Bangladesh has been wracked by violent protests (file)
Bangladesh has been wracked by violent protests (file)Reuters

Bangladesh police said Monday they have arrested four suspected members of the Islamic State (ISIS) jihadist group including a "local coordinator" who was planning to establish a self-declared "caliphate" in the country.

The suspected coordinator Mohammad Sakhawatul Kabir and three others were detained in the capital following raids on Sunday, Dhaka Metropolitan Police said in a statement.

During interviews, Kabir admitted the four were planning to collect funds and weapons from sympathizers, and the aim "was to attack important offices of the government and establish a caliphate" or Islamic government in Bangladesh, police said.

"Kabir has been working as the Bangladesh representative and coordinator of the ISIS," it said, adding that he was trained in Pakistan.

Police did not say whether the four had traveled to or fought in Syria or Iraq where ISIS has captured territory.

It was also unclear whether the four, as well as others in South Asia organizing under the ISIS name, were acting on their own or with support from the extremist group in the Middle East.  

The arrests came as Bangladesh has been hit by weeks of violent anti-government protests organised by the country's main opposition parties that include several Islamist outfits.  

At least 27 people have been killed in the latest unrest that began after opposition leader Khaleda Zia was confined in her office by police in Dhaka on January 3. She was allowed to leave Monday.

AFP contributed to this report.