Briton arrested over deadly Bangladesh cafe siege

Published August 5, 2016
Dhaka: Bangladesh police escort former North South University teacher, Hasnat Karim (centre left) and Canadian university student, Tahmid Hasib (centre right) towards the court as suspects in the Holey Artisan Bakery terror attack.—AFP
Dhaka: Bangladesh police escort former North South University teacher, Hasnat Karim (centre left) and Canadian university student, Tahmid Hasib (centre right) towards the court as suspects in the Holey Artisan Bakery terror attack.—AFP

DHAKA: A British national and a student at a Canadian university who were dining at a Bangladeshi cafe when it was besieged by militants last month have been arrested on suspicion of involvement in the attack.

Police said Hasnat Karim, a British citizen of Bangladesh origin, and Tahmid Khan, a University of Toronto student, were arrested late on Wednesday in connection with last month’s siege in Dhaka when 20 hostages were murdered.

“We can confirm they were arrested under Section 54 of CrPC (criminal procedure),” police spokesman A. K. M Shahidur Rahman said on Thursday, referring to a law under which police can detain someone on suspicion of any crime. A court later remanded both men in custody for eight days, deputy commissioner of Dhaka police Aminur Rahman said.

Karim and Khan were both inside the Holey Artisan Bakery when gunmen raided the cafe on the night of July 1, taking a group of mainly Western diners hostage and then killing 20 of them, along with two policemen.

But neither have been seen in public since the end of the siege when commandos stormed the cafe in the capital’s upmarket Gulshan neighbourhood on the morning of July 2.

The men’s families have said they were being held by security forces even though there was no evidence to link them to the attackers.

Police had denied the men were in their custody before announcing the arrest on Thursday.

Published in Dawn, August 5th, 2016

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