Spate
of attacks on country’s prominent atheist and gay activists, bloggers and
academics engulfs Dhaka
By Saad Hammadi
A
protest in
murders
of Xulhaz Mannan and Mahbub Rabbi Tonoy. Photograph:
Mohammad
Ponir Hossain/Zuma/Rex/Shutterstock
|
There
is an eerie feeling out on the streets of Bangladesh . To some of the city’s academics, activists
and gay community, Dhaka now feels more dangerous than a war zone, after
a spate of machete attacks by Islamist groups, including the murder last week
of the founder of Bangladesh ’s first magazine for the gay community.
At
least 16 people have died in such attacks in the past three years, among them
six secular bloggers, two university professors, an Italian priest, two other
foreigners working in the development sector, and a prominent gay activist.
On
Saturday a Hindu man, Nikhil Joarder, was hacked to death in the district of
Tangail, central Bangladesh , with police suggesting his killing might be
connected to a 2012 complaint claiming that he had made comments against the
prophet Muhammad.
Other
targets have included high-profile cultural and intellectual figures, but also
very private individuals, apparently murdered simply because Islamists objected
to their lifestyle. The diversity of the victims, and the authorities’ sluggish
response to the killing spree, have spread fear among anyone who identifies
with those who have been killed.
“I
am more worried now here than I ever was in Afghanistan , where the threats were more of an
existential nature,” says a gay American who has spent time in the war-torn
country and now lives in Bangladesh . He asked not to be named.
Among
his friends to have died were Xulhaz Mannan, a prominent activist – founder of
Roopbaan, the country’s only magazine for the lesbian, gay, bisexual and
transgender community – and Mannan’s friend, Mahbub Rabbi Tonoy. Six to seven
assailants pretending to be from a courier company forced their way into
Mannan’s apartment and hacked the two men to death last week.
Homosexuality
is illegal in Bangladesh and many members of the gay community were
already living in fear of being identified. Now they also have to fear for
their lives – and the murders have in effect outed many young people by forcing
them to change their daily routine.
“The news of Xulhaz and Tonoy’s deaths has
exposed many young gays and lesbians to their families before they were ready,”
says a close friend of Mannan’s, who lives in the US and also did not want to be named. “I know
of people not going to work for seven days, who have no hope of going back now.”
Shockwaves
from the killings went far beyond the gay or activist communities, reaching
diplomatic and development workers. Mannan was a former employee of the US embassy and before his death worked at the US government’s development agency USAid.
“They
[militants] are really trying to get attention by striking against the people
whose deaths would get [wide publicity],” says another US expatriate from
within the gay community. “It makes me think twice about certain things,” he
told theObserver.The attackers are also striking at Bangladeshi cultural and
intellectual life far beyond the capital. Two days before Mannan and Tonoy were
killed, two men on a motorbike drew up to a bus stop in the northwestern city
of Rajshahi and hacked Rezaul Karim Siddique to death. Islamic
State said that he had been killed for “calling to atheism”.
Siddique
was an English professor at Rajshahi University , a musician and a devout Muslim who had no
political affiliation. An aficionado of the sitar, he donated to the mosque in
his home village and had helped students at its madrasa, or religious school, according
to Muhammad Shahiduzzaman, a professor of international relations at the
University of Dhaka.
“Anybody
could become a target,” Shahiduzzaman says.
Many
of those now living in fear think that this was exactly the intention of the
killers. Five grisly murders within a month have had a chilling effect across
Bangladeshi society. “I have had to cut down on my presence in the civil
liberty protests. It was not this frightening even a few days ago,” says Imran
H Sarkar, the leader of secular activist group Ganajagaran Mancha.
Responsibility
for all of the attacks has been claimed either by Islamic State or Ansar al-Islam,
a chapter of al-Qaida in the subcontinent, but Bangladeshi authorities have
denied the existence of international jihadi groups in the country. They say
the attacks are being carried out by homegrown militants with links to the main
opposition party, who are seeking to destabilise the government.
Regardless
of who is behind the killings, they are a worrying sign of weakening political
and security institutions, in a country of 160 million that until now has
proved relatively successful in battling extremism.
After
the prime minister, Sheikh Hasina, held on to power in a 2014 election
boycotted by the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist party and its allies, authorities
arrested senior opposition leaders on charges of instigating violence.
“The
government has very effectively punished the opposition to the point they are
not really a political force any more,” says Chowdhury. The vacuum of a strong
opposition has made the atmosphere unpredictable.
The
spate of killings started in February 2013 after activists demanded that the
government hang everyone convicted of collaborating with the Pakistan army during the country’s war of
independence from Pakistan in 1971.
Many
of those brought to trial, in proceedings widely criticised by human rights
groups for not meeting international standards, were linked to the opposition
and its Islamist allies. One Islamist group, Hefazat-e-Islam, responded by
drawing up a list of 84 atheist bloggers and demanding that the government take
action against them for publishing blasphemous content online. At least five of
the victims since 2013 were named on that list.
But
there has been little official support for others who appear on it, and
families of victims and those at risk fear police investigations are too slow
and ineffective. So far at least 46 people have been arrested, but only two
have been found guilty; they were given the death penalty for their role in the
killing of the blogger Ahmed Rajib Haider.
“An
arrest is not an assurance of justice,” said Sarkar, the secular campaigner.
There
is also frustration that some killers of Avijit Roy, a murdered American
blogger of Bangladeshi origin, have been able to escape the country.
Concerns
about security are mounting from the international quarters after the killing
of Mannan. “The government will try to hunt down possible suspects [in Mannan’s
killing] but whether they can really get at the actual culprit, there is a
great deal of doubt,” Shahiduzzaman told the Observer.
Survivors
feel forgotten. Asha Mone’s husband, the blogger Niladry Chattopadhya, was
hacked to death in front of her, but police have not contacted her in five
months, she told the Observer. Officers said they had arrested five suspects in
relation to the case.
Many
are also concerned that authorities who should be chasing the killers are
instead blaming the victims. They point to a statement by Bangladesh ’s police chief after the killing of Mannan, asking
citizens to be aware of their security, and other comments by officials blaming
blogger victims for writing about religion. “What upsets me most is how [the] government
is now going out of their way to find other motives behind the murder,” says
Mannan’s friend who lives in the US .
Even
if the authorities do step up efforts to find and prosecute the killers, the
fear that has been created will linger.
“I
walk in the park every morning, and today a man came towards me carrying a
knife. When he walked past me, I turned my head so I could check he was walking
away,” says a gay expatriate living in the diplomats’ area of Dhaka .
He
could not shake off his fear, even when he later found out that the man was
there to cut the grass.
@ The Guardian
@ The Guardian