DHAKA: Bangladesh Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) personnel and bomb experts stand near the body of a man beside a RAB checkpoint in Khilgaon. — AP

DHAKA: Bangladesh police shot dead a suspected militant in the capital Dhaka yesterday, a day after a suicide bomber blew himself up at a security forces camp. The man was killed as he tried to cross a security roadblock on a motorbike carrying a bag with improvised explosive devices, according to Mufti Mahmud Khan, spokesman for the Rapid Action Battalion (RAB).

"As he was carrying explosives we primarily suspect him of being a militant," Khan told AFP, adding further investigation was needed to ascertain his identity. A bomb disposal unit was rushed to the spot where it recovered the biker's bag containing multiple small improvised bombs, which were later diffused, Khan said. According to local RAB commander Tuhin Mohammad Masud, the suspected attacker was in his early twenties.

The latest incident comes a day after a man blew himself up at a RAB camp near Dhaka's international airport, wounding two policemen, in an apparent botched suicide attack. Dhaka beefed up security at all airports after Friday's attack, one of the first in recent years against the elite RAB force which is tasked with tackling militancy. Bangladesh has seen a spate of deadly attacks recently on foreigners, writers and activists.

The country's security forces launched a nationwide crackdown on Islamist extremists following a siege at a cafe in Dhaka last year, arresting scores of suspects. The Islamic State group claimed responsibility for that attack, in which 22 people including 18 foreign hostages were killed. The government has denied the presence of IS in the country and blames local extremists.

IS claims attack

The Islamic State group claimed yesterday a suicide bomb attack a day earlier on a camp for Bangladesh's elite security forces. "A caliphate soldier in Bangladesh carried out a martyrdom operation with an explosive belt in a camp for special forces in Dhaka," the group announced in its daily Al-Bayan radio bulletin.

Two people were wounded in the apparently botched attack, one of the first in recent years against the elite Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) force which is tasked with tackling militancy. The incident came a day after a series of raids on suspected militant hideouts in the troubled country. Bangladesh has seen a spate of deadly attacks recently on foreigners, writers and activists.

The country's security forces launched a nationwide crackdown on Islamist extremists following a siege at a cafe in Dhaka last year, arresting scores of suspects. The Islamic State group also claimed responsibility for that attack, in which 22 people, including 18 foreign hostages, were killed. The government has denied the presence of IS in the country and blames local extremists. - AFP