Published : 14 Dec 2017, 10:20 AM
Haider's family had been worried when his son-in-law, Akayed Ullah, 27, missed a regular call to his wife on Monday. Their worry only worsened when his wife screamed as she found online pictures of Ullah, down on the ground with apparent injuries to his stomach after the bomb ignited but failed to detonate.
"Even in our worst nightmares, we could not have foreseen this," Haider, 62, told Reuters on Wednesday evening, following two days of questioning by Bangladesh's counterterrorism police.
The entrance of the apartment building in Dhaka's Zigatala, where Akayed's wife and in-laws live, Dec 12, 2017. Reuters
"There was never any indication he would do this. I think it's a conspiracy. A person who keeps roza (religious fasting in Islam), reads the Koran and goes to mosque five times a day can't do such a heinous act," Haider said.
This courtroom sketch shows Akayed Ullah appearing by video for a hearing from his bed in Bellevue Hospital in New York, NY, US, Dec 13, 2017. Reuters
"We were very excited. I hoped my daughter would go to the United States, and my son-in-law would then help get my son over there," Haider said, meeting Reuters after evening prayers in the mosque by his house in a middle-class neighbourhood in central Dhaka. "What else do parents want?"
'Only God knows'
The white-bearded Haider said he could not understand how Ullah, who had lived in the United States since 2011, could have committed the attack.
"Only God knows what happened to him in America," Haider said.
US President Donald Trump reiterated his call for tougher immigration rules following Monday's attack, which came less than two months after an Uzbek immigrant killed eight people by speeding a rental truck down a New York City bike path.
A member of the New York Police Department's Bomb Squad walks through the 42nd Street subway station beneath the New York Port Authority Bus Terminal following an attempted detonation during the morning rush hour, in New York City, New York, US, Dec 11, 2017. Reuters
Haider said he feared Monday's incident could lead to a backlash against Bangladeshis living in the United States.
Jui finished her bachelor of arts degree in accounting from a Dhaka college in March. When Ullah last came visiting in September after their son was born, they planned to get a passport for her to possibly join him in the United States sometime in 2018.
"He spent most of the time with his 6-month-old son when he came down," said Haider. "He is not much of a social person. He does not really have friends, not into gossiping. He has never brought any friend to our house."
Akayed Ullah is seen this New York City Taxi and Limousine Commission handout photo. Reuters
Bangladesh police, meanwhile, have questioned Haider as well as his wife, daughter and his 22-year-old son. Their phone call records have been scanned.
Bangladesh's counterterrorism chief, Monirul Islam, told Reuters they have found no links of Ullah with any militant group in his home country. But the chief added that investigations were continuing and the family was under surveillance.
"I no longer want my daughter to go to America," Haider said. "I just want our son-in-law back."
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