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Islamist Relief Groups Barred
By REHMAT MEHSUD
PESHAWAR, PakistanPakistan moved to bar banned Islamist organizations from offering flood relief, a senior provincial government official said, an effort to close an ideological front in the battle to give aid to some six million homeless Pakistanis.
Bashir Bilour, senior minister for the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa provincial government, said his administration had sent letters to senior district administrators ordering them to ban proscribed Islamist groups from offering relief to survivors of Pakistan's worst flooding in memory.
"This is a crackdown that we have initiated on our part. We have started implementation of clear-cut orders regarding control of terrorist organizations that are banned," he said. "You will see results on the ground shortly."
The government says Islamist groups that were banned under pressure from the U.S. in 2002 were active under new names following the flooding in some parts of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, a province that borders the tribal regions where the Pakistan Taliban are engaged in a war with the country's military.
There was some concern the groups could draw more local support for filling a vacuum before government and military response reached stranded villages.
But U.S. officials say that as the relief work picked up pacewith 60,000 soldiers now in the field to offer help and government-run camps mushroomingthose fears have receded.
Mr. Bilour said the ban also extended to the groups' political activities in the province.
One group active in flood relief is Jamaat-ud-Dawah, a charity organization the United Nations says is a front for Lashkar-e-Taiba, a group banned by Pakistan in 2002. India blames Lashkar-e-Taiba for attacks on Mumbai that killed more than 160 people in 2008. Pakistan backed the group as a proxy militia to fight Indian soldiers in Kashmir but says it has cut ties with it since it was banned.
Link: Pakistan Bars Banned Groups From Aiding Flood Victims - WSJ.com
By REHMAT MEHSUD
PESHAWAR, PakistanPakistan moved to bar banned Islamist organizations from offering flood relief, a senior provincial government official said, an effort to close an ideological front in the battle to give aid to some six million homeless Pakistanis.
Bashir Bilour, senior minister for the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa provincial government, said his administration had sent letters to senior district administrators ordering them to ban proscribed Islamist groups from offering relief to survivors of Pakistan's worst flooding in memory.
"This is a crackdown that we have initiated on our part. We have started implementation of clear-cut orders regarding control of terrorist organizations that are banned," he said. "You will see results on the ground shortly."
The government says Islamist groups that were banned under pressure from the U.S. in 2002 were active under new names following the flooding in some parts of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, a province that borders the tribal regions where the Pakistan Taliban are engaged in a war with the country's military.
There was some concern the groups could draw more local support for filling a vacuum before government and military response reached stranded villages.
But U.S. officials say that as the relief work picked up pacewith 60,000 soldiers now in the field to offer help and government-run camps mushroomingthose fears have receded.
Mr. Bilour said the ban also extended to the groups' political activities in the province.
One group active in flood relief is Jamaat-ud-Dawah, a charity organization the United Nations says is a front for Lashkar-e-Taiba, a group banned by Pakistan in 2002. India blames Lashkar-e-Taiba for attacks on Mumbai that killed more than 160 people in 2008. Pakistan backed the group as a proxy militia to fight Indian soldiers in Kashmir but says it has cut ties with it since it was banned.
Link: Pakistan Bars Banned Groups From Aiding Flood Victims - WSJ.com