War against Terror: Pakistan plays Jekyll & Hyde again! - Instablogs
War against Terror: Pakistan plays Jekyll & Hyde again!
Mohit Dubey , Ghaziabad: Aug 7 2009
Made Popular Aug 7 2009
Pakistan :

War against Terror: Pakistan plays Jekyll & Hyde again!

Mohit Dubey

Pakistan is at it again - playing Dr Jekyll and Hyde, speaking two languages in its alleged war against terror and its perpetrators! And the double speak (also translated in actions) now is exposed with the fashion in which the Islamic state is dealing with the two ugly faces of extremism - one against neighbour India and the other aimed at the western countries.

Mandarins in the ISI and other defense establishments apparently classify them as Taliban on one side and LeT and Jaish-e-Mohammad on the other. The former being largely anti-west and the latter being purely anti-India. All this is explained by the fact that even as the US drones pound the Kabali and other rural areas in Pakistan, the state has turned a blind eye to the utterances of JeM and LeT leaders and chieftains against India.

This despite the commitment of prime minister Yusuf Gilani to Manmohan Singh that the soil of Pakistan would not be used for anti-India tirades. Two days back Pakistan banned 25 religious and other organisations, including the Jamaat-ud-Dawah, Jaish-e-Mohammed and Lashker-e-Taiba and put Sunni Tehrik on its watch list. Among the organisations included in the list of outlawed groups are JuD, LeT, JeM, Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, Tehrik-e-Nifaz-e-Shariah Muahammadi, Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, Al-Akhtar Trust, Al-Rasheed Trust, Tehreek-e-Islami, Islamic Students Movement, Khair-un-Nisa International Trust, Islami Tehreek-e-Pakistan, Lashkar-e-Islam, Balochistan Liberation Army, Jamiat-un-Nisar, Khadam Islam and Millat-e-Islamia Pakistan.

But while Interior Minister Rehman Malik said the federal government had banned the 25 organisations and entities under the Anti-Terrorism Act of 1997 and promised “stern action against those which indulge in objectionable activities, double standards in Pakistan’s anti-terror campaign are more than obvious. And it is for this reason that hate speeches by the “mastermind” of the 26/11 Mumbai attacks, Hafeez Sayeed walks free, case against him feebly put by the Pakistani government in its courts while earlier this month, Pakistani prosecutors charged the head of a pro-Taliban group and seven of his associates with treason, incitement to rebellion, terrorism, waging war, and conspiracy against the country.

The charges centre around a speech made by Maulana Mohammad aka Maulana Radio for his use of FM broadcasts to spread his message, on April 19. Maulana Mohammad, Pakistan government alleges told his followers in the town of Mingora that there “is no room for democracy in Islam” and demanded for Shariah law across the country.

Pakistan’s stern action against the Taliban-linked cleric stands in stark contrast to its refusal to prosecute Lashkar-e-Taiba chief Hafiz Mohammad Saeed, despite the fact that he has been near-same-vitriolic in recent years. Saeed’s speeches off and on have been hateful, anti-Islamic, anti-democracy, anti-India and have selectively targeted the Pakistan government. According to the Jamaat-ud-Dawa website Saeed was reported as asserting that “the real objectives for the establishment of Pakistan will be achieved when the original Islamic system, established in Mecca 1400 years ago, is implemented here.” His language closely mirrored the proclamations of Sufi Mohammad.

“We hate democracy,” the pro-Taliban cleric said in February 2009, soon after the Government of Pakistan signed a peace deal that imposed Shariah across north-west Pakistan. “We want the occupation of Islam in the entire world. Islam does not permit democracy or election.” Maulana Mohammad and two of his sons were arrested in Peshawar on July 25. He was earlier held in May, but quietly released.

But as a Pakistani expert writes, unlike Maulana Mohammad, much of Saeed’s invective was directed at India and Hindus. In a 1999 article, he said that “the Hindu is a mean enemy and the proper way to deal with him is the one adopted by our forefathers, who crushed them by force.” Later, in December 1999, Saeed told an interviewer that Kashmir was “only our base camp.” “The real war,” he asserted, “will be inside India. Very soon we will enter India via Doda and unfurl the Islamic flag on the Red Fort.”

On the eve of the Mumbai attacks, Sayeed told followers that the “only language India understands is that of force, and that is the language it must be talked to in.” Despite such pronouncements however, Sayeed remains the most pampered ultra of the Pakistani establishment. After booking him post-Mumbai attacks under the US-UK pressure, the man has been languishing under house arrest and has been lately given a long leash with the Pak government saying it has been given precious little evidence of his complicity in the Mumbai attacks!

So much for Pakistan’s sincerity in taking the terror menace head on! Is Dr Manmohan Singh listening? Post Sharm-el-Sheikh he better does!!!!!

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1 Stars
Vinit
Mangalore, India
Just recently a ranking official made an official statement during Sharm-al-Shaikh summit stating that Pakistan for our country there is no good or bad terrorist, a terrorist is a terrorist and deserves to be punished. When it comes to India the statement loses relevance. Suddently those operating for LeT, Jamaat-ud-Dawa and Jaish-e-Mohammad become freedom fighters while the the Talibani fighters who are anti-west remain terrorist. Slain Baitullah Mehsud the chief of Taliban in Pakistan was good Taliban till he decided to point gun at the latter. Only time will tell whether Manmohan Singh government has done any good in pushing ahead further talks with Pakistan especially in contrast with minimal progress so far made in punishing those responsible for 26/11.
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