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Islamist militant group's kill-list targets nine UK-based writers

Bangladesh-based extremists Ansarullah Bangla Team threaten to kill 20 secular bloggers and activists across the world

Caroline Mortimer
Wednesday 23 September 2015 07:28 EDT
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Bangladeshi social activists shout slogans during a protest against the killing Avijit Roy in Dhaka on February 27, 2015.
Bangladeshi social activists shout slogans during a protest against the killing Avijit Roy in Dhaka on February 27, 2015. (AFP/Getty Images)

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Nine UK based bloggers have been named on a 'kill list' issued by a Bangladeshi Islamist militant group.

A list of 20 secular bloggers, writers and activists around the world was published by the Ansarullah Bangla Team (ABT) group with a warning that they will be killed if they continue to publish.

The targets include nine bloggers from the UK, seven in Germany, two in the USA, one in Canada and one in Sweden, according to the Guardian.

The group have been blamed for a series of murders of secular campaigners in Bangladesh over the past 18 months and their acting leader, a British IT worker called Touhidur Rahman, was arrested in August in connection with the death of Avijit Roy in February.

Avijit Roy was a vocal opponent of religious extremism
Avijit Roy was a vocal opponent of religious extremism

Mr Roy, a Bangladeshi-American writer on secularism and humanism, was hacked to death in an alley while visiting Bangladesh's capital, Dhaka. His wife, Rafida Ahmed Banna, who is one of those named on the list, was badly injured.

His death, along with the murders of other noted secular bloggers Washiqur Rahman and Niloy Chatterjee, prompted outrage around the world.

But it is the first time the group has suggested targeting secular bloggers who live outside Bangladesh.

The Guardian reported that the UK-based bloggers on the list have approached police and that authorities have warned them to take precautions to minimise risk of attack.

Students and teachers protested in Dhaka after Avijit Roy was hacked to death
Students and teachers protested in Dhaka after Avijit Roy was hacked to death (AFP/Getty Images)

But several individuals on the list are refusing to back down and will continue writing.

Ananya Azas, one of the bloggers on the list, told the Guardian: "Our weapon is [the] pen, and we can use it without hurting anybody. We just want to make people conscious about their rights. So that nobody can use them to fulfill bad intentions."

ABT, which was banned by Bangladeshi authorities in May, is believed to be affiliated to the Ansar ul-Islam- a regional wing of Al-Qaida.

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