In Bangladesh Court upholds death sentences over 2004 attack on British envoy
"The high court today upheld death sentences for three, including the HUJI leader Mufti Abdul Hannan, and life imprisonment for two others in the attack," Sheikh Moniruzzaman Kabir, a public prosecutor, told reporters.
A Bangladesh court upheld death
sentences on Thursday for three members of an outlawed Islamist militant
group in connection with a grenade attack on the British ambassador in 2004.
The Islamists, including the head of the Harkat-ul Jihad Islami
group, were sentenced to death in 2008 for the attack in which three
people were killed and about 50, including the then British high
commissioner, Anwar Choudhury, were wounded.
"The
high court today upheld death sentences for three, including the HUJI
leader Mufti Abdul Hannan, and life imprisonment for two others in the
attack," Sheikh Moniruzzaman Kabir, a public prosecutor, told reporters.
The
attack came after Friday prayers at a Muslim shrine in the northeastern
district of Sylhet. The Bangladesh-born British envoy was wounded in
the leg.
The militant group was blamed for several
other attacks, including a bomb attack later in 2004 on a rally by
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, who was then the leader of the opposition.
Twenty-three people were killed and more than 150 wounded in that attack. Hasina suffered partial hearing loss.
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