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    You are at:Home»ISI may be hiding India’s Most Wanted fugitive militant

    ISI may be hiding India’s Most Wanted fugitive militant

    0
    By Sarah Akel on 19 June 2009 Uncategorized

    LAHORE: Denying that Maulana Masood Azhar, the founder of the
    pro-Kashmir jehadi group, Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM), has been arrested
    from the Sialkot city of Punjab, the Pakistani authorities have said
    his whereabouts are unknown and he might have fled to the
    trouble-ridden Waziristan region. But some intelligence officials
    believe that Masood Azhar, who had to be released by India following
    the hijacking of an Air India plane in 2000, could be living under the
    protection of the Inter-Services Intelligence in the garrison town of
    Rawalpindi which also houses the General Headquarters (GHQ) of the
    Pakistan Army and those of the ISI.

    Following the June 17 arrest of five JeM activists from Punjab’s
    Sialkot district, there were rumours that among them was Azhar, whom
    the Indian government wants extradited. But Pakistani intelligence
    sources say a consensus exists in the establishment that Masood Azhar
    should not be handed over to India under any circumstances. The
    sources said the official stance of the Pakistani government remains
    that Azhar had abandoned his Bahawalpur headquarters following the
    26/11 Mumbai terrorist attacks and is still at large. However, some
    intelligence sources did not rule out the possibility of the JeM
    chief’s moving to some ISI safe house in the garrison town of
    Rawalpindi, as had been the case with Maulana Fazlur Rehman Khalil,
    the ameer of the Harkatul Mujahideen, already renamed as Jamiatul
    Ansar,

    The sources pointed out that earlier this month, the Indian
    government’s efforts in the United Nations to place sanctions on
    Maulana Masood Azhar received a major setback, after London
    surprisingly joined hands with Beijing to block New Delhi’s request
    for proscribing the JeM chief under the United Nations’ Al-Qaeda and
    Taliban Sanctions resolution No 1267. The sources claimed that this
    would not have been possible had Britain and China not been persuaded
    by Pakistan government to do so. India had wanted Azhar to be included
    in the sanctions list just as the Jamaatul Daawa and its head Hafiz
    Mohammed Saeed along with other LeT operatives were proscribed after
    26/11.

    The Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM) or “the Army of the Prophet Mohammad,” is
    one of the deadliest militant groups operating from Pakistan and
    waging ‘jehad’ against the Indian security forces in Jammu & Kashmir.
    It was launched by Maulana Masood Azhar at the behest of the ISI in
    February 2000, shortly after he was released from an Indian jail, in
    exchange for hostages on board an Indian Airlines plane which was
    hijacked by five armed Kashmiri militants and taken to Kandahar in
    December 1999.

    While resuming his activities in Pakistan almost immediately after his
    release, Maulana Masood Azhar announced the formation of his own
    militant group, Jaish-e-Mohammad, with the prime objective of fighting
    out the Indian security forces in Kashmir. Masood Azhar was the
    ideologue of another militant group, the Harkatul Ansar, which was
    banned in 1997 by the US State Department, due to its alleged link
    with Osama bin Laden. Therefore, the Jaish is ideologically an
    extension of the Harkatul Ansar which rechristened itself as Harkatul
    Mujahideen in 1998, a year after being banned.

    In December 2008, almost a week after the 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks,
    the Pakistani authorities placed restrictions on the movement of
    Masood Azhar by confining him to his multi-storied concrete compound
    in the Model Town area of Bahawalpur. The action was taken in the wake
    of Indian government’s demand to hand over three persons to Delhi
    –Masood Azhar, Dawood Ibrahim and Tiger Memon. India had sought their
    extradition by citing a 1989 agreement signed by Director General of
    the Central Bureau of Investigation and Director General of the
    Federal Investigation Agency which binds both the agencies to
    collaborate with each other to trace out the most wanted terrorists
    and criminals and hand them over to their respective counterpart. The
    Indian demand said that Masood Azhar was wanted for his alleged
    involvement in the 2001 attacks on the Indian parliament.

    However, the Indian demand was followed by media reports that Masood
    Azhar has abandoned his Jaish headquarters in the Model Town area of
    Bahawalpur and temporarily shifted his base to the trouble-stricken
    South Waziristan region in the wake the mounting Indian pressure for
    his extradition. However, in the second week of April 2009, Masood
    Azhar was declared ‘officially’ missing from Pakistan.

    A 13 January 2009 new report in Daily Times quoted official sources in
    Islamabad as having said that the Jaish chief has abandoned his
    headquarters in Bahawalpur and was missing now. Pakistani Interior
    Minister Rehman Malik officially declared that Masood Azhar and Dawood
    Ibrahim were not in Pakistan adding that Islamabad would not provide
    protection and refuge to any criminal. However, Indian External
    Affairs Minister Paranab Mukherjee ridiculed Pakistan for denying the
    ‘obvious presence’ of the Jaish chief, saying: “India had several
    times got different information from Pakistan on Masood Azhar and it
    was not unusual to hear such denials from Pakistani officials”.

    amir.mir1969@gmail.com

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