India-Pakistan |
Mirwaiz meets jihad commanders |
2007-01-27 |
![]() AAC officials have declined to name the Lashkar and Jaish leaders who held talks with the Mirwaiz, but both organisations have been critical of the peace process led by the APHC chairman and Pakistan's President, General Pervez Musharraf. Mohammad Yusuf Shah, the Pakistan-based chief of the Hizb ul-Mujahideen, even rebuffed efforts by the APHC chairman to secure a meeting during his ongoing visit to Pakistan. Mirwaiz Farooq, however, secured an extended meeting with Mushtaq Zargar, one of the three terrorists released during the 1999 hijacking of Indian Airlines Flight 814. Mr. Zargar's al-Umar, which drew much of its cadre from Mirwaiz Farooq's strongholds in old-city Srinagar, was once the sword-arm of the AAC. However, under attack from both Indian forces and rival jihadi groups like the Hizb, it was decimated by 1993. A Pakistan-based source close to the APHC told The Hindu that Mr. Zargar had persuaded three mid-level Lashkar and Jaish commanders to accompany him to visit Mirwaiz, most likely with the endorsement of Pakistan's covert service, the Inter-Services Intelligence. "The ISI is signalling to the Hizb and Lashkar that it must fall in line," the source said, "or face the consequences." General Musharraf, Mirwaiz Farooq's meetings in Muzaffarabad suggest, may be tiring of strident criticism of his Jammu and Kashmir policy by Islamist terror groups once sponsored by the Pakistan Army. For example, the January, 2007 issue of the Lashkar house magazine `Voice of Islam' characterises the Pakistani President's four-point peace plan as "a stab in the back, a betrayal." "As the unfinished business of Partition," the magazine asserts, echoing the long-standing Lashkar position, "Kashmir can only be achieved [sic., resolved] according to the principles on which the Partition was carried out the will of the citizens of the State and the religion of the majority population. Musharraf's formula is blind to these principles. It will never deliver." Lashkar leaders have also become increasingly critical of General Musharraf's overall agenda. Earlier this month, the Lashkar's parent political organisation, the Jamaat-ud-Dawa, organised a conference to critique a new Women's Protection Act promoted by the General. According to the Jamaat, the "floodgates of vulgarity and licentiousness opened by the Act would drown the womenfolk, sisters and daughters of the faithful." Mirwaiz Farooq, for his part, has long sought to demonstrate that he has some leverage with terrorist groups but with little success. On June 7, 2005, the Mirwaiz met to secure his support for the APHC's ongoing dialogue with the Government of India. Mr. Shah, however, said he would not accept any process that did not include hardline Islamist leader Syed Ali Shah Geelani. Syed Salim Geelani, who heads the moderate APHC-aligned National Peoples Party, met with Mr. Shah early this month to lay the ground for a second round of dialogue with Mirwaiz Farooq. However, the APHC chairman's recent assertion that the armed struggle "had not achieved anything other than creating more graveyards" incenced the Hizb and other terrorist groups fighting in Jammu and Kashmir. Angered by the remark, Mr. Shah called off the proposed meeting. A spokesperson for the United Jihad Council, which is chaired by Mr. Shah, subsequently warned the Mirwaiz "not teach the lesson of cowardice and hopelessness to our caravan of freedom seekers." For its part, the Lashkar-linked Save Kashmir Movement published direct threats to the Mirwaiz's life, charging the cleric with having become a "renegade." |
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India-Pakistan |
Militants threaten to disrupt Kashmir peace talks |
2006-05-21 |
![]() "We have made all arrangements to disrupt the round table conference. Kashmir is a disputed territory, the prime minister of India cannot hold such conferences here," four groups said in a media release. "All the separatist political leadership should stay away from the conference. It is aimed at misleading the international community," Al Nasireen, Save Kashmir Movement, Al Arifeen and Farzandan-e-Milat said in a fax to newspaper offices in Srinagar. Intelligence officials said the groups were likely to be a front for bigger organisations such as the Pakistan-based Islamist outfit Lashkar-e-Taiba and Hizbul Mujahideen. |
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Afghanistan/South Asia | |||||
Militant Groups Ban Return of Kashmiri Hindus | |||||
2005-07-23 | |||||
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Afghanistan/South Asia | |||
Militant groups criticise India-Pakistan agreement | |||
2005-04-19 | |||
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Afghanistan/South Asia | ||
Lions of Islam renew threat against Kashmir bus | ||
2005-04-14 | ||
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Afghanistan/South Asia | ||
Four injured in blast on trans-Kashmir bus route: report | ||
2005-04-08 | ||
SRINAGAR, India - Four people, including a policemen, were wounded on Thursday by a powerful blast that occurred along the route of the first inter-Kashmir bus minutes after the vehicle had passed, a report said. The improvised explosive device blew up in a closed shop barely 10 minutes after the bus had crossed the main market of Pattan, 27 kilometres from Srinagar, the Press Trust of India said, citing official sources.
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Afghanistan/South Asia |
Militants again warn Kashmir bus passengers |
2005-04-03 |
![]() The militant groups that signed the statement are Al-Nasireen (The Helpers), the Save Kashmir Movement, Al-Arifeen (The Pious) and Farzandan-e-Millat (Sons of the Community). The first two groups are major militant movements, while the others are little known. The groups had issued a similar warning three days earlier. There was no way to independently verify the authenticity of the fax. |
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Afghanistan/South Asia | |
LeT cell busted in Srinagar | |
2004-06-30 | |
In a major breakthrough, a Lashker-e-Taiba module was busted here with the killing of two militants and arrest of 18 who had planned attacks on Bombay Stock Exchange, strategic places in Delhi and elsewhere and had links with the four militants killed in an encounter in Ahmedabad on June 15, a top police official said today. One of the four militants killed in Ahmedabad, Babar, a Pakistani national, was sent from here, the DGP said. The militants arrested from various parts of the city in the past three days, including an auxillary police constable, were involved in several high profile killings including that of Maulvi Mushtaq Ahmed, uncle of Hurriyat leader Mirwaiz Umer Farooq, blasts and suicide attacks, he said. The DGP said of the 20 militants arrested, two, both Pakistani nationals, were killed when a police team leading them for recoveries came under fire from a hideout in Rawalpora area last night. Five policemen were also injured in the shootout. With this breakthrough, Sharma said the security forces have not only worked out several cases that took place over the past one year but also prevented many others which the module had planned. On the modus operandi of the module, the DGP said Hizbul Mujahideen, Al Umar Mujahideen and LeT had for the past six months pooled their resources including manpower, information and weaponry to work under the new umbrella organisation called Save Kashmir Movement. The outfit dominant in a certain area would help out logistically other outfits to carry out attacks, he said. Asked if busting of the module signalled an end to the presence of militants in the city, Sharma said some militants may still be around but we expect to go further in our probe.
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Afghanistan/South Asia | |||
Grenade Thrown Accurately in Kashmir | |||
2004-04-09 | |||
A grenade explosion and gunfire at an election rally in Indian-held Kashmir killed nine people Thursday and wounded at least 56, including the state's tourism and finance ministers. The rally was being held by the state's governing People's Democratic Party ahead of national parliamentary elections to begin April 20. Eight civilians and a police officer were killed and at least 56 people were wounded, according to Dr. S. Jalal, administrator of the Sher-e-Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences, where most of the wounded were being treated. Police said they suspected Islamic militants in the attack, and a man who said he was with the little-known rebel group Save Kashmir Movement quickly claimed responsibility.
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India-Pakistan |
Gunmen Kill Ex-Rebel Chief in Kashmir |
2003-03-23 |
Gunmen on Sunday shot to death the former leader of Kashmir's largest Islamic rebel group in what may have been retribution for talks with the Indian government. The slaying of Abdul Majid Dar, former Kashmir commander of the Hezb-ul Mujahedeen, was a setback for Indian security authorities, who were trying to persuade the former leader to take a political role in the state wracked by 13 years of separatist violence. Dar was fatally shot in the town of Sopore, a separatist stronghold 35 miles north of Srinagar. Dar's mother and sister also were injured in the shooting by masked men, said K. Rajindra Kumar, the inspector general of police. Local news agencies in Srinagar received calls from two separatist groups, both of whom claimed responsibility for the attack. Syed Tajammul, a spokesman of the Save Kashmir Movement, said it had carried out the killing "for his activities against the movement." A similar claim was made by Faisal Nasir, who said he was a spokesman of the al-Nasreen group. |
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India-Pakistan |
Kashmir Separatists Kill Assembly Member |
2002-12-20 |
A state assembly member in India-controlled Kashmir was shot to death outside a mosque after Friday prayers. The shooting of governing coalition member Abdul Aziz Mir, 45, was the first attack on a member of the new Jammu-Kashmir assembly since elections in September and October, when separatist Islamic militants threatened to kill anyone who participated in the campaign. "Civil, well-reasoned discourse" in Kashmir involves killing anybody who doesn't let you have your way. A Pakistan-based rebel group, Save Kashmir Movement, claimed responsibility for Mir's killing and threatened more violence. Apparently their objective is to save Kashmir by killing everybody there, one by one... Elsewhere in the state Friday, police said one civilian was found shot to death and another beheaded. Yep. That's Islamists at work, all right... On Thursday night, suspected militants attacked the village of Batiya in Rajauri district, where they forced three young women from their homes, killed two with swords and one with a gun, police said. Police said villagers claimed the attackers belonged to the separatist group Al-Badr. Young women are less likely to be armed... Steve grabs the followup on the girlies... Kashmir women âslain over Islamic dressâ Suspected Islamic rebels killed three young women in India's Kashmir region for not wearing burqas, the head-to-toe veiled dress worn by Muslim women. The killings came a day after handwritten posters appeared in Rajouri district warning women that they would face consequences for not wearing the veiled dress. Unidentified gunmen barged into the house of Mohammad Sadiq at Hasyote village in the Thanamandi area and shot dead his 21-year-old daughter, Noureen Kousar. The attackers then entered house of Khalil Ahmad in the same village and kidnapped his 18-year-old daughter, Tahir Parveen. Her beheaded body was found in jungles hours later. Another young girl, Shehnaz Akhtar, was also shot in the killing spree, United News of India reported. Police have confiscated some posters pasted on the walls of two senior secondary schools in Rajouri town on Dec. 16 ordering girl students to wear burqas or face the consequences. There have been previous cases of Islamic militants in the area ordering women to wear veiled dresses. In one incident some years ago, Islamic rebels threw acid on the face of one girl who didn't comply. I wonder where the National Organization of Women is on this one? Hello, anyone out there? |
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