Three persons, including a member of opposition BNP's youth wing, were arrested in Bangladesh today in connection with the murder of a Japanese farmer who was shot dead last month in an attack claimed by the dreaded Islamic State terror group.
The Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) arrested them from Chapai Nawabganj, an area 210 kilometres from Rangpur where 66-year-old Hoshi Kunio was gunned down on October 3.
His murder came less than a week after Italian aid worker Cesare Tavella was shot dead in similar fashion in Dhaka. That attack also was claimed by the Islamic State.
More From This Section
The RAB forces detained them on charges of keeping unauthorised weapons and seized from them two firearms but during the interrogation "we suspected they were involved in the (Hoshi) murder".
"When we pressed them, they admitted their guilt saying they were hiding in Chapainawabganj" after murdering Hoshi in Rangpur on October 3, Alam said.
Asked if they had any local or foreign Islamist links or their political connections, he said "we could not find it out and we did not find much time to quiz them either".
"We have already handed them over to police and may know the details once they were interrogated by the concerned investigation officials," Alam said.
Police said one of those arrested was a member of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party's (BNP) youth wing in Rangpur and the trio were involved in criminal activities.
Two small firearms, bullets and machetes were seized from them, Alam told reporters.
All three have pending criminal cases, including those of murder and mugging, he said.
Their families, however, claim they had been picked up by 'plain clothesmen' last month, but both Rangpur police and RAB have denied these allegations.
The Islamic State had claimed the responsibility for the attack. The government had rubbished the claim.
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina had said earlier this month a series of clandestine attacks and assassinations were carried out in a planned way in recent months and they were attributed to international Islamist outfits to "portray Bangladesh as an unsafe country to expose it to foreign (military) attacks like in Pakistan".
Five writers and bloggers along with a publisher have been hacked to death in Bangladesh in the past two and half years, five of them since January this year with families and friends of the deceased alleging failure on the part of police in bringing perpetrators to justice.