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US bounty on Hafiz Saeed: Pakistan demands proof supporting allegations

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US bounty on Hafiz Saeed: Pakistan demands proof supporting allegations

By Web Desk
Published: April 4, 2012
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The US announced a reward worth $10 million for the capture or any information leading to the capture of Saeed. PHOTO: REUTERS/FILE


ISLAMABAD: Proof supporting allegations levelled against founder of banned group Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) Hafiz Saeed should be provided to Pakistan, said Foreign Ministry spokesperson on Wednesday.

The US announced a reward worth $10 million for the capture or any information leading to the capture of Saeed, making him one of the most wanted persons in the world.
Foreign Ministry spokesperson further added that the judiciary in Pakistan is free and take decisions according to the constitution.

Saeed, earlier responding to the US bounty during a press conference in Rawalpindi said that he will be in Lahore tomorrow and the US can contact him whenever it wants. “The bounty is always set on people who are in hiding… There is no case against me in any American court,” he maintained while terming the bounty absurd.


Read more: hafizsaeed
 
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Islamabad, Pakistan (CNN) -- Pakistan has suggested that the United States needs to provide convincing evidence against a man accused of masterminding the 2008 terrorist assault on Mumbai, India, before it will take any action.
Washington posted a notice Monday offering as much as $10 million for information leading to the arrest and conviction of Hafiz Mohammad Saeed, a Pakistani man wanted by Indian authorities in connection with the Mumbai attacks, which killed 166 people.
"Pakistan would prefer to receive concrete evidence to proceed legally rather than to be engaging in a public discussion on this issue," the Pakistani Foreign Ministry said in a statement.
"In a democratic country like Pakistan, where (the) judiciary is independent, evidence against anyone must withstand judicial scrutiny," said the statement, which was released Wednesday.
Saeed has given an nonchalant response to the news of the multimillion-dollar offer for information that leads to his capture.
"I am living my life in the open, and the U.S. can contact me whenever they want," he told Geo TV in Islamabad on Tuesday.
Saeed said the U.S. government had a problem with the Defense of Pakistan movement against drone attacks, adding that his presence had never caused any problems for Pakistan.
He said the Pakistani Supreme Court had cleared him and his organization of wrongdoing in relation to the Mumbai attacks.
"The U.S. government is listening to the Indian lobby and not making its own decisions," he said, condemning the attacks in Mumbai.
Saeed has not been indicted in the United States, but the Treasury Department designated him and three other Lashkar-e-Tayyiba leaders as terrorists in 2008. It froze their assets in the United States and prohibited Americans from doing any business with them.
The "wanted" notice announcing the large bounty for Saeed, 62, was posted on the website of the U.S. State Department's Rewards for Justice program late Monday.
The program was established in 1984 and has paid about $100 million to more than 70 people for information about terrorists. Rewards go as high as $25 million for information on al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri.
The State Department calls the program "one of the most valuable assets the U.S. government has in the fight against international terrorism."
Spokesman Mark Toner said the reward was for evidence that would implicate Saeed.
"I think the announcement speaks very clearly to the fact that we're looking for evidence that can withstand judicial scrutiny against this individual, information that can be used against him to convict him in a court of law," he told reporters Wednesday.
Saeed's bounty is one of the highest offered by the reward program, on par with the sum pinned on Taliban leader Mullah Omar.
It comes at a time when U.S.-Pakistan relations are strained and the United States is expected to ratchet up pressure on Islamabad to take action against Saeed, a former professor of Arabic and engineering. He helped found Jamaat-ud-Dawa, a radical Muslim organization that aims to bring about Islamist rule in parts of in India and Pakistan.
The group's military wing, Lashkar-e-Tayyiba, which means army of the pure, is blamed for violence in the disputed territory of Kashmir aimed at liberating Muslims.
After the September 11, 2001, attacks in the United States, Lashkar-e-Tayyiba began operating outside Kashmir. It is suspected of carrying out several high-profile attacks in India in the past few years, including one on multiple commuter trains in Mumbai.
The United States labeled Lashkar-e-Tayyiba a "foreign terrorist organization" in December 2001, and under pressure from Washington, Pakistan banned the group in 2002. But it continues to function freely.
In November 2008, terrorists stormed locations throughout Mumbai, killing scores of people and taking hostages. Six American citizens were killed in the carnage.
The Indian government has issued a notice with Interpol against Saeed in relation to his alleged role in the attacks. India accuses him of participating in the training of the gunmen in the Mumbai attack and has charged him in absentia.
Muhammad Yahya Mujahid, the spokesman for Jamaat-ud-Dawa, said the U.S. bounty was yet another attack on Islam and Muslims.
"The only thing these American actions will do is create a more passionate hate for America in the hearts of Muslims," he said.
CNN's Nasir Habib and Moni Basu contributed to this report.
 
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Islamabad: Pakistan cannot take action against Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) chief Hafiz Saeed in the absence of solid evidence, the foreign ministry said Thursday.

The US Monday announced an award of up to $10 million for information leading to arrest and conviction of Saeed and $2 million for Hafiz Adbul Rahman Makki, under the Rewards for Justice programme, for information on the two terrorists.



Saeed is the founder of the LeT that was blamed for the 2008 Mumbai attacks.

Foreign office spokesman Abdul Basit said it is "strange" that the US has offered a bounty of millions of dollars for evidence and information against Saeed and Makki.

"We have clearly stated our position that there is no concrete evidence against Saeed," the spokesman said at a press briefing, Xinhua reported.

"Pakistan would prefer to have concrete evidence to initiate a legal process but in the absence of that, we cannot do anything," the spokesman said.

Pakistan Wednesday sought "concrete evidence" against the two men from the US.


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Basit said that even the US did not possess any evidence linking Saeed to terrorism.

He did not agree with a question that the US bounty was aimed at influencing Pakistan's ongoing parliamentary review of its relationship with the US and NATO.

Pakistan called for the review after 24 Pakistani soldiers were killed in air strikes by NATO fighter jets in November 2011.

A joint session of parliament is debating new terms of engagement with the US and the process is likely to be completed this month.

Replying to a question, Basit said he was not aware if there was a provision for offering a bounty under international law.

"A national government can take any step that is not in violation of the international law. I am not sure whether a bounty is covered under international law," he added.

Basit refused to state whether Saeed had figured in discussions Wednesday between Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar and visiting US Deputy Secretary of State Thomas Nides, saying that the two leaders had discussed "all issues".

Issues such as the bounty for Saeed "have to be addressed through a legal procedure" and it was not "desirable to get into public discussion" on such matters, the spokesman said.

The spokesman also shot down the impression that the US and Pakistan could reach some sort of understanding on Saeed on the lines of the agreement on drone strikes that was finalised under the previous military regime.

"When we say that we do not have any concrete evidence to proceed legally against any individual, I do not see any discrepancy. The government of Pakistan cannot proceed against any individual without undeniable evidence. I see no discrepancy or dichotomy in our stated position and what we have actually been saying to the US," Basit said.

"Obviously, Pakistan would not come under any pressure because ours is a principled and legal position," the spokesman said. He said Pakistan believed the US had respect for Pakistan's judicial system and both countries should be mindful of each other's limitations.

IANS
 
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Well Pakistan can't handover people to the Americans just because they say so, for Saeed being an anti-American, is not a good enough reason to be punished. There are many senators & congressmen in America, who have openly pledged support for terrorist activities in Baluchistan, how about America penalise them as well. As for indian evidence........... all i want to say is ''LOL''.
 
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India can gather only half of the evidence, the other half still remains in Pakistan.
 
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yeah evidence means evedence not cartoonic & fantasy stories by indians inspired by their Pakistan phobia trait.
 
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Pakistan will keep wanting 'concrete' evidence even if we provided them with actual concrete.

No point entertaining such country.

Hafiz Saeed's commupance will surely come to him one day.

Either it will be at the hands of the American Military or through an Indian non-state actor.

After all, I'm sure, there's no dearth of contract killers in Pakistan.

So, Hafiz Saedd will be punished one day, sooner or later.
 
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The kind of evedince pak is asking for cartoonic will do the job or has it started too.
 
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Pakistan deserves to gather as much information as possible before making any move.
 
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