5 militants sentenced to death for shooting Japanese farmer

Written By DNA Web Team | Updated: Feb 28, 2017, 12:42 PM IST

Five Islamist militants from the banned JMB terror outfit were today sentenced to death in Bangladesh for the brutal killing of a 66-year-old Japanese farmer in 2015 in the Muslim-majority country.

Five Islamist militants from the banned JMB terror outfit were today sentenced to death in Bangladesh for the brutal killing of a 66-year-old Japanese farmer in 2015 in the Muslim-majority country.

The murder was one of the first killings in a series of clandestine attacks on foreigners, Hindus and secular or moderate Muslim Sufis.

"They will be hanged until death," Judge Noresh Chandra Sarker of the Special Court in Rangpur pronounced as four of the five detained convicts were escorted to the courtroom under heavy security cover.

The judge acquitted two of the six accused in the murder of Kunio Hoshi, a Japanese farmer who set up a farmhouse in northwestern Rangpur town, while a fugitive convict was tried in absentia.

Masked motorbike mounted Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB) assailants shot Hoshi several times when he was heading to his grass farm on the outskirts of Rangpur town on October 3, 2015.

The Islamic State militant group had claimed responsibility for the attacks, but the government rebuffed it, saying the radical group had no presence in Bangladesh though officials said JMB was ideologically inclined to the foreign Islamist group.

Bangladesh has seen a spate of gruesome attacks on secular activists, religious minorities, bloggers and foreigners, many of whom have been hacked to death with machetes.

The country had launched a massive crackdown on militants specially after the July 1 Dhaka terror attack in 2016 in which 22 people, including an Indian, were killed.

 

(This article has not been edited by DNA's editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)