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Bangladesh
Islamic schools under spotlight

There are estimated
to be around 54,000 madrassas in Bangladesh with only 12,000
given recognition by the government.
DHAKA - Hirona Begum was hopeful when builders
began constructing a new Islamic religious school next to
her home in southern Bangladesh that her children would
be able to attend classes there. But the 28-year-old mother
of three, who lives on the remote island of Bhola, was told
by the school's owners, a British-based charity called Green
Crescent, that the facility was not for local children.
"People from out of town were bussed in and bussed
out. There was water around the building with a drawbridge
they lifted up every night. Even if we became curious, we
could never get close," she told AFP by telephone.
Last week police raided the school and seized
a cache of weapons and explosive devices, as well as jihadi
literature urging Muslims to take up arms, putting the spotlight
on madrassas in Muslim-majority Bangladesh. The schools
have long been viewed by authorities as potential breeding
grounds for Islamist terrorists and the Bhola raid has renewed
fears that some seminaries are teaching radicalism.
Author Abul Barakat, who has studied religious
seminaries and how they are funded in Bangladesh, said attempts
in recent years to keep a close eye on the schools had largely
been ineffective. There are estimated to be around 54,000
madrassas in Bangladesh with only 12,000 given recognition
and funding by the government.
The others are mainly privately funded with
many getting money from overseas, and their numbers are
thought to be on the increase. "These (unofficial)
madrassas offer free education, meals and accommodation
to over 10 million students," Barakat said. "They
collect funds from wealthy donors at home, in the Middle
East and expatriates in England and America. But some charities
use part of their funding to train and recruit militants.
"The government has no idea what is being taught at
some of these seminaries."
Although the situation is a far cry from Pakistan,
where madrassas are accused of being at the heart of the
country's chronic instability, Barakat said Bangladeshi
authorities needed to act quickly to prevent future problems.
Police say the school in Bhola was a cover
for a bomb-making factory and militants were planning some
type of unspecified attack. They have arrested four people
and are now investigating other charities in the country.
Britain, where the Green Crescent charity
is registered in the northern town of Stockport, is home
to a large Bangladeshi community and parents often send
their children to the South Asian nation for madrassa education.
A.N.M. Muniruzzaman, president of the Bangladesh Institute
of Peace and Security Studies, told AFP both countries needed
to take a close look at who was travelling between the two
nations and why. "It's something authorities need to
watch very closely," he said.
British Home Secretary Jacqui Smith said last
year on a visit to Dhaka that there were "linkages
between terrorism in Britain and Bangladesh."
Bangladesh has been the target of Islamic terror groups
in recent years -- including 400 blasts on just one day
in August 2005 by the banned Jamayetul Mujahedeen Bangladesh
(JMB).
The JMB was virtually silent under the army-backed
government, which ruled for two years until January 2009,
but authorities say the group is re-forming. For villagers
such as Hirona Begum, the recent police raid is a shock
and has raised suspicions about what goes on behind the
madrassas' closed doors. "If they can plot a big attack
right next to our house, who knows what else is going on
around the country," she said.
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