Link to that?
And is GT not affiliated with LeT while JuD and HS claims no affiliation with LeT anymore?
Ghazwa Times is a mouthpiece of the Jamaat-ud-Dawa.
Here is some news from Jan 2009:
-----------------------------------------------------------------
26/11: jamaat-ud-Dawa
The Gates Are Open
www.outlookindia.com
The ban on the JuD has been a farce. It's business as usual.
Amir Mir
Free For All
* UN resolution 1267 imposed sanctions on the JuD, requiring that activists be disarmed. At the JuD HQ, though, gun-toting men move about.
* The JuD took out a public rally in December, protesting against the UN ban. A police convoy accompanied it.
* The outfits websites have been closed. But Urdu publication Ghazva continues to be printed, spitting venom against India, Israel, the US.
* JuD spokesman Abdullah Muntazirs statement of Jan 6 threatened the government with dire consequences. The FBI says Muntazir impersonates as the Srinagar-based LeT spokesman.
***
You are obviously aware of the Pakistan governments ban on the Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD) and the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) sanctions against it. So your feeling is that JuD activists must have gone underground, shuddering at the sight of men in uniform. Well, not so fast. Drive down to Muridke, 30 km from Lahore, where the JuDs sprawling 200-acre headquarters, called Markaz-e-Toiba, is located. Atop its main building flutters the JuDs black-and-white flag, in defiance of the ban imposed on it. Symbolic, you think, nothing to worry about.
Outside the Markaz, dozens of gun-toting JuD activists stand guard, belying claims that its only an educational and medical centre (it houses several schools, colleges and a hospital). The Markaz bustles with activity, and there isnt a policeman either inside or outside the complex. Away from Muridke, the JuD still continues to runwithout any restrictionsits 150 healthcare centres, 10 hospitals, 300 schools and 510 madrassas countrywide.
It was in the second week of December that the government launched a crackdown on the JuD, detaining among others its chief Prof Hafiz Mohammed Saeed and Lashkar operations chief Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi. A month later, the crackdown appears to have come to a halt. In fact, three days after Saeed was placed under house arrest, he was allowed to leave his Johar Town residence in Lahore to offer Friday prayers in a nearby mosque. And though his movement has been restricted now, he hasnt yet been chargesheeted and is free to see his colleagues.
His son Talha Saeed faces even less restrictions, regularly leading the Friday prayers at Lahores Jamia Qadsia mosque, touted as the second JuD headquarters. True to his fathers teachings, Talha continues to spit venom against India, the United States and Israel.
A JuD spokesman, Atiq-ur Rehman, addressing the media after their office was sealed
Not only this, three days after the UNSC sanctions against the JuD, its activists organised a rally in Lahore on December 14. The protest against the UN was led by Yahya Mujahid, JuDs central secretary, information, and one of the 12 leaders whom the Pakistan government had put under house arrest. Hundreds of JuD activists in over 50 vehicles, including JuD ambulances, drove from Nasir Bagh to the Lahore Press Club, via the Mall, carrying banners and placards. Escorting them was a contingent of the Punjab police.
The JuD continues to use print and electronic media for propaganda purposes, in gross violation of government orders. For instance, JuD spokesperson Abdullah Muntazir issued a statement as recently as January 6, threatening the government with dire consequences should it decide to act against the JuD.
Incidentally, the American fbi is believed to have identified Muntazir as the person who impersonates as the Srinagar-based Lashkar-e-Toiba spokesperson Abdullah Ghaznavi. The fbi has reportedly told Islamabad that Muntazir has adopted this ruseringing up journalists from masked numbersbecause of the JuDs official stance that it has severed links with the LeT, once it shifted base to Srinagar.
The only concrete action taken against the JuD so far has been the shutting down of its Urdu and English websites by the Cyber Crime Wing of the Federal Investigation Agency.
However, the JuDs Urdu-language weekly, Ghazva, continues to hit the newsstands, featuring hate material. Ghazva treated the Mumbai attacks as its lead story, describing the gory incident as "a historic victory for the Muslim warriors who had actually avenged the grave atrocities being committed by the Indian establishment against the Muslim minority in several parts of India and in the state of Jammu & Kashmir". In the same issue, Ghazva claimed that over 4,500 Pakistani mothers donated one son each and 83 mothers two sons each to the JuD this year. Their goal: promoting, preaching and defending Islam, besides waging jehad against the forces of the infidel.
After all this, the Pakistan government, as is required by UNSC resolution No. 1267, has not even confiscated the weapons, even those licensed, from JuD activists. On January 4, information minister Sherry Rehman said it is the Punjab governments responsibility to enforce the ban. In response, the provincial government spokesman Pervaiz Rashid pointed out that five JuD leaders have been put under arrest. "Necessary measures are also being taken for assuming control of the central headquarters of Jamaat-ud-Dawa at Muridke," he added. The most interesting comment, though, came from federal interior minister Rehman Malik: "If they are running schools and hospitals, what can we do? We are not in a position to shut down medical centres and schools and colleges being run by the JuD." There are a few voices that say, well, take them over then.