Italian priest wounded in latest attack on foreigner in Bangladesh
Unidentified gunmen shot and wounded an Italian priest on Wednesday in northern Bangladesh, the latest in a spate of attacks on foreigners that have been blamed on hardline Islamists, police said.
The priest, identified only as “Piero”, was riding his bicycle in the northern city of Dinajpur when gunmen on a motorbike shot him several times at close range before fleeing, a police inspector said.
“Riding a motorcycle, unidentified attackers shot an Italian near the Dinajpur bus station in the morning,” inspector Robiul Alam told AFP by phone, adding that he was “seriously injured”.
Aged in his 60s, the priest had been working as a doctor at a Catholic mission in Dinajpur for some time, according to another priest, Anthony Sen, who lives in the same city.
Sen said the priest was “riding a bicycle at around 8am (0200 GMT) when three attackers shot him at close range”.
“One of the bullets hit his neck. He bled a lot,” Sen said. Alam also confirmed the man attacked is a priest working in Dinajpur, located 350 kilometres (217 miles) north of the capital Dhaka, close to the border with India.
The attack comes after an Italian aid worker was shot dead in September and a Japanese farmer killed days later in Dhaka, attacks claimed by the Islamic State group.
The Bangladesh government denied IS was behind the attacks, saying there is “no presence of (IS) militancy” in the Muslim-majority nation.