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Bangladesh regulates Friday sermons in mosques across the country after attacks

State-run Islamic Foundation, which works as a watchdog for mosques and religious establishments, has prepared a sermon for the main national mosque which it has asked other mosques to follow

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Security officials stand guard in front of the entrance of the National mosque and check people through archway metal detector during the Friday prayer in Dhaka 15 July 2016. Photo: EPA
Agence France-Presse

Bangladesh on Friday moved to regulate weekly sermons in hundreds of thousands of mosques as part of a stepped-up campaign to combat Islamist extremism, officials said.

The move comes after the deadly attack in an upscale Dhaka cafe in which 20 hostages were brutally shot and hacked to death in the nation’s worst attack by suspected Islamist militants.

Since then, authorities have shut down a television channel run by a controversial Indian preacher, and decided to monitor the social media and Friday sermons of local mosques in a bid to prevent radicalisation.

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As part of the drive, the state-run Islamic Foundation, which works as a watchdog for mosques and religious establishments, has prepared a sermon for the main national mosque which it has asked other mosques to follow.

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The sermon, which was published by the agency ahead of Friday’s prayers, invokes Koranic verses and traditions of the prophet Mohammed to rail against murderous extremism.

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