Fourth militant shot dead in Bangladesh in crackdown

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Bangladesh police shot dead a militant on Wednesday, the fourth killed since a crackdown was launched against suspected militants blamed for a wave of gruesome killings, an officer said.

The 25-year-old militant was killed during a gun battle with police in northern Bogra district, where he was suspected of bombing a minority Shia shrine last year, the officer said.

Kawser, who uses one name, was the fourth member of the local Jamayetul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB) killed since the crackdown on Tuesday. The banned group is blamed for dozens of murders of religious minorities and secular and liberal activists.

“Kawser was shot during a gunfight between police and JMB militants under a bridge at Shibganj in Bogra,” Bogra district police spokesman Gaziur Rahman told the media. He died on the way to a hospital.

“He directly took part in the bomb attack on a Shiite mosque in Bogra last October and we believe he also took part in other killing missions,” Rahman said.

Three “high-ranking”‘ members of JMB were shot dead on Tuesday during raids by police in Dhaka and in a northwestern district, officers have said.

Bangladeshi authorities have been coming under mounting international pressure to end the string of attacks that have left nearly 50 people killed in the last three years.

In the past four days, an elderly Hindu priest, a Christian grocer and the wife of a top anti-terrorism police officer have been shot or hacked to death with machetes.

Authorities have blamed homegrown Islamists for the attacks, rejecting claims of responsibility from the militant Islamic State (IS) group and a South Asian branch of Al Qaeda.

The killings across officially secular but majority Sunni Muslim Bangladesh have surged in recent weeks and include the murder of two gay rights activists.

Experts say a ban on Bangladesh’s largest Islamist party Jamaat-e-Islami following a protracted political crisis has pushed many towards extremism.