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SOUTH ASIA: BANGLADESH News Briefs |
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Such reports only reinforce the conviction that the spectre of JMB continues to haunt the nation. Far from having been completely neutralised since their top leaders were hanged during the tenure of the caretaker government, the outlawed outfit has been regrouping under the leadership of some diehard militants who once acted as second-in-command of the deceased leaders. Their intent is as clear as daylight so that there can be no lowering of guard to maintain political and social order. In order to attain success in their hunt, the law enforcing agencies will have to extend their intelligence network both inside the country and beyond the borders to unearth the funding sources. It is only stating the obvious that once money flow dries up, militants will lose steam and disperse out of frustration. Since large volume of money is being transacted, it should not be too difficult to identify the people involved in the illegal process. The senders, once apprehended with the help of the Interpol and other overseas agencies, should be put on trial under the money laundering act to which Bangladesh is a signatory. Drastic measures would go a long way to deter other sympathisers waiting in the wings to help JMB. We urge the government to live up to its promise of uprooting terrorism in all its forms that are out to unsettle the country's constitutional structure. [Source: The Daily Star]
Government agrees to hand over ULFA general secretary Anup Chetia to India: Bangladesh said on February 19, 2009 that it has mutually agreed with India to hand over the United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA) general secretary Anup Chetia, who has been lodged in a Bangladeshi jail since 1996. "We have mutually agreed on the handover, now we have to decide on the formalities of how to hand over," Bangladesh's Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Hasan Mahmud told CNN-IBN news channel in Dhaka. The mutual agreement "will also include handover of Bangladeshi criminals who have fled to India," Mahmud was quoted as saying in a press release issued by the TV channel. He reportedly accused the previous Bangladesh National Party Government of nurturing terrorist groups like the Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami (HuJI-B). "Since 2001, the BNP and Jamaat-e-Islami had ministers in their Government who chanted slogans to turn Bangladesh into Afghanistan," Mahmud said. He also added that "HuJI has cross-border linkages not only with Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) but with other organisations also". Mahmud also conformed that the HuJI still has cadres in hideouts in Bangladesh and the Government was trying to locate them. The Hindu, February 20, 2009. [South Asia Intelligent Review]
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