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India-Pakistan
Sedition case lodged against Sufi, nine others
2009-08-04
[The News (Pak) Top Stories] A sedition case was registered against the banned Tehrik Nifaz Shariat-e-Muhammadi (TNSM) chief Maulana Sufi Muhammad and his nine colleagues at the Saidu Sharif police station in Swat Valley on Sunday.

Sufi Muhammad, who was arrested by the NWFP government on July 27 from Peshawar along with his two young sons Rizwanullah and Ziaullah and another relative, was charged with sedition for issuing statements against the state of Pakistan and its institutions, including parliament and judiciary, during a public gathering at the Grassy Ground in Mingora on April 19.

Others named in the First Information Report (FIR) were two deceased leaders of the TNSM, Maulana Muhammad Alam and Amir Izzat Khan. They had been arrested by security forces from their organisationís office in Amandarra in the Malakand Agency and were killed in mysterious circumstances near Dargai while being shifted by soldiers to Peshawar.

Other TNSM activists named in the FIR include Maulana Abdul Haq, Shah Zeb, Maulana Safiullah, Maulana Bakht, Fayyaz Shah, Salar and Samiullah. It is not known if any of them is in the government custody.

District Police Officer (DPO), Swat, Sajid Khan Mohmand, confirmed the registration of the FIR and said that Sufi Muhammad was charged with sedition for instigating the general public against the state and its institutions during public gatherings after signing a peace agreement with the government.
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India-Pakistan
TNSM suspends talks with govt
2009-04-28
* Spokesman says Dir operation must stop, but peace deal intact

* Taliban occupy govt buildings in Swat, set up checkposts


The Tehreek-e-Nifaz-e-Shariat-Muhammadi has suspended talks with the NWFP government to protest against the military action in Dir, spokesman Amir Izzat Khan told Daily Times in Mingora city on Monday. He did not say when the talks would resume.

"We, however, still adhere to the February deal," he told AFP, referring to the accord that sought a Taliban disarmament in return for the imposition of sharia law in Malakand division. "We will not hold any talks until the operation ends."

"The agreements with the Pakistan government are worthless because Pakistani rulers are acting to please Americans," Muslim Khan, spokesman for Taliban in Swat valley said.

"We were living peacefully in Dir," Umar told AP. "Nothing warranted the operation."
A Taliban spokesman that AP identified as Umar said the Taliban would agree to talks about the situation in Dir, but only if the military operation is halted. "We were living peacefully in Dir," Umar told AP. "Nothing warranted the operation."

The situation in Swat meanwhile drifted towards chaos as Taliban set up checkposts, occupied government buildings and kidnapped a policeman, local residents told Daily Times. They robbed and ransacked the office of Belgium-based humanitarian organisation Doctors Without Borders in Saidu Sharif, officials said. Heavily-armed Taliban were patrolling streets in Qambar area, close to Mingora city, and checking incoming and outgoing passengers.

Separately, Online reported that Taliban took control of the telephone exchange in Bahrain town of Swat. Around 20 or 25 Taliban men stormed the building and seized the exchange, a private TV channel reported. Taliban have also set up a checkpost in Bahrain. They had earlier taken over the houses of Pakistan Muslim League-Quaid provincial president Engineer Ameer Muqam, Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz leader Saranjam Khan and Pir Syed Hussain Shah Gillani's bungalow.

Muslim Khan told Online the Taliban would not lay down weapons until the establishment of Darul Qaza, an appeals court which is part of the new Nizam-e-Adl Regulation. In an interview with a private TV channel, he said Taliban were present in Buner district and would remain there. "We have not disobeyed the Swat peace deal," he said, adding that the Nizam-e-Adl would be "a role model for the whole world."
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India-Pakistan
TNSM extends deadline for setting up Darul Qaza
2009-04-24
Swat cleric Sufi Muhammad extended his Thursday deadline for the establishment of the Darul Qaza appellate courts in Malakand to hear appeals against convictions of the new qazi courts set up in line with the Nizam-e-Adl Regulation.

"The deadline for the establishment of Darul Qaza has been extended for an indefinite period," Amir Izzat Khan, spokesman for Tehreek-e-Nifaz-e-Shariat-e-Muhammadi (TNSM) chief Sufi Muhammad, told Daily Times after a decision-making shura approved the move a day after a high-level government delegation made the request.

Separately, Izzat Khan condemned Jamaat Islami (JI) Amir Munawar Hassan for his statement that Sufi -- who had said democracy was a system of Kufr (infidelity) -- was also "a little kafir" for contesting local elections. He told Daily Times that the JI "has earned so many dollars in the Afghan war no one could count them".

He said Sufi repented his past, but Munawar Hassan "is still treading the path of Kufr". The spokesman also told a private TV channel the TNSM believed the constitution of Pakistan was Islamic and that the banned outfit "has no intention to set up a state within state".
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India-Pakistan
TNSM welcomes surrender of Swat
2009-04-14
[Geo News] Tehrik Nifaz Shariat-e-Muhammadi (TNSM) spokesman Amir Izzat Khan has welcomed the passing of Nizam-e-Adl Regulation 2009 by the Parliament. He termed the parliament's decision as Islam and Pakistan friendly, thanking all members of the parliament for their support in approving the Bill. He said National Assembly has given a historic decision for the first time following the creation of Pakistan. He regretted the MQM's decision to abstain from the voting.
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India-Pakistan
Sufi leaves Swat in protest against Nizam-e-Adl delay
2009-04-10
First noted yesterday; follow-up here.
MINGORA: Sufi Muhammad wrapped up his “peace camp” in Swat on Thursday, in protest against the delay in the implementation of Nizam-e-Adl Regulation.

“But the peace deal with the provincial government is intact,” Sufi Muhammad, head of Tehreek Nifaz-e-Shariat-Muhammadi, told a news conference before moving out of the district. “If something unpleasant happens after our peace camp has been wrapped up, President Asif Zardari will be held responsible,” Sufi read a written statement in Pushto. He said the federal government was not sincere.

TNSM spokesman Amir Izzat Khan said Sufi Muhammad left for Amandara town in Malakand where he will chair a shura meeting. “The ball is now in the president’s court,” he told Daily Times. Malakand Commissioner Syed Muhammad Javed said the federal government would sign the regulation soon. “This stage will be crossed, like other stages.”
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India-Pakistan
Govt frees 12 Taliban prisoners in Swat
2009-03-08
The government on Saturday released 12 Taliban prisoners after a meeting in Swat of a delegation of the Tehreek-Nifaz-e-Shariat Muhammadi (TNSM) and the NWFP government.

Awami National Party (ANP) NWFP President Afrasiyab Khattak, provincial Information Minister Iftikhar Hussain, the Malakand division commissioner, and representatives of the TNSM and the local peace committee attended the meeting.

Sharia: It was decided that sharia would be formally implemented in Malakand region, including Swat district, from next week after the government released the 12 Taliban, a spokesman for a pro-Taliban cleric said.

They agreed to open the Qambar-Takhtaband road, Amir Izzat Khan, spokesman for TNSM chief Sufi Muhammad said.

The spokesman said it was also decided that qazis would begin taking up cases under the Islamic law from March 12, three days prior to an earlier deadline of March 15 set by the TNSM chief.

Earlier on Friday, NWFP Chief Minister Ameer Haider Hoti had said that his government would not free Taliban prisoners who were in the black and grey categories of security agencies, but had promised to release those falling in the white category.

Official sources said no prominent Taliban was among the freed prisoners, who were set free at the Circuit House in Mingora.

Meanwhile, unidentified men abducted six people from Saidu Sharif tehsil of Mingora, witnesses said.
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India-Pakistan
Security forces and TNSM strike 17-point accord
2009-03-05
The NWFP government struck a 17-point deal with the banned Tehreek Nifaz-e-Shariat-e-Muhammadi in the Swat valley on Wednesday.

"A 17-point understanding was reached with a TNSM delegation ... music has been banned in Swat and it has been agreed to expel prostitutes and pimps from the district," the senior official told Daily Times after the meeting. The Awami National Party (ANP) and the Pakistan People's Party (PPP) co-led the provincial government at the talks, while Maulana Safiullah and spokesman Amir Izzat Khan represented the TNSM -- with Malakand Commissioner Syed Muhammad Javed also in attendance.

The meeting came a day after suspected Taliban killed two army troops and continued taking government officials hostage, despite having agreed to a ceasefire in the wake of the provincial government's February 16 accord on the implementation of sharia in Swat.

Sharia: "Music and vulgar CDs will be banned; shops will remain closed during prayer times and the complete implementation of sharia laws in the region will come into effect from the 16th of this month," according to the key points of the understanding. "Vulgarity would be rooted out and profiteers dealt with under the law. An anti-crime campaign will be launched and Quran classes will be started for jail inmates in the region."

The Malakand commissioner's office released to the media the 17-point understanding -- which does not say if the Taliban would stop abducting government officials and attacking government forces.

The commissioner told the TNSM delegation that he would forward the 17 points to the chief secretary in Peshawar for the government's approval, said the officials. However, the TNSM delegates insisted that the commissioner bring into effect some of the points through his own administrative powers.

Meanwhile, the army began vacating former headquarters of Swat Taliban leader Mullah Fazlullah in Imamdheri, military sources here told Daily Times on Wednesday as witnesses said the Taliban had abandoned the Qambar checkpost near Mingora on the main highway linking the district with Peshawar.
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India-Pakistan
Sufi unveils nine-point peace plan
2009-02-24
Tanzeem Nifaz Shariat-e-Muhammadi (TNSM) chief Maulana Sufi Muhammad, while expressing concern over the activities of the militants in Swat after the peace agreement, asked them on Monday to stop their militant actions.

The TNSM, whose black-turbaned activists are staying in a mosque here till ìrestoring peaceî, asked NWFP Chief Minister Ameer Haidar to visit the Taliban-infested Swat Valley, where until recently ministers and even MNAs and MPAs could not go.

Unabated activities by the militants even after a ceasefire have been causing a serious setback to the peace deal. The militants picked up the newly-posted District Coordination Officer (DCO), Khushhal Khan, and three other people on Sunday, who were released after six hours of talks.

However, cashier of the National Bank of Pakistan Yousaf, Akbar Zaman and Bakht Ghulam, who were kidnapped from Odigram area near Mingora, are still in the captivity of the militants. Sufi Muhammad, who has been making unflinching efforts for bringing back tranquillity to Swat, was perturbed and intended to have a direct contact with the militants in near future.

Unveiling a nine-point plan for restoration of peace here at a press conference, he asked both the militants and the government to fulfil their responsibility by taking measures for bringing back calm to the valley. Sufi, who was unwell, started the press conference with emphasis on a life in accordance with Shariah. He, however, asked the TNSM spokesman, Amir Izzat Khan, to read out the plan.

Before going into the details, Izzat thanked the government for enforcing the Nizam-e-Adl Regulation and doing away with certain check-posts.

The nine points of the plan are:

1) The government should shift the Army from schools, houses, mosques, hospitals and other places to safer locations and remove all the ìobstaclesî so that the problems of the people are addressed.

2) The district administration and police should be taken to their respective positions with the help of the TNSM activists and the people.

3) The government should immediately reinstate those police and Levies officials and FC personnel who had been sacked or imprisoned.

4) People's losses, particularly human, should be compensated and the process should commence in line with the announcement of Chief Minister Ameer Haidar Khan Hoti. He should visit Swat to accomplish ìthis noble task.î

5) Tehrik-e-Taliban Swat's leaders should direct their Taliban fighters to immediately remove the barricades and stop checking people there.

6) The Taliban should stop armed movement and other militant activities.

7) The Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan should not create obstructions on roads for vehicles taking soldiers or their ration. Also, they should not interfere in the affairs of the administration and police.

8) Both the sides should release all the prisoners straightaway.

9) The people (IDPs) should come back to their homes.

The document said that incident of Musa Khankhel murder and kidnapping of the DCO had created panic among the people and hindered the process of establishing peace.

The TNSM urged the people from all walks of life, including the civil society and political parties, to help the TNSM in restoring peace and implementing Nizam-e-Adl.

"Particularly, I appeal to the media to help restore peace," Maulana Alam, deputy chief of the TNSM, requested on behalf of Sufi Muhammad.

Earlier, talking exclusively to The News at Madni Mosque, Saidu Sharif, Sufi Muhammad said he wanted to remove fears from the hearts of the people and provide them with an opportunity to move freely. "The people will be able to move freely if the check-posts are dismantled and Taliban's movement is restricted," Sufi added.

To a question, he said that some undesirable elements were out to sabotage the peace efforts but he hoped they would be exposed. To another query, he said that Maulana Fazlullah had agreed to remain non-violent during the recent meeting with him. "He will stick to that," he hoped.

AFP adds: Meanwhile, schools reopened in Swat valley on Monday but attendance was extremely low despite a fledgling truce between the government and insurgents, officials said. "Our schools reopened today. The attendance was very poor. Only up to 10 percent attended," Swat education ministry official Sher Afzal told AFP.

Schools reopened a week earlier than scheduled after the winter holidays, but Afzal said many parents were unaware of the new term start date.Syed Mohammad Javed, a top local government official, appealed the students to return to school, promising to accord them full security.

The government reopened all boys' schools on Monday but only the primary section up to the fourth grade in girls' schools, local officials said.A spokesman said attendance at private schools -- all of which reopened -- was only 40 percent because of security fears.

"This is because of the recent (unstable) situation. Another reason is that many families are still frightened and thousands more left the valley because of the fighting," said private schools association spokesman Ziauddin Yusufzai.

Residents said girls attended classes veiled after militant leader Maulana Fazlullah announced on his illegal radio station that girls could take examinations, but only after covering themselves according to shariah.

Of the total 350,000 pupils registered in Swat, 250,000 are enrolled at government schools and 100,000 at private schools, said Afzal.Militants have destroyed 191 schools in the valley, including 122 girls' schools, leaving 62,000 pupils without schools to go to, said Afzal.

Militant spokesman Muslim Khan said girls could go to school provided they observe "Pardah". "We have sent proposals to the government to rebuild the schools, which will cost around 800 million rupees (10 million dollars)," Afzal said.

APP adds: Director-General Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) Major-General Athar Abbas on Monday said the operation in Swat has been halted. Addressing a seminar organised by the Sustainable Policy Development Institute (SDPI) in Islamabad, Athar Abbas said that the state could not control the external elements, as the militants were continuously getting funds from ìinimical forcesî.

He said that a vacuum was created as the administrative machinery stood paralysed in Swat and it was imperative to gain confidence of the people for some success over there. He welcomed the political approach to deal with the situation in the area, saying ìthis may bear fruitful results without causing any further loss of lives."

He said the Taliban have gotten themselves mixed up with the people, using civilians to shield themselves. Athar Abbas said that establishing the government's writ and restoring peace were the main objectives of the Army while the operation has been halted under the new political strategy. He said the troops will stay in the area.

Answering a question, he said that the troops were not withdrawn from the Afghan border when some were deployed on the Indian border. To another question, he said the Army was not carrying out any operation in Balochistan, saying the Frontiers Corps was dealing with the situation in the province.

Regarding the FM station operations in Swat, he said that mobile FM transmitters were being used to carry out the illegal activity and whenever these were spotted their transmission was jammed.
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India-Pakistan
Sufi to meet national peace jirga today
2009-02-21
Tehrik Nifaz Shariat-e-Muhammadi (TNSM) chief Maulana Sufi Muhammad will hold talks with members of the national peace jirga in Deolai area of scenic Swat valley today (Saturday).

According to sources, third round of peace talks between TNSM and Tehrik Taliban Pakistan (TTP) was held on Friday at an undisclosed location in Matta. Both sides made positive progress, while Maulana Fazalullah presented his demands to Maulana Sufi Muhammad for talks with the government. Sources said that Maulana Fazlullah has set several conditions for talks which include complete enforcement of Sharia in Malakand Division, withdrawal of security forces from Swat, release of prisoners, indemnity for Taliban and compensation of losses they had suffered during military operation.

Maulana Fazlullah, Haji Muslim Khan and Maulana Shah Doran and other important members represented the TTP while TNSM comprised of its chief Maulana Sufi Muhammad, Maulana Alal, Amir Izzat Khan, Maulana Iqbal Khan and other members. TNSM spokesman Amir Izzat Khan said that important announcement is expected from Maulana Fazlullah anytime today. Sources further said that TNSM peace rally reached Deolai area of Kabal from Matta where chief of the national peace jirga Syed Inam-ur-Rehman and other members were called to discuss Swat peace.
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India-Pakistan
Sufi Mohammad leads ''peace rally'' to Taliban stronghold Matta
2009-02-20
Maulana Sufi Mohammad, Chief of the Tanzim Nifaz Shariat-e-Mohammadi (TNSM), Wednesday reached Matta, the stronghold of militants in the volatile Swat Valley, as part of his peace mission.

However, he could not hold talks with his son-in-law as widely expected by euphoric people who largely participated in his rally to play their part in the peaceful solution to the Swat problem.

Earlier, Sufi Mohammad along with thousands of his supporters took out a peace rally, which after passing through various roads of Mingora culminated at the Tableeghi Markaz where special prayers were offered for the restoration of peace.

Earlier, talking to The News, spokesman for the TNSM Amir Izzat Khan said that the rally was part of the peace initiative and an effort to remove the trepidations of the people of Swat. Izzat Khan said the peace rally would go to Matta and, if contacted, will hold talks with the Swat Taliban for laying down arms.

He said the TNSM would devise a future strategy after holding talks with the Taliban in Charbagh. He said they would listen to their viewpoint. The spokesman said Sufi Mohammad would stay in Swat district till the complete restoration of peace in the valley and surrender by the Taliban.

NWFP Senior Minister Bashir Ahmad Bilour on Wednesday said the provincial government was negotiating with everyone for the restoration of peace and normalcy in the restive Swat Valley.

Meanwhile, a meeting of the Swat chapter of the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) was held on Wednesday at an unidentified location in Matta tehsil in which top commanders and Fazlullah's lieutenants participated. They reportedly constituted a committee to hold talks with the TNSM.

Speaking at a press conference here at the Circuit House (this correspondent was not allowed to cover the event), NWFP Senior Minister Bashir Bilour said it was due to their negotiations that peace was being restored in the restive valley. He thanked Maulana Sufi Mohammad for his efforts to restore peace.

Provincial Minister for Environment Wajid Ali Khan, Minister for Science and Technology Mohammad Ayub Khan, member provincial assembly Sher Shah Khan and District Coordination Officer Shaukat Ali Khan Yousufzai were also present on the occasion.

Bashir Bilour also thanked the people of Swat for voting the ANP to power in the hope of bringing peace to the valley. He said the ANP once signed an accord with the Taliban and now it had reached an accord with TNSM chief Maulana Sufi Muhammad.

The minister said the Sharai Nizam-e-Adl Regulation could also be replicated in other districts following its success in Malakand region. The provincial government wanted to solve problems through dialogue as use of force was not a solution to problems, he added. He said that courts in Malakand would not be like that of Afghanistan's Taliban but the regulation was aimed at providing speedy justice.

A 14-member delegation of the TNSM, headed by central Nazim-e-Adl Safiullah, met Bashir Bilour at the Circuit House and discussed the regulation in detail. Bilour said that efforts by the TNSM would prove fruitful in bringing back peace to the valley.

Agencies add: Earlier, Sufi Muhammad and his supporters, carrying black and white flags representing the Taliban and peace, marched through Swat's main city of Mingora as jubilant residents chanted "God is great! We want peace"!

Police and witnesses estimated that 15,000 people marched in the crowd as they paraded through the town with the cleric, who advised them to recite only verses from the holy Quran. The marchers later drove through nearby villages to muster support for their call to militants to shun violence.

"We have come here for peace," Sufi Mohammad told around 3,000 people in Matta, a militants' stronghold, some 18 km north of Mingora. "Without peace, Shariah (Islamic law) cannot be enforced," he said as militants carrying AK-47 assault rifles strolled nearby.

"We're Taliban. Everybody here is Taliban ... We won't accept anything short of the Shariah system," Saifur Rehman, a resident of Matta, told Reuters after Sufi Mohammad's speech. Local residents lined the main roads, greeting Sufi Mohammad, who was jailed in Pakistan for six years after returning from Afghanistan where he led thousands of supporters to fight against US-led troops who toppled the Taliban in 2001.

Amnesty International believes that over the past year, more than 1,200 people have been killed and 2,00,000-5,00,000 displaced from Swat as a result of fighting between hardliners trying to impose Shariah and the government.

Geo News adds: The peace marchers then drove to the nearby Khwazakhela town, another hotbed of Swat Taliban. This was the last report filed by our slain correspondent.
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India-Pakistan
TNSM endorsees accord on Nizam-e-Adl Regulation
2009-02-17
The Tehrik-e-Nifaz Shariat Muhammadi (TNSM) has endorsed the truce signed with the NWFP government about enforcement of Nizam-e-Adl Regulation in Malakand Division. TNSM chief Maulana Sufi Muhammad will head to scenic Swat valley today in the form of caravan at 11am. Earlier, the shura of the TNSM presided over by Sufi Muhammad met here in Temar Garah to discuss the truce inked with the NWFP government on implementation of Sharia in Malakand region. Talking to Geo news after the meeting, TNSM spokesman Amir Izzat Khan said that the Nizam-e-Adl Regulation's accord was endorsed by the council in today's meeting. He further told that the tehrik had closed down its protest camp set up in Temargarah. Sufi Muhammad will remain in Swat till complete restoration of peace, he said.
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