Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
National

Toronto University Student Linked To Dhaka Cafe Attack Sent To Jail

The Canadian Press, 20 Aug, 2016 03:05 PM
    A Toronto university student arrested on suspicion of having links with the Dhaka cafe attackers was sent to jail after completion of his 14-day remand, police said.
     
    On Saturday, police finished a second round of interrogation of Tahmid Hasib for six days. Tahmid was produced in court where Dhaka Metropolitan Magistrate Delwar Hossain ordered him sent to jail.
     
    Tahmid's lawyer applied for his bail which the court rejected.
     
    Police did not ask for further remand.
     
    Police have claimed that former North South University teacher Hasnat Reza Karim and Tahmid “instigated” the Gulshan café attackers.
     
    Tahmid went to the restaurant with two female students of a private university.
     
    The terror attackers killed 20 hostages -- nine Italian, seven Japanese, two Bangladeshis, one Indian and one Bangladesh-born US citizen -- and two police officers on July 1.
     
    Hasnat Reza Karim was arrested along with Tahmid on August 3 night.
     
     
    Both were taken for eight days interrogation on August 4.
     
    In a related development, several law enforcement and intelligence agencies are on high alert in Sylhet to arrest most wanted militant leader Tamim Ahmed Chowdhury, who allegedly masterminded the Gulshan and Sholakia terror attacks last month.
     
    His village home at Borogram of Bianibazar in the district was visited by several agencies but they have learnt that Tamim, on who the police has declared a Taka 20 lakh bounty, has not visited the place recently. His parents live in Canada.
     
    According to investigators, Tamim came to Bangladesh from Canada in 2013, taking special assignment to reorganise the disjointed militants. He then formed a wing of banned militant outfit Jama'atul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB), according to Dhaka Tribune.
     
    Tamim's grandfather Abdul Majid was a member of Peace Committee during the 1971 Liberation War. His father moved to Canada after the independence.
     
    The village is within 300 metres of the Indian border.
     
     
    Local Awami League leader Zakaria Ahmed demanded immediate arrest of Tamim. “We condemn his activities,” he said, adding that Tamim's uncle Nurul Emran is a joint secretary of the ward Awami League unit.
     
    Tamim last visited the village in 1995. When his family came to Bangladesh again in 20

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Small-town N.S. Doctor Loses Licence After Underreporting His Qualifications

    Small-town N.S. Doctor Loses Licence After Underreporting His Qualifications
    HALIFAX — A much-needed doctor recruited from overseas to serve a small Nova Scotia town has had his medical licence revoked because he under-reported his qualifications.

    Small-town N.S. Doctor Loses Licence After Underreporting His Qualifications

    Clement Seeks To Make Jump From Being Virtual Tory Leader To Real One

    Clement Seeks To Make Jump From Being Virtual Tory Leader To Real One
    OTTAWA — Former Conservative cabinet minister Tony Clement declared Tuesday that he's running for the leadership of his party — but it's not the first time he has pursued the job.

    Clement Seeks To Make Jump From Being Virtual Tory Leader To Real One

    Alberta To End Craft Brewery Tax Discount, Will Replace With Grant Program

    Alberta To End Craft Brewery Tax Discount, Will Replace With Grant Program
    CALGARY — The Alberta government says it is dropping a beer markup that favoured western small breweries and will replace it with a grant program.

    Alberta To End Craft Brewery Tax Discount, Will Replace With Grant Program

    Abbotsford Senior Robbed And Beaten, Suspect Arrested

    On Tuesday, July 12, 2016, at 1:50 pm, a male suspect followed an 86-year-old man into his apartment building in the 2800 block of Clearbrook Road. 

    Abbotsford Senior Robbed And Beaten, Suspect Arrested

    Spread Of Terrorism In Africa On Canada's Peacekeeping Radar, Says Harjit Sajjan

    Spread Of Terrorism In Africa On Canada's Peacekeeping Radar, Says Harjit Sajjan
    Sources say a mission to Mali, where more than a dozen peacekeepers have been killed this year, is very much on the government's radar.

    Spread Of Terrorism In Africa On Canada's Peacekeeping Radar, Says Harjit Sajjan

    External Reviewer To Look At Toronto Star's Newsroom Culture After Raveena Aulakh Suicide

    The newspaper had earlier rejected a union call for an outside probe of the circumstances around the suicide of Raveena Aulakh, saying it would have been too bureaucratic.

    External Reviewer To Look At Toronto Star's Newsroom Culture After Raveena Aulakh Suicide