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Blasts kill four as Bangladesh commandos storm Islamist hideout

Two explosions ripped through a crowd Saturday, killing four people and injuring more than 40 in Bangladesh's northeastern city of Sylhet as army commandos stormed an Islamist extremist hideout, police said. The "powerful" blasts went off some 400 yards (metres) from the hideout, targeting police and hundreds of onlookers who were witnessing the commandos conducting an anti-militant operation at a five-storey apartment building, police said. Sylhet police spokesman Zedan Al Musa told AFP that "at least four people including a policeman were killed" in the attack, which was claimed by the Islamic State (IS) jihadist group via its propaganda agency Amaq. He added that 42 people including about a dozen police and security officers were injured in the attack. "Conditions of several people are critical," Atiqul Islam, an emergency doctor at Sylhet Medical College Hospital told AFP. Musa said police primarily suspect a new faction of the homegrown extremist group, Jamayetul ul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB), which has been blamed for a wave of attacks in recent years, for the the blasts. Police could not confirm whether whether it was a suicide blast. "It occurred in the dark when there was no electricity," Musa said. IS claimed via Amaq that there were "dozens killed and wounded among Bangladeshi forces as a result of the detonation of an explosive device", according to US-based monitoring agency SITE Intelligence Group. The blasts occurred hours after the commandos rescued "78 civilian hostages" from the hideout where several Islamist militants were holed up in a ground-floor apartment. "So far what we've done, our main task was to rescue the hostages, which we have done successfully. We were able to rescue all 78 people safely," army spokesman Brigadier General Fakhrul Ahsan told reporters. He said the extremists were still inside the apartment building where they "set up barricades" by "laying IEDs" in many rooms and stairs. "As a result the whole operation is being conducted carefully," he said. - 30-hour standoff - The commandos backed by armoured personnel carriers launched the operation after a more than 30-hour standoff that began early Friday morning when police sealed off the building as militants detonated small bombs. The spokesman could not say how many extremists were in the building, but police said there were at least two including a woman. "They are Islamist extremists," police spokesman Musa said, adding they shouted "Allahu Akbar" (God is the greatest). Police used loudspeakers to ask the extremists to surrender, but they refused to give up, Musa said. The raid came after a series of suicide attacks on security camps by Islamist extremists this month including one at a police checkpoint near the country's main international airport on Friday night. Two of the three attacks, including Friday's blast in which the suicide attacker was killed, were claimed by the Islamic State group. This month a police elite unit also stormed a building outside the port city of Chittagong, killing four members of the homegrown extremist group Jamayetul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB) including one woman. IS has claimed responsibility for a wave of killings since 2015 including for a major attack on a Dhaka cafe last year in which 22 people, including 18 foreign hostages, were killed. The Bangladeshi government denies IS has any presence in the country, arguing instead that a new faction of JMB was behind that and other attacks.