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Related Topics HuJI demands extortion from private university
by Special Correspondent http://www.weeklyblitz.net/1889/huji-demands-extortion-from-private-university
Outlawed Islamist militancy group Harkat Ul Jihad al Islami [HuJI] has demanded TK. 400 million as extortion from Asha University, which is located at Dhaka's Shyamoli area. The notorious group has set October 17 as deadline for payment of the demanded money and threatened to blow-up the university campus, if authorities of Asha University fail to comply with such demand. In a letter sent by courier service to the management of the university, two men named Masud and Shohag demanded TK. 400 million as extortion. They [Masud and Shohag] introduced themselves being members of Harkat Ul Jihad al Islami [HuJI], and claimed to have fought in Afghan war for 3 years. They also elaborated the their 95 murder cases in the letter and warned the university authorities to refrain from reporting the issue to law enforcing or intelligence agencies. The HUJI letter said, in recent times, a large number of their "party comrades" are arrested and it [HUJI] needs fund to release them from prisons. The matter has already been reported with Mohammedpur Police Station and investigation is continuing to identify the culprits. Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami or Ḥarkat al-Jihād al-Islāmiyah, meaning "Islamic Struggle Movement", [HuJI] is an Islamic terrorist outfit most active in South Asian countries of Pakistan, Bangladesh and India since the early 1990s. It was banned in Bangladesh in 2005 by the Bangladesh Nationalist Party led coalitions government. The operational commander of HuJI, Ilyas Kashmiri, was reportedly killed in a U.S. Predator drone strike in South Waziristan on June 4, 2011. He was linked to the February 13, 2010 bombing of a German bakery in the Indian city of Pune. A statement was released soon after the attack which claimed to be from Kashmiri; it threatened other cities and major sporting events in India. HuJI, along with other jehadi groups such as Lashkar-e-Toiba [LeT], HuM and Jaish-e-Mohammed [JeM] emerged from the same source, and therefore had similar motivations and goals. However, HuJI and HuM were both strongly backed by the Taliban, and therefore the group professed Taliban-style fundamentalist Islam. HuJI espoused a Pan-Islamic ideology, but it believed in violent means to liberate Kashmir and make it a part of Pakistan. The group recruited some of its cadres from the Deobandi madrassas of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province; however the ethnic composition changed when the recruitment also began from Azad Kashmir, Punjab and Karachi. Most of the inductions were done by the roaming jihadist cells, who lured the teenagers religious sermons imbued with the spirit of jihad, from where the process of induction began. Unlike LeT, HuJI did not require its cadres to go through religious education; rather the recruits proceeded to military training in the camps located in Afghanistan and Pakistan-administered Kashmir. After the group established its Bangladesh wing, the operations in Bangladesh increased, with the major source of recruitment coming from the Islamic madrassas. The training for these recruits was given in the hilly areas of Chittagong and Cox's Bazaar. Later on, members of the group made an attempt on the life of poet Shamsur Rahman, the liberal poet in January 1999. Committed to establishing an Islamic rule, HuJI was the prime suspect in a scheme to assassinate the Prime Minister of Bangladesh Sheikh Hasina in the year 2000, and has been blamed for a number of bombings in 2005. In October 2005, it was officially banned by the government of Bangladesh. In April 2006, the state police Special Task Force in India uncovered a plot hatched by six HuJI terrorists, including the mastermind behind the 2006 Varanasi bombings, involving the destruction of two Hindu temples in the Indian city of Varanasi. Maps of their plans were recovered during their arrest. Pakistani passports had been in the possession of the arrested. Apparently Huji has claimed the responsibility for the blasts in New Delhi high court which has claimed lifes of 10 and has injured around 60. Harkat-ul-Jihad al-Islami has claimed responsibility for the 2011 Delhi bombing. However, this has not been confirmed by the National Investigation Agency. 14 people were killed and 94 people were injured in the bomb blast. Police have released two sketches of the suspects. Here is the Embedded video link for this latest attack. This link has English news video clip. This is in Hindi Language. Also as clear in the video links, they have also made threats to target other Indian cities. Several governments have proscribed HuJI as a terrorist organization. In October 2005, Bangladesh banned the militant group. On August 6, 2010 the United States and the United Nations designated Harakat-ul Jihad al-Islami as a foreign terror group and blacklisted its commander Ilyas Kashmiri. State Department counterterrorism coordinator Daniel Benjamin asserted that the actions taken demonstrated the global community's resolve to counter the group's threat. "The linkages between HUJI and Al-Qaeda are clear, and today's designations convey the operational relationship between these organizations," Benjamin said. Militant attacks claimed by or attributed to HuJI:
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