Avijit's widow defiant after bloody attack

Blood-soaked Rafida seeks help after killers left Avijit Roy hacked down in a pool of blood on the footpath on the Dhaka University campus on 26 February. Photo: Banglar Chokh
Blood-soaked Rafida seeks help after killers left Avijit Roy hacked down in a pool of blood on the footpath on the Dhaka University campus on 26 February. Photo: Banglar Chokh

The widow of blogger Avijit Roy, who was hacked to death in Dhaka last month, says she will continue to speak out on the causes of secularism and science, reports BBC.

Rafida Bonya Ahmed was also badly injured when her US immigrant husband Avijit was killed after leaving a book fair in Dhaka. Speaking to the BBC from a safe location, she said fundamentalism had "taken deep roots" in Bangladesh.

She said she was recovering slowly and had few memories of the attack.

Avijit's family said he had received threats after publishing articles promoting secular views, science and social issues on his Bengali-language blog, Mukto-mona (Free Mind).

He had defended atheism in a Facebook post, calling it a "rational concept to oppose any unscientific and irrational belief".

Police say they suspect he was killed by religious extremists, said BBC.

A group of men wielding meat cleavers ambushed the couple after they left Dhaka University on 26 February.

"Somehow, my memory is completely blocked about the incident itself," Rafida told BBC's Newshour.

"We were supposed to be going back home to have dinner with the family. I think I was holding his hand and we were just talking. I do not remember anything from that point until I was in some sort of vehicle and someone was carrying me. I remember I was soaked in blood."

Rafida said she realised they had been attacked when she was in hospital and she noticed stab wounds to her head. She also had serious wounds to her hands and had lost a thumb.

"Avijit was still alive, lying on a stretcher beside me. Doctors were going back and forth and I was telling them 'please take care of him first, because my condition is better'. Avijit was just making a sound, but he was not conscious," she said to BBC.

She described her husband as "an intellectually fulfilled atheist, who dedicated his life to promoting science and secularism".

"I will go back to being vocal and expressing what we believe in. The cause that Avijit died for, I will not be quiet," she said.

The couple lived in the US and were visiting Dhaka only to attend the book festival.

After the attack, students, teachers and bloggers gathered at Dhaka University to protest against the killing.

Police told the BBC at the time that they were investigating a local hard-line religious group that had praised the killing in an online message.