajshahi University , where Mr. Siddiquee taught, in November 2014,
when a sociology professor was hacked to death on his way home from the campus.
That professor had said students should not be allowed to wear burqas, the
traditional Islamic covering, during sociology examinations.]
By Julfikar Ali Manik and Ellen Barry
A photograph of Rezaul Karim Siddiquee, a professor who was
killed in
Abdullah Iqbal/Agence France-Presse — Getty
|
DHAKA,
Bangladesh — A professor of English was hacked to death and nearly beheaded
near his home in northwestern Bangladesh on Saturday, in what the police said
they suspected was the latest in a series of targeted killings by Islamist
militants.
The
professor, Rezaul Karim Siddiquee, 61, was attacked by assailants about 60 yards
from his home and died at the scene, said Mohammad Shamsuddin, the commissioner
of the metropolitan police in the city of Rajshahi . Neighbors said they had heard the victim
screaming and alerted his family.
Mr.
Shamsuddin said that “our preliminary suspicion is that the murder was
committed by an Islamist militant group,” based on the attack’s similarities to
recent killings of secularist bloggers in Bangladesh . He said that Mr. Siddiquee had three deep
wounds to the neck and that his head had been nearly severed.
Later
Saturday, the Islamic State group claimed responsibility for the attack, according
to a message posted on Twitter by the SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors jihadist
websites. No further details were available.
Social
media accounts linked to the Islamic State have claimed responsibility for a
number of attacks in recent months in Bangladesh . The government and the police have
expressed skepticism about those claims, denying that the organization has a
presence inside the country.
The
murder on Saturday echoed one that took place at Rajshahi University , where Mr. Siddiquee taught, in November 2014,
when a sociology professor was hacked to death on his way home from the campus.
That professor had said students should not be allowed to wear burqas, the
traditional Islamic covering, during sociology examinations.
Killings
of secular activists have become a grim commonplace in Bangladesh over the past two years, and intellectuals
have become reluctant to publish views critical of fundamentalist Islam. About
two weeks ago, anatheist student blogger was killed by men with machetes at a
crowded intersection in Dhaka , the Bangladeshi capital.
But
Mr. Siddiquee was not, like most of the previous victims, an avowed atheist or
anti-religious campaigner. He was involved in some cultural activities in his
department and was fascinated by traditional Bangladeshi music and the poetry
of literary figures like Rabindranath Tagore and Kazi Nazrul Islam, said Prof. Mohammad
Shahidullah, the head of the English department at Rajshahi University .
“He
was a purely academic person, but he was a progressive and secular person,”
Professor Shahidullah said. He added that Mr. Siddiquee had recently
established a music school in his village.
Police
officers who interviewed Mr. Siddiquee’s family said he had never published any
materials critical of Islam and had never received threats.
Julfikar
Ali Manik reported from Dhaka , and Ellen Barry from New Delhi .