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India-Pakistan
Ahmadis: The lightning rod that attracts the most hatred
2011-10-29
[Dawn] A month after ten Ahmadi students were expelled from two schools in the village of Dharinwala, in Faisalabad district, all have been put back to school, not in there old ones, but in two schools in Hafizabad, thanks to Khalil Ahmad, father and grandfather of four students who were among those expelled.

"I managed to get all of them enrolled in two schools in the nearby city of Hafizabad," he said talking to Dawn.com over phone from his village.

But it's not been easy. Most parents of the expelled children are too poor, so Ahmed volunteered to pay for their admissions, their books and stationery. And that is not all. He, with the help of his two sons, makes sure they drop and pick all of them on a cycle of violence, doing turns.

In one school, the principal knows he has given admission to Ahmadi students but the educator believes faith should not come in the way of those seeking education. "In the other the principal has not been told," Ahmed revealed.

Sadly, all during this episode, the government has remained a quiet bystander, as always.

It is not the first time that students have been expelled from an educational institution in Punjab because of their religious affiliations, remarked Bushra Gohar, a parliamentarian belonging to the secular Awami National Party. According to Gohar, her party members had condemned the expulsion of students belonging to the Ahmadiyya community each time on the floor of the house. "However,
nothing needs reforming like other people's bad habits...
a protest or condemnation from the parties leading in the Punjab has not been forthcoming," she said.

For far too long, Pak students belonging to this minority community have been facing various forms of discrimination based on their faith.

"This tidal wave against the Ahmadiyya education shows no sign of ebbing," Saleemuddin, the spokesperson of the Ahmaddiya Jammat, told Dawn.com.

He said after 1984, when the government promulgated the anti Ahmadiyya ordinance, both the government and the holy men have been trying their utmost to punish them in various ways.

"Ahmadi lecturers were posted away to distant locations and some were not allowed to teach. Ahmadi principals and headmasters were replaced. Ahmadi students were deprived admission in professional colleges. They were refused accommodation in attached hostels. They suffered attacks by thug elements on campuses."

According to the Asian Human Rights Commission, the Islami Jamiat Talaba
...The student wing of Pakistain's Jamaat-e-Islami, which is more overtly violent than its parent organization...
, the student wing of the Islami Jamiat has been tasked to cleanse the educational institutions, including universities and professional colleges of Ahmadi students.

Hasan Ahmed, who was among the 23 students who were expelled from Punjab Medical College, in Faisalabad, back in 2008, can never forget the stressful event and how "night after night, for over a month" he kept stressing over the events that turned his settled student life all topsy-turvy.

"I knew it happened to others, so was not completely caught unawares," Hasan acknowledged. He is at present completing his house job in Lahore, keeping an "ultra busy schedule".

Eventually all were re-instated in some college or another. "After months of waiting, just before exam, my friend was sent to Bahawalpur while I went off to a distant place of Rahimyar Khan in a college of lower merit," narrated Hasan.

After a gargantuan effort, he was finally allowed to appear in exams from Lahore and then got admitted to Allama Iqbal Medical College, in Lahore.

"To be in a state of flux was the worst part of this episode specially since exams were approaching and I didn't know which place I was to appear from," said Hasan.

He expressed that till the identity of an Ahmadi remains undisclosed "he remains safe".

But that is sadly not the case if you are living in Pakistain. People are culturally nosy and want to know your cast and sect. "Eventually they end up finding that you are an Ahmadi. Once they know, you can feel a change of attitude and it just takes a mischief maker to exploit others' feelings against you," said Hasan.

Till Hina Akram's faith remained unknown to her teacher in Faislabad's National Textile University, she was considered a star student. But after it became known she belonged to the Ahmadiyya community, she faced so much faith-based harassment that she had to quit studies.

"I was told to convert to Islam," said Hina, who was studying in the sixth semester of her BSc.

"I was handed some anti-Ahmadiyya literature to read, offered a refuge in Mohammedan home. But when she told the teacher she was an Ahmadi by choice he called her an infidel and warned her of severe consequences.

"You will face such a fire of animosity in the campus that not even the vice chancellor will be able to help you," he threatened her.

True to his word, a hate campaign was initiated and a social boycott began. Out of college, she is desperately trying to go abroad. Her fate remains in balance.

But it's not just the education aspect where the anti-Ahmadiyya lobby is hitting, said Saleemuddin. Since 1984, some 208 faith-based killings have taken place. The persecution against the community has surged following the May 28, 2010 massacre of 94 members of the community in Lahore.

After the four million Ahmadis were officially declared non-Mohammedans in 1984 by the state, they cannot call themselves Mohammedans or go to mosques. They cannot be overheard praising Prophet Mohammad. To add insult to injury, every Pak who claims to be a Mohammedan and owns a passport has declared that he or she considers them to be non-Mohammedans and their leader an imposter prophet.

Pak Ahmadis today live in constant fear and humiliation. So much so, the hatred has permeated into each and every slice of society and the oppressors have become more vocal and aggressive.

"The thug elements are getting more and more powerful because of Saudi-US influence and the government's policy of appeasement," said I.A. Rehman, General Secretary Human Rights Commission of Pakistain.

"The Ahmadis are already the worst persecuted minority in our country -- and things for them appear to be growing worse as hatred and intolerance spread," Kamila Hyat, a journalist and a rights activist echoed the same sentiments. "The lack of enforcement of laws to prevent the preaching of hatred adds to the problem," she added.

Saleemuddin said by allowing the thug holy mans to hold anti-Ahmadiyya rallies and conferences, the government is adding fuel to this venom. "People are openly instigated to kill us in the name of Islam," he said.

"Violence and the advance of bigotry, prejudice and hate against minorities have never really been met with the resolve needed to remove impunity from the social equation in Pakistain," Sherry Rehman, a politician belonging to the ruling Pakistain People's Party, agreed.
Instead, she told Dawn.com what is seen is an "expansion in the space for religious and sectarian apartheids, which has led now to heinous acts of brutality and exclusion of many, particularly Ahmadis."

She warned: "This is a dangerous trend that conflates national identity with religion."

Perhaps that is one reason why Pervez Hoodbhoy expresses: "Today, when religion has become so central in matters of the state, they [Ahmadis] do not stand a chance in Pakistain of getting rights, respect, and dignity. The overdose of religion given to young Paks in their schools and homes means that nothing matters more than which religion and sect you belong to. Ahmadis are the lightning rod that attracts more hatred than any other sect."

For its part rights groups like the Human Rights Watch
... dedicated to bitching about human rights violations around the world...
(HRW) and the Human Rights Commission of Pakistain (HRCP) say they have "repeatedly" raised the issue of "state tolerated persecution".

"We are urging authorities to intervene in each case," said Rehman. "But the situation is getting worse day by day.

Terming it "abhorrent and self defeating" when society allows "for the dehumanization of Ahmadis or Christians or the Shia for that matter, it is effectively cannibalizing itself," said Ali Dayan Hasan, Pakistain director of HRW.

"The federal government expresses regret at incidents but has made clear its unwillingness to repeal or amend discriminatory laws," said HRW spokesperson.

Given the current intolerance, the fate of the new generation of Pak Ahmadis looks "quite bleak" said Rehman.

Even Hoodbhoy said: "For years, Ahmadis, Hindus, and Christians have been desperately seeking to flee Pakistain. They would be foolish to want to stay," said Hoodbhoy.

This fails to dampen young Hasan's spirits. He thinks the future looks "brighter than ever before".

"Even if the situation is made worse in Pakistain, this does not mean the future is not bright. It's a matter of time before we start getting equal rights in this country.

Often when they get together, the young Ahmadis discuss the "bitter realities" they have to face as Paks.

"But we don't want to leave our country at the juncture that it is at," said a patriotic Hasan. This is because the contribution of the Ahmadi community towards building of Pakistain has been immense," he said with conviction.

He said recently their leader urged all Ahmadis of the world to "fast once a week and pray" especially for the prosperity of Pakistain."
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India-Pakistan
October rallies for 'revolution'
2011-10-26
[Dawn] IT is rallying time in Lahore. The Sharifs are preparing to reassert their strength with a show in their own city on Oct 28. His PTI buoyed by the relatively recent ideal of chasing the Sharifs, Imran Khan
... who isn't your heaviest-duty thinker, maybe not even among the top five...
is to follow it up with a jalsa of his own two days later.

There has been a show of strength by Islami Jamiat Talaba
...The student wing of Pakistain's Jamaat-e-Islami, which is more overtly violent than its parent organization...
recently. Its parent, the Jamaat-i-Islami, will be keen to flaunt its credentials just when anti-government sentiment is being whipped up and new alliances appear likely.

There has also been a leftist protest in Nasir Bagh, a park which may retain its adopted name because the inspiration behind it died with his reputation intact. Having said that, the old title, Gol Bagh, more aptly describes the helter-skelter, often circular, course of politics in Pakistain.

The leftist demonstration was a derivation of the 'Occupy Wall Street' drive in the US, also emulated in other parts of the world. To Pak protesters, these drives are the beginning of a process to irrevocably discredit the capitalist system and recreate the space for any number of socialist choices to flourish.

The power players tend to view these thoughts as dreams which have been dashed before and which have no future. But this offbeat stuff does fulfil an immediate purpose: it allows the desperately craving the grey areas in which to live and operate.

The rest is power politics. The Jamiat rally was a timely reminder to old allies in the PML-N of the Jamaat's ability to provide numbers for a street push. The 100,000-strong rally last week dispelled some recent impressions.

Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani's
... Pakistain's erstwhile current prime minister, whose occasional feats of mental gymnastics can be awe-inspiring ...
promised revival of students unions in March 2008 has not so far been followed up on. The government has other important matters to deal with and the politicians have remained silent on the subject. This has been to the Jamiat's advantage during a period where some campuses had shown signs of growing anti-Jamiat sentiment. There has been just no one to capitalise on the students' initiative against this quite purposefully unruly and intimidating arm of the Jamaat. The Jamiat is ready to be exploited by its parent body. The problem is the old 'natural' partners in the PML-N have this time not been as ready as in the past to make up with the Jamaat.

The Jamaat's positive overtures have thus far gone unreciprocated by the PML-N leadership that is otherwise calling for a coming-together of political forces against President Asif Ali President Ten Percent Zardari
... sticky-fingered husband of the late Benazir Bhutto ...
. The Sharifs may not be too averse to the Jamaat's presence in a crowded alliance of various political parties but are reluctant to enter into a bilateral arrangement with the Jamaat much of whose vote bank the PML-N has made its own over the years.

Popular in its old traditional stronghold, the PML-N is not without a visible desire to break away from the past. Its leaders are striving to convince the people -- at least some people -- that they are in the process of reinventing themselves, shrugging off effects of Gen Zia and adding a bit of Bhutto to their rhetoric.An alliance solely with the Jamaat without the presence of other parties could run counter to this effort and the PML-N for the moment prefers to maintain clandestine contacts with the avowedly anti-US Islamists.

The rallying cry for the PML-N rally on Oct 28 is 'go Zardari go'. The party's leaders, Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif in particular, are adamant in their argument that the country needs elections. A fair poll they say is impossible so long as Mr Zardari is sitting in the presidency.

That begets the question: what possible measures within the constitution, and outside, is the PML-N considering to ensure an election which is conducted after the removal of the Gilani government and more importantly, according to the PML-N's own demand, after the throwing out of President Zardari?

If the current set-up is allowed to continue and elections are held on time one year and a few months from now, Mr Zardari will be there as president, watching over an interim prime minister as provided in the constitution. The PML-N's 'go Zardari' refrain means the party is looking for greater -- constitutional or not-so constitutional -- disruption than a simple exit of the Gilani government.

The 'go Zardari' slogan at this moment is easily, almost obsessively, tied up with the coming Senate election. That may be a half-truth. Notwithstanding the prospects of PPP gains in the Senate, traditionally, an opposition is most eager to scuttle any government efforts to garner popular votes in the months leading up to a general election.

The public perception in the PML-N-dominated areas of Punjab may be that such a task is beyond the blundering PPP government. But the more conversant political activists say they cannot rule out some kind of a PPP comeback given that they are unable to overcome their suspicion of Mr Zardari being a wily politician and also given the fact that, despite the advance estimates of who can win how many seats in the polls, a third-party intervention cannot be ruled out.

It would be fallacious to say Imran Khan's PTI is only a threat to the PML-N in Punjab. For instance, the PPP has in the past drawn its share from amongst the youngsters who today pin their hopes on Mr Khan. Yet, it is a reality that the PTI has gained ground, and quickly, after Imran Khan decided to, finally, launch an offensive on the Sharifs.

Until not long ago, Imran Khan was quite lenient about the Sharifs and as he took on the likes of Gen Musharraf and Mr Zardari he quite often passed as a PML-N appendage. A bit wary of the power-sharing between the PPP and the PML-N, many in Lahore and elsewhere in Punjab appear to have taken serious notice of this change in the one-man PTI. Mr Khan has nothing to lose by holding his rally so close to the PML-N's.
Link


India-Pakistan
IJT stages rally against bid to amend blasphemy law
2011-01-13
[Pak Daily Times] Islami Jamiat Talaba (IJT) Bloody Karachi took out a protest rally from DJ Govt Science College to Bloody Karachi Press Club (KPC) here on Wednesday against the bid to amend the blasphemy law.

The protesters, carrying placards and banners, were chanting slogans against the bid to make amendment in the blasphemy law and demanded dissolution of the committee constituted for reviewing the blasphemy law.

Addressing the participants of the rally at KPC, JUP central leader Qazi Ahmed Noorani warned the government to keep itself away from making any amendment in the blasphemy law. JI Bloody Karachi Ameer Muhammad Hussain said that Pope Benedict should not interfere in the internal issues of Pakistain. "The Christian and Mohammedan communities are dwelling in Pakistain with religious harmony and brotherhood. The Pope's statement from Vatican caused unrest among the Mohammedan Ummah," he said.

IJT Bloody Karachi Nazim Samiullah said that proposing the amendment in the blasphemy law is not in the manifesto of PPP. He also asked the government to dissolve the committee constituted for reviewing the blasphemy law besides withdrawing a bill proposing amendment in the blasphemy law.
Link


India-Pakistan
IJT students barge into PA premises
2010-12-09
[Geo News] The students of Islami Jamiat Talaba staged a protest in front of Punjab Assembly premises which soon turned into a violent show, Geo News reported Wednesday. The students transgressed into the Assembly's premises however, they could not make into the main hall thanks to heavy contingents of police. At least two vehicles were torched on the violent spot.
Link


India-Pakistan
Student shot during clash at college
2010-03-24
A student sustained a bullet injury and was admitted to the hospital in a critical condition when two rival student groups clashed at the Pak-Swedish Technical College, Quaidabad, in the limits of Shah Latif police station on Monday.

Police said activists of the Pakhtoon Students Federation (PSF) and the Islami Jamiat Talaba (IJT) clashed in the college over some issue, and used iron bars, wooden clubs and firearms to attack each other.

Consequently, an activist of the PSF, Nasir Zaman, was shot in the stomach and was rushed to the Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Centre. Five other students, Rafaih, Rehan, Owais, Kamran and Saleem, also sustained injuries and were shifted to private hospitals where they were released after being provided first-aid treatment.

Sukkhan police station SPO Abdul Jabbar Qaimkhani said the situation has been brought under control.
Link


India-Pakistan
Islamists fight free thought at Pakistani university
2009-01-24
The Islamists lost their grip on Pakistan's largest college campus for the first time in decades last year. Then the violence started.

Their decline had been obvious. Shops at the University of the Punjab began selling Coca-Cola, which had been banned by the Islamist students because it was an American product. Cable television, seen as immoral by the fundamentalist group, was installed inside college dormitories. Girls and boys sat together, after years of forced segregation. For the university administration and many students, the push back against the youth wing of fundamentalist party Jamaat-e-Islami was essential for the future of the school and the country's fight against extremism. But the resulting clashes here last month show how serious the fight over Islam is in this volatile nation.

In many ways, the battle at Punjab's university is a microcosm of the larger battle in the country, especially with the government facing pressure to rein in Islamist militant groups after one of them was implicated by India and its Western allies in the deadly terrorist attacks in Mumbai in November. For years, the militant groups have been supported directly or indirectly by the country's powerful intelligence agencies and army command, and it's unclear how much the civilian government can do—or has the will to do.

"We are sitting here in a campus which is going to define the future of Pakistan," said Muhammad Naeem Khan, the registrar of the school of 30,000 students, in a recent interview. "Here is where we will win the war on terror. Here is where we will win the war for democracy."

The rise of the Islamist youth group, called Islami Jamiat Talaba, over the last 30 years illustrates how forces once supported by the Pakistani establishment can be difficult to stop. In 1984, President Mohammad Zia-ul-Haq, a right-wing military ruler known for spreading Islamic fervor, banned student political groups. In University of the Punjab, the only major group left was IJT, which defined itself as a religious party. Zia's government, busy helping the U.S. fight the Soviet occupation in Afghanistan, allowed IJT to spread. Afghan jihad leaders such as Gulbuddin Hekmatyar — now listed as a terrorist by the U.S. — spoke at University of the Punjab. Some students left to fight in Afghanistan.

Although the ban on student groups was briefly lifted in the 1990s, President Pervez Musharraf, the military ruler who seized power in 1999, reinstated it. In the years that followed, IJT played a similar role to that of its parent group, Jamaat-e-Islami, supporting Musharraf even while pretending not to, analysts say. But Jamaat-e-Islami, the country's oldest religious political party, also had links to militants. In 1989, it helped form a militant group to fight in Indian-controlled Kashmir at the prodding of Pakistan's most powerful spy agency, analysts say. In 2003, Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, the alleged mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks in the U.S., was arrested in the house of a Jamaat-e-Islami member.

Here in Lahore, leaders of the Islamic youth group say they are not violent. They say that they have no problem with Coke and no problem with male and female students talking to each other. "We have an ideology, and everybody [at the university] is with us," said Qaisar Sharif, 27, who is in charge of the group on campus. "The ideology is of Islam, and to help the students be together, without any division."

Over the decades, with no organized opposition, the Islamist group became so entrenched in the university that former members became teachers and now run the teacher's association on campus. They forced the university to hire supporters as drivers, gardeners and guards. Member students took over university offices and used them to preach, teachers and administrators said. University administrators did little against the group — at times because they were afraid.

The group even made money from the university, setting up a book fair and banning American sodas in favor of Pakistani-made Shandy cola, which paid the group a commission, university administrators said. The group's leaders denied this. "This university for a long time has been the goose that laid golden eggs for these people," said Mujahid Kamran, named university vice chancellor a year ago.

In his new job, Kamran wanted the Islamist group to obey the rules. So he paved the way for Coca-Cola's return. He closed the school rather than allow the book fair — and then he held a university-sponsored book fair. He cleared out university offices that the group had taken over. The new civilian government, elected last February, again lifted the ban on student unions. A loose group of liberal students, the United Students Federation, started recruiting and eventually took control of Dorms 15 and 16.

But there were ominous signs. In September, a suitcase of rusted Kalashnikovs, grenades and bullets was unearthed near the Islamist youth group's headquarters, Kamran said. The next day, another gun was found. A leader of the liberal student group was then beaten up in the middle of the night. And in the early hours of Dec. 3, after hours of protests by both student groups and a fist fight, Islamist youths broke into Dorm 16 and shot two liberal students, wounding both, police said. Mazhar Qayyum, 24, a law student, was in the hospital for more than two weeks after being shot in the left thigh and hit over the head with a metal rod. He has left the university and is now recovering at home. "I am very much fearful about my life," Qayyum said. "Not only my life, but my family, my friends."

Although police initially held one Islamist youth group member in the shooting, no one has been charged. The liberal youth group's leaders say they have been threatened to withdraw their cases against the Islamists. The leaders also blame the university for encouraging them to recruit and rally against the Islamists but doing nothing to protect them.

Some moderate teachers, weary of a long fight against the Islamist group, worried that the recent changes were only cosmetic. "It's like dispersing little mosquitoes when you put a mosquito coil in the room," said Shaista Sirajuddin, head of the English department. "When the coil is gone, they come right back. ... It's not a question of could they come back. They will come back."
Link


India-Pakistan
IJT workers threaten to kill student
2008-06-25
The Punjab University (PU) Vice-Chancellor’s office on Tuesday, received an application from PU Institute of Administrative Sciences (IAS) student Muhammad Ahsan, alleging that Islami Jamiat Talaba (IJT) workers Sabir Shah, Muhammad Usman and a few others who live in the university hostels illegally, entered his room in hostel number 15 and threatened to kill him.

Ahsan told Daily Times that he was a worker of the University Students Federation (USF). He said that Sabir Shah, who belonged to the Tribal Areas, was living in the university illegally. He said Shah had threatened to kill him if he participated in any political activity. Ahsan asked the PU administration to protect him in this regard, especially since the USF workers had planned a protest against the IJT in the PU hostel.

He added that Shah was living illegally in room number 50 of hostel 15, but no action had been taken against him. He quoted Shah as saying that he was here to take revenge in response to the university administration’s action against IJT workers.

According to a PU official, two cases had been registered against Shah. PU official spokesman Dr Mujahid Ali Mansoori said that when he found out about the incident, he asked students to submit an application for a disciplinary action.
Link


India-Pakistan
IJT doin' what comes naturally
2008-06-25
Threatening to maim and murder their fellow students, of course! Oh, and also holding signs and "shouting slogans" when told to pack their bags and amscray.
LAHORE: The Punjab University (PU) Vice-Chancellor’s office on Tuesday, received an application from PU Institute of Administrative Sciences (IAS) student Muhammad Ahsan, alleging that Islami Jamiat Talaba (IJT) workers Sabir Shah, Muhammad Usman and a few others who live in the university hostels illegally, entered his room in hostel number 15 and threatened to kill him.

Ahsan told Daily Times that he was a worker of the University Students Federation (USF). He said that Sabir Shah, who belonged to the Tribal Areas, was living in the university illegally. He said Shah had threatened to kill him if he participated in any political activity. Ahsan asked the PU administration to protect him in this regard, especially since the USF workers had planned a protest against the IJT in the PU hostel.

He added that Shah was living illegally in room number 50 of hostel 15, but no action had been taken against him. He quoted Shah as saying that he was here to take revenge in response to the university administration’s action against IJT workers.

According to a PU official, two cases had been registered against Shah. PU official spokesman Dr Mujahid Ali Mansoori said that when he found out about the incident, he asked students to submit an application for a disciplinary action.

IJT Nazim Rana Zahid said that the administration was using the USF against the IJT. He said that cases against Shah did not matter as there were cases registered against the administration too. PU Hall Council Chairman Dr Saeed Ahmed Nagra said that he did not know of any such incident.

Protest by IJT: A number of IJT workers on Tuesday protested against PU Vice-Chancellor (VC) Prof Dr Mujahid Kamran in front of the Lahore Press Club for expelling their workers from PU.

Zahid said that the PU administration was victimising their workers and they would raise their voices against the administration at every platform. He said that the administration was taking revenge from them for trying to hold a book fair in the varsity. He said that the administration had expelled 11 IJT workers who were final year students.

Dr Mansoori said that allegations had been proven against the expelled IJT workers in the disciplinary committee and if the victims thought they were innocent they could use their right to appeal.

A number of IJT workers from various departments gathered in front of the Lahore Press Club and shouted slogans against the administration and the VC. Students held posters and demanded their workers be re-admitted in the university.
Link


India-Pakistan
IJT activists attack SAC camp at Nasser Bagh
2008-06-11
Islami Jamiat Talaba (IJT) activists from Islamia College Civil Lines beat members of the Student Action Committee (SAC) in front of Nasser Bagh on Tuesday. After the incident a number of SAC members blocked Lower Mall for half an hour and shouted anti-IJT slogans.

According to sources, the SAC had set up a protest camp in front of Nasser Bagh for the restoration of the judiciary in which SAC members from throughout the city were participating. Haroon, an SAC member told Daily Times that more than 30 IJT activists from Islamia College Civil Lines, arrived wielding sticks and started beating members. He said the activists included Islamia College Civil Lines IJT Nazim Irfan Idress, Hostel Nazim Shair Gul, Mohsin Kahloun, Shaukat, Mujtaba, Hafiz Anees, Abu Bukar and Zargham. “SAC members Rai Shajr, Atif Ranjha, Ahmed Salimi, Abdullah Khan, Samad Khuram were seriously injured and sent to hospital. IJT activists said that they were in control of the area and would not allow any movement within,” Ahsan Chaudry, an SAC member, said.

He added that IJT activists had been involved in such incidents against SAC members before and condemned the hooliganism of IJT. “Some elements have tried to damage our reputation. Our members nominated by the SAC were not present on the occasion. The IJT is not involved in this incident,” Lahore IJT Nazim Abdul Basit said.
Link


India-Pakistan
IJT activists thrash three Shia students
2008-03-15
About 40 to 50 Islami Jamiat Talaba activists beat three Shia PhD students after Friday prayers in the presence of Punjab University (PU) Vice Chancellor (PU) Prof Mujahid Kamran and security personnel.

The beaten students are also members of the Students Action Committee (SAC) and Insaf Student Federation, which is the students wing of Tehreek-e-Insaf. The PU IJT media secretary said the students who had beaten the SAC members were not the IJT activists.

The SAC students were gathering after Friday prayers to protest in favour of the sacked judges when IJT activists, numbered in between 40 and 50, attacked them. Most of the SAC students, who were between 10 and 15 in number, managed to flee, but IJT activists managed to get hold of three SAC students. The SAC students were beaten to the extent that they were bleeding. They (IJT activists) raised anti-Shia slogans while beating them and the reason they gave for beating them was that they were “creating fuzz”.

Before the beating episode began, both IJT and SAC students had come out of the PU Central Mosque after the Friday prayers. The VC was present there when the scuffle broke out. In addition to the VC, there were between 15 to 20 security guards. The VC immediately left the place where the security guards stood by as mere spectators.

PU Registrar Dr Naeem Ahmed Khan said, “It is a sad incident and PU Estate Officer Muhammad Saleem has been suspended for being unable to keep things under control.”

The three students beaten were identified as Amir Jalal, Haroon Riaz and Sajjad Gul, all PhD students of biological sciences. The other SAC members later said that the event showed how the IJT controlled the university and could beat anyone even in the presence of the VC and security.

Jalal said, “It is the brazenness of the IJT activists, who indulged in hooliganism in the presence of the VC and security guards. SAC will launch a campaign against this vandalism.”
Link


India-Pakistan
Crackdown on IJT men for harassing PU students
2008-02-06
The Punjab University (PU) administration on Tuesday night started a crackdown on the Islami Jamiat Talaba (IJT) activists and expelled students, after receiving complaints against them about harassing students and officials.
Double secret probation, huh? That oughta do it.
The PU Hall Council officials raided Hostel 4 on the New Campus and locked the rooms of four PU IJT activists. “The crackdown started after the students complained about the IJT activists harassing them,” PU spokesman Dr Mujahid Mansoori said, adding that the crackdown would go on.

Earlier, Daily Times received reports that the IJT activists, carrying guns, threatened hostel 4 guards on Monday. The IJT activists also warned the guards not to interfere in their affairs. The PU official said the IJT activists had also harassed the hostel warden for bearing a strict attitude towards them.

Dr Mansoori said two of those activists were ‘illegal students’ and two had been expelled from the university. Those activists had been pressing the hostel officials to show ‘leniency’ towards them, he added. He said the PU administration would continue the operation against such elements and would also register an FIR (first information report) in the police station concerned, in case the activists continued harassing the students and officials. The university administration, till the filing of this report, was present in the hostel and had put the security on high alert to thwart any untoward incident in reaction to the crackdown against the IJT activists.
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India-Pakistan
PU IJT supports extremists in Waziristan and Swat
2008-01-19
The Islami Jamiat Talaba (IJT) said on Friday that it supported the extremists of Swat and Waziristan in their battle against the government.

The IJT expressed its support at a gathering arranged to commemorate the martyrdom of Imam Hussain (AS) at Punjab University’s Hostel No 7.
The IJT said Muslims in Kashmir, Afghanistan, Iraq and Chechnya were being targeted because they were the true believers. It denounced the war on terror and the role of the Pakistan Army and government in killing Islamists and extremists.
The IJT said Muslims in Kashmir, Afghanistan, Iraq and Chechnya were being targeted because they were the true believers. It denounced the war on terror and the role of the Pakistan Army and government in killing Islamists and extremists.

Calling the people killed by the government ‘Hussaini’, the IJT said the government had revived another Karbala through its atrocities. It praised the Islamists fighting against the government and supported. The IJT also sent an official statement of supporting the extremists to the media after the gathering dispersed.

Political activities are banned at Punjab University.
Political activities are banned at Punjab University. PU IJT nazim Atiqur Rehman told Daily Times that US president George W Bush was allegedly instructing the Pakistani government to kill innocent people in North Waziristan and Swat. He criticised the war on terror, saying President Pervez Musharraf was killing innocent Muslims in North Waziristan, Swat and various parts of the world. He said the government had killed innocent Muslims in the Lal Mosque incident. Sources said PU IJT workers arranged several similar gatherings at PU. They said anti-government and anti-Musharraf speeches were the norm at the gatherings.
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