"We have been both engaging with the government on this problem but also for example with India, given the relationship between India and Bangladesh to raise the concern and to try to work together with them on countering violent extremism before it takes root in Bangladesh," the Deputy Secretary of State Anthony Blinken told lawmakers during a Congressional hearing yesterday.
"That's the last thing we want," he said during a hearing on Asia organised by the House Foreign Affairs Committee.
Blinken disagreed with the Bangladeshi government's assessment that opposition parties are responsible for these acts of violence.
"Now the government has sometimes claimed that these attacks were actually the work of the opposition in one fashion or another but what we've seen based on the evidence to date is in fact that extremist groups whether they are indigenous or whether they really are affiliated with ISIL or DAESH are responsible," he said.
"This gives us concern about the potential for ISIL, for DAESH, to take root in Bangladesh, which has been an important country in terms of having a Muslim country with a moderate orientation that can be an important player in dealing with the problem of violent extremism," Blinken said.
"They (Bangladesh) clearly deserve more attention than they often have received either by this administration or a whole range of things but first of all, as we all know, an election was held a while back and Sheikh Hasina of course was re-elected," he said.
"Khaleda Zia and her party boycotted the election and so the political situation is a bit iffy there, but let me ask you this Bangladesh has long been considered a moderate Muslim country in resisting Islamic radicalism," he added.
Last year, four prominent secular bloggers were killed with machetes, one inside his own home.
A Hindu head priest was on February 21 hacked to death by gun-and-cleaver wielding Islamists. In September last, Italian aid worker Cesare Tavella was murdered by unidentified assailants in Dhaka, and within five days of that incident Japanese farmer Kunio Hoshi was killed.
Also, moderate Sufi saint Khizir Khan, progressive book publisher Faisal Arefin Dipon, and a Sufi shrine worker were murdered while two Christian pastors, one an Italian doctor, narrowly escaped attacks.
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