Business Standard

Recent murders carefully planned to destabilise B'desh: Hasina

Image

Press Trust of India Dhaka
Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina today said that the recent spate of murders of secular bloggers and minorities had been carefully planned to destabilise the country and held main opposition BNP and its allies responsible for the killings.

"The recent killings had been carefully planned. The targets were Imams, Hindu and Christian priests. The motive is to destabilise the country," Hasina's Press Secretary Ihsanul Karim quoted her as saying.

Hasina was speaking at the 4th meeting of the Fast Track Project Monitoring Committee at her office wherein she said, those who had killed ordinary people for the sake of their campaigns are responsible for the recent "covert killings", the bdnews24.Com reported.
 

The killings of a liberal professor in Rajshahi, a gay- rights activist and his friend in Dhaka by machete-wielding assailants within three days follow similar attacks on secular thinkers, bloggers and members of religious minorities.

"We do not want to see such events in Bangladesh," she said.

Hasina said a platform that "opposes development" was responsible, and added the culprits would be caught soon.

Al Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent (AQIS) has claimed responsibility for both the attacks. But the government has rejected the claims, saying home-grown terrorists were responsible, not global terror groups.

Also, Hasina told the parliament that the government has already directed law enforcers to take stern actions against all sorts of militant, sabotaging and violent activities.

Replying to a query, she said people who have connections with the previous militant, criminal or sabotaging activities are under surveillance.
(Reopens FGN 13)

"I would like to suggest those who are opposing the coal-based plants to visit Barapukuria Plant at the densely crowded location...Despite being a sub-critical plant, it did not cause any harm tothe environment and public life in the past 10 years and rather it made fertile the land there," Hasina said.

"A super critical plant reduces emission of carbon, sulfur and nitrogen by 40 per cent while an ultra-super critical (plant) could bring down any kind of pollution to zero level," Hasina argued.

Don't miss the most important news and views of the day. Get them on our Telegram channel

First Published: Apr 27 2016 | 9:42 PM IST

Explore News