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India-Pakistan
In Pakistan, a militant deal sours
2011-10-28
The deal saw one of Pakistain's most feared forces of Evil walk from jail apparently in exchange for his commitment to nonviolence, help in reining in other fighters and possibly delivering the votes of his followers.

Supporters showered Malik Ishaq with rose petals when he left the prison in the eastern city of Lahore in July.

Days later, he was preaching murderous hatred toward minority Shias to a cheering crowd, energising a network whose members have joined al-Qaeda for terror strikes.

That was too much for Pak authorities, who incarcerated him again last month.

Pakistain has a well-documented history of trying to co-opt or strike deals with forces of Evil of various causes, and a close examination of the Ishaq case shows how that can play out.

It's a cautionary tale, perhaps, for US officials who are urging Pakistain to bring to the negotiating table Afghan forces of Evil who allegedly enjoy safe havens in the country's lawless border regions.

Fifteen years ago, Ishaq founded Laskhar-i-Jangvi, or LJ, which allies itself with al-Qaeda and the Taliban.

The LJ is blamed for scores of attacks on Shias and on Pak and US interests.

Ishaq was locked away in 1997 and accused in more than 200 criminal cases including the killings of 70 Shias.

One judge attempted to hide his face with his hands, but Ishaq made clear he knew his identity in a chilling way: He read out the names of his children, and the judge abandoned the trial, he said.
But the state could never make the charges stick -- in large part because witnesses, judges and prosecutors were too scared to convict.
That happens when your country's controlled by gangsters.
Frightened judges treated him honourably in court and gave him tea and cookies, according to Anis Haider Naqvi, a prosecution witness in two cases against Ishaq.

One judge attempted to hide his face with his hands, but Ishaq made clear he knew his identity in a chilling way: He read out the names of his children, and the judge abandoned the trial, he said.

Despite the lack of convictions, Ishaq remained in prison for 14 years as prosecutors slowly moved from one case to the next.

Ishaq proved his usefulness in 2009, when he was flown from jail to negotiate with forces of Evil who had stormed part of the military headquarters in Rawalpindi and were holding hostages there, said Hafiz Tahir Ashrafi, who used to advise the Punjab provincial government on religious matters.

A behind-the-scenes effort by the government to co-opt the leaders of turban outfits and bring them into mainstream political life, or at least draw them away from attacking the state, helped Ishaq secure his July 15 release, according to Ashrafi.

"I met Ishaq several times in prison," Ashrafi said, emphasising that Ishaq assured him that he wanted to contribute to peace. "If someone wants to get back to normal life, yes, why not, we do help him," said Ashrafi. "These are our own men." He said he was disappointed to see him back in jail.

Punjab law minister Rana Sanaullah Khan denied there was any deal behind Ishaq's release, but said myrmidon leaders were free to join politics if they eschewed violence. "We are in touch with those who have become, or want to become, useful citizens," he said.

The Punjab is the key battleground between the ruling party of President Asif Ali President Ten Percent Zardari
... sticky-fingered husband of the late Benazir Bhutto ...
and the party of opposition leader Nawaz Sharif
... served two non-consecutive terms as prime minister, heads the Pakistain Müslim League (Nawaz). Noted for his spectacular corruption, the 1998 Pak nuclear test, border war with India, and for being tossed by General Musharraf...
, currently in power in that province.

Maulana Ahmad Ludhianvi, the head of Sipah-i-Sahaba Pakistain, or SSP, LJ's parent sectarian group, told a rally last year that Nawaz's brother, Punjab chief minister Shahbaz Sharif, had promised that Ishaq's release "would be settled in meetings" with him.

"After that meeting, the time is not far when the prison door would break open and Malik Ishaq would be released," he said.

LJ and other turban groups can muster significant support in Punjab and parts of Sindh province through their schools and mosques, making them an important political force.

Mainstream politicians have shown no hesitation in courting them despite their links to violence.

Local SSP leader Mohammad Tayyab said a recent SSP-backed candidate for a regional assembly seat in southern Punjab got 17,000 votes.

"That is what Zardari's party and Sharif's know very well," he said.

Khaled Ahmad, an expert on Pak turban groups in Punjab, said there is "no doubt" that the SSP and Sharif's party would cut deals as they have done in the past. "It is dangerous now because the group and its offshoots are in alliance with al-Qaeda."

Government intelligence reports obtained by The News Agency that Dare Not be Named show Ishaq made threats in his public appearances after his release from prison. He urged his supporters not to be afraid of Pak laws or prisons. "We know how to kill and how to die," he told a gathering near Rahim Yar Khan on September, 4 according to one report.

Ishaq's aides denied he made such remarks.
"No,no! Certainly not!"
The government suspected Ishaq of coordinating meetings in recent months of 50 or so alleged terrorists, said Khan, the law minister. Some of the men Ishaq visited directly after his release had allegedly been involved in terrorism and were being watched by law enforcement and intelligence agencies, said the government reports.

LJ's stronghold is south and central Punjab, a neglected, blisteringly hot part of the country that has long been the recruiting ground for turban groups. Wealthy families, disproportionately Shia, own large swaths of land where tenant farmers grow cotton, sugarcane and wheat and work at mango orchids.

Visitors to Ishaq's house in Islam Nagar in the southern Punjabi city of Rahim Yar Khan are greeted by an SSP member with an automatic rifle, against a backdrop of flags and banners glorifying the group. "My father's mission is a true one," said his son, Malik Usman. "We will seek our reward from Allah."
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Afghanistan
Afghan tribe signs pact to keep Taliban out
2010-01-29
[Dawn] An eastern Afghan tribe has signed a pact to keep the Taliban out of their lands, pledging to burn down the houses of those who shelter insurgents and force them to pay fines high as $20,000, reports AP.

US military officials Wednesday welcomed the decision by the Shinwari tribe with a pledge of $1 million for a tribal fund and $200,000 in jobs programs. But they acknowledged that the tribe was uniquely positioned to defy the Taliban with its sizable militia and a history of unity against outsiders.

The Shinwari, which dominate five districts of about 600,000 people in Nangarhar province, agreed in the document signed by 170 elders to stand unified against the Taliban. Tribal leaders said the agreement was borne as much out of frustration with the Afghan government as the desire to keep out militants.

The agreement affirms that the tribe ''recognizes that the Afghan government supports their cause.'' But it adds that ''defensive preparations have to be taken'' in case of a fallout with the government.

''We can't go to the government for anything,'' said Malik Niyaz, the white-bearded head of one of the most powerful of the tribe's 12 subgroups. He said his people are used to defending themselves.

Niyaz alone oversees a militia of about 400 men who successfully fought off a Taliban attack in July, killing at least four insurgents. Niyaz said it was an unprovoked attack on his people, though accounts differ. Some in the area said the fighting began as a feud between families rather than a stand against the Taliban.

US military working in the area said that they had to learn to work around local officials and go straight to the tribal elders, who serve as a de facto government.

The Shinwari tribe spans the volatile Pakistan-Afghanistan border area that serves as a sanctuary for the Taliban. However, the Afghan Shinwari faction is not commonly seen as a major supporter of the extremist group, partly because of the strength of its traditional hierarchy.

''We determined that the tribal elders were the ones that really represented the people,'' said Lt. Col. Randall Simmons, commander of U.S. troops in eastern Nangarhar. He said other Shinwari leaders have forces similar in size to Niyaz's informal groups of men who are ready to be called up to fight.

Despite the tribe's misgivings about the government, US officials called the decision a step forward because the tribe has at least said it is willing to work with the Afghan leadership, for example in reintegrating tribe members who have joined the Taliban but are ready to abandon the insurgency.

At a conference Thursday in London, the Afghan government plans to unveil a similar plan of economic incentives and jobs for Taliban fighters willing to turn against the militants.

''What it shows is that the community wants to have a little more cohesiveness and to reject destabilizing elements, which means their orientation is basically toward the Afghan government,'' said Dante Paradiso, the senior US civilian official working with the American military to secure the area.

The agreement followed six months of meetings between tribal leaders, starting in July when Niyaz and a few others renounced the Taliban. Each round of meetings brought in a few more leaders until the final document emerged on Jan. 21.

American diplomats helped smooth over some feuds to bring tribal leaders together but otherwise were not involved, Paradiso said.

The more than $1 million in funds is an acknowledgment of a major step taken by the tribe, Simmons said, adding that the U.S. hopes it will empower the elders to continue to take the lead in establishing security.

''If we can empower them a little bit, then in the grand scheme of things it is a bargain,'' he said.

The tribe will have to agree on how to use the extra funds. Those who have participated in early discussions say likely options are health centers, schools and funding for additional border police to help defend the area.

But underneath the optimism, the Shinwari say they recognize they are in danger and perhaps more so now that they have taken such a public stand.

Malik Usman, another powerful tribal leader who helped push through the pact, said he's been fighting the Taliban since they killed his brother a year ago. As recently as last week, he found out he had been targeted by a suicide bomber.

He worries Americans will leave soon, saying the US already made that mistake once, by pulling out and leaving the area to be run by criminals after US-backed fighters helped oust the Soviets.

''If the Americans leave us now, that will be their second big mistake,'' Usman said. ''When we were fighting the Russians they supported us, then they deserted us.''
Not everyone hates us and wants us to leave, it seems.
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India-Pakistan
People told to vacate village in Waziristan
2007-11-26
The army directed residents of Thapi village in North Waziristan to vacate the area at around 4pm on Sunday after it defused six remote controlled improvised explosive devices (IEDs) fitted near the village. The army ordered the residents to vacate the village, 15 kilometres east of Miranshah, under the collective responsibility clause of the Frontier Crime Regulations (FCR).

Meanwhile, a 35-member jirga from the village also met Assistant Political Agent (APA) Taslim Khan in Miranshah. The APA extended the deadline till 12pm on Monday (today). The jirga members included Malik Gul Bahram Khan, Malik Gul Faraz Khan, Malik Awal Din, Malik Zar Wali and Malik Usman Khan. The Frontier Crime Regulations comprises a set of laws enforced by British colonialists in 1901 in the tribal areas.
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India-Pakistan
Nuggets from the Urdu Press
2007-01-02
WPB is being opposed by jahils and munafiqs
According to daily Express, Provincial Minister of Education Maulana Fazal Ali Haqani condemned President Musharraf’s statement that those who oppose the Women’s Protection Bill are jahil (ignorant). He said the president had earlier said that those who oppose the bill are munafiq (hypocrites). He said the World Bank report clearly says that corruption in the Punjab is more than in NWFP and our government is working honestly.

Dancing naked to celebrate WPB
As reported in daily Nawa-i-Waqt, a young man, Malik Usman, in Dhok Maulvi Mohammad near Attock had started dancing naked in a populated bazaar near fawara chowk. He chanted slogans in favour of President Musharraf, Women Protection Bill, Shaukat Aziz and Benazir Bhutto. He also raised slogans in favour of Kashmala Tariq, Sumaira Malik, President Bush and Muslim League government. A huge crowd gathered to see the performance of a naked young man.

Possessed girl murdered by her father
As reported in daily Jang, in Harappa a superstitious father Jamal killed his daughter Shagufta and then burnt her to death fearing she was possessed by jinns and witches. The girl was mentally unstable. She was about to get married but she burnt her dowry and said she doesn’t want to get married. Her father Jamal told the police that when he woke up in the morning she was possessed by a witch and attacked him, “So I killed her and then set her on fire.” The residents of the area said she was pious and a hafiza Quran, but mysterious fires burnt things in their house regularly.

Miracle in Kala Shah Kaku
As reported in Daily Pakistan, in Kala Shah Kaku a 12 years old hafiz Quran was standing in a square and giving a sermon when his father came and told him that the era of divine help is over, and if you are such a believer then jump into a tandoor (oven) and let us see if divine help comes to save you. The son shouted Allah-o-Akbar and jumped into the oven and when people took him out of oven he was miraculously safe. This moving vision brought tears to the eyes of his father and other bystanders. His father, who is a famous goon and drunkard of the area, left his old habits and starting offering regular prayers.

Woman imam leads Friday prayers
As reported in daily Khabrain, around one hundred men and women offered Friday prayer lead by Amina Wadood, a professor at Virginia Commonwealth University. The prayers were offered in a church when no mosques gave them permission for prayers. The Islamic thinkers society activists demonstrated against the prayers in front of the church and said that a new deviation is being introduced in the religion of Islam. The main organiser of this event was Asra Naumani, a Mumbai born American.

Maulvi arrested for making fake marriage certificate
Accroding to daily Express, Supreme Court has ordered the arrest of Hafiz Abdul Ghafoor (nikahkhawan) and four witnesses who made a fake nikahnama (marriage certificate) to avoid the punishment of counsellor Basharat Choudhry who raped a housemaid. Police arrested the culprits outside the court. Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry initiated an inquiry against the counsellor of Wahga town after reading the letter written by the parents of raped housemaid. The learned judge told nikahkhawan Hafiz Abdul Ghafoor that he should be ashamed of providing a fake marriage certificate and cancelled his registration.

Fighting one Satan with the help of another
In daily Express columnist Javed Chaudhry wrote that Major (Retd) Amir said that Pakistan had started jihad before the coming of American aid in Pakistan. He said our courageous leadership, our secret agencies and Afghans had already encircled the Russians. The American dollars started coming after two years. Javed Chaudhry said, if we were able to strike back at Russia, then why did we need American dollars? Why did we have to sell the faith and emotions of mujahideen in the American markets? Does our religion allow such a strategy? Can we fight one Satan with the help of another Satan? Did Caliph Omar Farooq wage jihad against the Roman with the help of Persians? So Major Sahib! Admit that your leadership started Islamic jihad but the strategy was devised by the Americans and Indian, and it was against the spirit of Islam.

Our honour not for sale
Sarerahe wrote in daily Nawa-i-Waqt that is there a solution for the people who print nude pictures of women to sell their newspapers? Don’t they know that if this nudity is spread then what shall be left with us? Even those we consider responsible for our sins don’t print such obscenity. To earn money, respect and fame doesn’t mean that we should lose our honour.

No azan, only church bells
According to daily Nawa-i-Waqt, the members of Norwegian nationalist Democrat party are opposing the construction of a mosque in southern city of Christian Sand. They claimed that the construction of a mosque would give rise to the criminal activities and encourage inhuman activities in the area. They said we wouldn’t let the symbol of Muslims come to our town. They said there should be no azan and only the bells of the church shall ring. The mayor of Christian Sand criticised these statements of the Democrats and said their opinion about religion of Islam is not correct. Democrats have a strict policy for immigrants in the country. There are already two mosques in the city and Muslims have moved an application to build another mosque.

Religion can’t divide family
As reported in daily Khabrain, the family member of cricketer Mohammad Yousuf said, “We are Christian and are proud of being Christians.” His father Youhanna Masih told the newspaper that Yousuf asked other family member to convert to Islam. He said he lives with his elder son and his wife lives with Mohammad Yousuf. His mother said the changing of our religion can’t change the relationship. All religions give same message but their methods are different.

Maulvi is a symbol of resistance
In daily Express famous columnist Abdul Qadir Hassan wrote that today maulvis are under attack from all sides. Communists of yesterday and industrialists of today have jumped upon the maulvis and have started hurling allegations on their lives, politics and personalities. Maulvis are being treated today as they were treated during the British Raj. The rulers are descendants of British legacy but have adopted all the negative qualities and have shunned the positive qualities of Britishness. Maulvis were targeted when they started war of independence against the British in 1857.
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