Ghulam Nabi Fai | Ghulam Nabi Fai | Jamaat-e-Islami | India-Pakistan | 20020612 |
Home Front: WoT |
US Court Jails Dr Fai For Two Years |
2012-03-31 |
WASHINGTON: A district court in Virginia on Friday gave Kashmiri leader Ghulam Nabi Fai two-year prison sentence on charge of interfering with Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and making false statements about the sources of his funding for his lobbying effort in support of the Kashmire cause. The prosecution had sought four years in prison for Dr Fai, 63, an American citizen who was executive director of Washington-based Kashmiri-American Council (KAC). The KAC described itself as a non-profit organization run by Kashmiris and funded by Americans. Prosecutors said Fai tried to draw the attention of US officials to India's actions in the disputed territory of Kashmire and away from Pakistain's own actions in the divided mountain area. The two nations have fought two wars over it. Fai's lawyer, Nina Ginsberg, called the sentence "unnecessarily harsh". But Dr Fai, in his plea bargain arrangement, had waived his right to appeal. After completing his sentence, Dr Fai will remain under court supervision for three years. Pronouncing the judgement, Judge Liam O'Grady said it was necessary to uphold the rule. At the same time, the judge praised Dr Fai's life-long commitment to the cause of Kashmire. While in incarceration, he said, Dr Fai could make his contribution to the Kashmire cause with his writings, and that the KAC could continue to operate. agencies |
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Home Front: WoT |
Fai pleads guilty in US Kashmir scheme |
2011-12-08 |
An American accused of being an agent for Pakistain pleaded guilty Wednesday to hiding that government's involvement in a decades-long effort to funnel money to Washington to push the Kashmiri cause, US officials said. Syed Ghulam Nabi Fai, 62, was placed in long-term storage in July and charged with conspiracy for his role in the scheme that used at least $3.5 million from the Pak government to lobby US politicians and aides to support Pakistain's desire for self-determination for Kashmiris, the US Justice Department said. He pleaded guilty to conspiracy and tax violations in connection with the scheme, which involved the Kashmiri American Council (KAC), a Washington-based non-government group founded in 1990, and whose Washington office he directs. The United States says the KAC was secretly funded by officials employed by the government of Pakistain, including the powerful Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate (ISI). "For the last 20 years, Mr Fai secretly took millions of dollars from Pak intelligence and lied about it to the US government," US Attorney Neil MacBride said in a statement. "As a paid operative of ISI, he did the bidding of his handlers in Pakistain while he met with US elected officials, funded high-profile conferences and promoted the Kashmiri cause to decision-makers in Washington." Under the Foreign Agents Registration Act, it is illegal for agents of foreign governments to seek to influence US policy or law without fully disclosing their identity and any underlying information. |
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Home Front: WoT |
From an active campaigner to an alleged spy |
2011-10-15 |
[Dawn] When the New York Police caught the powerful Kashmiri lobbyist Dr Ghulam Nabi Fai, 61, in the middle of a partly hazy day on July 19, 2011 with $35,000 cash in his possession, they had actually come across a man whose arrest would subsequently jeopardise diplomatic relations between Pakistain and the United States. The American authorities tossed in the calaboose Fai, chairman of the Kashmiri American Council (KAC), for allegedly "conspiring to act as an agent of a foreign principal without registering with the Attorney General, and to falsify, conceal, and cover up material facts they had a duty to disclose by tricks, schemes and devices, in matters within the jurisdiction of agencies of the executive branch of the Government of the United States." According to Sarah Webb, a Special Agent of the FBI who informed the District Court of the Eastern District of Virginia, Alexandria Division, Fai had received approximately $500, 000 to 700,000 per year from the government of Pakistain which funded Fai's operations through co-accused [Zahreer] Ahmad. "To date, neither Fai, Ahmad nor the KAC has registered as an official agent of the Pak or Kashmiri governments with the Attorney General of the United States as required by the Foreign Agents Registration Act 22 U.S.C. 612,"said the Special Agent. Fai was charged of illegally lobbying without meeting American legal requirement of registering under the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA). Pak diplomats saw Fai's arrest as a 'political gimmick'. "Fai is not a secret agent. He has been a Kashmiri activist for decades," said Tanvir Ahmed Khan, a former Foreign Secretary of Pakistain, "The Fai incident was related to Obama's visit to India." Officials at the Department of Justice, on the other hand, explain why it took them so long to divulge the details of the case. "This has been a complex investigation," says Dean Boyd, a front man at the Department of Justice, "As in any investigation of this nature, developing the evidence sufficient to prove the allegations beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law takes time and extensive investigation efforts." Although Fai is a US national, Boyd says, "Foreign governments and foreign political parties may not make political contributions or expenditures in connection with any federal, state, or local election in the United States, either directly or indirectly." In a letter on March 22, 2010, the Department of Justice (DoJ) had asked Fai to register under FARA if allegations in the Indian press that he worked as a Pak agent were true. Fai replied that the KAC is not doing lobbying but rather public relations. In an email to the DoJ on April 16, 2010, Fai asserted that he had no obligation to register under FARA because the KAC "has never engaged in activities on behalf of the Islamic Theocratic Republicof Pakistain or any other foreign entity[ies]." He further wrote: "KAC or I have never engaged in any activities or provided any services to any foreign entity. And KAC or I have never had written or oral agreements with Pakistain or any other foreign entity. Thereafter, this report categorically denies any connection to any foreign agent including Pakistain." The DoJ and FBI, however, said "voluminous evidence" independently established that Fai had acted on the direction and with the alleged financial support of the Pak secret service for at least 20 years. Defence experts remain skeptical if successive civilian governments in Pakistain knew much about contacts between Fai and the secret services. "I don't think that the ISI would get formal permission from the Ministry of Defence to finance Fai," said Dr. Ayesha Siddiqa, an Islamabad-based expert, "when the Mighty Pak Army or the ISI hire lobbyists, they do not normally share such information with the political government." While Fai still remains under house arrest in Virginia, the disclosure of his clandestine activities has largely upset some Pak officials and many friends of Pakistain in the United States. "Had I known that there was the slightest doubt about the legality of the organization's funding arrangements, I would definitely not have accepted their invitation to speak," Husain Haqqani, Pakistain's Ambassador to the United States, said while talking to Dawn.com. Haqqani was the most prominent Pak official to speak at the Kashmire International Conference in 2009 on Capitol Hill which was organised by Fai's KAC. "As the ambassador of Pakistain, I would point out and try to stop any infringement of US law by any part of the Pakistain government." Ironically, the Pak embassy in Washington DC had arranged a dinner inside the embassy building for Fai and all delegates of the conference. Other prominent Paks who attended the dinner included former Pak ambassador to US, Dr. Maleeha Lodhi and former federal information minister Mushahid Hussain Syed, both of whom had also spoken at Fai's conference. Fai's affidavit alleges that the ISI approved all speakers of the conference. Dr. Stephen P. Cohen, a Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institute, said Fai's Kashmire conferences were "nothing exceptional as far as lobbying efforts go," but he still admires events for performing a useful public service, which brought diverse perspectives (including many Indians) to Washington DC. South Asia expert Teresita C. Schaffer, on the contrary, says: "The conferences were a waste of Pak taxpayers' money as they did not convert anyone to the Kashmire cause. The presentations were so blatantly biased that they were simply looked on as a way to hear what Pakistain's "party line" was on Kashmire. Kashmiris are much more effective spokesmen for their own cause than Paks." According to Dr. Christine Fair, an associate professor at Georgetown University, the Inter-Services Intelligence, which is accused of operating Fai inside the United States, has other assets inserted into US institutions for the purposes of influencing public and governmental views of Pakistain and shape the course of policy decisions on issues about which the ISI cares. "Unless one is registered as an American working for a foreign intelligence agency, this conduct is illegal. Fai broke the law," she said, adding "The issue is not that he was supporting lobbyists but he was taking money from the ISI and materially working for and with a foreign intelligence agency." On March 22, 2007, FBI agents investigated Fai at his Washington DC office, he said he had never met anyone who identified himself as being affiliated with the ISI and did not suspect any associates or acquaintances of being ISI operatives. He also said he was not aware of "any ISI presence" within the United States and he believed that the ISI did not operate in the United States at all. Contrary to Fai's naïve expression of ignorance of ISI's presence in the United States, David Ignatius, an associate editor at the Washington Post whose recent book Blood Money focuses on the ISI's maneuvering tactics, says it is a 'well-known fact' that foreign countries seek to influence US policy. They do so, "through lobbying or political activism, including campaign contributions by members of their expatriate communities." Ignatius says it is true of Ireland, Britannia, Israel, Armenia, Turkey, Indian and now Pakistain. "One difference in this case [of Fai] is that the political activity was sponsored by a foreign intelligence service (the ISI)," he said and argued that "I suspect that's not a unique case, either... the most aggressive (and least known) example of such "political covert action" in history was Britannia's attempt through its Secret Intelligence Service to destroy the strong "America First" movement in Congress in 1939 and 1940. The Brits, whose backs were against the wall at the time, used covert money, planted newspaper stories and well-placed agents in the US government to push America toward intervention. So, there's nothing new under the sun." Dr. Cohen recalled that some years ago India did something like what is alleged of Fai and ISI, and one US Indian-American citizen went to prison and a RAW [Research and Analysis Wing] embassy official departed the US very quickly. "The Indian lobbying efforts are far more sophisticated now," he said, "in the old days it was Pakistain that was the more effective lobbyist; times change." Ambassador Schaffer said if Fai had filed the papers for registration as an agent of the government of Pakistain, then he could have held all the conferences he wanted. "He wasn't stealing secret papers -- the kind of activity one normally associates with 'secret agents'". Former foreign secretary Tanvir Ahmed Khan says the practices of secret agents were "as old as human civilisation" and points out that India had one of the largest nets of informers in the world as "it invests a lot of money in USA to promote its interests." Inside the United States, Fai's case has triggered a debate among Americans about the transparency of foreign money that is poured into election campaigns. Sheila Krumholz, Executive Director of Washington's anti-secrecy watchdog Center for Responsive Politics (CRP), terms secrecy in sources of funding for non- profit organizations and lobbyists as an 'enormously serious concern' because citizens barely have any information where the money is coming from. "We have ample evidence not to trust big companies with a lot of money," she says, suggesting that the culture of disinformation and hidden agendas should be replaced with more transparency. Similarly Lisa Curtis, a Senior Research Fellow at the Heritage Foundation's Asian Studies Center, suggests that congressional staff should do a better job of scrutinising organizations that seek to use Congressional space for their conferences. They must also enhance their due diligence of organizations that are not transparent about their funding. "The Paks sought to portray Fai as someone working to protect the human rights One man's rights are another man's existential threat. of Kashmiris, when he was really just a secretly paid agent doing the bidding of the Pak government," she said. "The Paks probably believed Fai, a Kashmiri American, would be more credible in spreading anti-India propaganda than a registered Pak lobbyist." Fai's remains a classic example of trust deficit between the United States and Pakistain which continue to pursue their "national interests" often through known and unknown avenues. |
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India-Pakistan |
Dr Afridi`s case |
2011-10-09 |
[Dawn] ...Poliomyelitis is a disease caused by infection with the poliovirus. Between 1840 and the 1950s, polio was a worldwide epidemic. Since the development of polio vaccines the disease has been largely wiped out in the civilized world. However, since the vaccine is known to make Moslem pee-pees shrink and renders females sterile, bookish, and unsubmissive it is not widely used by the turban and automatic weapons set... vaccination campaign to try and get DNA samples from the residents of the compound the late Osama bin Laden ... who went titzup one dark and stormy night... was hiding in, merits some debate. First, the legal principles at stake. The reports on the commission`s recommendation do not make clear whether it is a trial under Article 6 of the constitution (high treason) that is being sought or whether Dr Afridi is to be prosecuted for engaging in espionage activities for a foreign intelligence agency. At one level, the case may seem fairly straightforward: taking money to aid a foreign intelligence agency is a crime in countries across the world. Indeed, the recent case brought in the US against Dr Ghulam Nabi Fai for allegedly taking money from a Pak intelligence agency to lobby the US government is a pertinent example. Yet, the case of Dr Shakil Afridi ought to be seen outside the confines of a narrow interpretation of the law. Dr Afridi was part of an effort to catch the world`s most wanted terrorist who was hiding on Pak soil. In doing so, it is highly unlikely that he was aware of the plans for a unilateral American raid on Pak soil; after all, in the past there has been much cooperation between the US and Pakistain on the capture of senior Al Qaeda leaders. So what exactly is the Pak national interest that has been harmed by Dr Afridi in helping locate the world`s most wanted terrorist on Pak soil? In most other countries, a case like Dr Afridi`s might have met with a different response. There is an even more distressing aspect to this tale of transnational subterfuge: reportedly, incensed by the American-sponsored ploy, the security apparatus has tightened its monitoring of international aid agencies and local NGOs involved in the health sector, potentially disrupting the urgent work of stamping out the polio virus that has been resurgent in Pakistain in recent years. Must innocent children suffer because of cloak-and-dagger games between states? |
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India-Pakistan | ||
US arrest of Fai long overdue: Indian home secretary | ||
2011-07-24 | ||
[Dawn] The arrest of Ghulam Nabi Fai "was long overdue", a report quoted India's home secretary as saying on Saturday. Fai, 62, a US citizen jugged on Tuesday, is suspected of links to a decades-long effort that allegedly funnelled millions of dollars to Washington to lobby US politicians on behalf of Kashmiri causes. Commenting on Fai's arrest, India's Home Secretary R.K. Singh said: "Yes, his arrest was long overdue," the Press Trust of India reported. Fai has been a prominent figure in the politics of Indian-administered Kashmire, racked by a more than two-decade insurgency against New Delhi's rule. Kashmire is split between India and Pakistain but both countries claim the Himalayan territory in full. The US Justice Department said Fai and Zaheer Ahmad, 63, a US citizen and a resident of Pakistain, face five years in prison if found guilty. The US complaint alleges Fai and Ahmad conspired illegally as Pak agents, falsifying and concealing material facts that they had a duty to disclose in dealings with the United States government. The allegations, which come amid increasingly strained ties between the United States and Pakistain, centre on the Kashmiri American Council (KAC), a Washington-based group founded in 1990. "We had a fair degree of suspicion that the money he (Fai) used to get was given by the agencies in Pakistain," Singh said on the sidelines of a regional security conference in the Bhutanese capital Thimphu. The KAC is suspected of being run by Pakistain's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI). Pakistain supports Kashmire's right to self-determination.
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India-Pakistan | |
Move described as part of slander campaign: Protest lodged with US over Fai`s arrest | |
2011-07-23 | |
![]() "A demarche was made to the US embassy in Islamabad today to register our concerns," a statement issued by the Foreign Office said. Jonathan Pratt, Political Counsellor at the US Embassy, received the demarche from Director General (Americas) Dr Sohail Khan. The government sees Dr Fai's detention as a continuation of a slander campaign against Pakistain and an attempt to malign the Kashmire cause. Although he had been facing questioning about the KAC's relationship with Pakistain government since 2007, many believe that there was more to the episode because of its timing as the arrest came at a time when US Secretary of State ![]() ... sometimes described as the Smartest Woman in the World and at other times as Mrs. Bill, never as Another Bainbridge Colby... was in India. Besides, it followed an ongoing row between Washington and Islamabad over the arrest of CIA's local agents in Pakistain who may have facilitated the May 2 raid in Abbottabad in which the late Osama bin Laden ... who had a brief but splitting headache... was killed. The incident attracted special attention in Islamabad because it came ahead of the July 27 meeting between the foreign ministers of Pakistain and India and was perceived to be an indication of the changing nuances of the US policy on the dispute. Dr Fai, a US citizen, was placed in durance vile on Tuesday by the US Department of Justice for acting on behalf of the Pakistain government, without registering as a foreign agent, for influencing US government's position on Kashmire. Co-accused Zaheer Ahmed couldn't be placed in durance vile for being out of the US. He is said to be in Pakistain. Although the KAC claims to be a non-profit organization working for improving understanding in the US about the struggle of Kashmiris for self-determination, the US government says it is actually run by ISI, Pak spy agency. Washington alleges that the ISI funnelled four million dollars through the group for lobbying with Congressional leaders and key government functionaries. "Foreign governments who try to influence the United States by using unregistered agents threaten our national security," the FBI said. The demarche from the Foreign Office praised the KAC and Dr Fai's work for Kashmiris' struggle and said the Kashmire dispute was on the UN agenda and several Security Council resolutions reaffirmed the right of Kashmiris to self-determination. "Upholding fundamental rights of Kashmiris is the fundamental responsibility of the international community and all conscientious people who value human rights ...which often intentionally defined so widely as to be meaningless... and values," the Islamabad statement said in what could be interpreted as a response to the allegation of threatening America's national security.
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India-Pakistan |
Gilani asks US not to ignore Pakistan in crediting victories |
2011-07-22 |
[Dawn] Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani ... Pakistain's erstwhile current prime minister, whose occasional feats of mental gymnastics can be awe-inspiring ... on Thursday said Pakistain considered its relations with the United States 'extremely important' and stressed that victories in the fight against terrorism must be credited to Pakistain. "As we [Pakistain and US] are working together in fighting militancy, victories should be shared along with losses," Gilani said at a presser here at the conclusion of his four-day visit. He acknowledged that the two countries were undergoing a strained period after the unilateral action by the US in Abbottabad against al-Qaeda leader the late Osama bin Laden. ... who was laid out deader than a mackerel... The premier said the incident resulted in misunderstanding between the two countries after Pakistain voiced its reservations for not being taken into confidence for violating its illusory sovereignty. Gilani said Pakistain would not allow any restrictions forced on it from outside and added that the country's sovereign parliament had already adopted a resolution opposing such a step. When asked about the need for a more independent foreign policy, he said the parliament had all the rights to review national strategies. On the relations with India, he said the two countries had come on the table to discuss all the issues, including the Kashmire dispute. He said Pakistain and India had realised that their relations should not become hostage to the Mumbai incident and added that the foreign ministers would be meeting on July 27 to discuss a range of issues. "If the two countries do not talk, the beneficiaries will be the hard boys," he said. When asked to comment on the arrest of Kashmiri leader Ghulam Nabi Fai in the United States, Gilani clarified that he [Fai] belonged to the Occupied Kashmire and his detention had nothing to do with the Pakistain's clear-cut policy on Kashmire. |
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India-Pakistan |
Kashmir separatists defend US suspect |
2011-07-22 |
[Dawn] Separatist leaders in Indian Kashmire condemned on Thursday the arrest of a man accused of acting as a Pak government agent in the United States. Ghulam Nabi Fai, 62, a US citizen, is suspected of links to a decades-long effort that allegedly funnelled millions of dollars to Washington to lobby US politicians on behalf of Kashmiri causes. The US Justice Department said that Fai and Zaheer Ahmad, 63, a US citizen and resident of Pakistain, faced five years in prison if found guilty. Mohammedan-majority Kashmire is split between India and Pakistain, with the Indian-administered sector hit by a violent 20-year insurgency against rule from New Delhi. "It is unfortunate that a leader like Fai is being dubbed an agent. He has been representing Kashmiris at various forums to make the world hear our views," said Shabir Shah, a senior separatist in Kashmire. "We strongly condemn his arrest. It is aimed at suppressing the voices who call for Kashmire's freedom from India," Shah told AFP. The allegations, which come amid increasingly strained ties between the United States and Pakistain, centre on the Kashmiri American Council (KAC), a Washington-based group founded in 1990. The KAC is suspected of being run by Pakistain's powerful military intelligence service, the Inter-Services Intelligence Agency (ISI). Shah said the centre worked to "highlight Indian oppression in Kashmire" where more than 110 protesters were rubbed out by police last year to quell independence protests. Hardline Kashmiri separatist Syed Ali Geelani said Fai's arrest was unjustified. "It has been done at the behest of India and under a conspiracy to weaken the movement of Kashmiris at the diplomatic level," he said. Kashmire leaders said they were unaware of the identity of Zaheer Ahmad, the second suspect tossed in the slammer in the US with Fai. |
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India-Pakistan |
Pro-Pakistan American lawmakers in trouble |
2011-07-22 |
[Dawn] A day after US federal authorities placed in long-term storage a Kashmiri leader for allegedly lobbying for Pakistain, US politicians who supported Pakistain or the Kashmire cause find themselves in trouble. The US media -- from The New York Times ...which still proudly displays Walter Duranty's Pulitzer prize... to obscure small town newspapers -- highlighted some US politicians' alleged links to Pakistain, claiming that they too had received funds from Ghulam Nabi Fai who was placed in long-term storage in Virginia on Tuesday for allegedly lobbying for Pakistain. The media quoted the US Federal Elections Commission databases as showing that Mr Fai gave more than $20,000 in campaign contributions over the past two decades. The bulk of his donations went to two recipients: the National Republican Senatorial Committee and Congressman Dan Burton, a Republican who favours Pakistain's position on Kashmire and other issues. Mr Fai made smaller contributions to Democrats as well, including to Congressmen James P. Moran of Virginia, Dennis J. Kucinich of Ohio and Gregory W. Meeks of New York. He also gave $250 to the 2000 and 2008 presidential campaigns of Al Gore and Barack B.O.Obama. Mr Fai gave over $10,000 to Mr Burton between 1990 and 2010. He also gave $250 to the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, $250 to the DNC Services Corp and $6,000 to the National Republican Senatorial Committee. The media pointed out that for at least 15 years, Congressman Burton has been a champion for Kashmiri causes in Congress, appealing to Presidents Bill Clinton and Obama to get more involved in attempting to mediate a settlement between India and Pakistain over Kashmire. He has also endorsed allowing the Kashmiri people to vote on their own fate. Contacted by the media, Congressman Burton said he was "deeply shocked" by the arrest of Mr Fai, because he had known him for 20 years and "in that time I had no inkling of his involvement with any foreign intelligence operation and had presumed our correspondence was legitimate". He said he would donate the funds provided to his campaign to the Boy Scouts of America. Congressman Joe Pitts, a Pennsylvania Republican, also allegedly received donations from Mr Fai and his group. Mr Pitts visited South Asia in 2001 and 2004, where he met Pak and Indian leaders and called for a ceasefire. He also introduced a resolution in 2004 calling for President George W. Bush to appoint a special envoy to help negotiate peace. A front man for Mr Pitts said he had donated $4,000 -- an amount equal to the donations his campaign received from Mr Fai's group -- to local charities in Pennsylvania on Tuesday. The US media, however, focused on Congressman Burton who also played a key role in the formation of a Kashmire caucus in Congress. Media reports included quotes from the speeches he made in Pakistain, saying in one such speech that "since 1948, the people of Kashmire have been offered and promised a plebiscite and that's something that has not happened.... Here we are 61 years later, and we are still hoping that one day there will be peace and tranquillity in that beautiful part of the world". In another speech, highlighted in the US media on Wednesday, Mr Burton noted that India had deployed hundreds of thousands of troops in Kashmire who were "keeping everything under wraps, patrolling the streets and there are still some horrible tragedies that are taking place. I heard of gang-raping of young women, I've heard of murders and tortures". Mr Burton was also quoted as chiding the B.O. regime for failing to engage in the region. "During the presidential campaign President B.O. pledged to appoint a special envoy on the region and declared that solving Kashmire crisis was one of his critical tasks. So far this has been a promise unfulfilled," Mr Burton said. |
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India-Pakistan |
Kashmir leader denounces US arrest |
2011-07-21 |
[Dawn] A separatist leader in Indian-controlled Kashmire said Wednesday the Kashmiri-born man jugged in the US on suspicion of being a Pak agent is a victim of a diplomatic conspiracy. The charge against Syed Ghulam Nabi Fai of the Kashmiri American Council alleges he is an unregistered agent of a foreign government. The US Justice Department says he donated millions to a Washington nonprofit in a secret lobbying effort led by Pak intelligence to influence US policy on disputed Kashmire. ![]() Both Fai and Geelani have openly opposed India's heavy-handed rule and argued that Kashmiris should vote themselves to decide the territory's final status. "Mr. Fai has been active for last 32 years highlighting the plight of his people," Geelani said. "Because of his unflinching advocacy of the Kashmire cause at the international level, he had become an eyesore for India." Another separatist group, the pro-independence Jammu-Kashmire Liberation Front, also condemned the US charge as going against the democratic path of nonviolence Fai advocated. "His arrest is against ideals of democracy and peaceful reconciliation. This is also against the US government's approach and thinking." India's police chief in Kashmire said Fai's arrest followed years of suspicions. "He has been figuring in lots of things in the past, like ... the diversion of ISI funds for anti-national activities in India and particularly in Jammu and Kashmire," Kuldeep Khoda said. The US Justice Department says in court documents that Fai --directed by a top member of Pakistain's spy agency Inter-Services Intelligence, or ISI --donated millions of dollars to US political campaigns, wrote newspaper op-eds, organised congressional trips and met with White House and State Department officials. Geelani urged Kashmiris to protest Friday and "foil the Indian designs to weaken the Kashmiri struggle." He said that, unless Fai was freed, Kashmiris "will lose their faith in the international community." |
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Home Front: Politix | |
FBI arrest points to major Pakistan influence-buying spy ring in U.S. | |
2011-07-20 | |
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Afghanistan/South Asia | |
'No new CBMs unless Kashmir bus begins' | |
2005-01-17 | |
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