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Malik Ishaq arrested: Pakistan arrests top militant

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Pakistan arrests militant leader over Quetta bombings

MULTAN, Pakistan (Reuters) - Police said they arrested the leader of a banned militant group on Friday in connection with sectarian attacks in the northwestern city of Quetta that have killed nearly 200 people this year.

Two bombings about month apart targeting the minority Shi'ite community in Quetta, claimed by the Sunni militant group Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ), sparked demonstrations across the country and the dismissal of the local government.

Police said they arrested LeJ leader, Malik Ishaq, in the town of Rahim Yar Khan at his home on Friday afternoon.

"LeJ has accepted responsibility for the recent Quetta blast and Ishaq is its supreme commander. That's why we have arrested him and 24 other LeJ militants," said Zafar Chatta, the district police officer.

The LeJ claimed responsibility for a blast that killed 85 people on Saturday in the provincial capital of Quetta. It also claimed responsibility for blasts on January 9 that killed 96 in the same city.

It was unclear why authorities did not arrest Ishaq, who was living openly at his home protected by gunmen, after the LeJ claimed the first bombing.

Pakistani leaders have done little to contain hardline Sunni Muslim groups which have stepped up a campaign of bombings and assassinations of Shi'ites in a bid to destabilize the nuclear-armed country and install a Sunni theocracy.

The LeJ, whose roots are in the heartland Punjab province, wants to expel the Shi'ites, who make up about a fifth of the 180 million population. Human Rights Watch says more than 400 Shi'ites were killed in sectarian attacks last year.

Chatta said Ishaq was being held under public order legislation and would be held at least a month while investigators interrogated him.

Ishaq was released from prison in July 2011 after spending 14 years behind bars charged with 34 counts of culpable homicide and terrorism.

He was released after the charges could not be proved - partly because of witness intimidation, officials said. Supporters showered him with rose petals when he left jail.

In an interview with Reuters last year, Ishaq said Shi'ites were the "greatest infidels on earth".

At that time he said he was a leader of Sipah-e-Sahaba, the LeJ parent group. He told Reuters that Shi'ites had insulted the Prophet Muhammad.

"Whoever insults the companions of the Holy Prophet should be given a death sentence," he said.

Many Pakistanis remain suspicious about the extent to which the LeJ has preserved its links with the country's powerful security services.

Journalists have asked how a truck with nearly a ton of explosives could have passed so many checkpoints in the heavily militarized garrison town of Quetta. The Supreme Court has ordered security services to explain why they were unable to stop the bombings.

(Additional reporting by Mehreen Zahra-Malik; Writing by Katharine Houreld; Editing by Jeremy Laurence)
 
This is a very welcome step but the issue here again is the courts which free him each and every time. He should be severely punished and put to trial properly this time with the new anti terror legislation.
 
Pakistan arrests militant leader over Quetta bombings
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By Asim Tanveer

MULTAN, Pakistan | Fri Feb 22, 2013 10:01am EST


(Reuters) - Police said they arrested the leader of a banned militant group on Friday in connection with sectarian attacks in the northwestern city of Quetta that have killed nearly 200 people this year.

Two bombings about month apart targeting the minority Shi'ite community in Quetta, claimed by the Sunni militant group Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ), sparked demonstrations across the country and the dismissal of the local government.

Police said they arrested LeJ leader, Malik Ishaq, in the town of Rahim Yar Khan at his home on Friday afternoon.

"LeJ has accepted responsibility for the recent Quetta blast and Ishaq is its supreme commander. That's why we have arrested him and 24 other LeJ militants," said Zafar Chatta, the district police officer.

The LeJ claimed responsibility for a blast that killed 85 people on Saturday in the provincial capital of Quetta. It also claimed responsibility for blasts on January 9 that killed 96 in the same city.

It was unclear why authorities did not arrest Ishaq, who was living openly at his home protected by gunmen, after the LeJ claimed the first bombing.

Pakistani leaders have done little to contain hardline Sunni Muslim groups which have stepped up a campaign of bombings and assassinations of Shi'ites in a bid to destabilize the nuclear-armed country and install a Sunni theocracy.

The LeJ, whose roots are in the heartland Punjab province, wants to expel the Shi'ites, who make up about a fifth of the 180 million population. Human Rights Watch says more than 400 Shi'ites were killed in sectarian attacks last year.

Chatta said Ishaq was being held under public order legislation and would be held at least a month while investigators interrogated him.

Ishaq was released from prison in July 2011 after spending 14 years behind bars charged with 34 counts of culpable homicide and terrorism.

He was released after the charges could not be proved - partly because of witness intimidation, officials said. Supporters showered him with rose petals when he left jail.

In an interview with Reuters last year, Ishaq said Shi'ites were the "greatest infidels on earth".

At that time he said he was a leader of Sipah-e-Sahaba, the LeJ parent group. He told Reuters that Shi'ites had insulted the Prophet Muhammad.

"Whoever insults the companions of the Holy Prophet should be given a death sentence," he said.

Many Pakistanis remain suspicious about the extent to which the LeJ has preserved its links with the country's powerful security services.

Journalists have asked how a truck with nearly a ton of explosives could have passed so many checkpoints in the heavily militarized garrison town of Quetta. The Supreme Court has ordered security services to explain why they were unable to stop the bombings.

(Additional reporting by Mehreen Zahra-Malik; Writing by Katharine Houreld; Editing by Jeremy Laurence)


Pakistan arrests militant leader over Quetta bombings | Reuters
 
now where is that guy who said that punjab has no terrorists?
 
this is a simple case of coming under police protection, in other words State protection !!
 
LJ leader Malik Ishaq detained in Rahim Yar Khan
DAWN.COM and Agencies | 7 hours ago 0

LJ leader Malik Ishaq detained in Rahim Yar Khan | Pakistan | DAWN.COM

malik_ishaq_6701.jpg



Photo shows Malik Ishaq, the leader of the banned Lashkar-i-Jhangvi (LJ).—File Photo

RAHIMYAR KHAN: The head of the Lashkar-i-Jhangvi (LJ) has been detained by authorities for one month, police said on Friday, a week after the banned religious outfit claimed responsibility for a deadly bombing in Quetta killing over 90 people.

Malik Ishaq was detained at his residence in the central city of Rahim Yar Khan and taken to the local jail.

“Ishaq has been detained under the Maintenance of Public Order (MPO) law on the orders of the Punjab provincial government,” said senior police official in Rahim Yar Khan, Tanveer Ahmad.

A spokesman for the ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) government in Punjab, Pervaiz Rasheed, confirmed the news and said Ishaq would be held for one month.

“There were complaints against him, that he had been making provocative speeches in the past month,” he said.

Speaking to reporters prior to his arrest, Ishaq denied any involvement in the Quetta bombing or any such incident. He said he would contest his arrest in court.

Ishaq is said to be one of the founders of the Lashkar-i-Jhangvi group, which is accused of sectarian violence and has claimed several attacks on the ethnic Hazara Shia population in Balochistan.

Ishaq was briefly detained last year on accusations of fanning sectarian hatred. He is also accused of masterminding an attack on the Sri Lankan cricket team in 2009.

According to police records, Ishaq was involved in more than 40 cases relating to sectarianism and terrorism in which 70 people, most of them Shias, were killed.

He was released from prison in July 2011 after spending 14 years behind bars after the charges could not be proved.

On Friday, Mahdi Hasan, a leader of Hazara Democratic Party, welcomed Ishaq’s arrest, but demanded the arrest of all others involved in the attacks.

More than 90 people, mostly Hazara Shias, lost their lives when a water-tanker filled was detonated in a marketplace near Quetta’s Hazara Town on Feb 16. It was the year’s second deadly attack on the ethnic minority following a Jan 10 bombing at a snooker club in the city killing over 100 people, also mostly Hazaras.

Both attacks were claimed by the LJ.

Ishaq’s arrest comes a day after the Pakistan Army emphatically denied it maintained any links with the banned terror outfit. “The armed forces were not in contact with any militant organisation, including Lashkar-i-Jhangvi,” ISPR chief Maj-Gen Asim Bajwa told a media briefing on Thursday.

“There is no reason to think about army’s involvement with LJ,” the Dawn newspaper quoted Gen Bajwa as saying.

Human rights organisations have accused the army and its intelligence agencies of maintaining links with Lashkar-i-Jhangvi.

The allegations stem from the army using Ishaq for negotiating with the terrorists who had attacked the military headquarters in October 2009. Ishaq’s subsequent release from jail was sceptically seen as a deal. The escape of LJ’s operational commander in Balochistan, Usman Saifullah Kurd, in 2008 from a detention facility in the military Cantonment in Quetta has also raised questions.

Malik Irfan contributed to reporting from Rahim Yar Khan
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Raiwind estate must be on fire as we speak for their terrorist ally and a useful idiot is behind bars and may spill beans on his financiers and 'high command'.
 

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