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Pakistan, Fearing U.S. visa ban, cracks down on militant group

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Pakistan, fearing U.S. visa ban, cracks down on militant group

Pamela Constable January 31 at 11:46 AM

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — The sudden house arrest of a high-profile Islamist cleric in Pakistan on Monday sparked peaceful protests Tuesday by his followers, who condemned it as a government effort to appease the Trump administration after it banned visitors and refugees from seven Muslim-majority countries over the weekend — and a top presidential aide hinted that Pakistan could be added to the list.

Supporters of Hafiz Saeed, the fiery leader of the Jamaat-ud-Dawa movement, claimed the move by Pakistani officials had also come at the behest of India, Pakistan’s Hindu-led rival and neighbor. The group zealously opposes India’s claim to the disputed Kashmir border region, and a previous militant group led by Saeed, Lashkar-e-Taiba, was blamed for the 2008 terrorist siege that killed 164 people in the Indian city of Mumbai.

“There was pressure coming from the U.S. on Pakistani authorities to either arrest Hafiz Saeed or face the sanctions, and the government succumbed to that pressure,” Nadeem Awan, a spokesman for Saeed, said in an interview Tuesday. The U.S. government offered a $10 million bounty for Saeed’s arrest in 2012.


At one rally in the capital Tuesday, about 200 supporters burned representations of the American and Indian flags and repeatedly chanted, “We are Hafiz Saeed!” One speaker praised Saeed as a champion of the needy and insisted that his supporters are “civilized citizens” who only perform relief work and “carry out no illegal or anti-state acts.”

Pakistani officials dismissed suggestions that they had moved against Saeed under foreign pressure, insisting they were only implementing the terms of a United Nations resolution that declared Saeed’s group a terrorist organization after the Mumbai attacks. They also criticized Trump’s new visa restrictions, which Pakistan’s Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar said would “not affect terrorists, but the victims of terrorism.”

might be extended to Pakistan and other countries that have had “similar problems” with terrorism as the seven countries originally placed on the list — Iran, Iraq, Syria, Libya, Yemen, Somalia and Sudan.

But others said they doubted the Trump administration would add Pakistan to the visa ban without first adding Saudi Arabia, another longtime ally that was also the origin of most of the 9/11 hijackers. Instead, they suggested that Islamabad was looking for a way to improve ties with India after months of tension and violent episodes in Kashmir, which led to harsh accusations on both sides.

“This is something India has wanted for years, and it was a major stumbling block to resuming dialogue,” said Rifaat Hussain, a professor of government and public policy at the National University of Sciences and Technology. “There was also a feeling that Hafiz Saeed had gotten too big for his boots and was becoming a nuisance. This was mostly a desire for a restart.”

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, a lifelong Hindu nationalist, and concerned about Trump’s substantial business investments in India.

Many Pakistanis would find little disagreement with the chants and arguments of Saeed’s supporters on Tuesday, who denounced India’s military oppression of Kashmiris and cast its growing friendship with the U.S. as a conspiratorial alliance against Muslim interests.

“The new U.S. president has time and time again declared India a best friend of the United States and is following upon the desires of that friend,” Awan said. “But if our rulers want to please the United States, they can’t. Pakistan has done a lot for the U.S., but it always pressures Pakistan to do more.”

Annie Gowen in New Delhi and Shaiq Hussain in Islamabad contributed to this report.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world...b11ed7d8d2a_story.html?utm_term=.253c5b2ac640
 
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Pakistan, fearing U.S. visa ban, cracks down on militant group

Pamela Constable January 31 at 11:46 AM

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — The sudden house arrest of a high-profile Islamist cleric in Pakistan on Monday sparked peaceful protests Tuesday by his followers, who condemned it as a government effort to appease the Trump administration after it banned visitors and refugees from seven Muslim-majority countries over the weekend — and a top presidential aide hinted that Pakistan could be added to the list.

Supporters of Hafiz Saeed, the fiery leader of the Jamaat-ud-Dawa movement, claimed the move by Pakistani officials had also come at the behest of India, Pakistan’s Hindu-led rival and neighbor. The group zealously opposes India’s claim to the disputed Kashmir border region, and a previous militant group led by Saeed, Lashkar-e-Taiba, was blamed for the 2008 terrorist siege that killed 164 people in the Indian city of Mumbai.

“There was pressure coming from the U.S. on Pakistani authorities to either arrest Hafiz Saeed or face the sanctions, and the government succumbed to that pressure,” Nadeem Awan, a spokesman for Saeed, said in an interview Tuesday. The U.S. government offered a $10 million bounty for Saeed’s arrest in 2012.


At one rally in the capital Tuesday, about 200 supporters burned representations of the American and Indian flags and repeatedly chanted, “We are Hafiz Saeed!” One speaker praised Saeed as a champion of the needy and insisted that his supporters are “civilized citizens” who only perform relief work and “carry out no illegal or anti-state acts.”

Pakistani officials dismissed suggestions that they had moved against Saeed under foreign pressure, insisting they were only implementing the terms of a United Nations resolution that declared Saeed’s group a terrorist organization after the Mumbai attacks. They also criticized Trump’s new visa restrictions, which Pakistan’s Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar said would “not affect terrorists, but the victims of terrorism.”

might be extended to Pakistan and other countries that have had “similar problems” with terrorism as the seven countries originally placed on the list — Iran, Iraq, Syria, Libya, Yemen, Somalia and Sudan.

But others said they doubted the Trump administration would add Pakistan to the visa ban without first adding Saudi Arabia, another longtime ally that was also the origin of most of the 9/11 hijackers. Instead, they suggested that Islamabad was looking for a way to improve ties with India after months of tension and violent episodes in Kashmir, which led to harsh accusations on both sides.

“This is something India has wanted for years, and it was a major stumbling block to resuming dialogue,” said Rifaat Hussain, a professor of government and public policy at the National University of Sciences and Technology. “There was also a feeling that Hafiz Saeed had gotten too big for his boots and was becoming a nuisance. This was mostly a desire for a restart.”

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, a lifelong Hindu nationalist, and concerned about Trump’s substantial business investments in India.

Many Pakistanis would find little disagreement with the chants and arguments of Saeed’s supporters on Tuesday, who denounced India’s military oppression of Kashmiris and cast its growing friendship with the U.S. as a conspiratorial alliance against Muslim interests.

“The new U.S. president has time and time again declared India a best friend of the United States and is following upon the desires of that friend,” Awan said. “But if our rulers want to please the United States, they can’t. Pakistan has done a lot for the U.S., but it always pressures Pakistan to do more.”

Annie Gowen in New Delhi and Shaiq Hussain in Islamabad contributed to this report.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world...b11ed7d8d2a_story.html?utm_term=.253c5b2ac640

JuD is not a militant group... both Mr. Shaiq Hussian and Annie Gowsawami are mistaken.
JuD is is an activist group, who criticize Indian state for killing of Muslims.
 
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Yeh sab trump ka karam hay !

JuD is not a militant group... both Mr. Shaiq Hussian and Annie Gowsawami are mistaken.
JuD is is an activist group, who criticize Indian state for killing of Muslims.

Alqaida is a charitable organisation doing reconstruction in Afghanistan..talibans are volunteer peace keeper..?
 
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Nothing to do with Trump or anybody else. He is in protective custody with credible intelligence about his life in danger by RAW goons. Infact, the letter issued from interior ministry also used the word "protective custody".

These forigeners are making it look like it was due to them. NOT.
 
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Yeh sab trump ka karam hay !



Alqaida is a charitable organisation doing reconstruction in Afghanistan..talibans are volunteer peace keeper..?
And Nato is a force of monks that doesnt even indiscriminately bombs the hospitals or attacks Salala checkposts

God-Emperor strikes again.
On India ? Nah hes under house arrest, It will be while before he does

If it makes u feel any better.
http://www.businessinsider.com/obam...o-longer-a-threat-to-the-united-states-2011-6
 
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Nothing to do with Trump or anybody else. He is in protective custody with credible intelligence about his life in danger by RAW goons. Infact, the letter issued from interior ministry also used the word "protective custody".

These forigeners are making it look like it was due to them. NOT.

Is it being suggested that HS has been taken into custody to save his life ?!!
 
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Yeh sab trump ka karam hay !



Alqaida is a charitable organisation doing reconstruction in Afghanistan..talibans are volunteer peace keeper..?
Go and tell people of Afghanistan ....
95 percent people still think the current setup is corrupt to the neck and American agents....they still feel for the taliban , they are ready to give American weapons to them ... And taliban are ones fighting Isis ...
Alqaida is finished thanks to Pakistan.....

hafiz Saeed sahab was just on temporary house arrest , so that when someone ask us to take action against him , we can tell them we have already taken action without any real evidence ....and he can walk free soon...
 
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Yeh sab trump ka karam hay !



Alqaida is a charitable organisation doing reconstruction in Afghanistan..talibans are volunteer peace keeper..?
amazing you have become a lackey of america like no ones business? Is america god?
 
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The way I see it, this is all just a cosmetic "gesture" of sorts. For 6 months he was placed under a similar house arrest (despite lack of evidence). The courts cleared him due to lack of evidence. The "evidence" presented by india was mostly either heresay or prose (pictures of "made in Pakistan cigarettes" or other such 'memorabilia')

I don't see HS as an impediment to even an uneasy peace between Pakistan and india. The issue is Kashmir.

I'm still surprised to see that some international media like BBC are claiming there's a "bounty" on HS for $10 million. The Americans THEMSELVES are on the record even 4 years back stating they dont have evidence that could withstand judicial scrutiny against this man.

See below (start at 1:35)



This whole cycle will go on and on and on. Trump is facing enough domestic resistance and there are a lot of question marks about his admin just barely 2 weeks into his inauguration. I don't think Pakistan Govt. should worry too much about empty bravado from Mr. Bronze-Spray. At the same time Pakistan does have its obligations to act against terrorist groups both foreign and domestic and given that the security situation in Pakistan is much more favourable now (to the angst of some hostile neighbours) - I'd say Pak Govt/Security Establishment have done well and should maintain course.
 
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JuD is not a militant group... both Mr. Shaiq Hussian and Annie Gowsawami are mistaken.
JuD is is an activist group, who criticize Indian state for killing of Muslims.

Anyone criticizing India for its atrocities in Kashmir is deemed an enemy. No surprise there.

As for the ban, time will prove that it was a wrong decision to make. Trump will do whatever he has to do. Banning any person won't change that fact.

Pakistan and Trump won't get along. That is a fact we have to embrace.
 
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