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Firefighters attempt to extinguish a fire on a passenger train in Dhaka, Bangladesh on Friday. Photo: Reuters

Bangladesh police arrest opposition members over train fire that killed 4

  • Friday night’s blaze engulfed the intercity Benapole Express in central Dhaka, with hundreds scrambling to pull passengers from burning carriages
  • Police arrested Nabiullah Nabi, a senior Bangladesh Nationalist Party official, and six other party activists, saying that Nabi ‘funded and masterminded the attack’
Bangladesh

Bangladesh police on Saturday arrested seven opposition party members blamed for an alleged pre-election arson attack on a packed commuter train that killed four people and injured another eight.

Friday night’s blaze engulfed the intercity Benapole Express in central Dhaka, with hundreds scrambling to pull passengers from burning carriages.

It was the latest in a series of fires to hit railway services since late last year, blamed by police on “deadly acts of sabotage” by the opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) ahead of Sunday’s national election.

At least four coaches caught fire on the Benapole Express, which was arriving in Dhaka from Jessore, Bangladesh on Friday. Photo: Reuters

Police said Nabiullah Nabi, a senior BNP official in Dhaka, and six other party activists were arrested in the capital early on Saturday.

“Nabi funded and masterminded the attack,” Dhaka Metropolitan Police spokesman Faruk Hossain told Agence France-Presse by phone.

The BNP and dozens of other opposition parties are boycotting Sunday’s vote, which they say is a “sham” designed to entrench the rule of long-time Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina.

The party has vehemently rejected allegations of responsibility for the fires and demanded an international probe into the incidents.

“These are pre-planned acts of sabotage by government functionaries aimed at discrediting the non-violent movement of the BNP,” party spokesman A.K.M Wahiduzzaman said.

“Tarique Rahman, our party chief, had expressed his fear that [the] government was hatching these conspiracies to divert people’s attention away from the sham election.”

Police had earlier lowered the fire’s death toll from five to four.

Samanta Lal Sen, a senior official of the Dhaka hospital treating victims of the blaze, said eight people had been critically injured.

Bangladesh foreign minister A.K. Abdul Momen described the latest train fire as “an unforgivable crime against humanity”.

“The timing of this tragedy … shows an absolute intention to hinder the festivity, safety and security of the democratic processes,” he said.

An unidentified relative of the victims mourns at the scene where a passenger train caught fire, ahead of the general election, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, on Friday. Photo: Reuters

Hasina, 76, is assured of a fifth consecutive term in Sunday’s vote, which observers have criticised as one-sided.

Opposition parties held a series of protests last year demanding Hasina’s resignation in favour of a neutral caretaker government to oversee the election and ensure its integrity.

Violence in the run-up to Sunday’s vote has killed at least 15 people.

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