Tuesday, August 30, 2005

Pakistani militant killed, two injured in Afghanistan

Pakistani militant killed, two injured in Afghanistan

By Mudassir Ali Shah

KABUL: A ‘Pakistani Taliban’ was killed while two others suffered injuries in an overnight clash with security forces in the southwestern Helmand province, officials said on Tuesday.

Haji Mohammad Wali, spokesman for the Helmand province governor, said the body of the Pakistani fighter was still lying at the scene of the clash in Baghny district. He refused to say how armed Pakistanis had entered the troubled province despite improved border security.

Helmand’s Deputy Police chief Haji Mohammad Ayub claimed two Kalashnikov assault rifles, as many hand-grenades and a walkie-talkie had been seized from the combatants.

Sunday, August 28, 2005

Britons flock to India for fast, cheap surgery

Britons flock to India for fast, cheap surgery
By Peter Foster in New Delhi
(Filed: 27/08/2005)


Mrs Holman's keyhole surgery on a damaged knee would cost up to £9,000 in the UK. But at the Apollo Hospital, New Delhi, the same operation is just £1,400.

However, for many patients such as Mrs Holman it is not the affordability but the speed and availability of service that are India's biggest draw. She wanted her life back.

"When my whole leg went numb and I was housebound on crutches, in despair one night I went to A&E to try to see a duty orthopaedic surgeon. I couldn't do any of the things I loved - walk the dog, go to the gym, ride a bike.

"In the end I saw a house officer who basically said 'go home and wait for your operation', which we were told would take 'months'."

A call to a Warwickshire-based company, The Taj Medical Group, began the process that ended in Mrs Holman having a surgery appointment in three weeks.

"We were able to check out the surgeon's qualifications on the internet - he was trained in Britain - and he

e-mailed us with his mobile phone so we could chat through any concerns. It was incredible," said Mrs Holman's husband, John.

Mrs Holman landed back at Heathrow this week and left the aircraft without the aid of crutches, which she left at the hospital in Delhi for use by a charity.

"I wouldn't hesitate recommending coming here," she said. "Our experience has been brilliant. I came to have one knee done but in the end I've had the other fixed too, to save me coming back again."

Across the corridor from Mrs Holman's private hospital room another English family had also decided that paying out some of their savings was preferable to waiting their turn on the NHS.

Karen Knott, a design engineer from Dorchester, said her 14-year-old son, Elliot, was walking "five inches" taller after a £4,700 operation on his spine to correct an injury suffered in an ice-skating accident last New Year's Eve.

The same surgery would have cost £25,000 in Britain or could have been done for free on the NHS after a 17-week wait to see a specialist and a further nine months for surgery.


Thursday, August 25, 2005

Islamic group banned by Britain wins over middle-class Pakistan(Hizb ut-Tahrir)

Islamic group banned by Britain wins over middle-class Pakistan


Wed Aug 24,12:42 AM ET

KARACHI (AFP) - As the Islamic radical group Hizb ut-Tahrir fumes over the British government's intention to ban it following July 7 bombings in London, it can take some comfort from its offshoot in Pakistan.

Islamabad also outlawed the group in 2003, but here it is attracting a new breed of students and professionals, who are more likely to wear sharp Western suits than the baggy Islamic clothes preferred by other fundamenalists.

"I do my normal job and than take out some time for Tahrir, as I believe they are doing a good job to change the system," says Habibullah Saleem, the manager of a free eyecare centre in the southern Pakistani city of Karachi.

Like the group's followers in Britain and elsewhere, members in Pakistan have conservative views, but they say they abhor violence and only want an "intellectual revolution" in the Muslim world.

Other followers here include a civil engineer working in a multinational company, an assistant professor in a medical and dental college, and "thousands" of students, the group says.

Founded in the Middle East in the 1950s and then consolidated in central Asia, Hizb ut-Tahrir -- the Party of Islamic Liberation -- is a Sunni movement that says it wants to create a pan-Islamic state through non-violent means.

Countries around the world have since seemed unsure how to handle it.

It remains legal in most western nations, although Russia classified it as a "terrorist" organisation in February 2003 and Germany imposed a ban due to the group's alleged anti-semitism.

Uzbekistan says a military crackdown in May that claimed hundreds of lives was in response to a Hizb ut-Tahrir plot to seize power. However, many analysts and rights groups say they saw no direct link between it and the violence.

And when British premier Tony Blair said this month that he was banning the group, it was greeted with anger even by some mainstream Muslims because it was paired with Al Muhajiroun -- a hardline British-based group that cheered the September 11, 2001 attacks in the United States. The attacks, for which Al-Qaeda claimed responsibility, killed about 3,000 people.

In Pakistan, the group has a powerful opponent in military ruler President Pervez Musharraf, who banned it in November 2003 as part of a general crackdown against Islamic extremism.

He singled it out in a speech following the London bombings, accusing it of "passing an edict against my life" and saying that London was allowing it to operate with impunity.

The London bombings killed 56 people including the four men who attacked three subway trains and a bus.

But the year and a half since Pakistan's ban have seen an increase in the group's membership in colleges and universities, it says, inspired partly by increased anti-Americanism over the war in Iraq.

"It's an international intellectual and political movement, something more dangerous for the West than any militant group," Hizb ut-Tahrir's spokesman in Pakistan, Naveed Butt, told AFP.

Hizb does not depend on Pakistan's Islamic seminaries, known as madrassas, for its recruits.

During Pakistan's post-July 7 crackdown -- which Britain's High Commissioner to Islamabad last week insisted was already planned before the bombings -- Musharraf ordered about 1,400 foreign madrassa students to leave Pakistan.

Pakistan has also arrested more than 800 Islamic extremists and banned their publications since the London attacks.

"You don't find our workers in madrassas. Not because we are against it but because we worked in a different manner and believe in non-violence," Butt said.

Political analyst Tauseef Ahmed said it was a positive sign that Hizb ut-Tehrir was not apparently producing violent militants or suicide bombers, and said they could influence other Islamist organisations.

"They are certainly different from other extremist groups, as they don't draw their strength from madrassas," Ahmed, professor of mass communication at Karachi's Urdu University, told AFP.

"And the significant part is that educated youth are attracted by their approach."

In the last couple of months dozens of Hizb ut-Tahrir members have been arrested from different parts of the country, mainly for distributing their pamphlets or literature, but most of them have been released by the courts.

The group's adherents say they are immune to whatever action the authorities take.

"Our weapon is our thoughts," member Saleem said.

Wednesday, August 24, 2005

Forbes: Look to India

Look to India

Paul Johnson, 09.05.05, 12:00 AM ET

If George W. Bush wishes to be remembered in future ages--and what high-spirited world leader doesn't?--he will devote much of his second term to forging close and durable links with India.

Naturally, President Bush must seek to get Continental Europe back into the Atlantic camp. With the sun of the anti-U.S. Jacques Chirac setting and the star of the realistic and sensible Nicolas Sarkozy on the rise in France, and with the likelihood of the pro-U.S. Angela Merkel's taking over Germany's chancellorship from the ridiculous failure that has been Gerhard Schröder's, the Continentals are already moving Bush's way.

People Power

Regardless of who is in power, Europe is becoming a small player in the 21st century. The 25th International Population Conference, which met at Tours, France in July, made some significant points as to where power will be increasingly exercised in the new century.

By 2050 the EU's 25 member nations will have a total population of only 461 million, compared with the U.S.' 420 million. If you subtract Britain from the European total, the U.S. population will be significantly higher. The makeup of the European population will be older, with far fewer in the active workforce. It is more difficult to compute output per capita half a century hence, but if present trends continue, the GNP of the U.S. will be three times that of Europe.

In contrast, by 2050 India will have the largest population in the world--1.6 billion inhabitants versus China's 1.4 billion, with India's population being much younger. Although much of the Islamic world is growing fast in demographic terms--a matter of serious import for southern Europe in particular--India by midcentury most likely will have a greater number of souls than the entire Muslim world. As for India's economic potential, I regard that as almost infinite over the long term.

Since China threw off the horrific and destructive legacy of Mao Tse-tung's primitive Marxism, it has done remarkably well, on the whole. It has, however, tended to concentrate unduly on old smokestack industries, with the object of gaining quick returns through cheap exports. Needless to say, this has had appalling consequences for the environment, which China will rue desperately in decades to come. China, with estimates of about 20 million convicts, is heavily dependent on slave labor, as well as on the labor of underpaid ex-peasants who are still pouring into the industrialized coastal belt. China is not investing enough in high technology, with the exception of the military, and is thus making the same mistakes the Soviet Union made. Indeed, the differences between the new China and the old U.S.S.R. are more superficial and visible than fundamental. The entire Chinese apparatus, political and economic, looks fragile to me.

India, however, with its educated strata fluent in English, is leapfrogging over the industrial epoch into the advanced communications era. Bangalore, India's capital of high technology and outsourcing facilities, is a city fully at home in the 21st century, whereas Shanghai, despite its spectacular skyscrapered skyline, is a phenomenon rooted in the 20th century. India looks--and is--astonishingly old, but its futuristic sinews, though often invisible to the untrained eye, are becoming formidable. As things stand, India will soon have more English-speaking computer operators than the rest of the world put together, and it will be organically linked to all the advanced economies.

Given the climate of freedom that prevails in India, we can expect that it will be producing ideas, inventions and new processes of its own before long. China will not be able to match this until it dismantles its communist system--or lets it collapse. To have a truly innovative economy, freedom of thought and expression must be encouraged. That is the most important lesson of the modern age. India has this precious tradition, as well as the rule of law, both of which are legacies (I am proud to say) of British rule. The rule of law is essential to long-term investment on the largest possible scale.

Counterbalance

India ought to also figure largely in President Bush's calculations for another reason: It is a counterbalance on two important fronts. India will prove invaluable as a counterbalance to China if China becomes aggressive, especially toward Taiwan. China has weaknesses in central Asia--especially in Tibet, its much-oppressed and rebellious colony. Tibet, for many reasons, has closer affinities to India and is much closer geographically to Delhi than to Beijing.

India is also a counterbalance to the Muslim world. It is an example to its neighbors, Pakistan and Bangladesh. As India's standard of living rises and India takes its place at the world's head table, the inhabitants of these two neighboring countries are bound to ask, "What's holding us back, while India prospers?" The answer will come, as it increasingly comes to Arab lands: Islamic fundamentalism.

All these trends can be to America's advantage. But they must be cultivated and reinforced by intelligent U.S. policies and sophisticated diplomacy.

Paul Johnson, eminent British historian and author; Lee Kuan Yew, minister mentor of Singapore; and Ernesto Zedillo, director, Yale Center for the Study of Globalization, former president of Mexico; in addition to Forbes Chairman Caspar W. Weinberger, rotate in writing this column. To see past Current Events columns, visit our Web site at www.forbes.com/currentevents.

Baloch Freedom fighters vow to continue their struggle

Dawn: Aug 24, 2005.

JWP foresees another operation in Dera Bugti

QUETTA, Aug 23: Jamhoori Watan Party leader Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti has accused the government of making false claims about development projects in order to continue the exploitation of Balochistan’s resources.

A statement issued in Dera Bugti on Tuesday said that Nawab Bugti, who was talking to a group of newsmen, alleged that the authorities were preparing for another military operation and heavy weapons were being piled up in Dera Bugti for the purpose.

The JWP chief said that not only Gwadar but a major part of Balochistan’s coastline had been sold out to multinational companies. He alleged that foreign companies had strengthened their grip on the province. Besides, he said, the government was planning to settle outsiders in the province, posing threat to the national identity, culture and survival of the Baloch people.

Responding to a question, he said that Gen Pervez Musharraf, Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain and Syed Mushahid Hussain had repeatedly stated that the government would give to the Baloch people more than what they expected. But no demand of the four-party Baloch alliance has been accommodated in the parliamentary committee’s recommendations.

Sunday, August 21, 2005

Afghanistan: US fury at wild-west militants who flee back to Pakistan

US fury at wild-west militants who flee back to Pakistan

Sydney Morning Herald

By Paul McGeough, Chief Herald Correspondent in Kabul
August 22, 2005

It should have been a slam dunk. In Afghanistan's eastern border region, US troops say they photographed Taliban fighters firing a rocket-launcher at them from the safety of the Pakistani side - within sight of a Pakistani military observation post.

But a frustrated US military official in Kabul explains: "We thought we had them.

"But when we showed the pictures in Islamabad they said, 'We saw nothing.' It's the same when we call on our direct communications lines to say we're chasing the Taliban over the border - they see us coming and they refuse to pick up the phone," he said, speaking anonymously.

Islamabad's failure to stem the rising flood of Taliban and al-Qaeda fighters on deadly cross-border forays from Pakistan's wild west has sapped US hopes of defeating the infiltrators any time soon. And it has reduced relations between Islamabad and Kabul to an icy low.

More than 700 Afghans and 45 Americans have died as border raids intensified since the northern winter. This is all the more puzzling because Pakistan says it has sent 74,000 troops to the border region to rein them in.

Despite superficial civility and an aid cheque for $US100 million ($133 million) from Islamabad, a spokesman for Afghanistan's President, Hamid Karzai, recently told reporters: "All the weapons, ammunition, budgets, money transfer systems and safe havens for terrorists are located in Pakistan."

Afghan officials suspect parts of Pakistan's military and intelligence services that are loyal to the Taliban have been training the fighters to use more sophisticated remote-controlled bombs.

Pakistan denies Afghan claims that a system of extremist training camps operates in Pakistan. But Zulfiqar Ali, a Pakistani journalist, reported visiting such a camp. Men and boys as young as 13 took an 18-day "ideological orientation" and weapons training.

After September 11, 2001, Pakistan's President, Pervez Musharraf, promised to crack down on terrorist fighters in Pakistan and the fundamentalist schools, madrassas, which indoctrinate their foot soldiers.

General Musharraf repeated the promises after the revelation of Pakistan's links to last month's London bombings. After a Central Asia analyst, Ahmed Rashid, challenged General Musharraf last week, the President said he had arrested 800 militants and deported 1400 foreigners at Pakistani madrassas since the London attacks. He argued his hands had previously been tied - by confrontation with India, local elections or global or domestic political insecurities. But he insisted: "The situation is now far different from what I faced before. Now I'm much stronger."

But General Musharraf's admission his Government would no longer distinguish between "terrorists" seemed to confirm analysts' views that Islamabad deals with them selectively.

The analysts say there is zero-tolerance for non-Pakistani militants - mostly Arab and Central Asian - who seem to be deftly weeded from among home-grown militants who have done Islamabad's dirty work in the disputed territory of Kashmir. And in Afghanistan many in the Pakistani security forces believe the militants will be needed as a "moderate Taliban" to step in when, as they suspect, the Karzai Government in Kabul collapses.

Despite General Musharraf's promises, the gunmen and the bombers keep arriving in Afghanistan, and only a few hundred of the estimated 15,000 madrassas in Pakistan have complied with his demand that they register with the authorities. All that, he says, is about to change.

NATO's civilian representative in Kabul and a former Turkish foreign minister, Hikmet Cetin, said last week: "The madrassas in Pakistan remain a critical issue. The border between these countries is 2400 kilometres and very mountainous. It's very difficult to patrol, and with 2 million Afghan refugees still in Pakistan it's easy for them to bring the Taliban ideology back here when they come home."

The recent discovery of four remote-controlled bombs in the border region in an Afghan taxi passenger's baggage underscored his point. Afghan police say the man confessed to entering the country with four Pakistanis after being trained at Shamshatu, which is home to a big United Nations-run refugee camp for Afghans near Peshawar, just over the border in Pakistan.

The new US ambassador to Kabul, Ronald Neumann, said last week: "We are urging the Government of Pakistan to take all possible action to control extremism. We'll work with both countries to bring about better relations and institutions to fight terrorism. I think we are having some success."

The US military official speaking on condition on anonymity spoke more bluntly. "We are looking for commitment - we've seen none in the last 12 months. All they do is arrest someone on the eve of an official US visit to Islamabad, and they release them once we've left town."

Most US criticism of the ease with which the Taliban slip away into Pakistan has been confined to soldier level in the US forces. They are often forced to halt while in hot pursuit when they come to what they believe is the border. Known as the Durand Line, the 1893 British-drawn frontier is ill-defined and disputed.

The US military officer seemed to share his men's frustration, exclaiming: "Anyway, where is the f---ing Durand Line?"

Reuters reports: Four US soldiers were killed and three wounded in a bomb attack in Afghanistan yesterday. They were involved in an operation against militants in the southern province of Zabul, the US military said.

Jihadi, captured in Afghanistan, trained in secret terrorist training camp in Pakistan(Manshera)

'I Will Go to Do Jihad Again and Again'

Prisoner's Story Highlights Pakistan-Based Training Network for Insurgents

By N.C. Aizenman
Washington Post Foreign Service
Sunday, August 21, 2005; Page A17

KABUL, Afghanistan -- The prisoner perched on a metal chair, hugging his knees to his chest and rocking slightly, like a nervous child.

But his expression relaxed into a blissful smile as he described what he would do if released from his cell in the headquarters of the national intelligence service.

"When I get the chance, I will stick to my promise," said Sher Ali, 28, a Pakistani man with cropped black hair and a long beard. "I will go to do jihad again and again."

Ali said he took his vow to wage holy war against U.S. forces in Afghanistan earlier this summer, just before embarking on what he described as a 20-day weapons training course at a secret mountain camp in northeastern Pakistan.

He was captured by Afghan police about three weeks ago, shortly after crossing into Afghanistan's rugged, northeastern Konar province. The area has been a haven for armed renegades from an assortment of groups, including al Qaeda, the Taliban and backers of former Afghan leader Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, who is now a fugitive.

Over the last several months, insurgents have killed hundreds of people in Afghanistan, including aid workers, religious and tribal leaders, government officials, and Afghan and U.S. troops, many in ambushes and bombings apparently aimed at derailing parliamentary elections scheduled for Sept. 18.

American and Afghan forces have countered with an aggressive effort to flush the fighters from their remote mountain hideouts, killing several hundred in operations in border provinces from Konar in the north to Kandahar in the south. They have also taken several hundred suspected insurgents prisoner and allowed a few to speak to journalists.

Ali's story, which could not be verified independently, offered a glimpse of what Afghan authorities charge is a shadowy Pakistani network that continues to fuel the insurgency with fresh recruits as fast as U.S. and Afghan forces kill or capture their predecessors.

Ali spoke in the presence of an Afghan intelligence official, but he did not show signs of having been mistreated. Some details, such as the existence of jihadist training camps and the recruitment of Islamic fighters, have been reported separately in the Pakistani press or described by prisoners after their release.

"We know where a lot of these training camps are. We have their names. And we've given the Pakistanis all the information we have," said a senior Afghan intelligence official. "We're waiting for Pakistan to show the willingness to fight."

Pakistan's president, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, has repeatedly pointed out that his government has captured or killed more than 700 suspected al Qaeda members in Pakistan since 2001. It also lost more than 250 soldiers last year in battles against al Qaeda bases in the largely lawless semiautonomous tribal regions along the Afghan border.

Officials from the two governments have recently exchanged pledges to collaborate closely on security. But they must still contend with the sympathy that many Pakistanis feel toward the Taliban, particularly in tribal border towns such as Miram Shah, where residents share the same Pashtun ethnicity as the Afghan militia.

It was in Miram Shah this summer, at the home of a friend, that Sher Ali said he met Zubair, an Afghan in his late twenties, who recruited him to fight in Afghanistan. Ali, who was visiting from his village, said Zubair did not initially admit to being an insurgent. "But from the way he talked, I could tell that he had been a fighter," Ali said during an hour-long interview in the intelligence headquarters.

Ali said Zubair told him and his companions that Western troops were bombing, arresting and torturing innocent Afghans. "He kept saying, 'It's our duty as Muslims to go there and help,' " said Ali.

That night, Ali recalled, Zubair turned to him and asked point-blank: "Do you want to join the jihad?"

The son of a truck driver, Ali said he had never belonged to any religious movement and had never attended any of the thousands of free religious schools that cater to impoverished Pakistani children. Instead he had dropped out of public school at 13 to take a series of odd jobs, most recently as a security guard.

During that pivotal evening in Miram Shah, Ali said he thought of his wife and 1-year-old son, who lived with his parents in a mud hut. But he also thought of how he had often seethed at the idea of U.S. troops in Muslim lands such as Afghanistan and Iraq and at the U.S. military's detention of Muslim prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

"It was like Zubair had poured the petrol, lit the match and set fire to this issue of jihad for me," he said.

Several days later, Ali said he boarded a public bus for the four-hour journey from Peshawar, the city nearest his village, to the northeastern Pakistani mountain town of Mansehra. He carried only a backpack stuffed with three changes of clothes and a bar of soap. His ears rang with his mother's wails of protest at the news that he was setting off for jihad.

But as the bus sputtered through the flat, hot plain of his youth into hilly green terrain, Ali said his only concern was whether he would prove physically fit for the regimen ahead. Otherwise, he said, he felt deeply happy.

"I knew then that when I was killed in jihad, I would go directly to heaven," he said, smiling.

On reaching the bus stop in Mansehra, Ali walked to a stand selling fried dumplings and looked for the contact Zubair had promised would be waiting.

"Salaam aleikum," peace be to you, he said tentatively to a middle-age man with a long beard.

"Are you the person who has come from Peshawar?" the man asked.

Ali nodded, and the man quickly led him to another bus, this one far more dilapidated. They rode for an hour to a small town, then alighted and began a steep hike up into the hills, following no discernable path. For more than four hours they trekked in silence under a cool canopy of trees, taller than any Ali had ever seen.

Finally they reached a small camp of five white tents, where about 20 men were preparing to perform afternoon prayers. Ali was introduced to a soft-spoken Pakistani instructor who never gave his name, though Ali said he overheard others refer to him as Maksud.

Maksud never gave the name of the group that was training him, Ali said. However, the hills around Mansehra overlook Pakistan's border with Kashmir, a disputed Himalayan province that is split between Pakistan and India.

The area has long been a training ground for Kashmiri guerrillas, unofficially supported by Pakistan. In recent years, several Kashmiri groups have joined forces with al Qaeda or the Taliban to attack Western targets, but critics charge that the Pakistani military remains reluctant to defang them.

Every day, Ali said, the trainees awoke before dawn and did sprinting exercises for 20 minutes. They spent several hours learning how to assemble, aim and fire weapons, from Kalashnikov rifles to rocket-propelled grenade launchers, although Ali said there was only one rocket, so the trainees never actually fired it.

Despite the loud bangs emanating from the camp, Ali said, Maksud took pains to conceal it and warned the trainees not to wander too far away.

Shortly after Ali returned to Peshawar, he said, Zubair arrived and announced they would drive into Afghanistan the next morning. Ali said Zubair never told him whom they would be joining, but an Afghan intelligence investigator said Ali had confessed under interrogation that Zubair was working for a senior Taliban commander, Jalaluddin Haqqani.

Ali said Afghan border guards waved them into Konar, assuming they were Afghan. But some miles later, police stopped their taxi. When they discovered Ali did not have identity papers, they arrested him.

Ali complained that the Konar police kept him tied up for several days and threatened to hurt him. But he said that he was never beaten and added he had been pleasantly surprised by the extent to which Afghans appeared to be in charge of their country.

Still, the Pakistani prisoner remained skeptical and defiant. The interview over, Ali rose from his chair in the investigator's office and began to shuffle out of the room. Suddenly, he stopped and popped his head back through the door.

"So," he demanded, "when are you taking me to Guantanamo?"

Saturday, August 20, 2005

Pakistani Soldiers punished for attempt on Musharraf

Soldiers punished for attempt on Musharraf


By Anwar Iqbal
UPI South Asian Affairs Analyst

Islamabad, Pakistan, Dec. 24 (UPI) -- A Pakistani military court has sentenced one soldier to death and another to 10 years hard labor for conspiring to assassinate President Pervez Musharraf, the military said Friday.

"The soldiers were involved in the attack against the president on Dec. 14, 2003 in Rawalpindi," a city close to Islamabad, the army's press office said.

"The court found them guilty of the charges," said Maj. Gen. Shaukat Sultan, the army's chief spokesman. He said the soldiers were sentenced "a few days ago" but gave no details.

United Press International reported the story on Dec. 21 and identified the soldier sentenced to death by firing squad as Mohammed Islam Siddiqui.

"This is only a small segment of what is happening behind closed doors of the Pakistani cantonments," says Syed Saleem Shahzad of the Asia Times who first reported the trial. "There are many within the army who are not happy with Pakistan's strong alliance to the United States."

Siddiqui was arrested in South Waziristan after he refused to fight against tribal insurgent helping al-Qaida and Taliban suspects. Waziristan is part of the long and porous tribal belt bordering Afghanistan where U.S. officials believe several key al-Qaida leaders are hiding. Al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden and his deputy Ayman Al-Zawahiri are also believed to be hiding in this region.

Shahzad said there were other soldiers who also refused to fight "their Muslim brothers" and were arrested with Siddiqui.

Later, investigators found that Siddiqui was also involved with a group within the armed forces that was assisting al-Qaida suspects who made two attempts on Musharraf in December last year.

Musharraf narrowly escaped both the attempts. In the first attempt, on Dec. 14, a powerful explosion rocked a bridge just seconds after his motorcade had passed.

Pakistani security officials say that a hi-tech jamming device on Musharraf's car delayed the explosion and possibly saved his life.

Musharraf survived a second attack in the same area about two weeks later on Christmas Day last year when two suicide bombers rammed explosives-laden vehicles into the presidential motorcade, killing 15 people.

Musharraf who is also the army chief, annoyed al-Qaida when he abandoned Pakistan's former Taliban allies and joined the U.S.-led war against terrorism after the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks in the United States. Al-Qaida says that Musharraf's assistance enabled the United States to bring down the Taliban regime without much resistance and caused the collapse of its terror network.

Pakistani security officials have blamed a Libyan al-Qaida militant, Abu Faraj al-Libbi, for masterminding the two attempts. Pakistan has offered a $350,000 reward for al-Libbi's arrest. The United States has also announced a separate, $5 million reward.

In September, Pakistani police shot dead Amjad Farooqi, another co-conspirator of the Christmas Day attempt on Musharraf and the beheading of U.S. reporter Daniel Pearl.

The authorities this year arrested Tanzanian national, Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani, who was convicted for the 1998 twin bombings of U.S. embassies in East Africa, and Pakistani al-Qaida computer expert Naeem Noor Khan.

Three Islamic extremists were sentenced to 10 years hard labor for an earlier assassination attempt on Musharraf in Karachi in April last year, when a remote-controlled device failed to detonate an explosives-laden van near the president's motorcade.

Siddiqui, the soldier sentenced to death for the Dec. 14 attempt on Musharraf, is from the Defense Services Guard Company attached to the Punjab regiment.

Charges against him include "abetting mutiny" against Musharraf and attempting to persuade "a person in the military" to rebel against the government.

Siddiqui is also accused of entering Afghanistan without a passport and having links to a group in the Pakistan air force which was plotting to eliminate Musharraf.

The Pakistani army, which was part of the British Indian army before independence in 1947, was raised on liberal values. But this changed in the early 1980s when the Soviet forces occupied neighboring Afghanistan, and Pakistan became the hub of resistance to the Soviet occupation.

Both U.S. and Pakistani authorities recruited hundreds of Muslim activists from around the world to fight in Afghanistan. Many of them worked closely with the Pakistan army along with Pakistani and Afghan jihadi groups.

Pakistan continued the army's association with the jihadis after the withdrawal of the Soviet forces from Afghanistan in 1989. They also used them to stir an uprising against India in Kashmir, a Himalayan valley disputed between Islamabad and New Delhi since 1947.

While most of the armed forces supported Musharraf's decision to join the U.S. camp three years ago, religiously inclined soldiers and officers were not happy. The first time the army's high command learned about their grievances was in December 2003 when Musharraf escaped two close attempts on his life.

Investigators later said they learned that there were groups within the Pakistan army and the air force who conspired with al-Qaida in arranging these attacks.

Alarmed, Musharraf ordered a major overhaul of the armed forces. Musharraf loyalists were tasked with drawing a list of religiously inclined officers and many were quietly retired.

Friday, August 19, 2005

US concern at Pakistan textbooks

US concern at Pakistan textbooks

By Aamer Ahmed Khan
BBC News, Karachi

The United States has described some of the material contained in Pakistani textbooks as "inciteful" and said it was an issue of "serious concern".

The US said it feared the material might "cause people to... lash out with violent actions".

Despite two government reviews of the textbooks, a leading Pakistan NGO says little has changed.

Pakistan's school curriculum has been in the spotlight since the 11 September attacks in the US.

Pakistan and the US are key allies in the latter's war on terror.

US State Department spokesman, Sean McCormack, was commenting on media reports that jihad, or holy war, was still a part of school curriculum in Pakistan.

"We have engaged the Pakistani government on... the issue of textbooks and language that... was clearly, clearly unacceptable and inciteful or would cause people to perhaps lash out with violent actions," he told a press briefing on Thursday.

He said the US had raised the matter with the Pakistani education minister during his visit to Washington in March.

Independent review

The administration of President Pervez Musharraf asked the education ministry in March 2002 to undertake a comprehensive review of all textbooks.

But the review recommended that no major changes were required in the existing curriculum.

This prompted one of Pakistan's most respected non-government organisations, the Sustainable Development Policy Institute (SDPI), to undertake an independent review.

It examined textbooks for Urdu, English, Social Studies and Civics from grades one to 12 (5-18 years) and came out with its report a few months after the ministry's review. The findings created a furore.

It found "falsehoods, distortions and omissions" in all the textbooks, which it said defied Pakistan's declared objective of turning into a modern, dynamic state.

It also found the books "full" of material "encouraging or justifying discrimination against women, religious and ethnic minorities and other nations".

The report said that most of the textbooks incited "militancy and violence, including encouragement of holy war and martyrdom".

There were repeated instances of "glorification of war and the use of force".

The religious parties in particular were incensed at the report and labelled it "paid Western propaganda".

Curriculum change

The report was taken seriously by the government which ordered another review.

The second review, completed in mid-2004, recommended that references to holy war and the use of force be deleted.

The ministry also recommended that the social studies subject be scrapped.

The recommendations were implemented for the school year starting 2005.

"I don't think anything has changed in substance," co-editor of the SDPI report Ahmed Salim told the BBC news website.

The SDPI is planning to undertake another review which it expects to complete in a month's time.

Thursday, August 18, 2005

How Pakistan's Dr. X sold al-Qaida Islamic bomb Khan armed bin Laden for his 'American Hiroshima' plan

How Pakistan's Dr. X sold al-Qaida Islamic bomb Khan armed bin Laden for his 'American Hiroshima' plan

Dr. Abdul Qadeer Khan, the "father of the Islamic bomb" and the "godfather of nuclear proliferation," provided nuclear expertise, nuclear materials, and designs for atomic weapons to Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri to assist in the realization of the "American Hiroshima."

The American Hiroshima plan represents al-Qaida's plan for the nuclear destruction of the United States. It calls for the detonation of seven tactical nuclear devices in seven U.S. cities at the same time. Each device, according to the plan, must be equipped to produce an explosive yield of 10 kilotons to equal the 1945 blast in Hiroshima that killed 242,437 Japanese civilians.

News about Dr. Khan's involvement with al-Qaida and the American Hiroshima plan first emerged with the capture of several al-Qaida operatives in Afghanistan in October 2001, during the first phase of Operation Enduring Freedom, and, later, with the arrest of Khalid Sheikh Mohammad, bin Laden's military operations chief, in Karachi, Pakistan, March 2, 2003.

From Khalid Mohammad's laptop, CIA officials uncovered details of al-Qaida's plan to create a series of "nuclear hell storms" throughout the United States.

After days of interrogation coupled with severe sleep deprivation, Khalid Mohammad told U.S. intelligence officials that the chain of command for the "American Hiroshima" answered directly to bin Laden, al-Zawahiri, and a mysterious scientist whom he, at first, referred to as "Dr. X," but later identified as Dr. Khan.

Tim Burger and Tim McGirk in the May 12, 2003, edition of Time managed to confirm that at least one meeting between Dr. Khan and bin Laden occurred within a safe house in Kabul.

The Real Dr. Strangelove

Dr. A.Q. Khan spearheaded Pakistan's effort to build nuclear weapons to stabilize the nuclear threat from India. Five atomic bombs, developed by Khan, were successfully detonated beneath the scorched hills of the Baluchistan desert in 1998.

Khan, who went on to work on the successful firings of the nuclear-capable Ghaudi I and II missiles, remains a revered figure in Afghanistan and Pakistan, where his birthday is celebrated in mosques.

After gaining a place for Pakistan within the elite nuclear club of nations along with the United States, Russia, China, Great Britain, France, India and Israel, Khan proceeded to sell his centrifuge technology for the enrichment of uranium and his designs for atomic weapons to such countries as Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Nigeria, and Sudan, and such rogue nations as North Korea, Iran, and Libya. Abundant evidence exists that the list of Khan's customers should be expanded to include Brazil, Malaysia, Indonesia, Algeria, Kuwait, Myanmar, and Abu Dubai.

More information was squeezed out of Khalid Mohammad in subsequent months, including accounts of continuous visits by bin Laden and company to the A.Q. Khan Research Laboratories in Pakistan, where they gained the assistance of such renowned nuclear physicists, including Dr. Sultan Bashiruddin Mahmood, chairman of Pakistan's Atomic Energy Commission.

Dr. Mahmood's Confession

Mahmood was taken into custody by Pakistani Inter Service Intelligence and CIA agents Oct. 23, 2001. After months of questioning, Mahmood at last admitted that he had met with bin Laden, al-Zawahiri and other al-Qaida officials on several occasions, including the fateful morning of Sept. 11, 2001, to discuss the means of speeding up the process of manufacturing nukes from the highly enriched uranium that al-Qaida had obtained from the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan and other sources.

Mahmood insisted that he had provided answers to technical questions concerning tactical nuclear weapons but declined to provide bin Laden actual hands-on help for the creation of such devices. Upon voicing this denial, Mahmood was subjected to six lie-detector tests. He failed them all.

The Nuclear Nest

Throughout 2002, CIA and ISI officials obtained more and more information concerning the involvement of scientists from the A.Q. Khan Research Laboratories in the plans for the American Hiroshima. After being threatened with seven years in prison under Pakistan's Official Secrets Act, Dr. Chaudry Abdul Majid, PAEC's chief engineer, admitted that he met with bin Laden and other al-Qaida officials on a regular basis to provide technical assistance for the construction and care of its nuclear weapons. Dr. Mirza Yusuf Baig, another PAEC engineer, made a similar confession.

Yet a host of other leading scientists and technicians from Khan's facility have managed to elude arrest and interrogation by quietly slipping out of the country. Dr. Mohammad Ali Mukhtar and Dr. Suleiman Assad, nuclear engineers and close colleagues of Khan and Mahmood, escaped to Myanmar, where they are currently engaged in building a 10-megawatt nuclear reactor for the Third World country. Others have made off for unknown destinations. The list of such "absconders" includes the names of Muhammad Zubair, Murad Qasim, Tariq Mahmood, Saeed Akhther, Imtaz Baig, Waheed Nasir, Munawar Ismail, Shaheen Fareed, and Khalid Mahmood.

The Missing Nukes

Still, the interrogations of the Pakistani scientists, coupled with findings from Dr. Mahmood's office for "charitable affairs" in Kabul, verified for the CIA that al-Qaida had produced several nuclear weapons from highly enriched uranium and plutonium pellets the size of silver dollars at Khan's facilities. At least one of these weapons was transported to Karachi where it was shipped to the United States in a cargo container.

The story of the deployed nuke was reported by Arnaud de Borchgrave of the Washington Times Dec. 10, 2001. It was carried by United Press International but received little play in the national press and garnered scant attention from such major news outlets as ABC, NBC, CBS and CNN.

The whereabouts of the weapon remains a mystery. There are more than 18 million potential delivery vehicles that could be used to bring the nuke into the U.S. This figure represents the number of cargo containers that arrive into the country every year. Of these containers, only 3 percent are inspected. Moreover, the bills of lading do not have to be produced until the containers reach their place of destination.

News about other tactical nuclear weapons developed by Khan's facilities for bin Laden came with the arrest of Sharif al Masri in Pakistan in November 2004. Al Masri, an al-Qaida operative with close ties to Ayman al-Zawahiri, informed CIA interrogators that a number of nukes had been deployed to Mexico where arrangements had been made with a Latino street gang for their safe transport into the U.S. This story, which appeared in the Nov. 17 issue of the Nation, also failed to capture widespread press attention.

Khan's 'Mea Culpa'

On Feb. 4, 2004, Khan, after being confronted with tell-tale evidence obtained by inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency, issued a public statement in which he confessed that he had sold blueprints for nuclear weapons to Libya, North Korea and Iran. He expressed "the deepest sense of sorrow and anguish" that he had placed Pakistan's national security in jeopardy. "I have much to answer for," he said.

Pakistan's federal cabinet and President Pervez Musharraf responded to Khan's confession by granting the esteemed scientist a full pardon for his acts of nuclear proliferation. Musharraf said that Khan and the scientists who worked with him were motivated by "money." The pardon, according to many observers, represented an attempt by the Musharraf government to appease Islamic extremists and senior Pakistani military officials who believe that Musharraf had become a traitor to the Muslim people by providing military support and assistance to the Bush administration.

Khan remains a free and honored citizen of Pakistan, where neither U.S. military officials nor CIA agents can obtain the right to approach or question him. This situation has prompted Robert Gallucci, former U.N. weapons inspector and dean of Georgetown University's School of Foreign Service, to observe: "The most dangerous country for the U.S. now is Pakistan. ... We haven't been this vulnerable since the British burned Washington in 1814."

Coda

The story of Dr. A.Q. Khan's relationship with al-Qaida comes with a coda. Acclaimed French journalist Bernard-Henri Levy amassed considerable evidence that ISI officials executed Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl after Pearl obtained inside information on the close relationship between Khan and bin Laden, the trafficking of nuclear materials from Khan's facility near Islamabad to al-Qaida cells in Afghanistan and the North West Frontier Province of Pakistan, and the plans for the American Hiroshima.

For continuing and complete coverage of Osama bin Laden's "American Hiroshima" plans, subscribe to Joseph Farah's G2 Bulletin, the premium, online, intelligence newsletter published by the founder of WND.

In Pakistan's Public Schools, Jihad Still Part of Lesson Plan

In Pakistan's Public Schools, Jihad Still Part of Lesson Plan



# The Muslim nation's public school texts still promote hatred and jihad, reformers say.

By Paul Watson, Times Staff Writer

LAHORE, Pakistan — Each year, thousands of Pakistani children learn from history books that Jews are tightfisted moneylenders and Christians vengeful conquerors. One textbook tells kids they should be willing to die as martyrs for Islam.

They aren't being indoctrinated by extremist mullahs in madrasas, the private Islamic seminaries often blamed for stoking militancy in Pakistan. They are pupils in public schools learning from textbooks approved by the administration of President Pervez Musharraf.

Since joining the U.S. as an ally in its "war on terror" four years ago, Musharraf has urged Pakistanis to shun radical Islam and pursue "enlightened moderation."

Musharraf and U.S. officials say education reforms are crucial to defeating extremism in Pakistan, the only Islamic nation armed with nuclear weapons. Yet reformers who study the country's education system say public school lessons still promote hatred against non-Muslims and urge jihad, or holy war.

"I have been arguing for the longest time that, in fact, our state system is the biggest madrasa," said Rubina Saigol, a U.S.-trained expert on education. "We keep blaming madrasas for everything and, of course, they are doing a lot of things I would disagree with.

"But the state ideologies of hate and a violent, negative nationalism are getting out there where madrasas cannot hope to reach."

The current social studies curriculum guidelines for grades 6 and 7 instruct textbook writers and teachers to "develop aspiration for jihad" and "develop a sense of respect for the struggle of [the] Muslim population for achieving independence."

In North-West Frontier Province, which is governed by supporters of the ousted Taliban regime in neighboring Afghanistan, the federally approved Islamic studies textbook for eighth grade teaches students they must be prepared "to sacrifice every precious thing, including life, for jihad."

"At present, jihad is continuing in different parts of the world," the chapter continues. "Numerous mujahedin [holy warriors] of Islam are involved in defending their religion, and independence, and to help their oppressed brothers across the world."

The textbook for adolescent students says Muslims are allowed to "take up arms" and wage jihad in self-defense or if they are prevented from practicing their religion.

"When God's people are forced to become slaves of man-made laws, they are hindered from practicing the religion of their God," the textbook says. "When all the legal ways in this regard are closed, then power should be used to eliminate the evil.

"If Muslims are being oppressed," the book says, "then jihad is necessary to free them from this cruel oppression."

"Jihad" can mean peaceful struggle as well as holy war. Jihad can be waged on several levels, beginning with a peaceful, inner struggle for one's own soul and escalating to killing "infidels."

But Pakistani critics of the public school system maintain that jihad's softer sense is easily lost in lessons that emphasize that Muslims are oppressed in many parts of the world, and that encourage fellow Muslims to fight to free them.

"Some people coming from the regular school system are volunteering for various kinds of jihad, which is not jihad in classical Islamic theory, but actually terrorism in the modern concept," said Husain Haqqani, a Pakistani author and professor of international relations at Boston University.

"All of that shows that somehow the schooling system has fed intolerance and bigotry."

About 97% of Pakistan's people are Muslims, so it's not unusual for its government to promote Islamic values in public schools. Many Muslims find that versions of history taught in countries dominated by non-Muslims are biased against Islam.

But Pakistan's public education system goes beyond instilling pride in being Muslim and encourages bigotry that can foment violence against "the other," said Haqqani, who has written a new book on the links between the Pakistani military and radical Muslims.

Under Pakistan's federal government, a national curriculum department in Islamabad, the capital, sets criteria for provincial textbook boards, which commission textbooks for local public schools.

Javed Ashraf Qazi, a retired army general and former head of the military's powerful Inter-Services Intelligence agency, or ISI, was named education minister in September to revive a stalled reform effort. He acknowledges that the job is still only half finished.

In a nation with one of Asia's highest illiteracy rates, Qazi said he was determined to have specialists rewrite course guidelines and textbooks, from the first grade to the college level, so that "the curriculum will be in line with that of any other advanced country."

"We don't want to condemn any religion — which we will not," he added.

A study of the public school curriculum and textbooks by 29 Pakistani academics in 2002 concluded that public school "textbooks tell lies, create hatred, inculcate militancy and much more."

The study by the independent Sustainable Development Policy Institute angered religious conservatives, and even a few liberals, who saw it as an attack on the country's Islamic values, or even a plot by Western governments and rival India to subvert the Islamic state.

Qazi headed the ISI from 1993 to 1995, when the intelligence agency was recruiting students from Pakistan's madrasas to join the extremist Taliban militia. Under Qazi's watch, the Taliban won its first major victory, the seizure of the southern Afghan city of Kandahar, with ISI training and weapons.

His critics say that makes Qazi the wrong man to take on hard-line Islamic parties and clerics who are blocking education reforms at every turn. But the education minister insists that he will fight hard to correct a curriculum that he calls lopsided.

It would be easier to end extremism in Pakistan if Western governments did more to resolve conflicts that anger Muslims worldwide, such as the war in Iraq, the dispute with India over the region of Kashmir, or the Palestinians' struggle against Israel, he said.

Qazi insisted that he was not an extremist, but he offered a short history of the Middle East conflict that left little doubt that he wanted Pakistan's children to continue learning a distinct view of the world.

"Palestinians were promised their state. Originally they were the owners of the entire area," Qazi said. "OK, Israel was created by the British. And they indulged in terrorism. The Jews were the worst terrorists in the world.

"They created their state. Fine. Now that everybody has accepted it as a fait accompli, there was also acceptance of a Palestinian state. The Israelis, on one pretext or another, have not granted them that state. And every time something comes up in the Security Council, America vetoes it."

After it won independence from Britain in 1947, Pakistan had a secular public school system. President Zia ul-Haq, a former military dictator, ordered Islamic education to be incorporated into the public school curriculum in the 1980s as he consolidated power with the support of hard-line clerics.

Pakistan is still grappling with the lethal forces that Zia's "Islamization" policy unleashed.

Educators pressing for deeper reforms suspect that Musharraf, an army general who seized power in a 1999 coup, wants to maintain elements of Zia's strategy in order to preserve the military's dominant role in Pakistani society.

"Reforming education is not a part of Musharraf's agenda because it will require squarely confronting the mullahs," said Pervez Hoodbhoy, a professor who specializes in high-energy and nuclear physics.

"Musharraf acts only upon pressure, and there must be relentless, sustained pressure from the outside world if meaningful reforms are ever to become reality," he said. "Those who believe in secular education are far too weak and small in numbers."

Punjab state's seventh-grade social studies textbook, published in January, begins with a full-page message from Musharraf urging students to focus on modern disciplines such as information technology and computers.

"It is a historical fact that the Muslims ruled the world for hundreds of years," Musharraf writes. He acknowledges that in the past, Pakistan's school curriculum "was not in concert with the requirements of modern times." But he assures students that "textbooks have been developed, revised and updated accordingly."

The changes, if any, are hard to spot. Disparaging references to Christians, Jews and Hindus from previous editions are carried over into the new text.

"Before Islam, people lived in untold misery all over the world," the textbook says. "Some Jewish tribes also lived in Arabia. They lent money to workers and peasants on high rates of interest and usurped their earnings. They held the whole society in their tight grip because of the ever increasing compound interest.

"In short, there was no sympathy for humanity," the passage continues.

"People were selfish and cruel. The rich lived in luxury and nobody bothered about the needy or those in sufferings."

A section on the Crusades teaches that Europe's Christian rulers attacked Muslims in the Holy Land out of revenge even though "history has no parallel to the extremely kind treatment of the Christians by the Muslims."

"Some of the Christian pilgrims to Jerusalem fabricated many false stories of suffering," the passage continues. "If they were robbed on the way, they said it were the Muslims who robbed them."

Christians eventually realized they were inferior to Muslims, the chapter concludes.

Combined with lessons on armed jihad, such a view of history helps make young Pakistanis ripe for manipulation by Islamic militants, who have given jihad "a demonic meaning" here, said Saigol, the education expert.

"The word is so much more associated with violence, killing, death and blood," she said, "that I think it's difficult to reclaim it, as the modernists are trying to do, and turn it into a war against one's inner self."

Tuesday, August 16, 2005

Pakistani arrested in terror plot against National Guard recruitment centers and other targets

Arrest Made in Possible Terror Plot

  • FBI probe uncovers a list of potential Southland targets and suggests a connection between prison groups and Islamic extremists.

  • By Greg Krikorian, Times Staff Writer

    A Pakistani national has been arrested by authorities in connection with a far-reaching investigation of a possible terrorist plot targeting any of nearly two dozen locations in Southern California, including National Guard recruitment centers, law enforcement sources said Monday.

    The suspect, identified as Hamad Riaz Samana, 21, of Los Angeles, was quietly taken into custody last week by counter-terrorism officials as part of a probe that began with the arrest of two men in Torrance suspected of robbing gas stations. The investigation, sources said, has involved more than 100 FBI agents and Los Angeles police detectives as well as counter-terrorism specialists with other federal and local agencies.

    The case has opened a new and troubling front for counter-terrorism officials because of a possible connection to a radical form of Islam practiced by a group called Jamiyyat Ul Islam Is Saheeh, an official said. The group's name translates as The Assembly of Authentic Islam.

    While little is known publicly about the JIS, as intelligence officials call it, the group has been around for several years and has a presence at Folsom State Prison, where one of the three men in custody, Levar Haney Washington, 25, served time for assault and robbery, according to law enforcement sources.

    The JIS is only one of the prison-based groups being investigated for possible ties to Islamic extremists. The prospect that prisons in the U.S. may prove a breeding ground for homegrown terrorists has been a central focus of the closely-guarded investigation by the FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force.

    Rep. Jane Harman (D-Venice), senior Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, said Monday, without providing any details, that the public disclosures about the JIS underscored concerns that inmates and ex-cons might be recruited for terrorism in the U.S.

    "The conversation about prisons has been going on for a long time. That is not a new subject," Harman said during a luncheon with Times reporters. "My question is why don't we know more about this group, and what about other groups?"

    The counter-terrorism case began when Washington and Gregory Vernon Patterson, 21, were arrested by Torrance police in connection with a string of gas station robberies between May 30 and July 3.

    The arrests led to a search of Washington's apartment on West 27th Street in Los Angeles.

    Detectives discovered bulletproof vests and "jihadist" materials not readily available via the Internet, authorities said. Also found were the addresses of locations including the National Guard facilities, two synagogues, the Israeli Consulate and the El Al Israel Airlines ticket counter at Los Angeles International Airport.

    Law enforcement sources say other recovered documents suggest that particular dates — including Sept. 11 — may have been selected for terrorist attacks.

    Sources say they have found no links between the men arrested in Los Angeles and any overseas terrorism network. Samana was not known to have any criminal record or alleged ties to known terrorist groups.

    But the documents allegedly recovered from Washington's apartment, sources say, strongly suggest the men may have been planning an attack that could have unfolded in a matter of weeks. Sources say authorities have been compiling evidence for possible federal charges.

    Samana was being held at the federal Metropolitan Detention Center in downtown Los Angeles, but it was not clear what charge he was being held on. Washington and Patterson have been held at the Men's Central Jail since their arraignment on nine counts of robbery and one count of attempted robbery. A Superior Court judge has set bail at $1 million for Patterson and $2 million for Washington, a Rollin' 60s gang member.

    Attorneys for Washington and Patterson have said they have not been apprised of any charges facing their clients outside of the robbery cases. The name of Samana's attorney was not available.

    Patterson, who has no criminal record, worked at a duty free gift shop at LAX until early this year.

    No one has suggested he was surveying the airport as a possible target, but the fact that he worked at the Tom Bradley International Terminal has raised concerns for counter-terrorism officials because LAX is viewed as one of the state's most likely potential targets.

    Monday, August 15, 2005

    Afghans kick out Pakistanis: Pakistanis told to leave Kunar

    Pakistanis told to leave Kunar

    GHALANAI: Afghan authorities in Kunar province, close to Mohmand and Bajaur agencies in Pakistan’s tribal areas, have ordered Pakistanis to leave the province as the Afghan parliamentary elections near.

    Many Pakistanis from Mohmand and Bajaur agencies work in the timber industry in Kunar. Pakistanis returning from Asadabad, capital of Kunar province, told Daily Times they had been told through loudspeakers to leave to leave the province in two days.

    They complained that they had been unable to bring back their belongings with them because of the short deadline. They said Pakistanis were being harassed and arrested in Kunar. mukarram khan.

    In Lodi, terror probe has widened schism in Pakistani community

    In Lodi, terror probe has widened schism in Pakistani community



    Associated Press

    Twenty-year-old Nawaz Shah was tired of his community being invisible.

    So three years ago, Shah and a group of other Pakistani-Americans in this small agricultural town helped launched the annual Pakistan Independence Day festival, complete with kabobs, a fashion show with traditional clothing and dancing in the three-digit heat.

    "We wanted everybody to know we were here," said Shah, last year's emcee at the event to mark Pakistan's independence from the British rule on Aug. 14, 1947.

    There will be no such celebration this year, after the community was thrust into the spotlight by the arrests or detentions of five local Pakistanis who federal authorities accuse of terrorism-related activities.

    "We didn't feel it was quite the right time," said Robina Asghar, a social worker who helped Shah and his friends plan past events. "Two of our religious leaders are in the jail. That's a lot of stress on the community. It's not a time to celebrate anything."

    The festival's cancellation illustrates how the federal terrorism investigation in this town 35 miles south of Sacramento has affected its Pakistani community.

    A local imam and his son were detained on immigration charges and have agreed to be deported. Another imam remains in federal custody on similar immigration charges, and a father and his 22-year-old son are charged with lying to federal investigators about the son's attendance at an al Qaida terrorist training camp in Pakistan.

    The investigation and national attention have aggravated a pre-existing rift within Lodi's Muslim community, sparked a bitter power struggle at the Lodi Muslim Mosque and cast suspicion on the community from some non-Muslims.

    The Pakistani community in Lodi dates back to the 1930s, when Pakistanis came to the town founded by German farmers to work the fields. The farms surrounding Lodi are still pruned and picked by many Pakistani-Americans. The community kept close ties to their homeland and returned for weddings and holidays and to meet their spouses.

    In Lodi, home to the first A&W Root Beer stand, a once-active John Birch Society and a burgeoning wine industry, Pakistani-Americans often stood out but rarely drew attention to themselves.

    In recent years, a series of hate crimes spawned an effort to strengthen ties between the town's growing minority groups and its Jewish, Christian and Muslim communities. Local leaders formed a hate crime task force and came together for an interfaith event called the Celebration of Abraham.

    They credit these efforts with preventing a backlash against Pakistanis here as the terrorism investigation unfolded. Many in the Muslim community say they haven't felt tension from the broader community.

    But these high-profile efforts don't tell the whole story. Some non-Muslims say they are more suspicious of the Pakistani community since the arrests in June.

    "When something like this happens in your home, you're looking, you're always looking," said Korina Self, 35, a mother of six.

    "I've never had any sort of prejudice against Pakistani people, however I'm starting to get that," said Bryan Stamos, 54, adding that he thought that Pakistani leaders had remained too tightlipped after the investigation began. "To be honest with you, the silence tells you that there's more going on. The silence is telling."

    Stamos and others are questioning the intentions of an Islamic school that had been proposed by one of the arrested imams. An FBI official has testified that the imam planned to use the center as a terrorism camp to train followers to kill Americans.

    Neighbors have taken their objections to county leaders charged with approving permits. But opponents' concerns extend beyond land-use.

    "I think it's not yet clear exactly what's going on in Lodi at the mosque, and it's unclear just what exactly the link may have been to al Qaida and any training camp," said Joe Guzzardi, an adult education teacher and local newspaper columnist.

    In a recent column, Guzzardi questioned whether the school would be funded by Saudis and teach anti-Americanism. Based on its leaders past statements, he wrote, "can we trust Lodi Muslims to make the right decision regarding the Islamic school curriculum?"

    Muslim supporters of the schools say the new skepticism is frustrating.

    "This is not a Saudi school. We're in Lodi. This is Lodi school," said Shujah Khan, a member of the Farooqia Center board. "I wish I could write well and tell them that."

    Nowhere has the terror investigation reverberated more strongly than within the Pakistani community.

    What some call a long-standing tension between more liberal and conservative leaders has developed into a bitter power struggle and a community-wide divide. Those loyal to one of the accused imams suspect the other camp of turning him in to federal authorities on a green card violation.

    Many say they're uncomfortable worshipping at the mosque and have begun driving 15 miles to Stockton to pray.

    "Really, a lot of us have broken hearts," Khan said.

    The new mosque leaders say the imam had led the community astray. They say they've decided to hold a smaller independence day celebration on Sunday, in part to show the non-Muslim community that they have nothing to hide and will not be cowered by this controversy.

    "We would not cancel Fourth of July for a terrorist attack," said mosque president Mohammed Shoaib. "We will celebrate."

    Sunday, August 14, 2005

    Muslim Council of Britain linked to Pakistani extremist group Jamaat-i-Islami

    Radical links of UK's 'moderate' Muslim group

    The Muslim Council of Britain has been courted by the government and lauded by the Foreign Office but critics tell a different and more disturbing story. Martin Bright reports

    Sunday August 14, 2005
    The Observer


    The Muslim Council of Britain is officially the moderate face of Islam. Its pronouncements condemning the London bombings have been welcomed by the government as a model response for mainstream Muslims. The MCB's secretary general, Iqbal Sacranie, has recently been knighted and senior figures within the organisation have the ear of ministers.

    But an Observer investigation can reveal that, far from being moderate, the Muslim Council of Britain has its origins in the extreme orthodox politics in Pakistan. And as its influence increases through Whitehall, many within the Muslim community are growing concerned that this self-appointed organisation is crowding out other, genuinely moderate, voices of Muslim Britain.

    Far from representing the more progressive or spiritual traditions within Islam, the leadership of the Muslim Council of Britain and some of its affiliates sympathise with and have links to conservative Islamist movements in the Muslim world and in particular Pakistan's Jamaat-i-Islami, a radical party committed to the establishment of an Islamic state in Pakistan ruled by sharia law.

    One of the MCB's affiliate organisations, Leicester's Islamic Foundation, was founded by Khurshid Ahmad, a senior figure in Jamaat-i-Islami.

    Another is Birmingham-based Jamiat Ahl-e-Hadith, an extremist sect whose website says: 'The disbelievers are misguided and their ways based on sick or deviant views concerning their societies, their universe and their very existence.' It urges its adherents not to wear Western hats, walk dogs, watch sport or soap operas and forbids 'mingling and shaking hands between men and women'.

    Jamaat-i-Islami activists in Pakistan have been involved in protests against images of women on adverts in public places. The organisation's founder, Maulana Maududi, was a fierce opponent of feminism who believed that women should be kept in purdah - seclusion from male company. Although the MCB's leadership distances itself from some of these teachings, it has been criticised for having no women prominently involved in the organisation.

    Last week, Salman Rushdie warned in an article in the Times that Sacranie had been a prominent critic during the Satanic Verses affair and advised that the MCB leader should not be viewed as a moderate. In 1989, Sacranie said 'death was perhaps too easy' for the writer. Rushdie also criticised Sacranie for boycotting January's Holocaust Memorial Day ceremony. 'If Sir Iqbal Sacranie is the best Mr Blair can offer in the way of a good Muslim, we have a problem,' said Rushdie. A Panorama documentary to be screened next Sunday will also be highly critical.

    The MCB has now written to the BBC's director general, Mark Thompson, to complain about the programme in which reporter John Ware will challenge Sacranie to justify his boycott of Holocaust Memorial Day and clarify the MCB's position on Palestinian suicide bombers. In the letter, Inayat Bunglawala, the MCB's media spokesman says: 'It appears that the Panorama team is more interested in furthering a pro-Israeli agenda than assessing the work of Muslim organisations in the UK.'

    The origins of the Muslim Council of Britain can be traced to the storm around the publication of the Satanic Verses in 1988. India was the first country to ban the book and many Muslim countries followed suit. Opposition to the book in Britain united people committed to a traditionalist view of Islam, of which the founders of the Muslim Council of Britain was a part.

    The MCB was officially founded in November 1997, shortly after Tony Blair came to power, and has had a close relationship with the Labour government ever since. Its detractors claim it was the creature of Jack Straw, but his predecessor as Home Secretary, Michael Howard, also played a role in its establishment as a semi-official channel of communication with British Muslims. It remains particularly influential within the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, which has a little-known outreach department which works with Britain's Muslims. The FCO pamphlet Muslims in Britain is essentially an MCB publication and the official ministerial celebration of the Muslim festival of Eid is organised jointly with the MCB.

    The Observer has learnt that the MCB used its influence in Whitehall to gain a place on the board of trustees of the Festival of Muslim Cultures, planned for next year. This extravaganza is designed to demonstrate the diversity and vibrancy of Muslim culture. The festival is funded by the British Council and has Prince Charles as its patron, but it has been told that it will need to be compliant with Islamic 'sharia law' in order to gain the MCB's full support.

    The organisers are now concerned that the festival will lose political backing if they invite performers who are seen to be 'un-Islamic'.

    Festival organisers already hope to invite the Uzbek singer, Sevara Nezarkhan, who does not wear the headscarf or 'hijab' and has worked with Jewish 'klezmer' musicians. It also intends to exhibit the 14th-century world history of Rashid al-Din, which represents the human form and the prophet Mohammed himself, thought by some strict Muslims to be forbidden. Other performers could include the Senegalese musician Youssou N'Dour and the Bangladeshi-British dancer Akram Khan.

    The Observer understands that the Foreign Office insisted that the festival organisers involved the MCB before they would give them their full backing. As a result, an MCB nominee has been taken on to the festival's board of trustees. One source close to the festival organisers said: 'We constantly found our efforts were being blocked and it kept coming back to the MCB and its sympathisers within Whitehall.'

    The chairman of the festival's trustees, Raficq Abdulla, said: 'We will welcome the MCB's trustee and hope his contribution will prove valuable. But we insist that the festival is not dominated by any ideology. The aim is to capture the values of Muslim cultures and bring them into the British mainstream. We are not here to be the mouthpiece of any Muslim organisation.'

    The strain of Islamic ideology favoured by the MCB leadership and many of its affiliate organisations is inspired by Maulana Maududi, a 20th-century Islamic scholar little known in the West but hugely significant as a thinker across the Muslim world. His writings, which call for a global Islamic revival, influenced Sayyid Qutb, usually credited as the founding father of modern Islamic radicalism and one of the inspirations for al-Qaeda.

    In Maududi's worldview all humanity was split into believers (practising Muslims) and non-believers, whom he describes as 'barbarians'. He was deeply critical of notions such as nationalism and feminism and called on Muslims to purge themselves of Western influence.

    In 1941 he formed Jamaat-i-Islami and remained its leader until 1972. His writings do not advocate terrorism. But the language of Jihad in Islam, written in 1930, may seem violent to a Western reader: 'The objective of Islamic "jihad" is to eliminate the rule of an un-Islamic system and establish in its stead an Islamic system of state rule. Islam does not intend to confine this revolution to a single state or a few countries; the aim of Islam is to bring about a universal revolution.'

    Abdul-Rehman Malik, contributing editor of Muslim magazine Q-News, said: 'Maududi saw the world in the same way that Sayyid Qutb saw the world: they both divided humanity into true believers or those in a state of ignorance. Many of the affiliates of The Muslim Council of Britain are inspired by Maududi's ideology.'

    Malik said that its leaders needed to be clearer about its position on suicide bombers. 'You cannot be equivocal about innocent people. An innocent person in Tel Aviv is the same as an innocent person in Baghdad or London. The MCB has never clarified any of the critical issues and now the chickens are coming home to roost.'

    The MCB's Inayat Bunglawala said he had a deep respect for Maududi and defended the MCB's affiliation to Khurshid Ahmad's Islamic Foundation. He said: 'Maududi is a very important Muslim thinker. The book that brought me to practise Islam was Now Let Us Be Muslims by Maududi. As for Jamaat-i-Islami, it is a perfectly legal body in Pakistan. There is no suggestion that the Islamic Foundation has done anything wrong. They have done fantastic work in publishing literature on Islam, including works for children.'

    A spokesman for the Islamic Foundation confirmed that Khurshid Ahmad was chairman of its board of trustees. 'The Islamic Foundation does not have links with the Jamaat-i-Islami. We promote assimilation, integration and encourage community cohesion. We do publish books by Maududi, but we feel these are books of merit to British Muslims.'

    Sacranie said he believed that recent attacks on the Muslim Council of Britain were inspired by a pro-Israeli lobby in the British media. 'The MCB carries out its activities through its affiliates. There are more than 400 organisations involved, representing 56 nationalities. Yes there is a following for Maududi in the UK. I am not a scholar, but in many areas I am inspired by what he has to say and in others I am not.'

    There is no suggestion that Sacranie and other prominent figures in the Muslim Council of Britain are anything but genuine in their condemnation of the terrorist bombings of the 7 July. But their claims to represent a moderate or progressive tendency in Islam are becoming increasingly difficult to sustain.

    The biggest test for the MCB will be its reaction to the more challenging aspects of the Festival of Muslim cultures. On this Sacranie was clear: 'If any activities are seen to contradict the teachings of Islam, then we will oppose them. If you organise a festival in the name of Islam then it must be Islamic. We will advise them accordingly.'

    There are those in Britain struggling to transform the austere image Islam has in this country, including the organisers of the Festival of Muslim Cultures, who will not find his words reassuring.

    Deportation surge leaves void in Brooklyn's Little Pakistan

    Deportation surge leaves void in Brooklyn's Little Pakistan


    NEW YORK -- Business in his modest grocery store in Brooklyn's Little Pakistan has gone down so much that Shafiq Ul Hassan has started stocking what he calls ''American foods" in a desperate attempt to attract different customers. Across from the baby goat meat and the pungent ingredients for curry powder, the immigrant shopkeeper has placed candy bars and loaves of white bread.

    Saturday, August 13, 2005

    Copenhagen residents against naming road Pakistan

    Copenhagen residents against naming road Pakistan

    COPENHAGEN: Residents of Copenhagen have objected to a decision of the city municipal corporation to name a road in the city after Pakistan. The mayor of the Copenhagen Municipal Corporation made the decision two years ago during a Pakistani fair held in front of Town Hall. At the time, Pakistani and other foreigners living in the area gladly accepted the decision, but locals were worried about what road would be renamed Pakistan. The concern has now changed into protests, as the locals of the area where a road is being named Pakistan have objected to the mayor’s decision. They said that they did not want to hear or even see the name in their area. They also said they did not want a nameplate inscribed with the word Pakistan being fixed on any road in their area. Quarrels and scuffles have been taking place between the locals and foreigners in the area every day. After the London bomb blasts, anyone wearing the shalwar kamiz and sporting a beard is seen with suspicion by the locals. sana

    Film to show Pakistanis out to kill United States president

    Film to show Pakistanis out to kill United States president

    WASHINGTON: US-Pakistan relations may be strong and Pakistan may continue to remain the principal American ally in the “war against terrorism,” but Hollywood is not going to let go of the latest addition to the gallery of movie villains, Pakistanis. The script of a movie called Dreamz is not going to be changed and Pakistani suicide bombers are going to be shown out there in a bid to kill the American president. The fact that the makers of the movie call it a “black comedy” is not going to lessen the impact of the portraiture of “Pakistani terrorists” on the country’s already soiled image. Islamabad has drawn up an ambitious programme to “soften” the country’s image. Paul Weitz, the writer, director and producer of Dreamz has denied reports that the script is being revised after the July 7 attacks that left 56 dead, perpetrated by four British suicide bombers, including three of Pakistani origin. The film stars Hugh Grant, Dennis Quaid, Willem Dafoe, Chris Klein and Mandy Moore, plus a squad of “Pakistani terrorists.” The report that Weitz has denied suggested that the film’s producers were jittery over the London blasts and the botched July 21 repeat attack. “The plot of my film has not changed, nor is a change being contemplated,” Weitz said. “The film is a comic examination of our cultural obsessions and how they can anaesthetise us to the actual issues of our day.” khalid hasan

    Thursday, August 11, 2005

    Khalid Hasan whines about Pakistanis being profiled at US airports

    US ‘geniuses’ going berserk with ‘homeland security’

    By Khalid Hasan

    WASHINGTON: The profiling of Pakistanis at US airports and other points of entry has reached a point where Pakistani ambassador to the US Jehangir Karamat has felt it necessary to advise his countrymen that they should only visit America “if they absolutely have to”.

    Some recent cases will reveal the ridiculous limits to which American security fears have been carried.

    Former Pakistani ambassador to the US Riaz H Khokhar, who recently retired as foreign secretary, was one of those subjected to what can only be described as humiliating treatment.

    Khokhar, who was invited by the Kashmiri-American Council to speak at its July 14 conference in Washington, was taken aside to a separate room upon arrival for investigation by the Department of Homeland Security.

    He was made to wait for 40 minutes and then asked some strange questions. One of the questions was, “Why have you visited Saudi Arabia so many times?” The former foreign secretary’s answer that such travel had been necessitated by the nature of his official duties was received with a grunt, indicating either incomprehension or disbelief.

    Other questions asked of him were equally odd. The fact that Khokhar, one of Pakistan’s most distinguished career diplomats, had served as his country’s ambassador to India, China and the United States itself did not appear to be good enough for the “geniuses” working for the Department of Homeland Security.

    The new chairman of the Pakistan International Airlines, Tariq Kirmani, who paid an official visit to the United States last month, was given a similar reception. It took some time before his credentials were found in order by the Homeland Security and immigration officials, who appeared reluctant to put a stamp on his passport and let him go.

    Earlier this summer, when former ambassador to Washington and former federal minister Syed Abida Hussain and her husband, former federal minister and speaker of the National Assembly, Syed Fakhar Imam, arrived in this country, it took Syeda Abida Hussain close to two hours to be cleared.

    She was taken to a separate room and questioned. That she had been Pakistan’s ambassador to the US was considered of no consequence. Exasperated, she said she would be quite happy to be sent back. When she asked what she had done to deserve such special attention, she was told that her name triggered another name that was on some list. That name, it turned out, was Syed Hussain. Her pointing out that it was the name of a man and, further that she prefixed her name with Syeda, not Syed, did not shorten her ordeal.

    Former Pakistani interim prime minister, Moeen Qureshi, who until a year ago, was travelling quite frequently outside the country, being chairman and chief executive of Emerging Markets Inc was always being asked why he travelled so much. A couple of years ago, a prominent Pakistani journalist who was here on a fellowship was picked up because he had failed to register himself with the immigration authorities within a certain period after arrival.

    After some running around by his US hosts, he was freed. One of them said later that in the past there had been occasions when he (the host) had urged the Pakistani government to free someone taken in without due cause. He could never imagine that such a thing could happen in his own country.

    One travel agent told this correspondent that suspicion of Pakistanis had reached a point wherein a Pakistani passenger was more likely to be seated at the back of the aircraft than in the front or middle sections. A frequent traveller said that the baggage of many Pakistanis who were departing the United States was searched after it had been checked in.

    All baggage has to be pre-screened, a duty assigned to the passenger. [b]This correspondent can attest from his own experience that the last five times in the past two years he has landed at a US port from a trip abroad, he has without exception been taken to a separate room and made to wait for up to 40 minutes before being cleared. Twice when returning from Canada, he has been grilled at the Canadian port. US immigration formalities, when flying from Canada are completed at the Canadian end.

    Special scrutiny rooms have been set up at every major airport in the US. The passenger whose clearance has been held back is escorted by an immigration agent to one of these rooms where his passport is handed over to one of the officers who along with five or six of his colleagues sits on a raised platform, behind plexiglass, from where he can scrutinise passengers sitting down below. While the questioning can be polite or gruff, depending on the agent, the experience is humiliating. All the five times this correspondent has been subjected to “special attention”, no reason has been given, despite polite efforts on his part to find out why. [/b]

    Pakistanis back home who apply for a visitor’s visa for the United States are, on average, obliged to wait for up to three months before being granted one. In many cases, it is refused without any reason being assigned. Once a visa has been refused, the passport is as good as useless as far as travel to the US is concerned.

    Some of the applicants have had humiliating experiences at the US embassy in Islamabad. The unhappy experiences of Dr Javed Iqbal and his wife, former Justice Mrs Nasira Iqbal, former deputy chief of staff of the Pakistan Army Lt Gen Mohammad Yousuf and former chief of the Pakistan Navy Admiral Fasih Bokhari are too well known to be related here. Passengers boarding a US airline bound for the United States from points outside the country are subjected to the most thorough searches and scrutiny. Muslims in general and Pakistanis in particular are the recipients of the ‘special attention’.

    Canadians who used to require no visa or passport to enter the United States no longer enjoy that facility. Several Canadians of Pakistani origin, who travel to a neighbouring US town for work or business every day or every other day, have complained that each time they enter the US, they are subjected to special scrutiny. Some of them have had to wait as long as three hours.

    One Canadian who originally came from Pakistan and had lived in Canada for 30 years was told by a US border agent that no matter how long he had been a Canadian citizen, since he was born in Pakistan, for all intents and purposes he was a Pakistani. Many Pakistani-Canadians have told this correspondent that only the direst emergency would induce them to travel to the United States since they are not willing to suffer humiliation.

    Many Pakistanis and Pakistani-Americans who have had such experiences are of the view that since all consular agreements between sovereign states are bilateral, Americans arriving at Pakistani airports should be subjected to the same kind of scrutiny to which Pakistanis and Americans of Pakistani origin are subjected to in the United States these days. “Why should we show courtesy to those who show none to us?” one Pakistani, who has been grilled more than once on arrival by US officials, asked.

    Meanwhile, in the wake of the London bombings, some people here have openly called for ethnic or racial profiling. According to a recent newspaper commentator, “So far the idea has been advanced most forcefully by columnists, academics and local politicians in New York City, where anti-terror precautions including random searches of subway passengers’ bags were instituted after the London attacks. Bush administration officials resist the notion – which is against federal policy – but even the staunchest opponents of profiling admit the idea will gain force if Islamic extremists begin new attacks.”

    New York assemblyman Dov Hikind, a Brooklyn Democrat, has plans to introduce a bill to allow police to “zero in” on Middle Easterners when authorities conduct terrorism-prevention searches in subways or other locally controlled systems. New York city authorities have randomly searched subway riders’ bags and packages without regard to ethnicity or race. Other cities have not followed New York’s lead.

    Ultra conservative Washington Post columnist Charles Krauthammer recently wrote that searchers should home in on young Islamic men. Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff is not in agreement with the suggestion, saying, “I think we want to focus on behaviour. It’s behaviour which is the best test of someone’s intentions.” Profiling, it has been pointed out, is against current federal policy and might run afoul of federal court decisions that bar racial profiling, except where it advances a “compelling governmental interest,” as ruled by the US Supreme Court.