Seven Islamists sentenced to death in Bangladesh's 2016 café attack
Bangladesh security personnel stand guard at the Anti-terrorism Special tribunal of Dhaka on November 27, 2019 (AFP) |
A special anti-terrorism court in Dhaka sentenced seven
accused in aiding the country’s worst Islamist attack.
By Robin Gomes
Seven members of an Islamist militant group in Bangladesh
were handed death sentences on Wednesday by a special court in Dhaka.
They were accused for their role in a 2016 attack on a café in the capital in
which 22 people were killed, mostly foreigners.
The Anti-Terrorism Special Tribunal of Dhaka ordered the
deaths by hanging for their role, which included training the attackers and
supplying them arms, explosives and funds.
One of the eight accused was acquitted.
Five young militants, armed with guns, sharp weapons and
grenades stormed the Holey Artisan cafe in Dhaka’s upscale diplomatic quarters
on July 1 and took diners hostage, killing them over 12 hours.
Nine Italians, seven Japanese, an American and an Indian
were among the dead, in Bangladesh's worst Islamist attack. Army
commandos stormed the building, rescuing 13 hostages and killing all attackers.
The attack was claimed by the Islamic State (IS) group, but
the government blamed it on the Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB), a
home-grown Islamist group outlawed in the country.
“Charges against them were proved beyond any doubt,”
public prosecutor Golam Sarwar Khan told reporters after the verdict.
Defence lawyer Delwar Hossain said the seven men would
appeal, explaining the verdict was given hastily. “We are not happy with the
verdict. We will appeal to the higher court,” he said.
Ahead of the verdict, security in and around the court was
beefed up, with many from the paramilitary Rapid Action Battalion on high
alert.
At least 80 suspected militants were killed and more than
300 people arrested during a wave of operations that followed the attack.
The Catholic Church is against the use of the death penalty,
with Pope Francis last year authorizing changes in the Catechism of the
Catholic Church according to which capital punishment is inadmissible.
The Pope has been very vocal, urging for the abolition of
the death penalty saying it is a serious violation of the right to life of
every person. In a message to the “World Congress Against the Death Penalty” in
Brussels, Belgium earlier this year he said that the condemned need to be offered
the possibility to change life.
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