ISIS claims Bangladesh mosque attack
Gunmen opened fire in Shia mosque, killing muezzin, wounding 3 worshippers
Gunmen opened fire in Shia mosque, killing muezzin, wounding 3 worshippers
The ISIS group claimed responsibility on Friday for a deadly attack on worshippers at a Shia mosque in northern Bangladesh, as fears grow of a rise in sectarian violence in the mainly Muslim country.
US-based monitoring organisation SITE reported the group, which has claimed responsibility for a number of recent attacks in Bangladesh, said it had targeted the Shia worshippers.
Gunmen burst into the mosque in Shibganj, 125 kilometres north of Dhaka, during early evening prayers on Thursday and opened fire on the gathered worshippers before fleeing.
“Allah enabled the soldiers of the Islamic State in Bangladesh to target a Rafidah Mushrikin temple (Shia mosque),” SITE — which monitors jihadist activity — quoted the ISIS group as saying.
The police said the muezzin had been killed and three worshippers wounded in the shooting, a rare attack on minority Shia Muslims in the mainly Sunni nation.
Detectives said they are questioning two people over the shooting, although they had not been formally arrested.Television footage showed the heavily guarded Shia mosque with broken windows and blood stains on the floor.
There are estimated to be around 2.2 million Shia Muslims in Bangladesh, an officially secular but mainly Muslim country of 160 million.
Such attacks were until recently virtually unheard of in Bangladesh, which has a large population of mostly moderate Muslims but has suffered a recent upsurge in Islamic militancy.
The government said the jihadist group has no presence in Bangladesh and instead accuses the Opposition of trying to destabilise the country of 160 million mainly moderate Muslims.
But Bangladesh has been plagued by unrest in the last three years, and experts have warned that a long-running political crisis has radicalised opponents of the government.
The mosque shooting came a day after the police shot dead a top member of the banned local Islamist outfit Jamayetul Mujahideen Bangladesh accused of hurling grenades at the country’s main Shia shrine in Dhaka in October, killing two people.
That was believed to be the first attack on Shias in Bangladesh, though banned Islamist militant groups have killed more than a dozen Sufi Muslims and attacked Hindus and Christians in the last two years.ISIS has claimed a series of recent attacks, including the shooting of three foreigners.