ISIS says it killed Italian on streets of Bangladesh capital
Story highlights
- Italian Embassy says the ISIS claim "is yet to be verified"
- Cesare Tavella, 51, was an Italian aid worker living in the Bangladeshi capital of Dhaka
- "This is just the beginning," ISIS warns on Twitter
(CNN)ISIS
has claimed responsibility for gunning down an Italian citizen on the
streets of Bangladesh -- and threatens more attacks to come.
Cesare
Tavella, 51, was jogging home Monday evening in the capital of Dhaka
after swimming at the American International School's pool.
As
Tavella was jogging through Gulshan, the diplomatic zone of Dhaka, two
gunmen fired three shots, Dhaka police Deputy Commissioner Munatshirul
Islam said.
The assailants fled on a waiting motorbike. Nothing was taken from Tavella, and police said the attack was definitely planned.
ISIS issued a statement saying an ISIS sniper shot and killed Tavella.
The
statement said "the soldiers of the Caliphate in Bangladesh" targeted
an Italian national, according to Flashpoint Partners, a group that
tracks jihadist activity.
It said that ISIS operatives shot and killed Tavella using silencer-mounted guns "after pursuing him in one of Dhaka's streets."
The terror group issued an ominous warning on Twitter:
"We say to all citizens of the Crusader coalition, you will not be safe in the Muslim lands, and this is just the beginning."
The Italian Embassy in Dhaka, however, suggested that it's too early to say ISIS was behind Tavella's killing.
"It's
still not clear the motive behind the murder -- crime or terrorist
act," the embassy said. "... The responsibility for the murder claimed
by ISIS is yet to be verified."
Aid worker fought against hunger
Tavella came to Bangladesh in May, working for an interchurch organization called ICCO, Islam said. He was a manager for a project called "Profitable Opportunities for Food Security."
"Cesare
was a hard-working professional, committed to help the people of
Bangladesh," ICCO said in a statement. "He was respected and loved by
all his team members in the country office and field offices around the
country."
The Italian Embassy urged its
nationals in Bangladesh to avoid certain types of places "as a
precautionary measure" in the wake of Tavella's killing.
"The
Italian Embassy calls upon all the fellow countrymen to avoid places
(hotels, restaurants, clubs, international schools) and events which are
normally frequented or attended by foreigners."
Fundamentalists have killed several bloggers in Bangladesh
using machetes, knives and meat cleavers. But this is the first
reported attack by ISIS in Bangladesh, which is a majority Islamic
country.
"Although
the killing of Cesare might have been an attack of opportunity,"
Flashpoint said, "the incident raises worries that the group is now
attempting to operate and expand in southeast Asia."
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