Off the wire
Commentary: Deepening cooperation with China conducive to Vietnamese development vision  • IS releases 270 out of 400 kidnapped in Syria's Deir al-Zour  • 3rd LD Writethru: 19 killed, over 50 injured in university attack in Pakistan  • China Exclusive: End to late marriage holidays upsets young couples  • Roundup: Hong Kong stocks close 3.82 pct lower  • NW China province provides TCM assistance to Moldova  • A.S Roma terminates contract with Ashley Cole  • Federer, other seeds restore order on Day 3 of Australian Open  • Winter Olympic co-host city vows to improve air quality  • January exports expected to drop: MOC  
You are here:   Home

27 male Bangladeshi nationals arrested in Singapore for terror links

Xinhua, January 20, 2016 Adjust font size:

Singapore's Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) on Wednesday said the Internal Security Department has arrested 27 male Bangladeshi nationals who were planning to take part in extremist activities in other countries, including their homeland.

The authority said the 27 male Bangladeshis, all working in the construction industry in Singapore, were arrested under the Internal Security Act (ISA) between Nov. 16 and Dec. 1 last year.

MHA stated that the Work Passes of the Bangladeshi nationals have been cancelled and 26 of them have been repatriated to Bangladesh. The remaining Bangladeshi is currently serving a jail sentence for attempting to leave Singapore illegally after learning about the arrests of his fellow group members. He will be repatriated to Bangladesh upon completion of his sentence.

Twenty-six of the arrested were members of a closed religious study group that subscribed to extremist beliefs and teachings of radical ideologues like Anwar al-Awlaki. They supported the armed jihad ideology of terrorist groups like Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.

The remaining Bangladeshi was not a member of the group, but was found to be in the process of becoming radicalized and was supportive of extremist preachers. He also possessed jihadi-related material, added MHA.

The group members took measures to avoid detection by the authorities. They shared jihadi-related material discreetly among themselves, and held weekly meetings and gatherings where they discussed armed jihad and conflicts that involved Muslims. They also carefully targeted the recruitment of other Bangladeshi nationals to grow their membership.

A significant amount of radical and jihadi-related material like books and videos, including footages of children undergoing training in what appeared to be terrorist military camps, were recovered from the possession of the group, MHA said. Several members also had a shared document containing graphic images and instruction details on how to conduct "silent killings" using different methods and weapons.

The Singapore government takes a very serious view of any form of support for terrorism and will take firm and decisive action against any person who engages in any activity in support of terrorism, said the MHA. Endit