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India-Pakistan
Al-Qaida vows to hunt Musharraf down
2008-08-20
The Taliban and al-Qaida leaders reportedly celebrated the exit of Pervez Musharraf from the presidency atop the hilly terrains along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border, while the Muslim extremists heaved a sigh of relief across the country.

And, they all pledged to hunt down Musharraf and eliminate him for aligning with the Western countries and killing hundreds in Pakistan in the name of war on terror, particularly during the Lal Masjid attack.

According to The Sun , Taliban warlords pledged on Monday night to hunt down and murder Pakistan's ousted president Pervez Musharraf. They were determined to exact brutal revenge for his dedication in supporting the West's fight against Islamic terrorism.

The ex-Army chief has survived as many as nine attempts on his life in the past. But, Pakistani Taliban spokesman Maulvi Umar warned: "He should be awarded strict punishment."

Muslim extremists are also said to be baying for blood, especially for attacking the Lal Masjid killing several innocent children. Maulana Mehraj, prayer leader at the Lal Masjid mosque in Pakistan's capital Islamabad, reportedly said: "We hope Musharraf goes to hell. We will find him, he must be hounded to death."
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India-Pakistan
While Pakistan Burns
2007-10-30
by Daveed Gartenstein-Ross

If there were any doubt about the reach of militants in Pakistan, last week's events should have put them to rest. The ostentatious procession celebrating the return home of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto was tragically cut short by twin bombs that killed over 130 and wounded several hundred more on Thursday night. The attackers almost succeeded in killing Bhutto as well. The blast shattered the windows in her vehicle and set a police escort car ablaze. The sophistication of the attack was apparent from the outset, and the bombs may have been accompanied by sniper fire.

But extremist violence in Pakistan is hardly news. The raids against the militant Lal Masjid mosque on July 11 occurred in Islamabad, the capital city. Supporters of al Qaeda exist in the military and intelligence services; indeed, there may prove to be a link between militant infiltrators of these institutions and the attempt on Bhutto's life. The mysterious fact that the streetlights were off and the phone lines dead during the attack further raises the possibility of collaboration with ideologically sympathetic low-level government officials. Still, the stronghold of militant activity in Pakistan is clearly the remote and mountainous Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) on the border with Afghanistan, where Pakistan has ceded more and more ground to al Qaeda and its allies over the past year.
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India-Pakistan
'Foreign fighters' in Lal Masjid
2007-07-08
Pakistan's religious affairs minister has said foreign Islamic militants are among those inside a besieged mosque in the capital, Islamabad.
"Whut? Whut? Furriners? Sniffin' around our wimmin's madrassah?"
Ejaz-ul-Haq said "terrorists... wanted within and outside Pakistan" are fighting the army, which has surrounded the Lal Masjid since last Tuesday.
"How far outside Pakistan?"
"They have the death sentence on 12 systems!"
An army commander was shot dead by students inside the mosque on Sunday. The mosque's leader, Abdul Rashid Ghazi, said he and his followers would commit suicide rather than surrender.
Go ahead. Any time you're ready.
At least 20 people have been killed since the stand-off began. Mr Ghazi told the BBC as many as 1,800 followers remain in the Lal Masjid mosque, although this cannot be verified.
"No. Wait. Make that 18 thousand followers! Ha ha! We got 18 thousand followers in here, all ready to blow themselves up! We got kilotons of arms and ammunition! An' we're ready to use 'em! Why? Because youse attacked us and we wudn't doin' nuttin'!"

'Surrender or die'
Speaking at a news conference, Mr ul-Haq said up to 250 militants - including foreign radicals - were leading the fighting. He said between two and five of them were wanted in connection with "high-profile cases".
"Between two and five of them" is probably the equivalent of "three or four of them." But we're trying to follow the logic of a mind trained in Islamic jurisprudence, so it could also mean "12" or "yellow."
The BBC's Syed Shoaib Hasan, who is in Islamabad, says there are reports that militants from an outlawed radical Muslim organisation, Jaish-e-Mohammad, are in actual control inside the mosque.
That's the ISI at work. It certainly wouldn't be that nice Professor Ghazi. And even if it's Jaish snuffies, they're really just pawn in the hands of the Heathen Hindoo™.
Members of the group have been involved in several failed attempts on the life of Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf, and it has also been linked to al-Qaeda.
"But not to that nice Perfessor Ghazi. Certainly not."
On Saturday, President Musharraf told the students they had no option but to surrender. "We have been patient. I want to say to the ones who have been left inside: they should come out and surrender, and if they don't, I am saying this here and now: they will be killed," he said.
"Unless someone can talk me out of it. Has anyone talked me out of it yet? Why not?"
More than 1,000 supporters left last week under mounting pressure from security forces, although only about 20 have left since Friday.

No power
The commander who died on Sunday was in charge of an operation to blow holes in the mosque compound walls to enable civilians to escape. Water and power to the mosque have been cut off and food is said to be getting scarce. Our correspondent says he has heard intermittent gunfire in the area and the boom of heavy weapons. An increased military presence on the streets, combined with the refusal to let a delegation of Islamic figures through to the mosque, suggests that the government is now closing the door to negotiation, our correspondent adds.
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India-Pakistan
200 Lal Masjid students arrested in Pakistan
2007-05-21
(Xinhua) -- Some 200 students of a religious school in the Pakistani capital of Islamabad were reportedly arrested Sunday night, according to witnesses. The witnesses quoted the imam at the Lal Masjid mosque as saying that they were ready to sacrifice lives but would not surrender.

Earlier Sunday, local press reports quoted Islamabad administration sources as saying that operation was likely against the Lal Masjid administration. They said roads to the mosque had been sealed and bearded people traveling in vehicles were taken out for body search. The Lal Masjid administration Saturday night freed two of the four policemen who were abducted Friday in return for four men detained by the police, the reports said, adding that the government agreed to release the four men Monday.
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India-Pakistan
Perv Again Challenges Islamist Radicals
2007-04-03
The stand off between two powerful clerics and their followers at Islamabad's Lal Masjid mosque and the Pakistani government is entering a new phase after last week's showdown over a local brothel and the clerics' anti-vice campaign.

President Pervez Musharraf is seeking to isolate the brothers politically with a view to then ordering their arrest. Many religious scholars came forward to Musharraf's call Sunday and condemned the radical brothers, Ghazi Abdul Rasheed and Maulana Abdul Azi.

But the men are adamant their students' action against an alleged brothel owner was legitimate and supported by the masses.

The woman was held captive for three days and several policemen were also seized. Students from the two madrassas or Islamic seminaries associated with Lal Masjid - one male and one female - were closely involved in the clashes with the security forces.

In January hundreds of burqa clad women from the female seminary occupied a children's library in Islamabad, to protest against the demolition of unauthorised mosques in the capital.

The action against the brothel was part of the mosque's recent "anti vice campaign" which critics say is a clear sign that lal Majid has become the heart of the pro-Taliban movement in Islamabad.

Lal Masjid on Monday was once again surrounded by para-military troops and female police, an indication that a major operation is imminent. However the two brothers - both wanted by Pakistan's interior ministry - are still defiant.

Maulana Abdul Aziz gave the federal government a week within which to "enforce Sharia", saying that if it failed "clerics will Islamise society themselves."

"Today 26 people in the neighborhood where the prostitution den was situated, wrote a letter to the ministry of interior and asking them to prevent the return of the women" Ghazi Abdul Rasheed told Adnkronos International (AKI) by telephone on Monday evening after a press conference in Islamabad inside the four walls of Lal Masjid.

"What the students of our seminary did was basically a popular demand and the neighborhood also applauded that. Now the issue is over. We have released the woman [alleged brothel owner] after her confessions. We have moved on and the government should also move on" Ghazi Abdul Rasheed asserted.

Nevertheless, interior minister Aftab Sherpao said the government would maintain the rule of law at all cost.

"We have a deep regard that it is a womens seminary so we would not go blindly inside the premises but there are cases registered against the management of the seminary for abduction of a women so we would obviously pursue those cases at all cost," Sherpao briefed AKI from Islamabad by phone.

In a speech to mark Sunday's celebrations of the birth of the Prophet Mohammed, President Musharraf called on religious scholars in Pakistan to come forward and decide whether what Lal Masjid people had done was right or wrong, and if they find it wrong to then take up action against them.

"I disagree with the actions conducted by the female students of Jamia Hafsa [the women's seminary managed by Lal Masjid]. Nobody has the right to take the law into their hands. Even if they found anything wrong they should have apprised the state machinery," Mufti Naeem of Jamia Binoria Karachi, told AdnKronos International.

But Ghazi Abdul Rasheed was adamant that, according to the Prophet Mohammed’s traditions, any vice should be stopped by force or, if there is not enough strength, Muslims should speak out against sin.

"The government is considering isolating Jamia Hafsa through political manipulations and is intending to use force but we rest assured that if anybody tried to use any force against Jamia Hafsa we would resist," a top leader of Jamaat-i-Islami, Dr Merajul Huda, told AKI.
Another dangerous gambit against his political enemies.
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India-Pakistan
Women stage sit-in in Pakistan
2007-02-12
Veiled in burqas and armed with bamboo canes, scores of female seminary students have occupied a children's library to protest plans to demolish mosques and madrassas built without permission on government land.

The unusual protest has pitted Pakistan's government against the chief of one of the country's largest Islamic schools, long suspected of militant links. ``The protest is their form of jihad (holy war). They started it on their own, and since we are sharing the same feeling, I have offered them support,'' the chief cleric of the Lal Masjid mosque that runs the seminary, Abdul Rashid Ghazi, told the Associated Press.

Ghazi, an outspoken critic of Pakistan's support of the United States, denied instigating the library protest, although he is the seminary's vice principal. His open support could rally thousands to the cause -- as he has in the past for anti-government and anti-U.S. protests.

Since late January, about 200 female students have been occupying the children's library, which is run by the municipal authority and is sandwiched between the mosque and the sprawling Jamia Hafsa seminary -- which provides a free Islamic education for some 6,500 girls and women. The standoff has highlighted Pakistan's apparent inability to regulate its more than 13,500 seminaries, amid international concerns that a minority of the schools promote extremism and provide militant recruits for the Taliban in neighboring Afghanistan.

The protest at Jamia Hafsa poses a direct challenge to government authority in Islamabad and could spark unrest among the thousands of Islamic students and sympathizers in the city.
Pakistan occasionally has taken extremely tough action on extremist religious schools. The army launched an Oct. 30 airstrike on a madrassa near the Afghan border accused of training suicide bombers, killing more than 80 people. While no military strike is foreseen in the relatively sedate capital, far from the volatile frontier, the protest at Jamia Hafsa poses a direct challenge to government authority in Islamabad and could spark unrest among the thousands of Islamic students and sympathizers in the city.

Shireen Mazari, director-general of a pro-government think tank, said the land dispute posed fundamental questions about the state's ability to uphold the law, and asked why city administrators failed to prevent the illegal construction in the first place.
According to local news reports, more than 84 such mosques and seminaries in Islamabad have been built without permission on state land. Residents say city authorities -- who declined to respond to requests by AP for comment -- already have demolished at least two, prompting protests by Jamia Hafsa students who fear their seminary could be razed next. ``Our Muslim government is acting like this only to please America, and I want to it to wake up now,'' said Uma Aymen, a 22-year-old seminary student involved in the sit-in.

Shireen Mazari, director-general of a pro-government think tank, said the land dispute posed fundamental questions about the state's ability to uphold the law, and asked why city administrators failed to prevent the illegal construction in the first place.

Naeem Iqbal, a spokesman for Islamabad police, said authorities were seeking to resolve the dispute peacefully. Pakistan's religious affairs minister met protesters Wednesday to discuss the standoff, and ``there has been no decision as yet'' to use force, Iqbal said. Expectations that security forces could be planning to break up the protest prompted hundreds of male and female seminary students and local youths to gather around the mosque late Friday, shouting, ``Jihad is our way!'' and ``Allah is Great!'' They pelted security forces with stones, fearing a raid on the library could be imminent.
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India-Pakistan
Al-Qaeda leader in Pakistan detained
2006-01-05
A man considered a leading figure of the al-Qaeda network in Pakistan is being detained by the Pakistani intelligence agencies, Adnkronos International (AKI) has learnt from informed sources. However the same sources said that news of the capture of Ghulam Mustafa, alias Omar, alias Shahjee has not been shared with the US authorities as part of normal cooperation in the "war on terror". The fact that Mustafa was coordinating attacks in Indian Kashmir, in collaboration with the Pakistani military and secret services, may explain their reticence.

Ghulam Mustafa was picked up in the city of Lahore by the Pakistani intelligence agencies about 10 days ago. It is Mustafa’s second arrest; he was also detained on 11 August, 2004 after his brother-in-law Usman was picked up for allegedly involved in plans for sabotage in the Pakistani capital, Islamabad. Ghulam Mustafa made a telephone call to Usman at that time and that was traced by the authorities to Karachi and he was eventually arrested.

During his interrogation, Ghulam Mustafa confessed that he was close to the al-Qaeda chief, Osama bin Laden, but refused to admit that he was ever been involved in any activity related to violence. He told his interrogators that his role was limited to financial and logistical support to al-Qaeda operations.

He also admitted that he was the sector commander at the Line of Control (LOC) that divides the disputed region of Kashmir between India and Pakistan and had helped militants enter India from the areas of Bagh and Athmuqam in the Neelam valley. For this task he coordinated his assignments with Pakistan army officials of the Tenth Corps as well as the Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) which is Pakistan's military intelligence service.

India and Pakistan have fought two out of their three wars over Kashmir. Delhi accuses Islamabad of funding and arming Kashmiri separatists, to support the insurgency in Indian Kashmir. Pakistan has denied these allegations.

Ghulam Mustafa's confessions that he was doing logistics for al-Qaeda while also coordinating with Pakistan's secret services in Kashmir were if not a surprise, certainly an embarrassment. The interrogators opted to remain tight-lipped about his arrest and formally handed him over to the police and registered a case against him for alleged terrorist activities. However Pakistan's anti-terrorist court eventually released Ghulam Mustafa in September 2005 after they found no proof of his involvement in any violence.

Sources now tell AKI that Ghulam Mustafa was picked up by Pakistan's intelligence agencies after they uncovered a conspiracy to kill Pakistani president General Pervez Musharraf in December 2005. This led to a crackdown on those circles believed to be close to al-Qaeda, including the prayer leaders of the Lal Masjid mosque in Islamabad, Ghazi Abdul Rasheed and Maulana Abdul Aziz.

However, since Ghulam Mustafa has been involved in low-level operations in the disputed region of Kashmir together with the ISI, his real identitiy as al-Qaeda chief in Pakistan was not shared with the Americans. The sources add that Mustafa has instead been locked up in a secret prison, and no charges have been filed against him.
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