Police claim extracting important Dhaka attack info from Hasnat
Dhaka: Police have extracted important information from former North South University teacher Abul Hasnat Rezaul Karim about Gulshan attack during interrogation, said deputy commissioner of Dhaka Metropolitan Police (DMP) Masudur Rahman on Monday.
‘We’ve got very important information from Hasnat during quizzing him twice…now we are scrutinising the information,’ he told UNB.
Masud said they will not seek fresh police custody for Hasnat and he will be produced before a Dhaka court today (Monday) seeking an order to send him to jail. ‘We’ll seek remand for integrating him in the future, if necessary.’
On 13 August, a Dhaka court placed Abul Hasnat Rezaul Karim on an eight-day fresh police custody in connection with the Gulshan terror attack.
Another Dhaka court on 4 August placed Hasnat Karim on police custody for eight days.
A team of the CTTC arrested former North South University teacher Abul Hasnat Rezaul Karim (47), who is now in police custody for eight days, and Tahmid on 3 August from the city’s Gulshan and Bashundhara areas respectively for their suspected link to the attack that killed 22 people last month. The attack was claimed by Islamic State.
They were shown arrested under Section 54 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC). British national Abul Hasnat and Candian national Tahmid Hasib Khan were rescued along with 11 others during the commando operation at the Holey Artisan Bakery at the city’s diplomatic zone Gulshan on 2 July following a 12-hour hostage standoff.
Neither Karim nor Khan has been seen in public since the end of the siege when commandos stormed the cafe in the capital’s upmarket Gulshan neighbourhood on the morning of July 2.
Their family claimed that they had remained traceless since then. However, law enforcement agencies said that they set them free after interrogation over the restaurant attack.
The men’s families have said they were being held by security forces even though there was no evidence to link them to the attackers.
Relatives say Karim, his wife and two children were at the cafe to celebrate the 13th birthday of their daughter.
Law enforcers said both the men were being investigated for suspicious activity during the siege. They said Tahmid Hasib Khan was seen holding a firearm and Hasnat Karim strolling with the attackers on the roof of the restaurant.
Hasnat Karim was a lecturer at the North-South University in Dhaka, where two of the five attackers who were gunned down at the end of the siege had studied.
Thamid Khan, who is also a Bangladeshi citizen, was back in his homeland while on leave from the Canadian university.
Police earlier this week named a Canadian citizen, Tamim Chowdhury, as the attack’s mastermind, offering a reward of up to $25,000 for information leading to his arrest.
The siege was by far the deadliest in a string of attacks claimed by Islamist groups which have blighted Bangladesh over the last three years.

NTV Online