Al-Qaeda branch claims killing of gay activist

The body of Xulhaz Mannan who was stabbed to death by unidentified assailants, is carried out of a hospital morgue in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Tuesday, April 26, 2016. Bangladeshi prime minister has vowed to hunt down and prosecute those who fatally stabbed two men, gay rights activist Mannan and his theater actor friend Tanay Majumder, and accused the country's opposition party and allied militants of orchestrating the attack. (AP Photo)

The body of Xulhaz Mannan who was stabbed to death by unidentified assailants, is carried out of a hospital morgue in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Tuesday, April 26, 2016. Bangladeshi prime minister has vowed to hunt down and prosecute those who fatally stabbed two men, gay rights activist Mannan and his theater actor friend Tanay Majumder, and accused the country's opposition party and allied militants of orchestrating the attack. (AP Photo)

Published Apr 26, 2016

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Dhaka - A group affiliated to al-Qaeda claimed responsibility on Tuesday for killing a Bangladeshi gay rights activist and his friend, the latest in a string of murders of liberal activists and other minorities in the South Asian nation.

The slaying of Xulhaz Mannan, editor of Bangladesh's first magazine for gay, bisexual and transgender people, has deeply shocked Bangladesh's embattled community of liberal intellectuals.

Mannan, 35, was hacked to death on Monday in his apartment in the capital Dhaka by a group of assailants posing as couriers. His friend, actor Mahbub Rabbi Tonoy, 25, was killed in the same attack, according to police.

A Twitter handle identifying itself as an outlet of Ansar Al Islam said its fighters had killed the two, denouncing them as “the pioneers of practicing (sic) and promoting homosexuality in Bangladesh.

“They were working day and night to promote homosexuality among the people of this land ... with the help of their masters, the U.S. crusaders and their Indian allies,” read the statement signed by spokesman Mufti Abdullah Ashraf.

Ansar Al Islam, which is part of al-Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent, has issued similar claims in the past, according to a Bangladeshi security expert. The authenticity of the claim of responsibility could not immediately be verified.

Maruf Hossain Sardar, spokesman for Dhaka city police, dismissed the group's claim as baseless, saying international militant groups like Islamic State and al-Qaeda had no organisational base in Bangladesh.

Reuters

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