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Fears grow over Pakistan terror resolve

By James Lamont in New Delhi

Published: December 19 2008 02:00 | Last updated: December 19 2008 02:00

Fears grew last night that Pakistan's resolve to bring the perpetrators of the Mumbai terror attacks to justice was faltering.

The government said it had lost track of one of India's most wanted militants following his supposed arrest only a few days ago.


Shah Mahmood Qureshi, Pakistan's foreign minister, said Masood Azhar, the leader of Jaish-e-Mohammad, a militant group, was not under arrest, contradicting his government's previous claim that he was in custody.

"Other people have been detained but Mr Masood Azhar is at large. We have no knowledge of his whereabouts," Mr Qureshi told reporters in Islamabad.
The Pakistani defence ministry said a week ago that security forces had arrested Mr Azhar, who is suspected of launching an attack on the Indian parliament in 2001 that brought India and Pakistan to the brink of war.

The reversal will anger the Indian authorities, who have requested that Pakistan arrest as many as 40 "most wanted" militants in the wake of the Mumbai attacks and extradite them to India.

India has blamed Lashkar-e-Taiba, a Pakistani militant group, for the strikes. Although Pakistan has made arrests and banned Jamaat-ud-Dawa, a charity linked to Lashkar-e-Taiba, Islamabad insists that it has been given no proof by India that the attacks involved its nationals.

Russia yesterday became the latest country to share intelligence publicly about the attacks. It said Dawood Ibrahim, a Mumbai mafia don and drug baron suspected of living in Pakistan, had provided logistical support for the attacks.

"The super profits of the narco-mafia through Afghan heroin trafficking have become a powerful source of financing organised crime and terrorist networks," said Victor Ivanov, director of Russia's anti-narcotics service, in an interview with the state-controlled Rossiskaya Gazeta.

In a sign of escalating tensions, Islamabad yesterday formally protested over an incursion into its airspace at the weekend by two Indian fighter jets. President Asif Ali Zardari had played down the incident, calling it a "technical incursion". The Indian air force denied any incursion took place.

As tensions rise between the nuclear states, the Indian navy tested a supersonic cruise missile from a moving ship in the Bay of Bengal. Western diplomats said India was in a "watch and see" phase after the Mumbai attacks, gauging the seriousness of Pakistan's commitment to crack down on militants before deciding on its next steps. "Globally people are surprised at the maturity of India's reaction," said Amartya Sen, the economist and Nobel laureate. "Post the Mumbai crisis, despite anger at administration, lack of security, [the] public at large is not asking for waging a war on Pakistan."

*India sought extra public spending yesterday to buoy its economy, as inflation fell to 6.8 per cent in the first week of December - its lowest in nine months. The government asked parliament for an extra Rs424.8bn ($9bn, €6.3bn, £6bn) for the current fiscal year. Bond yields fell as market expectations of interest rate cuts gathered steam, with the benchmark down more than 30 basis points to a 4½ year low.

FT.com / UK - Fears grow over Pakistan terror resolve
 
Mumbai attackers part of global jihad: Pak journalist
Munizae Jahangir
Saturday, December 20, 2008 9:29 AM (Lahore)

Senior Pakistani journalist Ahmed Rashid has said that the Mumbai attackers were part of a global jihad movement and homegrown in Pakistan.

Rashid added that the situation in Pakistan remained volatile and India should help in stabilising the civilian government in Pakistan so that the military does not win.

There has been much back and forth between India and Pakistan post 26/11 over the role played by terror groups like the Lashkar-e-Toiba operating from Pakistan soil in the Mumbai attacks.

International pressure has been mounting on Pakistan to reign in these terror outfits.

Earlier, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had said that Pakistan's territory was used for the Mumbai attacks.

The Prime Minister had also said that global cooperation was needed to bring the perpetrators to justice on an international level.

Even the US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's message to Pakistan's new government was blunt.

"We talked at length about the importance of Pakistan taking its responsibility to deal with those who may use Pakistan territory even if they are non-state actors," the US Secretary of State had said when she visited India after the Mumbai attacks.

NDTV.com: Mumbai attackers part of global jihad: Pak journalist
 
US offers India package on terrorism
20 Dec 2008, 1323 hrs IST, IANS

WASHINGTON: The US is working on a package for India on dealing with the situation in the wake of the Mumbai terror attacks for which a
Pakistan-based terror group has been blamed, a top military commander has said.

The proposed package to India would "help them understand some of the lessons that we very painfully learned in the wake of our Sept 11 attacks, in information sharing, collaboration and cooperation", Admiral Timothy Keating, the head of the US Pacific Command, said.

"And I expressed our willingness to provide that to India in my conversations with Indian leaders," he said at a media briefing in Washington on "Asia-Pacific US Military Overview".

The US response to "the position of India and Pakistan following the horrific attacks on Mumbai" will be one of the main topics of an upcoming conversation he would have with General David Petraeus, head of the US Central Command, Keating said.

"The US Pacific Command is working closely with Central Command and with the Department of State, Office of the Secretary of Defence and the intelligence agencies to make sure we are as fully apprised, as fully aware of developments in that particular part of the world as we can be, and I'm satisfied that we are," he said.

"But the most important thing is the horrific nature of the attacks, the very calm measured response demonstrated by India thus far," he said when asked for his assessment of relations between Pakistan and India in the aftermath of the Mumbai attacks.

He also expressed the hope "that all throughout our region in particular and all throughout the world, folks will understand that the struggle against violent extremists continues to this day", the commander said.

"Mumbai is just the latest place where the innocent victims number in the hundreds. And it remains our foremost objective in the Asia-Pacific Region to deter and prevent those kinds of attacks," Keating said.

The admiral said he had "been in contact with our ambassador in India, with Indian military leaders, and am grateful for the very measured response that India has demonstrated".

"We have not done anything significantly different from the Pacific Command in terms of military presence or posture in the wake of the terrorist attacks," he added.

Discussing the US Pacific Command's strategy in the Asia-Pacific region, he said it "looks to mature the relationship with our strategic partner India as a leader on security cooperation".

"Strengthening the bi-lateral military relationship with New Delhi is an important component of that evolution, as is the recently approved civilian nuclear cooperation agreement between the two governments," Keating said.

Many challenges across the broader sub-region remain, however, including the legacy of powerful historic disputes that have complicated India-Pakistan relations and dominated US security concerns in this sub region, he said.

The region is characterised by a remarkable level of relative stability and continuity, Keating said but "there exist many traditional, emerging, and potential challenges that threaten to undermine stability".

These include trans-national violent extremism that promotes disorder, disrupts stability, and opposes freedom and State and non-state actors that sponsor terrorism, pursue nuclear technologies, proliferate weapons, and support illicit and criminal behaviour, he said.

According to the command's assessment and predictive analysis, "India will remain a strategic partner and emerge as an increasingly important regional actor" even as "China will continue to improve its military capabilities and its economic and political influence will continue to grow".

US offers India package on terrorism-USA-World-The Times of India
 
We all know the fat buffalo is no friend of Pakistan. He'll say anything to get in power and score points against his opponent, including sell his country down the drain.

Why is it that the buffalo can see a cordoned off house, and international reporters cannot?

This reporter, and many others have had free access to Faridkot. They have been unrestricted in their movement.

Pakistani Town Roiled by Alleged Link to Mumbai Suspect

Why is it they cannot find this cordoned off house, yet Jabba the Hut, can?

No we don't - He's ex-PM of Pakistan, and naturally his words have more credibility than your assertions about his bovine nature.

Regarding the other two articles quoted, all of them were written at different times. Now unless Faridkot is caught in a timewarp, things would change on a daily basis.

Also, I notice that you were trashing those same reports some time ago, which you are now using to trash yet another one. Your logic astounds!
 
Enough evidence given, Islamabad must act: Pranab
Agencies Posted: Dec 21, 2008 at 1424 hrs

Kolkata Taking a tough stance, External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee on Sunday said that Pakistan had been given enough evidence regarding the Mumbai terror attacks and ‘Islamabad must act’.
"Pakistan has been contradicting its statements. Enough evidence has been given to Pakistan. Pakistan must cooperate and not contradict us. Mere talk is not enough. Pakistan has to act," Mukherjee told a conference at the Bengal Chamber of Commerce in Kolkata.

"Instead of contradiction and denial, they will have to take action," Mukherjee added.

"We can deal only with the government of the day. Therefore, all arguments which are coming from the other side (Pakistan) are not really convincing", Mukherjee said.

The first reaction from Islamabad was that non-state actors were involved in the attacks, he recalled. "Non-state actors do not come from heaven, nor do they operate from another planet", he said.

"But from wherever they are operating, it is the responsibility of the incumbent government to deal with them", he said, adding that "we cannot chase the so-called non-state actors in another country. They will have to take the action".

"I have never used the word Pakistan government but I have deliberately used the word that some elements in Pakistan. Evidence clearly indicate (their involvement)," he the Minister said.

"We have the evidence, including intercepts of the conversation via satellite. Yesterday I described the conversation as a chilling account. The captured living terrorist (Amir Ajmal Kasab) gave the chilling account of what transpired between him and the controller from that side. They were monitoring Indian television. We have this type of information", he said.

Pakistan must pursue these evidence and take action, he said, noting that "words must be followed up by action".

Enough evidence given, Islamabad must act: Pranab - Express India
 
FBI Concludes Mumbai Terror Probe
12/24/2008 12:32 AM ET

(RTTNews) - The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has completed its probe in the terror attacks in the Indian financial capital Mumbai that left over 180 persons dead including six American nationals, and a team is likely to go there to prepare a charge sheet against the guilty, media reports said.

Less than a month after the unprecedented terror strikes, the FBI is understood to have found evidence about the role of a Pakistani security establishment other than the ISI being involved in the November 26 carnage.

While the name of the Pakistan establishment involved in the attack was not clear immediately, the possibility of active and direct involvement of its army has not been ruled out.

The FBI officials, before completing the probe, had questioned Kasab, the lone Lashkar-e-Tayiba (LeT) militant captured in November 26 terror strikes, for over nine hours recently to ascertain about his role and his handlers in Pakistan.

During the interrogation, the FBI sleuths asked the arrested Lashkar terrorist minor details about his native places, including the lanes and by-lanes of the area. Kasab hails from the Ukkad area of Faridkot district in Pakistan.


The FBI had also taken the DNA samples of the nine Lashkar terrorists killed in Mumbai to ascertain whether it matched with anyone in their data bank or has any relations with persons killed during operations of Allied Forces in Afghanistan.

The FBI had registered a case in the Mumbai terror strikes as according to the U.S. laws, the agency had to file a charge sheet in case of a death or torture of any American national outside the country.

As the FBI winds up the probe, which commenced on December 1, top U.S. Intelligence official John Michael McConnell, who heads the Director of National Intelligence (DNI), dashed to New Delhi and held meetings with the FBI team probing the case.

McConnell has passed on the findings of FBI team to the officials in the government and the U.S. probe agency would now be giving final touches to charge sheet in which it would be naming the accused persons.

He also held series of meetings with Union Home Minister P Chidambaram and senior officials including National Security Advisor M K Narayanan and discussed issues relating to evidence gathered so far in the probe in the 26/11 terror strikes, the sources said.

by RTT Staff Writer

For comments and feedback: contact editorial@rttnews.com
RTTNews - FBI Concludes Mumbai Terror Probe
 
What happen to the faridakot village ?. Is it still in the map or deleted ?

What happen to those peoples interviewed by Dawn Reporter on hidden cam?

Proofs of Pakistan Jihadis behind Mumbai Attacks found from Faridkot Pakistan


Thanks GEO TV.You are so Brave.You can keep Democracy in Pakistan

A country is not willing to accept its own citizen i don't know how it will

depend all the 172,800,000 citizens.

May be they will ask them to surrender like they did it in 1971.
 
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