India-Pakistan |
Court takes up appeals filed by convicts in Musharraf attack case |
2008-01-30 |
An Anti-Terrorism Appellate bench of the High Court of Sindh (SHC) comprising Justice Qaiser Iqbal and Justice Mehmood Alam Rizvi admitted on Tuesday for regular hearing three appeals filed by convicts in the attempt-to-kill General Pervez Musharraf case. Muhammad Imran, Muhammad Hanif and Ashraf Khan, the ameer, naib ameer and finance secretary of the banned Harkatul Mujahideen Al Almi, were convicted and sentenced to serve life imprisonment and were fined Rs 500,000 each by an Anti-Terrorism Court for Karachi division. The appellants maintained that the trial court erred in law and that they were sentenced and convicted in the absence of any material. There was no recovery of explosives, no witness to the placing of the explosives or conspiracy except for the alleged confessional statement of the accused, which is not admissible, the appeals said. The bench, accepting the appeals for regular hearing as matter of right to the accused, also issued notice to the Advocate General Sindh. |
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India-Pakistan |
Perv conspiracy case: 3 Harkat men sentenced |
2008-01-16 |
![]() Justice Ghulam Ali Samtio of ATC-I, Karachi division, gave the verdict against Muhammad Imran, Muhammad Haneef and Ashraf Khan. In a judgment announced inside Central Prison, Karachi, where the men were being tried for security reasons, co-accused Sharib alias Arsalan Farooqui, Jameel and Inspector Waseem Ahmed of the Rangers, were exonerated of the charges for want of evidence. According to the prosecution, the accused men had parked a vehicle laden with explosives on Shahrah-e-Faisal on April 24, 2002. President Musharraf was scheduled to travel from the Karachi airport to the State Guest House along this route. The plan to kill him, however, failed as the remote-controlled device attached to the explosives apparently failed to detonate. The conspiracy came to the fore when the men were arrested in a bomb blast case at the US Consulate in Karachi. They confessed to this incident and were charged with attempted murder under Section 324 of the Criminal Procedure Code. |
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India-Pakistan |
Harkat man given death |
2006-04-30 |
![]() Earlier, the ATC had awarded him five years imprisonment on charges of 'Qatel-e-Khata'. When Atif filed an appeal against his conviction in the Sindh High Court, its anti-terrorism appellate (ATA) bench remanded the case back to the ATC with the instructions to separate the charges against the accused arising from different FIRs and try him for each of them. |
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India-Pakistan |
Militant arrested in Karachi |
2006-04-04 |
![]() Khitab said Junaid was wanted in connection with several attacks on police and a 2003 bombing at a private club in Karachi that injured nine people. The government had offered a reward of Rs 500,000 for information leading to his arrest. Harkatul Mujahideen Al-Almi emerged as an offshoot of Harkatul Mujahideen, a banned militant group that fights against Indian security forces in Kashmir and is suspected of ties with the Taliban militia in Afghanistan. |
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India-Pakistan | |
Two Harkat men arrested in Karachi | |
2004-01-22 | |
Police arrested two men said to be activists of the outlawed Harkatul Mujahideen Al-Almi, sources told Daily Times here on Wednesday. On the basis of information extracted from Shamim Ahmed who was arrested on Sunday from Gulistan-e-Jauhar, a team of the Crime Investigation Department (CID) raided a house in Shafiq Colony and arrested Inamullah and Shakeel, sources added. They said Inamullah was the brother of Ikramullah from whose house police had recovered substances used for making explosives. Sources said the Crime Investigation Department also recovered some belongings of the late Asif Ramzi from the house where Inamullah and Shakeel were arrested.
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India-Pakistan | |||
Profile of three more banned militant groups | |||
2003-11-22 | |||
Profiles! Getcher profiles! Y'can't tell the jihadis without a profile! The Government of Pakistan banned three more religious organisations on Thursday and since people know very little about their background, Daily Times compiled their profiles below: The government had banned Millat-e-Islamia Pakistan (MIP), Islami Tehrik-e-Pakistan (ITP) and Tehrik-e-Khudamul Islam (TKI) at a meeting attended by President Pervez Musharraf and Prime Minister Zafarullah Jamali last Saturday. Jamaatul Furqan (JF): The JF is a breakaway faction of the TKI and was formed on September 25 when the TKI led by Maulana Masood Azhar reached an agreement over distribution of TKI assets with Commander Abdul Jabbarâs group. The two groups also agreed on a âcode of conductâ and a name change for the Jabbar group at a meeting in Lahore. Maulana Jabbar and Commander Umar led the breakaway faction. They accused Maulana Azhar, former head of the banned Jaish-e-Muhammad, of embezzling funds and disagreeing with his jihadi policies. Not only that, the two groups clashed for control of assets, such as the TKIâs Karachi headquarters Markaz-e-Batha. One man was reported injured in a gunbattle outside the Markaz on April 14. At the September 25 meeting, the Jabbar group agreed to take the name Jamaatul Furqan in exchange for Rs 1.5 million and a white Toyota Corolla 1988 model car. The Umar group also agreed to destroy the receipts of cheques it had for fundraising under the name of TKI. After reconciliation, Commander Umar became Nazim-e-Aala, Maulana Abdullah Shah Mazhar was named Ameer for Pakistan and Commander Jabbar was made supreme commander, while he was under arrest for the Taxila church explosion and an attack on a missionary in Murree in 2002. Before reconciliation, Masood Azhar wrote a letter to intelligence agencies against 10 of his partymen including Commander Jabbar and other leaders of the breakaway faction. The letter was published in the national press after which Commander Jabbar and others were arrested in July 2003.
Jamaitul Ansar (JA): The JA was the new name given to Deobandi jihadi organisation Harkatul Mujahideen (HM) in March 2003 to escape a ban. But it was not included in the list of organisations banned on January 12, 2002. The JA went through several changes over the years. In 1993, the HM merged with the Harkatul Jihadul Islami to form what came to be knows as Harkatul Ansar (HA). In 1995, an organisation called Al Faran kidnapped American, German, British and Norwegian tourists in Pehlgam in held-Kashmir. The two commanders who set up the group belonged to the HM were Abdul Hammad Turkey and Commander Sikandar. The kidnapped tourists were to be used as a leverage to get Maulana Azhar, commander Shahid Afghani and others freed. The US declared it a terrorist group. The HA was divided into two groups. Chief of HM Maulana [Fazlur Rehman] Khalil came under pressure and he denounced the Al Faran group. Both the commanders were killed later, which made it easier for Maulana Khalil to part ways from Al Faran. The HA split in 1996. The HM was shocked when Maulana Azhar formed Jaish Muhammad in February 2000. A large number of its mujahideen joined Maulana Azhar. When the US attacked Afghanistan in 1998, two HM training camps were destroyed and 21 mujahideen killed. The HM fought against Americans with the Taliban. But the organisation had a major setback when some of its leaders parted ways and formed a faction as Harkatul Mujahideen Al Almi (HMA). Later it established relations with Lashkar-e-Jhangvi. Maulana Khalil transformed the group into Jamaitul Ansar.
Hizbut Tahrir (HT): The HT is an international organisation working for the establishment of a Khilafat (caliphate) in the world and claims it has an alternative system. The HT has a network in 50 countries but in Pakistan it began working in August 1999 with Naveed Butt as the groupâs official spokesman for Pakistan. Mr Butt told Daily Times in an interview that the HT considered militancy or use of weapons for the establishment of a caliphate as Haram (forbidden). âWe believe in a peaceful change,â he said. However, many of its leaders like Mr Butt and Taimur Butt have been detained many a time in the past.
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