Bangladesh vows
justice in killing of gay activist, friend
NEW DELHI — The Bangladeshi prime minister has vowed to hunt
down and prosecute those who fatally stabbed two men, including a gay rights
activist who also worked for the U.S. Agency for International Development, and
accused the country’s opposition party and allied militants of orchestrating
the attack.
The killings Monday night were the latest in an ongoing wave of
attacks claimed by radical Islamists and targeting the country’s outspoken
atheists, moderates and foreigners. There was no immediate claim of
responsibility.
The victims were identified as USAID employee Xulhaz Mannan, who
previously worked as a U.S. Embassy protocol officer, and his friend, theater
actor Tanay Majumder. Mannan was also an editor of Bangladesh’s first gay
rights magazine, Roopbaan, as well as a cousin of former Foreign Minister Dipu
Moni of the governing Awami League party.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry condemned the “barbaric”
murders, issuing a statement from Washington, D.C. that said the U.S.
government would support Bangladeshi efforts to bring the perpetrators to
justice.
Police have not made any arrests in their investigation,
according to Sub Inspector Shamim Ahmed. He did not say if any suspects had
been identified.
Crime scene investigators recovered a mobile phone and bag
apparently left by the attackers at the scene, according to Dhaka Metropolitan
Police Commissioner Asaduzzaman Mia.
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina blamed religious radicals in
Bangladesh, specifically the Jamaat-e-Islami group and their political allies,
the opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party.
“Everybody knows who are behind these killings,” Hasina told top
party policymakers in a meeting Monday night after the attacks, which came just
days after an English professor was hacked to death on the street of a
northwestern city.
“The BNP-Jamaat clique has been involved in such secret and
heinous murders to destabilize the country,” she said. She added the
opposition, which opposes her brand of secular rule, was retaliating against
her government for its efforts to prosecute war crimes committed during the
1971 war of independence.
The opposition
denies the allegations, saying they are being scapegoated for Hasina’s failures
in maintaining security and placating the country’s desire for Islamic rule.
The U.S. government and numerous rights groups have lambasted
Hasina’s government for failing to keep civil society safe. Earlier this month,
the U.S. said it was considering granting refuge to a select number of secular
bloggers facing imminent danger in Bangladesh.
State Department spokesman John Kirby said Monday that remained
an option, while also describing Mannan as a “beloved member of our embassy
family and a courageous advocate” for LGBT rights, and pledged U.S. support to
Bangladeshi authorities “to ensure that the cowards who did this are held
accountable.”
The rights group Amnesty International noted that Bangladesh
considers homosexual relations a crime, making it harder for gay activists to
report any threats against them.
The group’s South Asia director, Champa Patel, said the latest
attack “underscores the appalling lack of protection being afforded to a range
of peaceful activists in the country.”
"Bangladesh vows justice in killing of gay
rightist, friend." 26 April. 2016. The Washington
Post.
26 April. 2016. <https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/asia_pacific/bangladesh-vows-justice-in-killing-of-usaid-worker-friend/2016/04/26/ea9ac900-0b72-11e6-bc53-db634ca94a2a_story.html
>.
Comment:
The
article presents the current issues in Bangladesh, specifically about the LGBT
rights, that caused multiple tensions in the country. The author of the article
starts out by engaging the reader into the article with the recent attacks on 2
men, in which was a gay rights activist. The author says that the
"killings Monday night were the latest in an ongoing wave of attacks
claimed by radical Islamists." This shows that the author agrees with
Prime Minister Hasina in that radical religionists are attacking people who are
against their beliefs and are publicly outspoken about it. I would say that the
article is a little bias against the people who are making these attacks since
there are little to none information about the side of the attackers. The
article concludes in that Bangladesh is facing tension inside the country
itself due to different groups who are for and against LGBT rights.