Secular activists marched through the Bangladeshi city of Sylhet today to demand justice for a blogger hacked to death this week, the third such attack by suspected Islamists since February.
Scores of activists, mostly university students, peacefully protested through the northeastern city, accusing the government of failing to protect free thinkers and urging authorities to halt "this evil force".
Wielding machetes, a masked gang killed Ananta Bijoy Das, 33, a banker, editor and blogger, yesterday as he headed to work in Sylhet, an attack that fellow writers said highlighted a culture of impunity.
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"We want justice for Ananta and the other bloggers who have been murdered by Islamist militants. The government must crush this evil force," Debashish Debu, a secular activist who joined the protest, told AFP.
Das was the third blogger killed in the Muslim-majority nation since February when Bangladeshi-born US citizen Avijit Roy was hacked to death in the capital Dhaka.
The deaths have sparked international condemnation, with Washington yesterday calling on Dhaka to bring perpetrators of the latest killing to justice.
The activists had called for a strike in Sylhet today, although police said offices and schools were mostly open and traffic was running almost as normal.
"Scores of young protesters held two marches in support of the strike," deputy commissioner of police Faisal Mahmud told AFP.
Mahmud said police suspected Islamist militants were behind yesterday's killing although there have been no arrests so far.
He said Das's brother filed a criminal case against four unidentified people over the killing, saying Das was murdered by an "extremist fanatic group".
Fellow writers have said Das had been on a hit-list drawn up by militants who were behind the recent killing of blogger Roy.
Friends said Das was an editor of a magazine called Jukti (Logic) and headed the Sylhet-based Science and Rationalist Council.
They said he had received threats from Islamists after he regularly blogged for a website called Mukto-Mona, founded and moderated by Roy, which criticises aspects of Islam and Hinduism.