Hefazat-e-Islam Bangladesh (Bengali: হেফাজতে ইসলাম বাংলাদেশ;) or Hifazat-e-Islam Bangladesh is an Islamist pressure group of madrassah teachers and students.In 2013, it submitted to the government of Bangladesh a 13-point charter, which included the demand for the enactment of a blasphemy law.
Allegations of links with Jamaat e IslamiEdit
The Awami League government alleges that Hefazat is front for Jamaat e Islami and seeks to derail the International tribunals for the war crimes committed in 1971,[62] by Hefazat denies any role with Jamaat e Islami,[2] and alleges that this is a libel to subjuguate Islamists in public life.[16] Analysts also say that any realtionship claim is baffling as Ahmad Shafi belongs to a band of Islamists that unlike Jamaat, did not oppose the independence of Bangladesh, and supported a united India and rejected the creation of Pakistan in 1947.[9] The German ambassador in Bangladesh Albrecht Conze opined that Hifazat demands fundamentalism in Bangladesh.However, in 2014, diplomats from the US Embassy in Bangladesh met with the leaders of Hefazat and discussed their demands.
The title of this release is in reference to Qur’anic verse 9:36. Here it is in full: “Indeed, the number of months with God is twelve [lunar] months in the register of God [from] the day He created the heavens and the earth; of these, four are sacred. That is the correct religion, so do not wrong yourselves during them. And fight against the disbelievers collectively as they fight against you collectively. And know that God is with the righteous [who fear Him].”
The main point to be noted here is believers are those who fear him..thus it is explicitly demanding political allegiance by coercion of threat..was mohammad a prophet or a politician well versed in realism
The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant – Khorasan Province (ISIL-K,[7] Wilayah Khorasan) is a branch of the militant Islamist group Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), active in Afghanistan and Pakistan.
ISIL announced the group's formation in January 2015 and appointed former Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan militant Hafiz Saeed Khan as its leader, with former Afghan Taliban commander Abdul Rauf Aliza appointed as deputy leader. Aliza was killed in a U.S. drone strike in February 2015,[8] while Khan was killed in a U.S. airstrike in July 2016.[9] Its current leader is unknown.
The Khorasan group's area of operations also includes other parts of South Asia.[10][11][1
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