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Bangla Bhai

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Bangla Bhai
Born
Siddique ul-Islam

1970
Died30 March 2007 (age 37) Jhalakathi, Bangladesh
Cause of deathExecution by hanging
OccupationMilitary head of Jagrata Muslim Janata Bangladesh

Siddique ul-Islam (Bengali: সিদ্দিকুল ইসলাম Siddikul Islam), known popularly as Bangla Bhai (বাংলা ভাই "Bengali Brother") (1970 – 30 March 2007), also known as Jawad uddin attari (Bengali: আজিজুর রহমান) Azizur Rôhman, was a Bangladeshi terrorist[1] and the military commander of the Al Qaeda affiliated[2] radical Islamist organization Jagrata Muslim Janata Bangladesh (Awakened Muslim Masses of Bangladesh), known in popular usage as the JMJB. Most active in the north-western section of Bangladesh around the Rajshahi region, Bangla Bhai gained a nationwide and worldwide notoriety for bombings and other terrorist activities.

Biography

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Bangla Bhai gave an interview to national and local journalist. This interview would be a significant source of information about his life. His father was Nazir Hossain Pramanik of Kannipara village in Gabtoli upazila in Bogra. He claimed to have graduated from Rajshahi University in 1995 with a master's in Bangla. The Daily Star reporter contacted the university to verify his claims. The university claimed there was no student with the Azizur Rahman at the Bangla Department in 1995. When the Daily Star reported pointed out this contradiction Bangla Bhai replied: "I studied Bangla at Azizul Haq University College affiliated with Rajshahi University.[3] Bangla Bhai remained private and guarded about his education and background. His senior officer in the organization Amir Maulana Abdur Rahman who was also present during the interview reported that Bangla Bhai studied at Tarafsartaj Senior Fazil Madrasa. Bangla Bhai said regarding his alias "I was a Bangla teacher at two top coaching centres in Dhaka. As my students did well in Bangla, the authorities of coaching centres called me Bangla Bhai, "he did not name the coaching centres or their exact locations. Bangla Bhai also denied certain reports that he was aligned with Bangladesh Chhatra League. "I supported it when I was in school. As a college student, I joined Islami Chhatra Shibir (an Islamist student organisation allied with Jamaat-e-Islami). When I finished my study in 1995, I quit Shibir because Jamaat accepted female leadership although it said it considered female leadership sacrilege."[3] He joined JMJB (Jagrata Muslim Janata Bangladesh) and rose to the rank of administrator of military affairs and an acting member of the Majlis-e-Sura, its main decision making board of trustees. Bangla Bhai became notorious for the torment and intimidation of the rivals of JMJB and minorities. On 17 August 2005, JMJB, under Islam's administration, dispatched an across the nation assault by blasting 500 bombs. Alongside Shaykh Abdur Rahman, Islam is affirmed to have engineered the bombings. In late 2005, a progression of suicide bomb assaults shook Bangladesh. JMJB and Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen Bangladesh have asserted obligation of these assaults.[4]

Militant activity

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  • He started operations in the northern Rajshahi locale in 2004 by crusading against neighborhood crooks, purportedly with the assistance of the police and some administration authorities.[4]
  • Taskforce against Torture is a Bangladeshi human rights organization which was founded in 2002. It has recorded more than 500 instances of individuals being threatened and tortured by Bangla Bhai and his associates.[5]
  • Abdur Rahman and Bangla Bhai set up organisational bases and militant training camps in madrasas and in remote areas of the country, mostly in the dense forests and hilly areas. They translated their plan into action with the help of huge funds from foreign countries that were meant for building mosques and madrasas.[6]
  • August 2005, estimated 500 bombs were detonated in almost every district of Bangladesh except one within one hour. The explosions caused the death of three individuals and injured about 100 individuals.[7]
  • In mid-November 2005, two Judges were killed when a bomb was tossed at their vehicle in the town of Jhalalkati, 120 km (75 miles) south of the capital, Dhaka.[8]
  • 29 November 2005-Seven individuals, including the suspected suicide bomber, died in the attack on Gazipur. This was the first Suicide bomb attack in Bangladesh's History. In Chittagong, two police officers were slain the suspected bomber was injured and immobilized. At slightest 16 individuals, 13 of them police officers were injured in Chittagong notwithstanding those murdered.[8]

Arrest

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The Government of Bangladesh broadcast a 5,000,000 reward for the catch of Bangla Bhai or information about his whereabouts, which would supposedly lead to his capture. The Rapid Action Battalion intelligence unit and RAB-9 raced to Mymensingh in the early hours of 6 March 2006 and caught Bangla Bhai's wife Fahima and minor child Saad from a house on Ram Krishna Mission Road in Mymensingh town at around 5:00 am. Acting on information obtained from his wife, the RAB men commanded by its intelligence wings head Lt Colonel Gulzar Uddin Ahmed encompassed the place of a town Doctor Umed Ali at Rampur in Muktagachha, 30 kilometers off Mymensingh, at around 7:00 am and began looking for Bangla Bhai. As RAB Sergeant Rafiq, who was posted in a contiguous tin-roofed house, attempted to peep into the space to see who were inside, Bangla Bhai shot him once in the head. The RAB men were able to remove the sergeant to safety. Two or three minutes after Bangla Bhai assaulted Sergeant Rafiq, an effective bomb went off inside the tin-roofed room where Bangla Bhai was remaining. The blast wrecked the rooftop and an edge of the room caught fire. RAB asked him to surrender, and informed him he was surrounded.

Bangla Bhai exited the house at around 7:30 am and surrendered. He showed signs of injury from the blast. Bangla Bhai's bodyguard Masud was discovered lying on the floor, he was badly injured from the blast. The entire house was smoldered and just the columns were remained. Injured RAB Sergeant Rafiq was airlifted to Combined Military Hospital (CMH) in Dhaka. RAB sources informed the journalists present that three cases would be filed against the terrorist- one under Arms Act, another under Explosives Substance Act and the third for striking the officers.

As the information of Bangla Bhai's catch spread, many individuals from close by towns raced to Rampur. The merry group remained on the housetops of houses, trees and both sides of the street as the injured Bangla Bhai was being taken to the hospital. In Mymensingh town, several individuals exited their homes, workplaces and shops to have a look of Bangla Bhai and continued applauding as the RAB men were taking him to the Mymensingh medical college and hospital in a security convoy.[9][10]

Death

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Rahman was given death sentences for the killings of two assistant judges in Jhalakathi. Along with 5 other militants, Rahman was executed by hanging on 30 March 2007.[11]

Family

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A Dhaka court on 10 August 2010 sentenced his wife (Fahima pseudonym Farzana) and two JMB men (Salahuddin alias Saleheen and Asaduzzaman Chowdhury alias Panir) to 20 years' imprisonment each for having explosives. Judge Mohammad Rezaul Islam of the Speedy Trial Tribunal-4 passed on the sentence in vicinity of the convicts.[12]

References

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  1. ^ "Jama'atul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB)". South Asia Terrorism Portal.
  2. ^ Roggio, Bill (16 March 2006). "Dismantling JMB in Bangladesh". The Long War Journal. Foundation for Defense of Democracies. Retrieved 27 December 2007.
  3. ^ a b Manik, Julfikar Ali (13 May 2004). "Bangla Bhai active for 6 yrs". The Daily Star. Retrieved 24 May 2015.
  4. ^ a b Sengupta, Somini (30 March 2007). "Bangladesh executes 6 Islamist militants". The New York Times. Retrieved 24 May 2015.
  5. ^ Griswold, Eliza (23 January 2005). "The Next Islamist Revolution?". The New York Times. Retrieved 24 May 2015.
  6. ^ Khan, Muhammad (10 March 2015). "No time to hibernate". The Daily Star. Retrieved 24 May 2015.
  7. ^ "Top Bangladeshi militant' held". BBC News. 6 March 2006. Retrieved 24 May 2015.
  8. ^ a b Buerk, Roland (29 November 2005). "Bangladesh's escalating extremism". BBC News. Retrieved 24 May 2015.
  9. ^ Manik, Julfikar Ali; Ashraf, Shamim (7 March 2006). "Tyrant Bangla Bhai finally captured". The Daily Star. Retrieved 24 May 2015.
  10. ^ "Top Bangladesh militant captured: police". China Daily. Reuters. 6 March 2006.
  11. ^ "Six JMB militants walk gallows". bdnews24.com. 30 March 2007.
  12. ^ "Bangla Bhai's wife, 2 JMB men jailed". The Daily Star. 11 August 2010. Retrieved 24 May 2015.