September 1, 2016

Page 1

SECOND EDITION

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2016

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Bhadra 17, 1423, Zilqad 27, 1437

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Regd No DA 6238, Vol 4, No 127

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www.dhakatribune.com | 32 pages | Price: Tk10

New JMB takes nearly two years to take root n Mohammad Jamil Khan The New JMB, a faction of Jama’atul Mujahideen Bangladesh, has taken nearly two years to set up its base in Bangladesh. Canadian Citizen Tamim Chowdhury, 30, who came to Bangladesh on October 5, 2013 through Dubai formed the militant outfit. Once the outfit was ready it began to launch attacks in 2015. Its first victim was Japanese citizen Hoshi Kunio who was killed on October 3, 2015 in Kawnia upazila of Rangpur. AKM Shahidul Hoque, the inspector general of police (IGP), said they had found involvement of the New JMB members in a good number of murder incidents since last year, especially in the North Bengal region. As police were very busy in dealing with political programmes and  PAGE 2 COLUMN 4

TWO MONTHS OF GULSHAN TERROR ATTACK

Investigation progresses, normalcy coming back n Mohammad Jamil Khan

Policemen sneak a look inside the Holey Artisan Bakery and the O’Kitchen Restaurant as others inspect the site after gunmen attacked, in Dhaka, Bangladesh. The photo was taken on July 3 REUTERS

Two months after the terror attack at Holey Artisan Bakery in Gulshan, Dhaka, investigators have made breakthrough having already traced the financier and arms supplier of the attack while gunning down mastermind Tamim Chowdhury in a drive. On July 1, for the first time in Bangladesh, militants confined guests at the Gulshan restaurant and killed 20 people including 17 foreigners. Two police officials were also killed in the militant attack as they attempted to go into action. The next day, in a special commando drive styled “Operation Thunderbolt,” by the army, five militants and one of their associates were killed.  PAGE 2 COLUMN 1

Is this the end of Islamic State in Bangladesh? N E W S

ANALYSIS NEWS

ANALYSIS

n Tasneem Khalil This is the big news of the day – Abu Muhammad al-Adnani, the second most senior leader of the Islamic State (ISIS) is dead. According to latest reports, al-Adnani was killed in a US air strike near the town of al-Bab in Northern Syria on Tuesday. As he was the the chief spokesman and propagandist of the group, he was often described as “the voice of ISIS.” However, as Rukmini Callimachi of The New York Times (NYT) notes on Twitter, “[al-Adnani] was far more than the mouthpiece of IS. He was head of the Emni, the secret service of IS which plotted external terror attacks.”

NEWS ANALYSIS NEWS ANALYSIS DT

NEWS

ANALYSIS

How important was al-Adnani (real name: Taha Subhi Falaha) for Bangladeshi ISIS jihadis? An indication of that can be found in an infamous ISIS video featuring three Bangladeshi jihadis in Raqqa, the ISIS capital. In that video, which was recorded at an intersection of a shopping street just two blocks away from the ISIS headquarters, Bangladeshi ISIS fighter Abu Issa al-Bengali (real name: Tahmid Rahman Shafi) refers to al-Adnani as “our Sheikh.” According to him, the gruesome slaughter of foreign nationals and Bangladeshis at the Holey Artisan Bakery in Dhaka “was just a glimpse” of a global war envisioned by the Sheikh.

NEWS ANALYSIS NEWS

ANALYSIS

There are indications that alAdnani was indeed the principal patron or sponsor of ISIS operations in Bangladesh. This was first revealed by Rukmini Callimachi as she interviewed Harry Sarfo, a former ISIS member now serving a prison sentence in Germany. During the interview, Sarfo told Callimachi that a regional division of the Emni – ISIS secret service headed by al-Adnani – was responsible for plotting and executing the “recent café attack in Dhaka, Bangladesh.” It is also highly likely that Tamim Ahmed Chowdhury – the alleged mastermind of the Gulshan attack – was sent to Bangladesh by al-

Adnani himself or one of his deputies overseeing the “Asian affairs division” of the Emni. Chowdhury left Canada sometime in 2012/2013 and received training in Syria before being deployed as an ISIS coordinator in Bangladesh. He was recently killed – some believe executed – by a special police unit in Narayanganj. These deaths – al-Adnani’s in al-Bab and Chowdhury’s in Narayanganj – will certainly have a crippling effect on ISIS operations in Bangladesh. However, as the NYT journalist Callimachi points out on Twitter: “I would caution people not to see this as a blow ISIS can not recover from. [The organisation] is built to survive deaths.” l


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