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India needs to share it's evidence on suspects

roadrunner

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Day 2:

Judge: Proceed

Prosecution: Your honour, now I come to the basis of my evidence that is irrefutable.

*Pulls a 10 rupee newspaper out his pocket and waves it around with a victory grin pasted on his face

Prosecution: The Dawn newspaper article where an anonymous reporter interviewed Amir Kasab *wink wink* that has now disappeared *wink wink nudge*.

Prosecution: "Ajmal" *wink wink*, is this your father?

Ajmal: Yes, no doubts.

Prosecution: His name is Amir Kasab?

Ajmal: Yes, he changed his name from Muhammed Amir to Amir Kasab after he found out I'd been captured because he wanted to try and remain anonymous.

*Stunned silence*




India pressed to share Mumbai evidence with rival
By SAM DOLNICK – 2 hours ago

NEW DELHI (AP) — In the days after the deadly Mumbai attacks, India demanded that Pakistan crack down on militants, shutter charities linked to extremists and jail suspected plotters.

With a flurry of raids, Pakistan took many of those steps this week. Now it's up to India to do what it likes least: share intelligence with its archrival about what it knows and how it knows it.

Keeping the alleged plotters in jail will require unprecedented investigative cooperation across a border mined with distrust and suspicion, and the onus has shifted to India.

Pakistani authorities say they will prosecute in their own courts anyone linked to the three-day siege in Mumbai that left 164 dead — they just need the proof.

"Our own investigations cannot proceed beyond a certain point without provision of credible information and evidence," said Pakistan's Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi.

But Indian Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee said it was too early to share any of what investigators say is ironclad evidence tying the attacks to Pakistani soil. According to India, the 10 gunmen were from Pakistan, as were the handlers, masterminds, weapons, training camps and financing.

"Whatever evidence we have, we can make available," Mukherjee told Indian news channel CNN-IBN in an interview to be broadcast Sunday. "We are also investigating. We have not come to any conclusion. Therefore, at this juncture, perhaps it would be premature to share the evidence."

It remains uncertain how much evidence, if any, India will actually provide.

India finds itself in the awkward position of having to investigate terrorist attacks hand-in-hand with its longtime nemesis. The two countries have fought three wars against each other since independence. Despite a peace process that began in 2004, tensions remain high.

"India grits its teeth and says 'They don't have to like us, we don't have to like them but ... we have to go through the process,'" said C. Uday Bhaskar, a prominent defense analyst in New Delhi.

Much of India's information comes from Mohammed Ajmal Kasab, the lone captured gunman. Through repeated interrogations, he has said he was trained by Lashar-e-Taiba, a banned Pakistan-based militant group, and revealed key details such as names of fellow plotters and locations of camps.

Islamabad has refused to even acknowledge Kasab is Pakistani, complaining it has had to rely on news reports for information.

Most recently, a Pakistani newspaper, Dawn, tracked down Kasab's family in the village of Faridkot — his hometown according to Indian investigators — and said the suspect's father had identified his son from photographs of the gunmen.

Pakistan has taken action in recent days, closing 65 offices of a charity linked to militants, putting the charity's prominent founder under house arrest and arresting senior Lashkar leaders, including the attacks' suspected mastermind.

But Mukherjee said India was still not satisfied, and he wanted Pakistan to ensure banned groups don't "reappear in their new name with the new signboards but with the same old faces."

Pakistan outlawed Lashkar in 2002 under pressure from the United States, but many say the group resurfaced under the umbrella of Jamaat-ud-Dawa, a charity group the United Nations this week labeled a terrorist outfit. Pakistan began shutting the group's offices late Thursday and ordered its assets frozen.

India has traced previous terrorist attacks back to Pakistan, but animosity and distrust at the time ruined any hopes for cooperation.

After the 1993 Mumbai blasts that killed 257, India provided evidence of Pakistani complicity — which Islamabad rejected as "fabricated," said Bhaskar.

"Pakistan has never accepted culpability of its own people or handed over anyone," he said.

This time may be different.

For starters, evidence collected by India from Kasab, as well as recovered phones and forensic evidence, may be too strong to dismiss, analysts say.

The siege also stands out because 26 foreigners were killed, which has brought investigative help from other countries and international pressure that makes it harder for Islamabad to avoid taking real action.

But India's probe also includes intelligence apparently gleaned through top-secret eavesdropping against Pakistan, which authorities will be loath to share.

In September, India's foreign intelligence agency intercepted telephone conversations apparently coming out of Pakistan that discussed possible attacks against Mumbai hotels, according to a government official who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive matter.

India will almost certainly not disclose details of its espionage work to Pakistan, the program's main target.

While Indian investigators have raised possible links between the militants and Pakistan's spy service, Mukherjee has been very careful not to accuse Pakistan's government of complicity in the siege.

"That is why, repeatedly, I said 'elements from Pakistan'" were responsible for the attacks, he said. "That is a phrase I have used meticulously. I would not like to be more specific unless definitive conclusion is arrived at by the investigating agencies."
The Associated Press: India pressed to share Mumbai evidence with rival
 
Apparently it seems another spectacular fake just saw it in the headlines on ARY digital that the man they have caught allegdley muhammed Ajmal kasab was caught by nepalese police two years ago his real name is Amar Singh.

Maybe that is why the Indian authorities are reluctant to share information at the moment.
 
India fails to provide any evidence: FO

Updated : Monday December 22 , 2008 5:47:52 PM




ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Monday again rejected Indian claims of providing it with any evidence relating to the Mumbai incident.

Foreign Office Spokesman Muhammad Sadiq, when asked to comment on reported statements by the Indian External Affairs Minister claiming that India has given evidence to Pakistan said "the Government of Pakistan has so far not received any information or evidence relating to the Mumbai incident from the Government of India."

India has been demanding action against suspected militant groups by Pakistan, based on evidence provided by it. However Pakistan has repeatedly asked India to provide it evidence through diplomatic channels and not media.
 
You need SOLID proof to back up your claims.
Blaming a nation for these attacks is a big thing, better get your stuff ready and make sure you know what you're talking about.
 
PAKISTAN
No action without evidence: Rehman Malik

Tuesday, 23 Dec, 2008 | 11:44 PM PST |
Rehman Malik addresses a joint press conference with Interpol chief Ronald Noble —PPI


ISLAMABAD: Adviser to Prime Minister on Interior Rehman Malik said on Tuesday that action will be taken against any person accused of being involved in the Mumbai attacks if India provided credible evidence against them.
Malik said India has not provided any official information to Pakistan on the arrest of any Pakistani national and it has also not shared any intelligence reports on the Mumbai attacks.
The PM’s adviser told reporters that the foreign office has received a letter from Ajmal Kasab, wherein he has reportedly sought legal assistance.
‘The letter is being examined by experts and the foreign office will issue a report regarding the contents of the letter,’ he said.
India has claimed that the lone surviving attacker, Ajmal Kasab, is a Pakistani national but Malik refuted such claims.
‘We have checked all records with NADRA (National database and registration authority) and have found no information on any person called Ajmal Kasab,’ Malik said.
Malik added that the whole nation is united and that the government will ‘take any step to safeguard national interest.’
 
How symbolic, 30 days exactly after the Mumbai attacks.
It's as simple as that, nothing else will change after the 26th of December.
The GoP should stand firm on its decision to wait for any credible evidence.
If the Indians think they can threaten Pakistan this way by giving the GoP a deadline, they're wrong.
This is very stupid IMO, the IND-PAK relations have deteriorated even further because of the way the Indians have handled this situation.
 
Mumbai attacks mastermind yet to identify: China



Updated at: 1135 PST, Wednesday, December 24, 2008
BEIJING: China has asked India to maintain calm as Mumbai attacks mastermind is yet to be identified.

"We hope to see the improvement of Indian-Pakistani relations," Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang told a regular press conference responding to questions on the South Asia situation in the aftermath of the November 26 terrorist attacks in Mumbai.

Qin said that the identity of the mastermind of the Mumbai attacks "awaited further investigation by concerned countries," indicating that Beijing was still unsure about New Delhi's assertion that all the 10 attackers were Pakistanis.

He called on India and Pakistan to "work together through peaceful consultations to investigate the cause of the attacks and combat terrorism," the agency reported.

"We hope the region will maintain its peace and stability," Qin said.

He said the improvement and development of the relationship between India and Pakistan, both important nations in South Asia, would help regional peace and stability.

China would, as always, support efforts by both countries to improve bilateral relations and safeguard regional peace, Qin said.

He noted that China had strongly denounced the Mumbai attacks.

"We agree that the international community should cooperate to fight terrorism," Qin said.
 
Pakistan being urged to catch culprits: US: Mumbai terror attacks -DAWN - Top Stories; December 24, 2008

Pakistan being urged to catch culprits: US: Mumbai terror attacks

By Our Correspondent

WASHINGTON, Dec 23: The United States has been urging Pakistan ‘every single day’ to catch those responsible for the Mumbai terror attacks, says the US State Department.

At the White House, Deputy Press Secretary Tony Fratto told a briefing on Tuesday that President George W. Bush sent his top military official to South Asia following reports that tensions between India and Pakistan could lead to a war.

“I don't know if President Bush has,” said Mr Fratto when asked if President Bush had spoken to Indian and Pakistani leaders to prevent a war. “I know Admiral (Mike) Mullen is in the region, and he's speaking to people in the region.”

At the State Department, spokesman Sean McCormack said the United States had not yet reached a stage where it could determine the final outcome of Pakistan’s efforts to catch those responsible for the Mumbai attacks.

“We are still at the stage where we are urging Pakistan every single day to do whatever it can to prevent future attacks and to track down and get off the street those responsible for these attacks,” he said.

“We will get to a stage at some point where, you know, we look very closely at exactly what is the final disposition of these individuals who have been arrested over time.”

Mr McCormack said he could not yet offer “a specific policy prescription” on how the United States would deal with the situation if Pakistan failed to catch the culprits.

“But it is important that Pakistan and India continue to talk and to work through any differences through dialogue and diplomacy that they might have, and that every single day Pakistan focus on the task at hand, and that is to prevent any further attacks,” he added.

The State Department official stressed that Pakistan would have to make ‘specific arrangements” for bringing to justice those responsible for the attacks and then they should talk to the Indian government about this.

“They have populations that are affected by it. And certainly, we would have concerns about that as American citizens were murdered in these attacks,” he said.

Asked if the US government knew whether militant leader Masood Azhar had been detained or not, Mr McCormack said: “No. It has been known on occasions to happen even in this government where there are conflicting reports that happen. I’ll leave it to the Pakistani authorities to describe whom they have detained and who they are looking to detain.”

Replying to another question, the official said the decision to warn Americans not to travel to India was not a political decision.

He said the US law required the government to warn its citizens about possible threats to their safety in a certain area and that’s why those travel warnings were issued.
 
& our reply is :-

NA seeks closure of terror cells in India

NA seeks closure of terror cells in India
Updated at: 1540 PST, Wednesday, December 24, 2008
ISLAMABAD: The National Assembly (NA) has asked world community to press India for the closure of terror cells and to stop anti-Pakistan propaganda.

The resolution, presented by Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Malik Ammad, stated that Pakistan wants peace and stability in the region and end of tension with India.

The resolution has urged global community to press India to close terror hubs and stop anti-Pakistan propaganda.

The resolution stated that Mumbai attacks reflected the failure of Indian intelligence; therefore, India should stop blaming Pakistan.

The assembly session has been adjourned after passing the resolution.
 
India is a name,
Blaming his game,
forget the name,
and play the game.

Now we will blame and we got proof HAHA
 
India is a name,
Blaming his game,
forget the name,
and play the game.

Now we will blame and we got proof HAHA

Of course we had proof .. unlike India .. we had forwarded the same to USA. The Indian consulates in Afghanistan where there is no Indian national present are actually terrorist camps of insurgencies in Baluchistan & border areas ... We have so many times told USA with proof .. but no real action did happen.

Only in the first year of 9/11 did the US asked India to do a hands off Afghanistan but ever since .. they have been indulging in one terrorist activity after another against Pakistan :

IPCS - South Asia

Afghan Interim Government: Its Implications for India

Wg Cdr NK Pant




At a time when India’s relations with Pakistan have touched rock bottom and combat formations deployed on the borders have raised tensions between the two neighbours to dangerous heights, the installation of a friendly regime led by Mr Hamid Karzai in post Taliban Afghanistan is an encouraging development. Mr Karzai had paid an official visit to New Delhi in the last week of February. Earlier, well before the new interim government was sworn in on December 22, two important ministers in Mr Karzai’s cabinet, Home Minister Younous Qanooni, and Foreign Minister Dr Abdulla Abdulla, were in the Indian capital in quick succession. Other ministers who came unpublicized were Air Transport and Tourism Minister, Abdul Rahman, who was subsequently lynched at Kabul airport by angry Haj pilgrims, and Higher Education Minister, Sharif Faez.

?

After President Musharraf’s ‘hands-off Afghanistan’ warning to India, following the September 11 terrorist attack in the US, the swearing in of an India friendly government in Afghanistan was welcomed by the architects of New Delhi’s Afghan policy. They have achieved their objective to ensure that Afghanistan is no longer an exporter of terrorism. Secondly, the perception that Pakistan would gain strategic depth in Taliban controlled Afghan territory has also vanished. New Delhi would like to see the post Taliban Afghanistan as a forward looking democracy, which is able to rebuild its battered economy and institutions, where the rights of minorities and women are protected.

?

On the other hand, Pakistan, since the fall of its prot?g? Taliban government, has desperately tried to gain a foothold in Kabul. But the Afghans, who were pawns in Islamabad’s game plan, are not in a mood to oblige, at least for the present. They know that the Pakistanis were part of the Taliban administration, and one of them was even a Minister. The Taliban militia also had a number of officers and soldiers seconded to it from the Pakistani regular army.

?

Hence, the Afghan Trade Minister Mustafa Kazimi was right when he said that the biggest threat to Afghanistan was its neighbour Pakistan. The warmth towards India was evident when Foreign Minister Abdulla promptly denounced the terrorist attack on the Indian Parliament on December 13. He was quoted as saying, "People of Afghanistan, having themselves experienced the ravages of terrorism, fully understand the significance of this attack."?

?

The new leadership in Kabul has requested Delhi to assist the war torn country by rebuilding its social and economic infrastructure, agriculture, health and education. It wants India to assist in setting up a police training academy and also to help in framing a stringent anti terrorist law. New Delhi is keen to help in the reconstruction programme to shore up Hamid Karzai’s interim government. It feels that Indian companies, with their experience in the Middle East and elsewhere in Asia, would be able to execute development projects effectively. India has already earmarked a Rs. 500 crore (US $109 million) aid package for this purpose. The reconstruction of Afghanistan may also? prove beneficial to Indian companies at a time when the economy is in a recessionary mode. Trade and economic relations will start picking up when the Indian embassy resumes its normal functions.?

?

India has age-old cultural relations with Afghanistan, which has a small but prosperous Hindu and Sikh minority engaged in business and other professions. In pre-Taliban Afghanistan, the minority communities were part and parcel of the larger Afghan mosaic. But the Taliban rulers’ satanic actions like blasting the Bamiyan Buddha statues and persecution of non-Muslims forced them to flee the country. Hopefully, they will return and contribute to its economic progress.

?

The dismantling of the Pan-Islamic terror machine in Afghanistan is a distinctive strategic gain for India. It should ensure peace and security in the country, which had suffered greatly due to terrorism. The multitude of terrorist training camps destroyed by US bombing should benefit New Delhi as it prepares to reopen its embassy in Kabul. The latest allied air and ground operations against the regrouped Taliban and Al Qaeda fighters in Eastern Afghanistan, bordering Pakistani territory, has further crippled the Jehadi groups. This setback to the ISI’s fundamentalist partners engenders hope that the state sponsored terror in Kashmir and other parts of India may be considerably reduced…brightening the prospects for peace.?
 
& our reply is :-

NA seeks closure of terror cells in India

NA seeks closure of terror cells in India
Updated at: 1540 PST, Wednesday, December 24, 2008
ISLAMABAD: The National Assembly (NA) has asked world community to press India for the closure of terror cells and to stop anti-Pakistan propaganda.

The resolution, presented by Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Malik Ammad, stated that Pakistan wants peace and stability in the region and end of tension with India.

The resolution has urged global community to press India to close terror hubs and stop anti-Pakistan propaganda.

The resolution stated that Mumbai attacks reflected the failure of Indian intelligence; therefore, India should stop blaming Pakistan.

The assembly session has been adjourned after passing the resolution.

Pakistan should continue and press hard to get what it wants, after all, India is doing the same.
There's always something fishy on the other side of the border that needs to be taken care of, let's see how the "world" reacts on this and how much they are willing to now look into Indias failures and domestic problems which affect Pakistan.
 
If someone doesn't have enough for himself, he can't share it with others.

The same situation for India:enjoy:
 
Pakistan would have to make ‘specific arrangements” for bringing to justice those responsible for the attacks and then they should talk to the Indian government about this.

errr... it is the Indian government refusing to talk to us, or share evidence, or form a joint investigation ..
 
Pakistan should continue and press hard to get what it wants, after all, India is doing the same.
There's always something fishy on the other side of the border that needs to be taken care of, let's see how the "world" reacts on this and how much they are willing to now look into Indias failures and domestic problems which affect Pakistan.

100% Agreed .. enough of diplomacy .. Move the strategic missiles now .. The army did the right thing in ordering full alert on all forward PAF bases. We should not let go of this opportunity. In 1965 we did it, in Kargil we did it, in Siachen I we did it .. & than what happened in 1971 & Siachen II ..

We have to up the ant .. we have to dispatch the subs in open seas fully armed ...

Their aircraft is already being dry docked or at least on retrofit. We have to move aggressively if not do a couple of sorties over disputed areas.

You want war, well we will give you one.:pakistan:

Because now the Yankees are sweating .. as they are being exposed to full fledge Taleban as our forces are moving from the Afghan front !

US Afghan strategy stretches all the way to India Kuwait Times Website

US Afghan strategy stretches all the way to India
Published Date: December 24, 2008
By Golnar Motevalli



America's top military officer announced a near-doubling of US troops in Afghanistan at the weekend, and then flew east to cool tensions between Pakistan and India. The reason? It's all part of the same security equation. If a "surge" of up to 30,000 extra soldiers to Afghanistan by next summer is the tactic chosen to beat the Taliban insurgency there, holding India and Pakistan back from each others' throats is the strategy to ensure peace across the region as a whole. "The surge is not an answer by itsel
f," said Brahma Chellaney, professor of strategic studies at the Centre for Policy Research in New Delhi. "It's not the number of troops, it's the strategy.

Last month's attacks by suspected Pakistan-based militants in the Indian city of Mumbai, in which 179 people died, has halted the faltering peace process between New Delhi and Islamabad. While neither side has moved to a war footing, the prospect of a conflict must be concentrating minds in the Pentagon and NATO. For one thing, there is a risk Pakistan would move some of the nearly 100,000 troops it has on its western border, with Afghanistan, to reinforce security along its frontier with India, with which
it has already fought three wars since 1947.

That would take pressure off Taleban fighters who hide in the borderlands planning attacks on Western forces in Afghanistan. "High tension between Pakistan and India doesn't serve American interests. It undermines America's agenda to control terrorism and that will only succeed if India-Pakistan relations are normalised," said Professor Hasaan Askari Rizvi, a Pakistani academic and political analyst. "Pakistan's attention has now been diverted from the tribal areas to the eastern border which means the Tal
iban and other militant groups now have greater freedom and that means they can engage in more activities.

Vanda Felbab-Brown, a Brookings Institution security expert, said Pakistan had stepped up the fight against militants, but not enough, and may lose the will to press on because of Mumbai. "Our hand is going to be weaker now due to Pakistan's tensions with India," she said. "It's quite possible that even the willingness they have generated up to now they will lose for the next two months.

Afghan officials often accuse elements within Pakistan's ISI spy agency of secretly supporting Taleban insurgents. Pakistan denies the charge, but analysts say many of its military brass are suspicious of the ties between Afghanistan and India and fear encirclement with a hostile India on its eastern flank and hostile Afghan forces, backed by New Delhi, on the west.

Increased tension with India would only reinforce those who argue that the Taleban are a useful foreign policy tool. "Some (but not all) in the establishment see armed militants within Pakistan as a threat - but they largely consider it one that is ultimately controllable, and in any case secondary to the threat posed by their nuclear-armed enemies," wrote Barnett Rubin and Ahmed Rashid in the Foreign Affairs journal.

The commander of international forces in Afghanistan had actually sought extra troops before the Mumbai attacks, and long before US Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Admiral Mike Mullen announced on Saturday that 20,000-30,000 more would be deployed. So perhaps the "surge" would have happened anyway. However, it was not by chance that Mullen flew to Islamabad two days later to lecture military chiefs there on the importance of joining hands with India "to combat ... extremism together".

US President-elect Barack Obama has made it clear he will adopt a dual strategy of maintaining peace between India and Pakistan and beating the Taleban, who remain a formidable force seven years after US-led forces ousted them from power. "Obama has also been clear that he sees the Pakistan situation very much through the prism of India," said a NATO diplomat, who asked not to be named. "So I think you see the whole US administration taking a much wider regional focus, which is very, very valuable." - Reuters
 

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