LLL - GFATF - Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen Bangladesh

Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen Bangladesh

highlights:

Established In: April 1998

Established By: Abdur Rahman

Also Known As: JMB, Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen

Country Of Origin: Bangladesh

Leaders: Shaykh Abdur Rahman, Maulana Abdur Rahman

Key Members: Maulana Abdur Rahman, Shaykh Abdur Rahman

Operational Area: Bangladesh

Number Of Members: 10,000+

Involved In: Armed attacks, Bombing attacks

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General Info:

Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen (“Assembly of Mujahideen”, abbreviated: JMB) is an Islamic terrorist organisation operating in Bangladesh. It was founded in April 1998 in Palampur in Dhaka division by Abdur Rahman and gained public prominence in 2001 when bombs and documents detailing the activities of the organisation were discovered in Parbatipur in Dinajpur district.

The organisation was officially banned by the government of Bangladesh in February 2005 after attacks on NGOs, but struck back in mid-August when it detonated 500 bombs at 300 locations throughout Bangladesh. The group re-organised and has committed several public murders in 2016 in northern Bangladesh as part of a wave of attacks on secularists. The JMB was believed to have contained at least 10,000 members, and have an extensive network of organisations, including connections to legal Islamist organisations. Six of the top leaders of JMB were captured by the Rapid Action Battalion security force in 2005. On the evening of 29 March 2007, four were executed by hanging for the killing of two judges and for the August 2005 bombings.

In two separate incidents in 2015, it was alleged that JMB had been receiving financing from officers at the Pakistan High Commission in Dhaka. In April, visa attache Mazhar Khan was caught red-handed at a meeting with a JMB operative, who said they were involved in pushing large consignments of fake Indian currency into West Bengal and Assam. In December, second secretary Farina Arshad was expelled after a JMB operative admitted to having received 30,000 Taka from her. It is listed as a terror group by the United Kingdom.



Ideology:
The JMB’s aim is to replace the government of Bangladesh with an Islamic state based on Sharia. It has explicitly stated on more than one occasion that it opposes the political system of Bangladesh and seeks to “build a society based on the Islamic model laid out in Holy Quran-Hadith.” The organisation follows the ideals of the Taliban of Afghanistan. Its chief has been quoted as stating that “our model includes many leaders and scholars of Islam. But we will take as much (ideology) from the Taliban as we need.” It opposes democracy as being in violation of Shari’a or Islamic law.

It also opposes socialism and its avowed objective is to neutralize left-wing extremists, especially cadres of the Purba Banglar Communist Party (PBCP). JMB also is opposed to cultural functions, cinema halls, shrines and NGOs. In another leaflet it said, “We don’t want Taguti (non-Islamic) law, let Qur’anic law be introduced. Law framed by humans cannot continue and only the laws of Allah will prevail.”

They have claimed responsibility for several violent attacks and bombings. JMB’s communiqués reveal a Salafist doctrine that is common across international radical Islamist organisations. A 2005 leaflet proclaimed:
“We are the soldiers of Allah. We have taken up arms for the implementation of Allah’s law the way the Prophet, Sahabis and heroic Mujahideen have implemented for centuries. If the government does not establish Islamic law in the country after this (third) warning and, rather, it goes to arrest any Muslim on charge of seeking Allah’s laws or it resorts to repression on Alem-Ulema, the Jamaatul Mujahideen (JMB) will go for counteraction, Insha Allah.”

Several captured members of the group have claimed that their targets include traditional Bangladeshi cultural and non-government organisations such as BRAC, Proshika, and Grameen Bank. Leader Abdur Rahman is alleged to have taught JMB operatives that “it’s not a sin to loot valuables of Grameen Bank, BRAC, Proshika, Asa and Karitas’ as they encourage women to shed Burqa (veil).”



Organization:
The JMB reportedly has a three-tier organisation. The first tier of the outfit consists of activists called Ehsar, who are recruited on a full-time basis and act at the behest of the higher echelons. The second tier, known as Gayeri Ehsar, has over 100,000 part-time activists. The third tier involves those who indirectly co-operate with the JMJB. According to JMJB leaders, the whole country has been divided into nine organisational divisions.

Khulna, Barisal, Sylhet and Chittagong have an organisational divisional office each, while Dhaka has two divisional offices and Rajshahi three. The outfit also had committees in each village and, according to media reports, villagers were being forced to join the committees. If anybody refused, he was branded as a “collaborator” of the PBCP and taken to the JMJB “trial centre”. JMB allegedly received financial assistance from individual donors in Kuwait, United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Libya.

Reports have claimed JMB received funding from international NGOs like Kuwait based Society of the Revival of Islamic Heritage (RIHS) and Doulatul Kuwait, Saudi Arabia based Al Haramaine Islamic Institute and Rabita Al Alam Al Islami, Qatar Charitable Society and UAE-based Al Fuzaira and Khairul Ansar Al Khairia.

South Asian Terrorist Portal (SATP), The Columbia World Dictionary of Islamism and Defenddemocracy.org state that Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen Bangladesh “appears” to be connected with putatively non-violent, legal Islamist group or groups in Bangladesh, Defenddemocracy speculating that Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen Bangladesh is a “proxy” established by the legal Jamaat-e-Islami Bangladesh party to “push the center of gravity of the political debate toward radical Islamism” and make Jamaat-e-Islami appear more centrist.

According to SATP, “many members of the JMB and JMJB have invariably been found to be cadres of the Islami Chhatra Shibir (ICS), student wing of the Jamaat-e-Islami, a partner in the ruling coalition” with the Bangladesh National Party “under Prime Minister Khaleda Zia” that came to power in 2001.



Leaders:
Since its foundation, the group was led by Maulana Abdur Rahman, a.k.a. Siddiqul Islam a.k.a. Bangla Bhai, and Shaykh Abdur Rahman. Six of their top men were captured by RAB security authorities in 2005. After being convicted at trial, on the evening of 29 March 2007, Abdur Rahman, Bangla Bhai, and four other leaders of the organisation were executed by hanging for the killing of two judges and for countrywide bombings in 2005.



Sphere of influence:
Main areas of JMB operations were:
-Rajshahi Division: Bogra, Sirajganj, Dinajpur, Jaipurhat, Gaibandha, Naogaon, Nator, Rajshahi, Rangpur, Tahkurgaon
-Khulna Division: Bagerhat, Jessore, Khulna, Meherpur, Satkhira
-Dhaka Division: Jamalpur, Mymensingh, Netrokona, Tangail
-Chittagong Division: Chandpur, Laxmipur, Chittagong



Campaign of violence:
On 20 May 2001, 25 petrol bombs and documents detailing the activities of the organisation were discovered and eight of its members were arrested in Parbatipur in Dinajpur district. It is believed to have been involved in an explosion of seven bombs on 13 February 2003 at one of its hideouts, having been preparing to explode them in northern Bangladeshi towns during International Mother Language Day.

On 17 August 2005, 500 small bombs at 300 locations in 50 cities and towns across Bangladesh detonated within the space of 30 minutes. Dhaka International Airport, government buildings and major hotels were targeted. There were 50 injuries but only two fatalities – a child in Savar, near Dhaka, and a Rickshaw-puller in Chapai Nawabganj District – because of the small size of the bombs. Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen Bangladesh claimed responsibility for the bombings.

Bombs later in the year were more deadly “killing judges, lawyers, policemen and common people”. It killed two judges in Jhalakathi in South Bangladesh on 14 November 2005. The group has threatened journalists, with more than 55 receiving death threats between September and December 2005. Following a 8 December 2005 suicide bombing, Reuters reported the group threatened to kill women, including non-Muslims, who did not wear the veil, according to news reports posted by defenddemocracy.org.