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India-Pakistan
Reopening of Bari Imam shrine sought
2014-06-30
[DAWN] Religious segments from Shia and Barelvi sects have demanded that the government reopen the Bari Imam shrine, located in the federal capital.

"We do not want to make a fuss over the matter in the wake of the military operation, otherwise we would give a protest call from our mosques," G-6 Imambargah
...since Pakistain is very religiously correct™, Shia Moslems can't call their houses of worship 'mosques,' which are reserved for Sunnis. It's not clear if imambargahs are used for explosives storage like mosques are...
Information Secretary Naeem Abbas said.

Speaking at a presser here at Markazi Imambargah in G-6, members of the management committee demanded that local administration should open the shrine to the public immediately.

"The shrine has been sealed since May 29, when an bomb was discovered there," Abbas said, and continued, "So it is for security reason — but then why not shut down ministries, cop shoppes and even the roads, since bombs have been found everywhere."

He said that the Imambargah management has contacted various mosques and seminaries belonging to the Barelvi sect and held a meeting with the local administration.

He added that a protest call is the last option, and also expressed support for the ongoing operation in North Wazoo. He said that the elimination of dangerous forces is an urgent requirement.
Link


India-Pakistan
Shrines under threat
2014-06-22
[DAWN] IF the snuffies had their way, the whole nation would forcefully be subscribing to their antediluvian code. All confessional and cultural differences would be vigorously stamped out as the hard boyz are not fond of difference of opinion. Perhaps that is why today, anything that veers even slightly from the ultra-orthodox path is under threat in Pakistain. Take, for example, Sufi shrines. As reported on Saturday, a shrine on the outskirts of Islamabad was targeted by an IED during urs celebrations. Luckily, due to the low intensity of the device no fatalities were reported, though some devotees were maimed critically. Considering that a large number of devotees were attending the event, much greater carnage could have been caused. This is not the first time a Sufi durbar has been targeted in or near the capital. In 2005, an kaboom rocked the Bari Imam shrine — perhaps the capital's best known durbar — during the saint's annual urs. Numerous fatalities resulted. In the years since, the shrine has been mostly closed during urs festivities, depriving devotees of the colour and zeal that marked the event. A few days earlier, the Auqaf department sealed the shrine as an bomb was found near the structure in May.

While ensuring the security of people's lives is amongst the government's primary duties, we fail to understand why appropriate security measures cannot be put in place that would safeguard citizens' lives while allowing them to continue with religious and cultural activities. Militants have attacked everything from mosques to markets; does the state feel that shutting everything down each time there is a threat is the best solution? Militants have also bombed the Data Durbar complex in Lahore, Abdullah Shah Ghazi's dargah in Bloody Karachi
...formerly the capital of Pakistain, now merely its most important port and financial center. It is among the largest cities in the world, with a population of 18 million, most of whom hate each other and many of whom are armed and dangerous...
as well as Baba Farid's shrine in Pakpattan. Will the state one day disallow urs celebrations at these iconic shrines due to security concerns? Instead of curtailing cultural activities, the government needs to strike at the root of the problem. For example, there are numerous Sufi shrines in Islamabad and its suburbs, and a number of them are being threatened by the growth of some myrmidon madressahs sprouting up in the area. Police and intelligence agencies have done little to keep an eye on the activities of the myrmidons. What is clear is that the age-old cultural and religious practices of the people cannot be put on ice indefinitely due to the murderous bullying of obscurantists.
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India-Pakistan
Bari Imam shut after explosives recovered
2014-05-31
[DAWN] Two kilogrammes of explosives were recovered near the Bari Imam shrine on Thursday.

Though it was a low-grade explosive usually used for blasting rocks and mountains, the farmers working in the area are yet to claim the ownership which has made the recovery suspicious.

Earlier, the police received information regarding an abandoned white packet lying on the eastern side of the shrine.

During examination, the police and the bomb disposal squad found explosives in the packet, along with a 48-foot-long detonating cord and a safety fuse, the police said. The police approached the labourers and farmers in the nearby areas to confirm the ownership.

However,
if you can't be a good example, then you'll just have to be a horrible warning...
they added that such a small quantity of explosives was not useful as they needed a larger amount to clear rocks from the farms and construction areas.

A police front man said the package was kept by unidentified persons to harass the locals.
Link


India-Pakistan
Tribals fearing for life fleeing to Islamabad, only to be killed
2012-07-10
[Dawn] ISLAMABAD police are worried that murders in the city are on the rise. Sixty-six people have been murdered so far this year, 55 of them in the rural areas of the capital territory where property and family disputes lead to violent crimes.

What worries the police more is a new trend -- tribals involved in similar disputes running away from the northwest to Islamabad for safety and being hunted down by their enemies and killed.

It is difficult to track down such killers as they return to their lawless lands after committing the crime. "In the tribal culture, the instinct of Dire Revenge™ works, not law," said a police brass hat.

Scores are settled personally, not through police. Families want to avenge their hurt themselves. They would not even approach police, much less help in investigating a crime. That often leads to a vicious cycle of Dire Revenge™ killings, according to the officer.

Tribal communities do hold jirgas to settle disputes and punish members found guilty of violating the tribal code and customs.

One can be fined or banished from the community for minor violations. But murderers usually flee rather than face a jirga.

They try to vanish in the urban populations. But the possibility of their pursuers hunting them down is never far away.

In recent years, some tribal runaways have sought to hide in Islamabad, particularly in its rural areas of Koral, Sihala and Shahzad Town in the southeast and Tarnol and Golra in the southwest.

Police frequently comb these areas for bully boyz and criminals and hauls up those who possess no, or doubtful identification.

But it is not much help to catch any runaway. Majority of them happen to be poor migrant workers who arrive in Islamabad in search of earning a living.

Meanwhile,
...back at the bake sale, Umberto's Mom's cannoli were a big hit...
Dire Revenge™ murders go on in the localities with the police at a loss how to bring the killers to book.

Mohammad Bashir, a cook from Kohat, became the latest victim on July 1 when his body was found in a nullah in Sector G-11/2.

Police investigations revealed that he was residing in Merabadi in Golra with his cousin Ahsan Ullah, a holy man in a local mosque.

Both had run away, with their loves, from their native town and married them. A jirga banished them. They had been living in Golra for two years. On the fateful day, Bashir went out of the house in answer to a call from his in-laws only to be found rubbed out in the afternoon.

Earlier, on June 20, Raza Khan, a native of Swabi, was murdered when he came to visit his in-laws in Gulshanabad in Tarnol. It turned out that the killer was the son-in-law of his elder brother who had followed him from Swabi to settle a family feud. Police knew nothing more than that the killer had escaped on a cycle of violence.

On May 23, four unidentified persons rubbed out Mumtaz Alam, a native of Kohistan
...a backwoods district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa distinguished by being even more rustic than is the norm among the local Pashtuns....
, outside his house in Sihala. The four called him out and killed him. Police believe Alam, who had been living in Sihala for 16 years, fell victim to old enmity.

Misal Khan, a cobbler from Bajaur Agency, aka Turban Central
...Smallest of the agencies in FATA. The Agency administration is located in Khar. Bajaur is inhabited almost exclusively by Tarkani Pashtuns, which are divided into multiple bickering subtribes. Its 52 km border border with Afghanistan's Kunar Province makes it of strategic importance to Pakistain's strategic depth...
, was stabbed to death by two persons outside his house in Mohammedan Colony, adjacent to Bari Imam shrine, on April 12. Police suspected he was a hunted man.

Before that, on February 8, Rayaz Ahmed, a migrant from Mansehra
...a city and an eponymous district in eastern Khyber-Pakthunwa, nestled snug up against Pak Kashmir, with Kohistan and Diamir to the north and Abbottabad to the south...
and administrator of a seminary in Bhara Kahu suburbs, was killed, allegedly by his in-laws.

Police were told Ahmed was asked to come out of his house by relatives living in the same locality and was rubbed out as he tried to flee them.

There was a time when criminals of urban areas used to flee to tribal areas for refuge. Now, the roles seem to have reversed.
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India-Pakistan
Several injured, arrested at Sunni Ittehad Council rally
2010-11-28
[Dawn] Over a hundred local leaders and activists of Sunni Ittehad Council were jugged on Saturday. Police stopped the rally near 'Soha Rawalpindi, where the activists had held a sit-in protest and were determined to move forward.

Police in twin cities of Islamabad and Rawalpindi jump-started into action since Saturday morning in a bid to stem Council's Long March from Islamabad to Lahore. Hazrart Bari Imam Shrine was sealed.

The workers of Sunni Tehreek (ST) arriving on board Khyber Mail were jugged at Rawalpindi Railways station.

According to Cantt Police Station, at least 50 people were taken into custody. Meanwhile,
...back at the ranch...
Sunni Council front man claimed over 200 of their workers were nabbed.

In view of security apprehensions, the government was in top gear since yesterday to stanch Islamabad-Lahore Long March announced by Sunni Ittehad as the march to 'Save Pakistain'.

Islamabad's exits and entry points especially those roads leading to Bari Imam Darbar were heavily guarded with baton-wielding police contingents armed with tear-gas shells and armored personnel carrier (APC).

Police were given duties outside madaris in support of Sunni Tehreek. Also, some local leaders were browbeaten into staying back.

Police took 19 Tehreek workers including a local leader during an operation in Jhelum.

According to Rawalpindi officials, over 100 people have been taken into custody. -- Agencies

Chief of the Sunni Ittehad Council (SIC) Sahibzada Fazal Karim on Saturday said the SIC will not allow the repeal of the blasphemy laws. He said terrorism had distorted Pakistain's image across the globe, adding that those persuading people for suicide kabooms were not loyal to Pakistain.

Hundreds of SIC activists started a nearly 200-mile long march on Saturday in a protest against Taliban attacks on the country's religious sites.

Authorities warned that gunnies could attack the procession which was being led by Sahibzada Fazal Karim.

Police escorted the convoy out of Islamabad, where the journey had started.

The participants, travelling on foot and in cars, plan to rally in Lahore, where 47 people died in a suicide kaboom at a Sufi shrine in July.

While addressing the participants of the long march at Islamabad's Bari Imam shrine, Karim said the government had not accepted the SIC's demand for legislation to curb terrorism and called for an All Parties Conference on the issue.

He further demanded the release of the jugged SIC activists.

The local administration had imposed Section 144 in Rawalpindi and several activists from various religious seminaries had been jugged.

Following intelligence reports of possible terror attacks, the Punjab government had banned the long march to avert any untoward incident.
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India-Pakistan
Bureaucracy finds recourse to 'saints'
2008-03-05
Bureaucrats in Punjab have started visiting shrines and ‘saints’ ahead of the incoming provincial government, sources said on Tuesday. They said two secretaries visited Bari Imam shrine in Rawalpindi on March 2, adding that an important bureaucrat was seen praying in Data Darbar on Tuesday afternoon. Officers who were close to former Punjab chief minister Chaudhry Pervaiz Elahi are worried, and meeting with saints. On Monday, a secretary invited a ‘saint’ from Layyah district to Lahore for prayers. He also offered gifts to the ‘saint’. Senior officials from police and the Civil Secretariat were present in the gathering. The sources said that the ‘saint’ was requested to pray for the bureaucrat so that the next government does not make him an officer on special duty.
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Afghanistan/South Asia
Nuggets from the Urdu Press
2005-07-23
Asma Jahangir working for US
Writing in the Nawa-e-Waqt, Manzur Ahmad stated that Asma Jahangir had started her campaign of shameless ‘mixed marathon’ so that the Islamic honour being dragged through the mud at Guantanamo Bay could be covered. Her only reaction was writing a letter but in the case of the mixed marathon, she decided to come into the streets.

Cohen as ideological aggressor
Great intellectual Fateh Muhammad Malik wrote in the Nawa-e-Waqt that American author Stephen Cohen, in his book The Idea of Pakistan, had advised Pakistan to submit to the key interests of America and India. This was a kind of aggression of America Sipah-e-Danish (troops of intellect) on Pakistan.

Typist in ‘trubbel’
According to the daily Pakistan, a typist at the Board of Secondary and Intermediate Education got into trouble after he mistyped two verses of the Quran in the Islamiat question paper. Two verses were typed as one, which was a serious heresy. The Board had to give concession to the students who attempted the question, but the typist was sent an explanation call. The Board stated that its personnel were pakka (true) Muslim and could not think of wilful heresy.

Follow Iqbal, rethink shariah
Writing in the Jang, Irshad Haqqani stated that according to the great Muslim thinker Allama Muhammad Asad, Islam had to be constantly reinterpreted to fit the exigencies of life. Asad followed the same path as Allama Iqbal, Dr Fazlur Rehman, and today’s living scholar, Dr Manzur Ahmad. It was no longer useful for Muslim ulema to insist on the form of hudood as practised in ancient times. President Pervez Musharraf in his recent speeches was appealing for the thinking of Allama Iqbal and Allama Asad. It was no longer good for Muslims to insist on the cutting of hands and stoning to death and on half a witness for women. The late Justice SA Rehman had asked for a council of intellectuals to form a Pakistani shariah. The Council of Islamic Ideology was now equipped with rational scholars who could perform the task. Quoted by the Nawa-e-Waqt, PMLN leader Zafarul Haq said that explaining the Quran in line with Western thinking was an insult to the Quran and a blasphemy.

Cowardice and bravery
Writing in Khabrain Jamaat Islami leader Hafiz Idrees stated that in the case of Zarqawi one heard that he had been wounded, but his followers thanked Allah and announced that they would carry on the war. In the case of Bush, he never got hurt when one Cessna plane caused the White House to vacate in great hurry. One side was brave, the other side was cowardly.

Musharraf’s blunder
Quoted in the Jang, leader of the Imamia Students Organisation (ISO) Nasir Abbas Shirazi said that President Musharraf’s remarks about Iran’s intention of making a nuclear bomb were most uncalled for and untrue. He said Musharraf’s description of Israeli prime minister Ariel Sharon as a determined soldier was also condemnable. (The government denied the remark about Iran.) Quoted in the Nawa-e-Waqt, Qazi Hussain Ahmad warned Musharraf not to play with the sentiments of the Pakistani nation by praising Sharon.

Needles out of another girl
According to the daily Pakistan, a girl in Khankah Dogran in Punjab had started producing steel needles from her big toe. So far she had expelled more than a hundred needles. The discovery followed a similar phenomenon in Karachi where a girl expelled needles from her fingers. The doctors said that there was no scientific principle according to which human body could produce steel needles.

Bari Imam attack was on me!
Quoted in the daily Pakistan, the leader of Tehreek Fiqh Jafaria, Agha Syed Hamid Ali Musavi stated that the attack on the Bari Imam shrine was actually meant to kill him. He said there was no Shia-Sunni divide in Pakistan but the enemies of Pakistan were busy trying to create the split.

Why tremble if we have the bomb?
Quoted by the Nawa-e-Waqt, ex-president Rafiq Tarar said why was the government trembling (thar-thar) if it had the nuclear bomb to throw on the enemy. Speaking on the occasion of Yom-e-Takbir he said the government was daily announcing that its nuclear programme was in safe hands. He said soon a popular wave (awami rela) would come and sweep the government from power. He said Nawaz Sharif was brave because he tested the nuclear device in 1998 despite American pressure.

MMA should cut itself off!
Quoted in the daily Pakistan, ex-general Zaheerul Islam Abbasi (1995 unsuccessful military coup) said in Rawalpindi that the MMA should unite all the religious elements and strive for the establishment of khilafat on the model of Khilafat-e-Rashida and not go after a baatil political system. Abbasi has renamed his party from Hizbullah to Azmat Islam.

Bari Imam terrorism done by America!
Quoted in Khabrain, MMA leader Samiul Haq stated that the act of terrorism at Barri Imam Shrine near Islamabad which killed 20 Shias and Barelvis was carried out to stop the nationwide protest being staged against the desecration of the Quran at the American prison in Guantanamo Bay in Cuba.

Bari Imam custodian wants to flee
Quoted by the Jang, the custodian of the Barri Imam shrine near Islamabad, Syed Hassan Raza Mashhadi said in Multan that he would leave Pakistan with his family if the killing of Shias did not stop. He said his father Syed Sibtain Raza was killed by sectarian fanatics in 1996 and he himself had escaped death more than once.
Link


Afghanistan/South Asia
Bari Imam blast: Masterminds belong to LJ linked group
2005-06-14
Investigators have traced the masterminds of a suicide attack on the shrine of Hazrat Bari Imam killing 20 people and injuring several others, sources told Daily Times on Monday. Sources said that an investigation team by the Punjab Crime Investigation Department Police, Federal Investigation Agency and the Intelligence Bureau found that Asif Chhota and Bara Usman from the Qari Group, a dissident of the banned religious outfit Lashker-e-Jhangvi, masterminded the attack.
Oh, gee. Somebody boomed a Shiite shrine. After intense investigation, it's deteermined it was Lashkar e-Jhangvi. WHO THE HELL DID YOU THINK IT WAS?
They said the two were included in the most-wanted list and the Punjab Police had put Rs 1 million head money on each.
Yeah. That tactic certainly works well, doesn't it? I'll bet the tips are just oozing in...
The investigation team also traced the calls made to the cell phones of Asif Chhota and Bara Usman during the explosion at the Bari Imam shrine, sources said. One investigation team member told Daily Times that Bara Usman said that Usman bought explosive material from the tribal area and made a bomb within two hours. The member, who asked not to be named, said that Asif and Usman were in Islamabad two weeks before the Bari Imam incident and instigated suicide bomber Mohsin Ali to launch the attack. Sources said the two had also planned suicide attacks on various Shia mosques on the outskirts of Islamabad, sources said.
Most of us are capable of pulling off, at most, one suicide attack...
The investigation showed that there was disagreement between the supporters of the two factions of the defunct Tehrik-e-Nifaz-e-Fiqh Jafria group — one headed by Hamid Musvi and the other by Allama Sajid Naqvi. Sources said that the two groups wanted to take control of the Bari Imam shrine.
But neither of them boomed it.
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Afghanistan/South Asia
Pakistani violence and international terrorism
2005-06-02
The following article is the second and final part of a series on sectarian organizations in Pakistan linked with international terrorism. The first part, Sipah-e-Sahaba: Fomenting Sectarian Violence in Pakistan, appeared in Terrorism Monitor Volume 3, Issue 2.

In the dizzyingly diverse universe of Pakistani Islamic militancy, one organization stands out for its secrecy, lethality and unrelenting pursuit of its core objectives: namely the eradication of Pakistan's Shi'a community and the eventual transformation of the country into a Taliban style Islamic state. Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ — Jhangvi's Army), firmly allied to the Taliban and the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU) and with loose links to al-Qaeda, is undoubtedly the most prolific and callous terrorist organization in Pakistan.

The suicide bomb attack at the Bari Imam shrine near the diplomatic quarter of the Pakistani capital, on May 27 which resulted in the deaths of at least 20 Shi'a worshippers (most likely carried out by a LeJ suicide bomber) underscores the intractable intensity and lethality of Pakistan's sectarian conflict. While focused primarily on Shi'a s, the LeJ often targets western interests in Pakistan and moreover its activities are part of a much broader constellation of Islamic militant agitation in the country which in the mid- to long-term threatens to overturn Pakistan's military dominated and ostensibly pro-western political system.

Origins

Ostensibly a break-away faction of Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan (SSP), LeJ was founded in 1996 by an extremist triumvirate within SSP — namely Riaz Basra, Akram Lahori and Malik Ishaque. Inspired by the ideals of SSP's founding leader Maulana Haq Nawaz Jhangvi, Basra and his followers accused the SSP leadership of not following the ideals of its slain leader. Another plausible reason for the emergence of LeJ was the rising violence of Sipah-e-Mohammed Pakistan (SMP), a Shi'a organization formed in 1994, ostensibly to target the leaders of SSP. Many top leaders of the SSP, including Israr-ul-Haq Qasmi and Zia ur-Rahman Farooqi were assassinated by SMP extremists in the following years.
However it is widely believed that the split of 1996 was manufactured to protect the political integrity of SSP and enable the so-called breakaway faction to transform itself into a purely paramilitary-terrorist organization.
However it is widely believed that the split of 1996 was manufactured to protect the political integrity of SSP and enable the so-called breakaway faction to transform itself into a purely paramilitary-terrorist organization. In any case, events since 1996 have proved beyond doubt that the LeJ constitutes the armed wing of the SSP and is ultimately controlled by the leaders of that powerful and Saudi-backed sectarian organization.

In the years since 1996, LeJ has developed into a formidable terrorist organization; according to one estimate, until 2001 LeJ had been involved in at least 350 violent incidents. [1] However the organization has had to contend with severe setbacks. In 2002, more than 30 Lashkar-e-Jhangvi militants were killed in numerous shootouts that resulted in the deaths of senior leaders. These included Riaz Basra, who was killed along with three associates near Mailsi in Multan on May 14, and LeJ chief Asif Ramzi, who was slain with six accomplices near Allahwala Town in Karachi. The slayings of Basra and Ramzi dealt a severe blow to the foundation of LeJ and its mother organization, Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan.

A visible crack in the ranks of the organization developed during the Majlis-e-Shura (Supreme Council) held in its former HQ near Kabul, Afghanistan on December 27, 2000. The divisions revolved around the personal ambitions of Qari Abdul Hai, a senior LeJ leader (and a commander of training camps in Sarobi, Afghanistan) who accused Riaz Basra of financial misappropriation. [2] However, the situation normalized with the interference of the Taliban regime and involvement of Jaish-e-Muhammad, but the operational differences remained until the killing of Basra in May 2002. [3]

Presently the LeJ is led by its Saalar-i-Aala (Commander-in-Chief), Akram Lahori, one of the founding leaders of the armed group and erstwhile bodyguard of Maulana Haq Nawaz Jhangvi. Lahori was sentenced to death along with his two associates on three counts of sectarian murders by an anti-terrorism court in Karachi in April 2003, but was later acquitted in one of the cases. The court gave him the benefit of the doubt in the murder case of the Pakistan State Oil Managing Director Shaukat Raza Mirza, who was killed on July 26, 2001. Lahori admitted his involvement in some 38 cases of sectarian killings in Sindh including the June 14, 2002 car bomb blast outside the US Consulate in Karachi, and remains in police custody.

Operational Distinctions
The LeJ differs from many of the other Islamic militant organizations in Pakistan insofar as it shuns media exposure and tries to operate as covertly as possible. Its only outlet to the outside world is occasional faxed messages accepting responsibility for terrorist outrages and through its publication Intiqam-i-Haq. [4] Lashkar-e-Jhangvi has focused most of its attention on Pakistan's Shi'a minority and Iranian interests.

Some of the more prominent recent attacks on Shi'a s include a July 2003 suicide attack on a Shi'a mosque in Quetta, which resulted in the deaths of over 40 worshippers. A letter issued by the LeJ claimed responsibility for the carnage, indicating that the attack was a protest against Iran, Pakistani Shi'a s, President Pervez Musharraf and the United States. Eight months later, in March 2004, LeJ terrorists bombed another Shi'a mosque, this time slaughtering 47 worshippers. In similar attacks on the Hyderi mosque in May 7, and the Ali Raza mosque on May 31, suspected LeJ suicide bombers killed more than 40 worshipers.

Since the late 1980s a secret war has been taking place in major Pakistani cities, pitting the SSP/LeJ against the Iranian intelligence services and their local Pakistani agents, both Shi'a and Sunni. [5] This war intensified in February 1990 with the assassination of the SSP's most influential founding leader, Maulana Haq Nawaz Jhangvi, allegedly carried out by Iranian intelligence agents. This assassination had many repercussions, the most important of which was the creation of LeJ in 1996.

In June 1994, as part of its campaign of revenge for the assassination of Jhangvi, SSP militants took this secret war into Iranian territory for the first time by bombing the Imam Reza shrine in Mashhad, killing 26 Iranian Shi'a worshipers. The Iranian authorities reflexively blamed the main Iranian opposition group, the Iraqi-based and formerly armed Mojahedin-e-Khalq for the atrocity, but the Iranian intelligence services drew their own conclusions and in subsequent years assassinated several leading members of SSP/LeJ. There is no indication as of yet that the intensity of this secret war between agents of a foreign power and Pakistani religious fanatics is diminishing. Indeed, in early 2005, a Pakistani Intelligence agency report submitted to the Interior Ministry indicated that LeJ cadres have bought weapons from arms smugglers in the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) and may be preparing suicide missions against Iranian and Shi'a targets in various cities of Pakistan.

Aside from attacks on Pakistani Shi'a s and Iranians, LeJ is also known to have targeted leaders of the Pakistani establishment and western interests. The three most high profile targets of LeJ have been President Pervez Musharraf and two former Prime Ministers of Pakistan— Nawaz Sharif and Mir Zafarullah Khan Jamali. Since 1998, LeJ has been trying to assassinate Sharif without any success; the closest they got was in January 1999 when LeJ militants attempted to blow the bridge on the Lahore-Raiwand road while Sharif was passing. Eid Muhammad, the explosive expert of LeJ, was alleged to have rigged Chaklala Bridge, Rawalpindi, with explosives in an attempt to assassinate President Pervez Musharraf on December 14, 2003. An attack on another former premier, Mir Zafarullah Khan Jamali, was also foiled with the arrest of an LeJ cadre on April 1 2004.

LeJ began to target Western interests in Pakistan after the United States toppled the Taliban regime in Afghanistan in late 2001. The Taliban was a firm ally of SSP/LeJ and allowed the latter to establish training bases on is territory. Indeed LeJ is believed to have been headquartered near Kabul until the collapse of the Taliban. LeJ militants are believed to have been involved in the kidnapping and subsequent murder of U.S. journalist Daniel Pearl in early 2002. The LeJ was also behind the bomb attack on May 8, 2002 in Karachi which killed 16 persons, including 12 French nationals. In another attack, near the U.S. Consulate in Karachi on June 14 of that year, 12 persons were killed. At least five of the 10 terrorists identified by the Pakistani government are believed to be LeJ cadres.

While there have been reports that al-Qaeda has used LeJ to attack western interests in Pakistan (particularly the ones listed above), there is little reliable evidence pointing to a contemporaneous relationship between the hardcore of al-Qaeda and SSP/LeJ. It seems that al-Qaeda's access to LeJ was severed after the slaying of Riaz Basra in May 2002. Basra allegedly maintained contact with al-Qaeda commanders through Harakat Ul Ansar (yet another Pakistani Islamic militant organization).

Interestingly the LeJ has forged a strong operational relationship with the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU). These links were forged in Afghanistan when both organizations were fighting the Northern Alliance on behalf of the Taliban. Further and more recent evidence pointing to a strong relationship emerged form investigations into LeJ's endeavors to train female suicide bombers to attack the female quarters of Shi'a mosques. Pakistani intelligence reports have allegedly revealed that Aziza, a woman cadre of IMU has been imparting fidayeen training. [6]

According to Pakistani law enforcement agencies, the LeJ organization is made up of small cells that do not exceed seven members. A majority of LeJ's cadres are drawn from the Sunni madrasas in Pakistan. Almost the entire leadership of LeJ is composed of veterans of the Afghan Jihad. Moreover, prior to the collapse of the Taliban, the outfit imparted training in the hard terrains of Afghanistan and later deployed its militants all over Pakistan. LeJ training camps in Afghanistan was located near the Sarobi Dam, Kabul. Organizationally, LeJ is widely dispersed with cells and units all over the country, particularly in Punjab.

Notwithstanding its proscription in August 2001, LeJ remains as active as ever; last week's suicide bombing at the Bari Imam shrine underscores the organization's lethality and callous disregard for the national unity of Pakistan. There is no doubt that there is widespread revulsion in Pakistan for the type of mindless sectarian violence that LeJ inflicts on fellow Pakistanis. For instance former ISI chief General Javed Ashraf Qazi once dismissed LeJ and similar outfits as "zombies that kill their fellow Muslim brothers". [7] But despite this popular revulsion, the Pakistani authorities are unlikely to be able to contain LeJ unless they decisively move against its mother organization; Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan (now ostensibly named Milt-e-Islamia Pakistan). This is unlikely, given that the latter is a large and powerful organization that benefits from the patronage of the Saudi Arabian establishment. Furthermore sectarian violence is likely to increase as Islamization deepens in Pakistan and the country's establishment continues to atrophy.
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Afghanistan/South Asia
Govt will improve law and order: Sherpao. Really.
2005-06-01
"And stop calling me Shirley!"
Interior Minister Aftab Ahmed Khan Sherpao on Tuesday assured the Senate that the government would improve law and order and ensure that the government's writ reigned supreme in the country.
"Yup. We're gonna get right on it!"
Concluding a debate on the law and order situation in the country, Sherpao said that Pakistan was a frontline state in the war against terrorism and law enforcement agencies had dismantled the terrorist network and arrested more than 600 terrorists since 9/11.
A quiet day in Pakland looks like a terrorist offensive any other place but Iraq...
"Some terrorists have formed small groups and are involved in sectarian terrorism,' he said.
Not much gets past Sherpao...
Sherpao said that Interior Ministry had formed a special investigations team to investigate the Bari Imam suicide attack. "I am personally supervising investigations into the Bari Imam bombing," he said, adding that law enforcement agencies had found some clues and those responsible for bombings in Karachi and at the Bari Imam shrine would be arrested soon. He said that two terrorists involved in the attack on Madinatul Islam mosque had been identified as Asif and Tehsin, both residents of Orangi Town.
Yeah, yeah. So you break their kneecaps now, round up a few more, then the Lahore High Court lets them off for lack of evidence. Whoopdy doo.
Sherpao said that it was the responsibility of everyone including the opposition to play their role in rooting out terrorism from the country.
Right. That'll happen. Let's all keep pretending that the MMA isn't made up of the front organizations for the gunnies and hard boyz...
He said that government would maintain law and order at all costs because it wanted to attract investment.
Bzzzzt! Wrong answer!
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Afghanistan/South Asia
RAW's probable involvement in shrine blast being probed
2005-05-30
While many theories have surfaced thus far about the terrorist act at Bari Imam shrine situated near the Prime Minister's House and the diplomatic enclave in Islamabad on Friday, the official circles are seriously probing into the reported tip-off regarding the probability of the involvement of Indian premier foreign intelligence agency, Research and Analysis Wing (RAW).
Yeah. Sure. Knew it was them all the time.
The notion of the Indian influence in Bari Imam episode is also substantiated by the reports that the Indian forces have stepped up their operations inside Occupied Kashmir and elsewhere. While the mode of the attack can be confused with the Al-Qaeda trademark suicide bombings, it must also not be forgotten that the RAW is alleged to have recruited a good number of Tamil suicide terrorists for contingency plans in case the entire exercise in peace building according to its own interpretation fails.
A little projection going on here?
Even though forensic experts have so far not come up with definite identification of the alleged suicide bomber, his dark colour and built is said to further support the thesis. According to the reports, RAW has about 1,2000 assets (operatives) invested in its immediate neighbourhood, a lion's share of which is quite obviously been deployed in Pakistan. RAW as a body is not answerable to the Parliament of democratic India and its head reports directly to the Prime Minister. Again there does not exist any clear system of agency's finances that are contributed on discretionary basis by a host of government bodies, which include the Indian embassies in the countries of operation.
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Afghanistan/South Asia
20 Killed in Bomb Blast at Muslim Shrine
2005-05-27
Hi there, Zaheer! More for you to be proud of!
A suicide bomber set off explosives Friday in the midst of Shiite Muslims reciting the Quran, killing at least 20 and wounding dozens gathered for a religious festival at a shrine near the capital. The motive was not immediately clear, but there are frequent sectarian attacks in this Islamic country by extremist elements of the Sunni and minority Shiite sects. An AP photographer at the scene counted at least 20 bodies, many in pieces. An intelligence official said at least 20 people were killed and 150 were wounded. The bomb ripped through hundreds of worshippers as they were reciting from the Muslim holy book beneath tents at the Bari Imam shrine outside Islamabad.

"It was like hell," said Syed Muktar Hussain Shah, 40, who had been waiting for a prominent Shiite leader, Hamid Moasvi, to address the gathering when the bomb went off. "I fell down ... when I woke up I saw dead bodies around me."

"None of the bodies was intact," said Dr. Wahid Abbas, who helped treat the wounded. "Some had legs blown off, some had their hands blown off." He and other witnesses said police collected the head of a suspected suicide bomber. Authorities did not immediately confirm that information. The Shiite leader, Moasvi, was not hurt, witnesses said. Mukhtar Kazmi, who was running a free clinic at the shrine, said it had treated about 200 people.
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