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Bangladesh shuts website following blogger’s murder



DHAKA: Bangladesh has shut down a blog site after it was linked to the murder of an anti-Islamist blogger who helped organise protests against the leaders of the largest Islamic party, officials said on Sunday.

Blogger Ahmed Rajib Haider, 35, was hacked to death near his home in the capital Dhaka on Friday night after he joined a huge protest demanding the execution of Jamaat-e-Islami party leaders who are on trials for war crimes.

Police have yet to comment on a possible motive, but his brother said Haider was targeted by Jamaat’s student wing for his online activities.

Fellow blogger Shakil Ahmed said a pro-Jamaat website had last week named Haider as a target.

Jamaat issued a statement on Sunday condemning the murder and said neither it nor its student wing had anything to do with the crime.

Officials of the telecoms regulator said that the Sonar Bangla blogsite had been shut down since Saturday for spreading “hate speech and causing communal tension.”

“It’s been closed down,” vice president of the regulator Giasuddin Ahmed said.

Demonstrations championed by online activists have seen thousands take to the streets for the last two weeks demanding the execution of Jamaat leaders accused of genocide, murder and rape during the 1971 war of independence from Pakistan.

Family and friends said Haider played a key role in organising the protests and had an argument with Jamaat supporters just days before the murder.

At least 50,000 people joined Haider’s funeral late on Saturday at the Shahbag intersection in central Dhaka, where protests have been staged against the Islamist leaders since Feb. 5.

The protesters have vowed they will not leave unless Jamaat and its student wing, Islami Chhatra Shibir, are banned and Haider’s killers are found.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina visited Haider’s home and indicated that she would back a ban on Jamaat as it had “no right to be in politics in free Bangladesh.”

The killing on Friday was the second attack in Dhaka against a blogger critical of extremist groups in less than a month, after the stabbing of a self-styled online “militant atheist” by three unidentified men.

Agence France-Presse

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