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News > World

The LGBT Killing Fields in Bangladesh

  • Weeks after Bangladesh's top gay rights activist was murdered by Muslim militants, the LGBT community is going into hiding, fearful of being the next target.

    Weeks after Bangladesh's top gay rights activist was murdered by Muslim militants, the LGBT community is going into hiding, fearful of being the next target. | Photo: Reuters

Published 18 May 2016
Opinion

"Say your prayers, confess to God for your sins. Eat or drink whatever you wish to, nobody can save you," read a letter to one gay rights activists.

Weeks after suspected extremists hacked Bangladesh's most prominent gay rights activist to death in his apartment along with an associate, another friend received a chilling message that he was next in line.

"Say your prayers, confess to God for your sins. Eat or drink whatever you wish to, nobody can save you," read the handwritten letter, delivered to his home in Dhaka.

Bangladesh's lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community was already marginalized in a country where same-sex sexual activity is illegal and many people strongly disapprove.

Now it has been pushed further into the shadows after Xulhaz Mannan, editor of the country's first LGBT-themed magazine, and Mahbub Rabbi Tonoy were murdered in the capital on April 25.

The attack, claimed by the regional arm of al-Qaida, was the first of its kind to target the community, although it followed similar killings in the last 16 months of university professors, bloggers and atheists who published views critical of Islam.

Eight members of Bangladesh's LGBT community, including activists spoke to Reuters. But most did son on condition they not be named, exposing the fear and sometimes the terror they live in their country.

Several had gone into hiding in safe houses in Dhaka arranged by local and foreign friends, while others fled to the countryside, considering it safer than the teeming capital.

"There is this constant, creepy feeling of being followed by someone, even if in reality we are not," said a young gay professional, who froze in fear last week when he mistakenly thought a man carrying a bag was approaching him with a machete.
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