Suspected Islamist militants hurled bombs at a prison van in a daring attempt to free Bangladesh’s most-wanted militant leader from death row, police said Tuesday.
Police arrested a 24-year-old man at the scene and launched a hunt for his accomplices after the gang threw bombs at the van carrying Mufti Abdul Hannan in the town of Tongi just outside Dhaka on Monday.
“Their aim was to snatch Mufti Hannan,” local police chief Firoz Talukder told AFP, referring to the high-profile ringleader of the Harkatul Jihad Al Islami group.
Several of the bombs went off but the van was able to return to prison with Hannan and 18 other prisoners, he added.
Police recovered a range of weapons from the scene, including a grenade and molotov cocktails, along with a pistol and butcher’s knife.
The man captured following the brazen attack was a former student at an Islamic boarding school, police said.
Hannan led a campaign of deadly bombings in Bangladesh in the mid-1990s, masterminding attacks on churches, secular gatherings and mosques used by Islam’s minority sects.
By the time he was arrested in late 2005, more than 100 people had been killed in attacks he orchestrated across the moderate Muslim-majority nation.
He was sentenced to death in 2008 for his role in several atrocities, including a grenade attack that wounded the then-British high commissioner.
The Supreme Court upheld the death sentence in December, meaning Hannan could be hanged within months. Overturning a death sentence is extremely rare in Bangladesh.
Hannan fought against the Soviets in Afghanistan before returning to join Harkatul Jihad Al Islami, a group founded for jihadists who fought in that war.
It was the first Islamist militant outfit to emerge in Bangladesh, and rose to prominence as Hannan escalated its deadly operations under his leadership.
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