Saturday, February 28, 2009

Taliban could take over Karachi: Report

Taliban [Images] militants have established secret hideouts in Karachi and it 'could take the city hostage at any point', according to the Pakistani police.

The Special Branch of police has highlighted the presence of Taliban in Karachi in a report submitted to the Sindh government and the provincial police chief.

The Taliban have 'huge caches' of weapons and ammunition, the report said.

The report provides details about secret Taliban hideouts and their presence in areas like Sohrab Goth and Quaidabad. Besides living in small motels in these areas, the Taliban are hiding in the hills of Manghopir and Orangi town and in other low-income areas and slums, the Daily Times newspaper quoted the police report as saying.

The daily also quoted sources as saying that the deputy chief of the banned Tehrik-e-Taliban, Hasan Mahmood, was hiding in Karachi. The Muttahida Qaumi Movement, which is part of the coalition government in Sindh province, has often warned authorities that the Taliban had established a presence in Karachi.

The Daily Times said the Special Branch report had 'terrified' police and security personnel.


Source :-http://in.rediff.com/news/2009/feb/28taliban-could-take-over-karachi-says-report.htm

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Two suspected Pak terrorists shot dead in Noida

NEW DELHI/LUCKNOW: Averting a major terror attack apparently planned to disrupt the Republic Day celebrations in Delhi, the UP Anti Terrorist
Noida encounter
Police personnel inspect the car in which terrorists killed in Noida encounter were travelling. (NBT Photo)
More Pictures
Squad (ATS) and Noida police in a pre-dawn swoop shot dead two Pakistani terrorists following an ambush in Noida's sector 97 area on Sunday. An ATS sleuth suffered a gunshot wound during the exchange of fire. ( Watch )

Additional director general of police (ADGP) Brij Lal, briefing newsmen in Lucknow said that the ATS was working on a specific terror module that was believed to be active germinating in Western UP for nearly a month and a half now. "While pursuing this module, we got a specific lead about the movement of two suspects in a Maruti car from Lalkuan in Gaziabad. The car was tipped to be moving towards Delhi," Brij Lal said. ( Watch )

The ATS team started screening vehicles passing from the Amity police outpost towards Delhi around 2:15 am when they saw a Maruti 800 trying to steer clear of the police check. As the ATS commandoes tried to intercept the car, it took an adjacent road and tried to escape. As the exchange of fire continued from the two sides, the ATS commanoded managed to hit the rear tyre of the suspects' car, throwing it off the road.

"It was here that the car occupants started firing from AK series rifles. The ambush left one of our sleuths Vinod Kumar with a bullet injury. While the exchange of fire was underway, back-up from Noida police arrived on the scene. Shortly thereafter firing from opposite side stopped. It was subsequently revealed that the car was occupied by two persons who had suffered bullet injuries. They were rushed to the hospital," Brij Lal said.

On way to the hospital, one of them identified himself as Farooq of Akara in Pakistan and his aide as Abu Ismail of Rawalkot in Pakistan. However by the time the two could reach the hospital, they succumbed. The doctors at the hospital pronounced them "dead upon arrival".

Two AK-47s, 4 magazines, 120 bullets, 5 hand grenades, Rs 18,000 cash, 3 detonators, 1.5kg of RDX and a rucksack were recovered from the car, police said. The materials seized from the car point out that the terrorists were trained in making plastic explosives and had planned to trigger three blasts, added the police.

The police are trying to find out the local contacts of the terrorists, Brij Lal added. The car's engine and chassis number had been erased, he said.

"The two terrorists were heading towards Delhi and the arms and ammunition which they had, surely indicates that they were not here for site-seeing and had some deadly plans with them," said Inspector General (IG) ATS AK Jain. "We don't rule out the possibilities that the slain militants were not the only two around," Jain said adding that extensive checking of vehicles entering or leaving Noida from all the 19 points dotting the district borders - particularly the 11 that connect to Delhi - has been launched immediately after the ambush took place and the security agencies in Delhi were informed about the development.

"Though it is too early to comment on the terror outfit to which they probably belonged to, but the manner in which they took on the ATS teams during the ambush clearly confirms that they were trained hands. They resisted the police action to the best possible extent," said deputy IG ATS Rajeev Krishna who is supervising the investigations into the case.

"We have recovered some documents and a diary which will surely help us to shed some more light on the two militants. This apart, a Pakistani passport which has the photograph of Farooq has also been recovered. But in the passport, his name is mentioned as Ali Ahmad of Rahimyar in Pakistan. It remains to be established as to which of the two identities was the real one. We have leads and we are working on them," Rajeev said. Senior superintendent of police (SSP) ATS Rajeev Sabarawal was set to fly to Noida take care of the investigations first hand, he said.

"Initial investigations have revealed that the registration number (UP 14 E 9531) on the Maruti car in which the militants were moving, has traced to be that of a Bajaj Chetak scooter belonging to one Pawan Verma of Shahpur area in Gaziabad. Though it appears almost certain now that the car is a stolen one, still we are trying to trace the actual number of the car and trace its real owner," SSP ATS Rajeev Sabarwal said commenting on the status of investigations into the case.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Two_alleged_Pak_terrorists_shot_dead_in_Noida/articleshow/4028732.cms

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Pak's picturesque Swat valley turns into terror den: Reports

The idyllic Swat or Suvastu valley joins the list of vast areas of Balochistan, Waziristan, Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) and the North West Frontier Province going out of control of Pakistani administration, a series of reports in Pakistani magazines and newspapers said.

The valley, once a popular tourist destination, recently witnessed blasts on power grids, bridges, gas pipelines, schools and hotels triggered by the terrorists. These militants also own radio frequencies and air radical messages freely, reports in 'The Herald', 'The Dawn' and 'The News' said.

Almost daily, four to five headless bodies are found on the streets of Mingora, the only major town of Swat, the reports said.

Even as the government plans to make changes in deployment of four army brigades stationed in Swat, including one from Rawalpindi overseen by a General-Officer-Commanding, the local people have started "doubting the state's motive and the real aims of the (army) operations".

Media reports claimed that the army operations not only killed civilians mainly but also left major infrastructure like power stations and bridges unguarded for the militants to attack at will.

Reports in 'The Herald' magazine and some major newspapers quoted locals as saying that "a common grievance" was that the activities of the army, before it took an offensive mode against the Taliban, "clearly revealed to the militants that action against them was about to take place, allowing them to escape."

While "nearly 800 policemen — half of the sanctioned strength of police in Swat — have either deserted or proceeded on long leaves", those on duty come out on the streets for a few hours in day time with the army as their escorts, reports in 'The Dawn' and 'The News' said.

An unnamed Pakistani Home Department official told 'The Herald' that more than 400 policemen have given up their jobs in Swat.

"Civic bosses have either performed a vanishing act or are ineffective", 'The Herald' said, adding that the morale of the police force was at its lowest ebb.

'The News' said in a report that one of the busiest squares in Mingora has been renamed by the shopkeepers as 'Khooni chowk' because every morning, when they come to their shops, they would find four or five dead bodies hung over the poles or the trees.

Similarly, bodies with their throats slit are found regularly in areas like Qambar, Kabal, Matta, Khawza Khela and Charbagh, it said.

Recently, at Mingora, the Missionary Girls High School and the Excelsior College were blown up by Tehreek-e-Taliban.

The militant outfit's Swat unit spokesman Haji Muslim Khan informed the media that the action was taken up as "the school had been preaching Christianity and the college was co-educational".

The number of schools blown up or torched now stands at 181 — the highest perhaps in any insurgency anywhere in the world in an area as small as Swat.

Contributing further to the already grim scenario is the growing negative public perception of the military operation which they said has killed more civilians than militants, the reports said.

The perception was reinforced by rising civilian casualties, shrinking state authority, terrorists' ability to strike anywhere, any time and military's over-reliance on long-range artillery than putting boots on the ground, the reports added.

People are closeted in their homes not only because of the terrorists, but also due to the almost indefinite curfew imposed by the government.

While no credible data is available to estimate the number of civilian casualties in the seven-month-old military operation, the police, which has generally been absent in most militant-controlled areas, said the figure ran into hundreds.

The damage caused to property and infrastructure since the emergence of militancy in Swat has been evaluated at three billion Pakistani rupees, according to an unmanned senior Pakistan government official quoted in the report.

Meanwhile, the government is planning to install a one megawatt transmitter which, it believes, would effectively silence the militant radio propaganda, the reports said.

Radical cleric Maulana Fazlullah runs an FM radio in Swat, while his lieutenant Shah Doran's sermon broadcasts are heard far and wide, thanks to a 500 KV transmitter they own.

The situation is so grim that 'The News' daily, in a report, appealed to the people to protest the violation of civil rights and liberty in Swat, both by the terrorists and the military.

It quoted the people's sentiment in Swat saying, "We hear no voice raise against the atrocities committed in Swat. No civil society organisation has raised its voice against the plight of the women and children in Swat. We have not seen a single demonstration in the big cities against the monster of militancy in Swat, or in FATA for that matter.

"The media also seems apathetic about the plight. The people of Swat ask you to come out on their behalf and mobilise the general public against the war tearing the valley. We implore you to come out of your drawing rooms and stage protests so that the government does something about our plight."

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Paks_Swat_valley_turns_into_terror_den_Reports/articleshow/3996759.cms

Friday, January 16, 2009

In Swat, 400 schools shut doors on girls

ISLAMABAD: About 400 private schools in Pakistan's troubled northwestern Swat region have stopped offering education to girls following the end
of a Taliban deadline to discontinue the practice, depriving over 40,000 students of their basic right.

Besides, another 84,248 girl students of state-run schools are unlikely to attend classes
due to warnings from the militants despite the local administration's declaration to reopen the institutions on March 1.

A body representing 400 private schools has decided to discontinue girls' education after the ongoing winter vacation despite assurances from the administration that security will be provided to them, the News daily said.

Meanwhile, the federal government said it would cooperate with the administration of the North West Frontier Province in taking steps to protect girls' educational institutions in Swat and some other areas.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/World/400_schools_shut_doors_on_girls_in_Pak/articleshow/3991228.cms

Friday, January 9, 2009

"I grew up in Pakistan and we were always taught to hate India, Israel and America"

A letter from a courageous Pakistani woman: "Pakistani viewpoint," in the Milpitas Post (thanks to Andrew Bostom):
Dear Editor,
I was saddened to read the letter of Javed Altaf in the Milpitas Post dated Feb 2, "Text clashes extremist, moderate Hindus." As a woman from Pakistan who immigrated to the United States, I would like to tell everyone that there are people in Pakistan who do not show such hatred toward others.
I grew up in Pakistan and we were always taught to hate India, Israel and America. Our school books described Christians, Jews and Hindus as evil people, and unfortunately most Pakistanis exhibit a lot of hatred because of this. I was ashamed when Pakistanis celebrated on the streets after innocent people were killed in the Sept. 11 attacks. Even when I got my passport, I had to sign a statement on the application form that I consider the leader of Qadiani group of Muslims to be an imposter and his followers to be non-Muslim. I felt uncomfortable signing it as I somehow thought it is a hateful thing to do. To all Qadiani brothers and sisters, I wish to apologize on behalf of Pakistanis and say I am truly sorry I signed the statement.
Fortunately, I had the chance to leave Pakistan and find freedom in America. Now, I do not have to cover myself with a burqa.
I learned that one can be a good person even without being a Muslim and I got the confidence to question Islam. Islam is an artificial religion of medieval Arabs. Why should I accept any religion that forces me to wear a burqa and prevents my education?
Mr. Altaf's letter talks about caste system in India. I want to point out that the caste system is alive and well in Pakistan as well. It is hypocritical of Pakistanis to talk of a caste system.
The people of Pakistan are no different from the people of India except that we are born into Islam. This unfortunate difference gave birth to Pakistan, which has the dishonor of being created as the world's first religion-based country. We should never have left India because forming a country based on religion tells the world that we are hateful people. Please tell your readers that not all Pakistanis are hateful people.
Ironically, my own life has been one where the differences between Indians and Pakistanis have been buried. After leaving Islam, I searched for spiritual peace and met a wonderful man who is a Hindu from India. Today, he is my husband and I find that I have a lot of freedom. Women in Islam do not have any freedom and four women are considered to be equal to one man. I realize that I would not have had the opportunity to meet my husband had I not come to America and got my freedom. There are many women like me who long for freedom. I sincerely wish I could do something for my sisters or that America would liberate my sisters but without hurting the people.
Meher Unnisa
Upland, Calif.
http://www.jihadwatch.org/dhimmiwatch/archives/010233.php

West Pakistani deep core hatred for India exposed as Five Afghan football players have been arrested on charges of displaying Indian national flags

You cannot display Indian flag along with flags of other countries for beautification purpose in Western Pakistani province of Waziristan.
Five Afghan football players have been arrested on charges of displaying Indian national flags during a football tournament in North Waziristan, Online news agency reports.
According to the Voice of America, the organisers of the football tournament said the Indian flag was displayed along with flags of other countries for beautification purpose only and there was no political motives behind the move.
Officials confirmed the arrest of the five football players and said they were under investigation.
Authorities said the act of the Afghan players was against national laws.
However, the tournament's organisers said that the flags of Pakistan, Afghanistan, India, the former Taliban movement and other political and religious parties were displayed at the ground.

http://www.indiadaily.com/editorial/2920.asp

Ajmal’s nationality confirmed

ISLAMABAD, Jan 7: Pakistani authorities, during the course of their own investigations into the Mumbai carnage, have established that the only surviving terrorist Ajmal Kasab is a Pakistani national.After a series of conflicting statements by various officials representing different sections of the government, it was officially acknowledged that DawnNews TV’s news item about the official investigation report regarding Ajmal Kasab’s identity was correct.Earlier, a high-ranking government official had told Dawn that the preliminary finding had provided enough information to conclude that the man at present in India’s custody was from a Punjab village, and perhaps belonged to a militant group that was bent upon destabilising the region by undermining the peace process.The official, who requested anonymity, said the authorities were examining all parts of the puzzle on the basis of their own investigation, as well as the information provided by India and the Americans.However, he said there was no doubt in the minds of the investigators that the captured terrorist was a Pakistani. “Sadly, it has been established that Kasab is a Pakistani national.”But within minutes of the revelation, confusing, and somewhat conflicting, statements started emanating from different sections of the government in Islamabad. While the Indian television channel CNN-IBN quoted Pakistan’s National Security Adviser Mehmud Ali Durrani as saying that Ajmal Kasab’s identity as a Pakistani had been established, Foreign Secretary Salman Bashir told the same channel that it was premature to say anything because the investigation was continuing.In the midst of all this, American news agency APTN quoted Information Minister Sherry Rehman as confirming that Ajmal Kasab in fact was a Pakistani national. The minister later confirmed it to Dawn that “he is Pakistani” and that investigations are ongoing.Similarly, the Foreign Office which at the initial stage appeared either detached from reality or completely out of the loop, admitted by broadcasting through the state-run PTV that Ajmal Kasab was indeed a Pakistani national.During the course of Dawn’s own investigation, a number of senior officials in the interior ministry and police said that investigations were started soon after initial reports had suggested that Ajmal Kasab might be a Pakistani national. But the authorities wanted to be doubly sure about his identity because there was no record of Kasab and his family in the national database maintained by Nadra. Details of preliminary investigations submitted to the government have still not been made public.The official who confirmed to Dawn about the preliminary investigation report said Kasab was son of Amir Kasab and Mrs Noor Illahi. But the identity of other militants killed in Mumbai is yet to be established. Senior security officials, however, said that preliminary investigations had established that the militants were operating on their own and had absolutely no link with any section of the country’s security apparatus.A top ranking western diplomat also confirmed to Dawn that there was no linkage between the terrorists who carried out the Mumbai carnage and the Pakistani security agencies, particularly the ISI. “There is ample evidence to prove that most of the terrorists belonged to Pakistan,” the diplomat said. “But there is not even a shred of evidence to suggest that the ISI or any other Pakistani intelligence agency had any links with these terrorists,” the diplomat said.“And this is not based on what the Pakistanis have been telling us, as we have double checked it on our own,” the diplomat added.The remarks belie the latest claim by Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh who on Tuesday had tried to up the ante by directly accusing the Pakistani security apparatus of being involved in the Mumbai carnage. Pakistan has already rejected the Indian accusation in strongest terms.In a related development, a statement by Prime Minister Yousuf Gilani also said the Pakistan’s investigations into the Mumbai attacks had made progress. He said that some information of an interim nature on Indian investigations had been received. He did not elaborate.Punjab’s dusty town of Faridkot became the centre of attention soon after the deadly Mumbai attack as the Indian authorities captured Kasab and claimed that he belonged to Faridkot. The town was thronged by local and foreign media and conflicting reports came out about the identity of Kasab.At that time the government had, for obvious reasons, decided to adopt a tight-lipped policy, maintaining that only a thorough investigation, based on concrete information, could establish whether Kasab was a Pakistani national, and a resident of Faridkot.Answering a question about consular access to Kasab, a senior official said the militant had damaged Pakistan ‘like no other’. “We are not yet sure when to ask for consular access. We may not ask for it. He is involved in a heinous crime,” the official said. Kasab also wrote a letter to the Pakistan High Commission in New Delhi. Pakistani authorities said they were examining the letter.
http://www.dawn.com/2009/01/08/top1.htm