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India-Pakistan
Eleven Pakistani Islamists sentenced to death
2006-02-22
A Pakistani anti-terrorism court sentenced 11 members of an al Qaeda-linked Islamic group to death on Tuesday after finding them guilty of killing 10 people in an attack on a top military commander in 2004, lawyers said. All the convicts belonged to Jundullah, a shadowy group analysts say has ties with al Qaeda and foreign militants. Judge Feroz Mehmood Bhatti said all those accused were found guilty of masterminding attacks on a convoy escorting then Lieutenant-General Ahsan Saleem Hayat in June 2004.

Hayat, now a full General, escaped unharmed, but 10 people, including six soldiers, were killed and 12 other people wounded. The ambush was in response to a security force operation in South Waziristan, where hundreds of people have died in clashes between the Pakistani army and militants in the past two years.

Atta-ur Rehman, the ring-leader of the group, said they would appeal to a higher court. "That court was fake, it had no power," he told reporters after the verdict. "We will appeal at the high court within seven days."

Witnesses said all the convicts chanted "Allahu Akbar" -- God is Greatest -- after hearing the judgement. Mullah Bux Bhatti, a state lawyer said he was satisfied with the verdict and the conviction was based on the confession made by the convicts.
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India-Pakistan
Accused in Pearl murder awaiting trial for four months
2006-01-08
The Sindh home department’s indecision has been delaying for more than four months the proceedings of the trial of an accused in the Daniel Pearl murder case. Hashim Qadir alias Arif was declared an absconder along with other co-accused at the arraignment of Omer Saeed Sheikh, who masterminded the kidnapping and murder of the Wall Street Journal reporter and three others in 2002. Qadir, according to the investigators of the case, was the man who had set up a meeting between Omer Sheikh and Daniel Pearl at the Akbar International Hotel in Rawalpindi. Intelligence officials said Qadir was one of seven militants still being sought in connection with Pearl’s murder.

Allegedly an activist of the Harkatul Mujahideen, Qadir was arrested in Gujranwala on July 24, 2005. He was brought to Karachi and after the completion of the remand proceedings his case was marked for trial to Anti Terrorism Court-IV (ATC-IV) Karachi headed by Judge Feroz Mehmood Bhatti. However, Qadir’s trial was stalled after the provincial home department informed the court that a notification was in the pipeline to declare him a dangerous and hardened criminal whose trial should be held inside jail. For four months, the state attorney has been informing the court that the provincial home department is planning to issue a notification to hold Qadir’s trial inside Central Prison Karachi. The case was again fixed for hearing on Saturday before ATC-IV. The state counsel once again sought an adjournment on the grounds that the notification for the jail trial of the accused has not yet been issued.

Qadir, first considered the main suspect in the case, was presumed dead after his family told the police that he was killed while fighting against US troops in Afghanistan. Pearl, 38, was kidnapped in January 2002 while researching a report on Islamist militants. He was later found beheaded. Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh, a British-born militant, was sentenced to death in 2002 for masterminding the crime while three associates were given life in prison. Their appeals against the convictions are still pending. Intelligence officials said Qadir was found on a bus about to depart for Muzaffarabad, the capital of Azad Kashmir, after being traced via the satellite telephone he was carrying.

A police investigator in Karachi said Qadir had acted as a co-ordinator between Omar and Amjad Hussain Farooqi, one of the main suspects in Pearl’s murder described by the authorities as a key link between local militants and al Qaeda. Farooqi was shot and killed by security forces in Nawabshah in September 2004. In November, police shot dead Asim Ghafoor, another militant wanted for Pearl’s abduction and murder, in a clash in Karachi, where Pearl was murdered. Pearl’s widow, Mariane, in her book about her husband’s murder, A Mighty Heart, said that Qadir worked as a spokesman for the Harkatul Mujahideen (Movement for Holy Warriors), a militant group fighting Indian rule in Kashmir.

Intelligence officials have said that Qadir also has links to the Jaish-e-Mohammad, another militant group linked to al Qaeda and blamed for a string of attacks in Pakistan, including attempts to kill President Pervez Musharraf. Qadir’s arrest came during a crackdown on militants after the 7/7 London bombings.
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Afghanistan/South Asia
Two Hakart activists acquitted in blast cases
2005-03-31
KARACHI: An Anti-Terrorism Court on Wednesday acquitted two activists of the banned Harkatul Mujahideen Al Alami in petrol pump blast cases. ATC Judge Haq Nawaz Baloch exonerating Syed Ahmer Ali Kazmi and Mohammad Naeem Rafi ordered that they be released forthwith if they were not involved in other cases. They were prosecuted on the charge of causing bomb explosions at Shell petrol pumps in Gizri and Saddar areas on May 15, 2003. The court in its order observed that the prosecution has not proved the case against the accused.

The court had earlier reserved the judgment after hearing the closing arguments of defence counsel, M.R Syed, and Special Public Prosecutor Mazhar Qayum. Meanwhile, the same defendants were also found innocent in another blast case. The ATC headed by Judge Feroz Mehmood Bhatti acquitted them of the charges of causing explosion at a petrol pump in Soldier Bazaar area.
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India-Pakistan
"Wudn't me" sez Sipah thug
2003-05-13
A worker of the defunct Sipah i-Sahaba Pakistan (SSP), being tried in a bomb blast case, denied on Monday the charges against him and said he was innocent.
"Nope. Wudn't me. Nope. Musta been somebody else."
Judge Feroz Mehmood Bhatti fixed May 14 for hearing final arguments from the prosecution and the defence after the statement of Sabir Waseem. The SSP worker was charged with launching an anti-tank rocket (BM-107) that had pierced through the wall of the Commerce College on the Dr. Ziauddin Ahmed Road on Nov 23, 2001. The defendant said that he had been implicated in the case by the police and that all the witnesses were policemen.
"Who y'gonna believe, judge? A buncha coppers or me?"
According to prosecution, the SSP worker along with his absconding accomplice, Asif Ramzi, reached the college to fire rocket to target Americans staying at the second and third floor of Sheraton Hotel. The two men, carrying the rocket and its locally-made launcher in a kit -bag, reached near the hotel on a motorbike around 9:30 p.m. The two positioned the launcher on the pushcart of a junk vendor. It was alleged that while accused Waseem was still trying to position the launcher to the hotel, the rocket blew off due to a short-circuit, hitting the outer wall of the Commerce College. It landed in a classroom making an eight-inch hole in the wall.
"Yow! What was that?"
"A 107 mm Chinese-made antitank rocket. Now go back to sleep."
"Hokay."
According to bomb disposal squad, the device was an anti-tank rocket, weighing 25 kilograms with 10 to 12 kgs of explosive material. Waseem was arrested red-handed during a shootout with the police following an attack on a prisoners' van, which was carrying, among others, Dilawar Hussain, a worker of the banned Sipah-i-Sahaba Pakistan.
Dilawar's not to be confused with the late Dildar, who got the high jump. Or maybe it is the same guy, since they often don't stay quite dead...
During the interrogation, the police found the lower body of Waseem severely burnt. He disclosed before the police that he was himself injured while firing the rocket.
"Cheeze, Waseem! Your legs look like a coupla burnt matches!"
"Yar... Red to black, green to white... Or is it the other way around? Damn! I can never remember!"
Two people, including a constable, Shakil, were killed when the prisoners' van, also carrying some sectarian workers, was ambushed on February 28, this year near Bohra Pir within the limits of Nabi Bux police. Ramzi and two others, Ata ur Rahman and Naeem Bukhari, were declared absconders in this case.
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