Indian officials should respect Pakistan’s courts: Malik

The Pakistan government honours the Supreme Court’s decision upholding the release from house arrest of JuD chief Hafiz Saeed and Indian authorities should accord “similar respect to the verdicts of Pakistani courts,” Interior Minister Rehman Malik said today.

Malik made the remarks while talking to reporters a day after the apex court upheld the Lahore High Court’s decision to free Saeed from house arrest and dismissed appeals filed by the federal and Punjab governments challenging his release.

The Interior Minister said Indian authorities should show the same respect for verdicts of Pakistani courts as that shown by the Pakistan government.

“We had also honoured the Indian court’s decision against Ajmal Kasab,” Malik said, referring to the death sentence recently awarded by an Indian court to the Pakistani national for his role in the 2008 Mumbai attacks.

India yesterday expressed disappointment over Pakistan Supreme Court’s decision to uphold the release of Saeed, whom New Delhi has blamed for masterminding the Mumbai attacks.

Indian officials have said they have provided sufficient evidence against Saeed to Pakistani authorities.

Malik also called for a joint struggle against terrorism by Pakistan, India and Afghanistan.

He said Faisal Shahzad, the Pakistani-American arrested by the US for a botched car bomb attack in New York, had links in the restive South Waziristan tribal region.

An investigation into these links is underway though no one has so far been arrested, he said.

“Faisal Shahzad had links in South Waziristan and his accounts are the focus of our investigation,” Malik said.

Media reports, however, said Pakistani authorities had detained 11 suspects, including an army major, for alleged links with Shahzad.

Terror to be core issue of talks between India and Pakistan: Krishna

New Delhi, May 20 (ANI): External Affairs Minister S M Krishna has said that terror continues to be the core issue of talks between India and Pakistan, and it would be one of the most important issues that would be taken up between the two nations during his forthcoming visit to Pakistan beginning July 15.

“Terror will continue to be the core issue for us even when I go to Islamabad. I will be talking to Foreign Minister Qureshi on terror, on terror instrumentalities and how those terror instrumentalities are operating from the soil of Pakistan,” said Krishna.

“But at the same time, Pakistan also says they are afflicted by terror. The Taliban and other terrorist outfits are active even in Pakistan against the establishment. So, that has to be factored in while making an assessment of the impact of terror on India and Pakistan,” he added in an interview to Raj Chengappa, Editor-in-Chief, The Tribune.

On efforts by Pakistan to dismantle the terror apparatus and cut off link with it, Krishna said: “In the light of the terror attacks they have been experiencing in their own country, they are in a position to assess what terror is all about. Terrorists can strike any country, anywhere, and, they can do it at will.”

“That is what they have proved in Rawalpindi. That is what they have proved in Swat and various other areas. So, I am sure, Pakistan would be looking at terror perhaps in the same prism with which India views it in,” he added.

On the prosecution of Lashkar-e-Taiba chief Hafiz Saeed, the suspected mastermind of the 26/11 Mumbai terror attack, Krishna said India has the evidence and Pakistan should proceed against him.

“We have been telling them that we have given you enough evidence to prosecute Hafiz Sayeed, who is the mastermind behind the Mumbai attacks. We have the evidence and that evidence is provable in a court of law. So, I think, they should proceed against him.”

“But both the times it was the court of law which let him out of custody. But, we still insist that Hafiz Sayeed is the brain behind the Mumbai attacks and he has to be brought to justice,” he added.

Krishna said the main mission of his Pakistan visit would be to foster friendly relations between the two nations and eliminate the prevailing distrust.

“But our efforts will certainly be to eliminate the prevailing distrust. The central theme of my visit to Pakistan is to make an effort to eliminate the distrust among us. I think, if we succeed, something would have been achieved,” he added. (ANI)

Hafiz Saeed’s security beefed up following Pak Taliban threat

Lahore, May 19 (ANI): Pakistan’s Punjab province’ Home Department has directed concerned agencies to provide extra security cover to the banned Jamaat-ud-Daawa (JuD) chief Hafeez Muhammed Saeed, following intelligence reports that the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) is planning to target him.

According to a report of the Punjab Home Department, suspicious activities have been witnessed around Saeed’s residence.

Following the report the department has directed security agencies to beef up security of Saeed, the mastermind of the November 2008 Mumbai terror attacks, The News reports.

Pakistan, under intense international pressure, had arrested Saeed and put him under house arrest following the 26/11 attacks.

However, in October 2009, the Lahore High Court (LHC) quashed all terror charges against Saeed and set him free due to lack of evidence.

The LHC also notified that the JuD is not a banned organization and can work freely in Pakistan. (ANI)

Kasab’s conviction must not lead to complacency

New Delhi, May 6 (ANI): Mohammad Ajmal Amir Kasab, the lone Pakistani terrorist caught alive in the aftermath of the 26/11 terrorist attack at Mumbai has been found guilty of 80 out of 86 charges by the special court of Judge ML Tahilyani and has been sentenced to death.

The trial that was completed in a record 525 days has been hailed as a triumph for of the Indian judiciary since every possible opportunity of defence, including a lawyer, was provided to the accused whose complicity in the terror strike was well established at the very outset.

The fact the two alleged co-conspirators of Indian origin, Fahim Ansari and Sabauddin Ahmed, have been acquitted on grounds of lack of evidence adds to the stature of the honourable Court.

The euphoria being generated with respect to the judicial process and the high moral threshold attained by Indian democracy are justified.

However, this is an apt time to determine whether we are more secure and better prepared now than we were when the attack took place.

P Chidabaram, who took over as Home Minister after the debacle, has worked hard to revitalize the internal security apparatus of the country.

His effort deserves appreciation, but the attack on the German Bakery at Pune serves as a grim reminder of the fact that we are a long way from attaining foolproof security.

The pressure exerted on Pakistan in the aftermath of the attack had a salutary effect for some time.

The country put a top commander of LeT, Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, under arrest and some effort was made to contain the activities of terrorist groups targeting India. Unfortunately, subsequent events and action bear testimony that the efforts were temporary face-saving gimmicks.

Top leaders like Hafiz Saeed, Syed Salahuddin and Mohd Azgar are not only roaming free, but are also propagating anti-India sentiment with impunity.

On February 6, on the occasion of the so-called Kashmir Solidarity Day celebrated every year across Pakistan, the banned Jamat-ud-Dawa was allowed to hold public rallies in Lahore, Islamabad and Rawalpindi.

Banners in support of Jihad were openly hung along the Mall Road in Lahore and CD’s in favour of Jehad were freely distributed.

None other than Hafiz Saeed whose arrest has been repeatedly demanded by India addressed the participants. All this was happening just a few days after the proposal for foreign secretary level talks was mooted at the behest of none other than Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, this not an exception but a common place happening in Pakistan.

Many precious lives have been lost in the last few months due to aggressive bids by terror organizations operating, in concert with the Pakistan Army, to increase infiltration along the line of control in Jammu and Kashmir and to revitalize terror groups operating within the state.

Terror is terror, and while articulating its effect, no distinction can be made between Mumbai and Kashmir or any other part of the country.

Kasab got what he deserves, but the challenges that the country faces due to export of terrorism from Pakistan will not abate with his conviction.

In fact, we have to be prepared for a possible retaliation. Pakistan’s professed determination to stop the proliferation of terror from its soil is no more than lip service, and the situation in Jammu and Kashmir is testimony to this fact.

Under the circumstances there is no room for complacency while addressing internal security challenges. (ANI)

Kasab”s quantum of punishment to be decided on May 6

Mumbai, May 4 (ANI): A Mumbai Special Court on Tuesday fixed May 6 as the date to announce the quantum of punishment to Ajmal Amir Kasab, the lone surviving terrorist of the 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks.

Earlier, Mumbai Special Public Prosecutor Ujjwal Nikam formally demanded the death penalty for Kasab, who was found guilty of waging war against India.

Nikam said that Kasab wanted to inspire others to take part in fidayeen or suicide attacks.

He also called Kasab a killing machine manufactured in Pakistan.

The court-appointed defence lawyer for Kasab, K P Pawar, is now expected to seek leniency for his client.

On Monday, it pronounced a verdict in a courtroom at the Arthur Road Jail here. Judge M L Tahiliyani declared Kasab guilty of all 86 charges filed against him.

The charges against Kasab include waging war against India, murder, abetting to murder, attempt to murder, violation of the Arms Act, Explosives Act, the Unlawful Activity Prevention Act (UAPA) and others.

However, in an unexpected move, the court found two Indian co-accused– Faheem Ansari and Sabauddin Ahmed – not guilty and said they must be acquitted of all charges due to lack of evidence.

For the first time in Indian judicial history, it was established in a court of law that Pakistan was involved in an act of terrorism and of waging war against India.

Judge Tahiliyani said the way the ten terrorists countered the elite National Security Guards (NSG) clearly established that they were trained to fight a war.

Though no direct evidences were mentioned against Lashkar-e Taiba leader Hafiz Saeed and Zakir -ur -Rehman, the court found them guilty based on Kasab”s confessional statement.

The court also accepted Kasab”s confessional statement.

The court also said the DNA test conducted on the seven dead terrorists matched prints collected from the boat ”Kuber”.

It said the evidence proved that Additional Commissioner of Police Ashok Kamte had died of a bullet fired by terrorist Abu Ismail, while it was not established who killed Maharashtra ATS chief Hemant Karkare and encounter specialist Inspector Vijay Saluskar.

The trial, perhaps the fastest in a terror case in India, commenced on May 8, 2009.

Judge Tahaliyani recorded 3,192 pages of evidence after examining 658 witnesses on 271 working days. Thirty witnesses in the court identified Kasab as the man who had opened fire on them.

Nikam submitted 1,015 articles seized during investigations. He had also filed 1,691 documents to support the case.

He had also argued that Pakistan”s security apparatus was used by the terrorist outfit Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) in the 26/11 Mumbai attacks.

The prosecution also tabled CCTV footage of the terrorists moving about with guns and firing at people.

The images were captured on CCTV cameras fitted at CST Railway Station, the Times of India building, and the Taj Mahal and Oberoi Hotels.

Photographs of Kasab shot by photojournalists Sebastian D”souza and Sriram Vernekar were also placed before the court.

Kasab is a native of Faridkot, in Pakistan”s Punjab Province.

He along with nine other terrorists, who were killed during the gun battle with security forces in Mumbai have been charged with killing 166 people, including 25 foreigners. (ANI)

Mumbai prosecutor Nikam demands death sentence for Kasab

New Delhi, May 4 (ANI): Mumbai Special Public Prosecutor Ujjwal Nikam on Tuesday formally demanded the death penalty for the lone surviving terrorist of the 26/11 attacks, Ajmal Amir Kasab, who was found guilty of waging war against India.

Nikam said that Kasab wanted to inspire others to take part in fidayeen or suicide attacks.

He also called Kasab a killing machine manufactured in Pakistan.

The court-appointed defence lawyer for Kasab, K P Pawar, is now expected to seek leniency for his client.

On Monday, it pronounced a verdict in a courtroom at the Arthur Road Jail here. Judge M L Tahiliyani declared Kasab guilty of all 86 charges filed against him.

The charges against Kasab include waging war against India, murder, abetting to murder, attempt to murder, violation of the Arms Act, Explosives Act, the Unlawful Activity Prevention Act (UAPA) and others.

However, in an unexpected move, the court found two Indian co-accused– Faheem Ansari and Sabauddin Ahmed – not guilty and said they must be acquitted of all charges due to lack of evidence.

For the first time in Indian judicial history, it was established in a court of law that Pakistan was involved in an act of terrorism and of waging war against India.

Judge Tahiliyani said the way the ten terrorists countered the elite National Security Guards (NSG) clearly established that they were trained to fight a war.

Though no direct evidences were mentioned against Lashkar-e Taiba leader Hafiz Saeed and Zakir -ur -Rehman, the court found them guilty based on Kasab”s confessional statement.

The court also accepted Kasab”s confessional statement.

The court also said the DNA test conducted on the seven dead terrorists matched prints collected from the boat ”Kuber”.

It said the evidence proved that Additional Commissioner of Police Ashok Kamte had died of a bullet fired by terrorist Abu Ismail, while it was not established who killed Maharashtra ATS chief Hemant Karkare and encounter specialist Inspector Vijay Saluskar.

The trial, perhaps the fastest in a terror case in India, commenced on May 8, 2009.

Judge Tahaliyani recorded 3,192 pages of evidence after examining 658 witnesses on 271 working days. Thirty witnesses in the court identified Kasab as the man who had opened fire on them.

Nikam submitted 1,015 articles seized during investigations. He had also filed 1,691 documents to support the case.

He had also argued that Pakistan”s security apparatus was used by the terrorist outfit Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) in the 26/11 Mumbai attacks.

The prosecution also tabled CCTV footage of the terrorists moving about with guns and firing at people.

The images were captured on CCTV cameras fitted at CST Railway Station, the Times of India building, and the Taj Mahal and Oberoi Hotels.

Photographs of Kasab shot by photojournalists Sebastian D”souza and Sriram Vernekar were also placed before the court.

Kasab is a native of Faridkot, in Pakistan”s Punjab Province.

He along with nine other terrorists, who were killed during the gun battle with security forces in Mumbai have been charged with killing 166 people, including 25 foreigners. (ANI)

Mumbai court to hear arguments, may sentence Kasab today

New Delhi, May 4 (ANI): A special trial court in Mumbai will hear arguments today from the prosecution and the defence on the lone surviving terrorist of the 26/11 attacks, Ajmal Amir Kasab, who found guilty of waging war against India.

On Monday, it pronounced the verdict in a courtroom at the Arthur Road Jail here. Judge M L Tahiliyani declared Kasab guilty of all 86 charges filed against him.

The charges against Kasab include waging war against India, murder, abetting to murder, attempt to murder, violation of the Arms Act, Explosives Act, the Unlawful Activity Prevention Act (UAPA) and others.

However, in an unexpected move, the court found two Indian co-accused– Faheem Ansari and Sabauddin Ahmed – not guilty and said they must be acquitted of all charges due to lack of evidence.

For the first time in Indian judicial history, it was established in a court of law that Pakistan was involved in an act of terrorism and of waging war against India.

Judge Tahiliyani said the way the ten terrorists countered the elite National Security Guards (NSG) clearly established that they were trained to fight a war.

Though no direct evidences were mentioned against Lashkar-e Taiba leader Hafiz Saeed and Zakir -ur -Rehman, the court found them guilty based on Kasab”s confessional statement.

The court also accepted Kasab”s confessional statement.

The court also said the DNA test conducted on the seven dead terrorists matched prints collected from the boat ”Kuber”.

The court added that the photographs taken were genuine and the witnesses credible, as they had no other intention than to catch a person.

It said the evidence proved that Additional Commissioner of Police Ashok Kamte had died of a bullet fired by terrorist Abu Ismail, while it was not established who killed Maharashtra ATS chief Hemant Karkare and encounter specialist Inspector Vijay Saluskar.

The trial, perhaps the fastest in a terror case in India, commenced on May 8, 2009.

Judge Tahaliyani recorded 3,192 pages of evidence after examining 658 witnesses on 271 working days.

Thirty witnesses in the court identified Kasab as the man who had opened fire on them.

The prosecution led by Special Public Prosecutor Ujjwal Nikam, submitted 1,015 articles seized during investigations.

Nikam had also filed 1,691 documents to support the case.

He had also argued that Pakistan”s security apparatus was used by the terrorist outfit Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) in the 26/11 Mumbai attacks.

The prosecution also tabled CCTV footage of the terrorists moving about with guns and firing at people.

The images were captured on CCTV cameras fitted at CST Railway Station, the Times of India building, and the Taj Mahal and Oberoi Hotels.

Photographs of Kasab shot by photojournalists Sebastian D”souza and Sriram Vernekar were also placed before the court.

Kasab is a native of Faridkot, in Pakistan”s Punjab Province.

He along with nine other terrorists, who were killed during the gun battle with security forces in Mumbai have been charged with killing 166 people, including 25 foreigners. (ANI)

26/11 trial verdict is a message to Pakistan: Chidambaram

New Delhi, May 3 (ANI): Union Home Minister P Chidambaram on Monday said the 26/11 Mumbai terror case judgement should seen as a clear message to Pakistan.

Interacting with media here after a Mumbai Special Court had convicted lone surviving Pakistani terrorist of 26/11 attack Ajmal Amir Kasab of all 86 charges, including waging war against India, Chidambaram said that at least now, Pakistan should stop exporting terror to India.

“If they do(exporting terrorism) and we apprehend terrorists, then we will bring them to justice,” Chidambaram said.

For the first time in Indian judicial history, it was established in a court of law that Pakistan was involved in an act of terrorism and of waging war against India.

Judge M L Tahiliyani said the way the ten terrorists countered the elite National Security Guards (NSG) had clearly established that they were trained to fight a war.

Though no direct evidences were mentioned against Lashkar-e Taiba leader Hafiz Saeed and Zakir –ur –Rehman, the court found them guilty based on Kasab’s confessional statement.

Chidambaram expressed satisfaction over the outcome of the trial and complimented the concerned agencies for “marshalling evidence and proving guilt beyond doubt”.

He added that Kasab was given all rights of an open trial and the case had ended in a conviction.

“Kasab’s trial reiterated that India is governed by a Rule of Law, “ he said.

Pronouncing the verdict in a courtroom at the Arthur Road Jail here, Judge M L Tahiliyani described the 26/11 attacks as clear act of war against India. (ANI)

Mumbai court charges Kasab with waging war against India

Mumbai, May 3 (ANI): A Mumbai Special Court on Monday found the lone surviving terrorist of the 26/11 attacks, Ajaml Amir Kasab, guilty of waging war against India, but acquitted the two other Indian co-accused.

Pronouncing the verdict in a courtroom at the Arthur Road Jail here, Judge M L Tahiliyani described the 26/11 attacks as clear act of war.

He declared Kasab guilty of all 86 charges filed against him.

The charges against Kasab include waging war against India, murder, abetting to murder, attempt to murder, violation of the Arms Act, Explosives Act, the Unlawful Activity Prevention Act (UAPA) and others.

However, in an unexpected move, the court found two Indian co-accused– Faheem Ansari and Sabauddin Ahmed – not guilty and said they must be acquitted of all charges due to lack of evidence.

The court said the evidence against the two was weak both in “quality as well as quantity.”

For the first time in Indian judicial history, it was established in a court of law that Pakistan was involved in an act of terrorism and of waging war against India.

Judge Tahiliyani said the way the ten terrorists countered the elite National Security Guards (NSG) clearly established that they were trained to fight a war.

Though no direct evidences were mentioned against Lashkar-e Taiba leader Hafiz Saeed and Zakir –ur –Rehman, the court found them guilty based on Kasab’s confessional statement.

The court also accepted Kasab’s confessional statement.

When the judge was framing him with charges, there was no reaction on Kasab’s face.

Kasab was dressed in a white Kurta-Pyjama.

The court also said the DNA test conducted on the seven dead terrorists matched prints collected from the boat ‘Kuber’.

The court added that the photographs taken were genuine and the witnesses credible, as they had no other intention than to catch a person.

It said the evidence proved that Additional Commissioner of Police Ashok Kamte had died of a bullet fired by terrorist Abu Ismail, while it was not established who killed Maharashtra ATS chief Hemant Karkare and encounter specialist Inspector Vijay Saluskar.

The court did not mention the quantum of punishment, but said the argument and counter argument in that matter would continue on Tuesday. The quantum of punishment is expected to be announced on Wednesday.

Monday’s judgment comes seventeen months after the incident.

The trial, perhaps the fastest in a terror case in India, commenced on May 8, 2009.

Judge Tahaliyani recorded 3,192 pages of evidence after examining 658 witnesses on 271 working days.

Thirty witnesses in the court identified Kasab as the man who had opened fire on them.

The prosecution led by Special Public Prosecutor Ujjwal Nikam, submitted 1,015 articles seized during investigations.

Nikam had also filed 1,691 documents to support the case.

He had also argued that Pakistan”s security apparatus was used by the terrorist outfit Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) in the 26/11 Mumbai attacks.

For the first time in the Indian history, the US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) officials deposed before the court and gave technical evidence.

The FBI informed the court about the technical data it gathered –that how Kasab and others came from Pakistan using Global Positioning System (GPS) and that they made calls from their mobile phones through Voice Over Internet Protocol (VOIP) to stay in touch with their handlers across the border.

The prosecution also tabled CCTV footage of the terrorists moving about with guns and firing at people.

The images were captured on CCTV cameras fitted at CST Railway Station, the Times of India building, and the Taj Mahal and Oberoi Hotels.

Photographs of Kasab shot by photojournalists Sebastian D”souza and Sriram Vernekar were also placed before the court.

Kasab is a native of Faridkot, in Pakistan’s Punjab Province.

He along with nine other terrorists, who were killed during the gun battle with security forces in Mumbai have been charged with killing 166 people, including 25 foreigners. (ANI)

India tells Pak that terrorism holding back talks progress

Thimphu, Apr 29 (ANI): India told Pakistan on Thursday that terrorism is stalling progress of the bilateral talks process, and added that there is a need for both countries to pay attention to reducing the existing trust deficit.

During a significant 50-minute meeting held at Bhutan House here on the sidelines of the XVIth SAARC Summit, Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh told his Pakistani counterpart Yusuf Raza Gilani that terrorism is holding back progress in Indo-Pak ties.

Briefing the media after the meeting, Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao said Prime Minister Singh particularly mentioned India’s concerns over Pakistan’s tardy progress in bringing the perpetrators of the Mumbai terror attacks to justice.

She said India laid stress on the fact that there has been an increase in cross-border terror, and added that Prime Minister Singh had expressed his deep concern over the activities and free movement of Jamaat-ud-Dawa chief Hafiz Saeed.

Rao said that Prime Minister Gilani responded by saying that Pakistan is serious about tackling terror and is taking all steps under the laws of the land to bring to book the perpetrators of 26/11.

Saeed is wanted by India as the prime suspect for the 26/11 attacks.

Rao said that while no joint statement was issued after the talks, both sides would meet as soon as possible at the Foreign Ministers and Secretaries level.

She also said that both Dr. Singh and Mr. Gilani had decided that channels of dialogue should be kept open to restore “trust and confidence” in the bilateral relationship.

“The Prime Ministers held very good talks in a free and frank manner. They agreed that cooperation between the two countries is vital for the people of South Asia to realize their destiny,” Rao told reporters.

“Prime Minister expressed India’s concern over the slow progress of Mumbai trial in Pakistan to Prime Minister Gilani,” Ms. Rao said.

This was their first meeting after their dialogue in Sharm-el-Sheikh in Egypt on July 16, 2009.

Rao said both leaders first met accompanied by their respective delegations. This was followed by a one-on-one meeting and then again by another meeting with the respective delegations present.

Rao said that Dr. Singh had told Mr. Gilani that India is willing to discuss all issues of mutual concern through dialogue.

At a separate interaction with the media, Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi said the meeting between the two leaders ended on a positive note and he would be meeting his Indian counterpart S. M. Krishna soon.

He also welcomed Home Minister P. Chidambaram to Islamabad on June 26 for the SAARC Home Minister’s conference.

Qureshi claimed that the meeting has “changed the climate” between the two countries.

Asked whether Foreign Ministers-level talks amounted to a resumption of the suspended Composite Dialogue process between both nations, Rao said: “I do not want to get into details about the nomenclature of the talks.”

She also declined to go into the details of the issues that would figure in the talks, saying “all concerns” would be discussed.

No request yet from India for a meeting with PM Gilani: Pak spokesman

Thimphu (Bhutan), Apr.28 (ANI): India is yet to make a formal request for a meeting between Prime Ministers Manmohan Singh and Yousuf Raza Gilani, the spokesman of the Pakistan Foreign Office, Abdul Basit, said on Wednesday.

Interacting with media here on the sidelines of the XVIth SAARC Summit, Basit said: “Both countries have realized that there has to be a meaningful and constructive dialogue. If they meet, our Prime Minister’s efforts will be to start such an engagement, so that all issues of terrorism and others are solved.”

“There has been no request for a meeting from the Indian side, but yes, this meeting was part of our roadmap which was given to India in New York by our Foreign Minister (Shah Mehmood Qureshi) to Indian External Affairs Minister (S.M. Krishna), and then again, by our Foreign Secretary (Salman Bashir) to Indian Foreign Secretary (Nirupama Rao) on February 25 in New Delhi. So yes, this meeting in Bhutan was part of our roadmap, but unfortunately India did not respond to that roadmap,” Basit added.

Commenting on India’s repeated demand that Pakistan take action against 26/11 prime accused and Jamaat-ud-Dawa chief Hafiz Saeed, Basit said: “They (India) know that we have done enough. He (Saeed) was detained twice, but we have an independent and fair judiciary, as is the case in India. How can you arrest someone on hearsay? As far as Pakistan”s position is concerned, it is resolved to fight militancy, resolved to fight terrorism to the hilt. The entire world recognizes that. It is unfortunate that India does not see the ground reality and how Pakistan is coping up with the entire situation.”

When further asked whether the legal evidence provided so far by New Delhi not enough to prosecute Saeed, Basit said “That can be implied.”

He also said that Pakistan is sparing no effort in collecting more evidence with regard to the case, and added that he hoped India would respond positively to Islamabad’s request for the handing over of lone surviving terrorist Ajmal Kasab for questioning and corroboration of evidence.

“I hope, India is currently examining our request and we hope that they will get back with a positive response,” he said.

On the issue of the Indian diplomat’s arrest for allegedly passing on secrets to Pakistani intelligence agencies, Basit said that it was an internal matter of the Indian Government, and added that he did not think it would have any bearing on SAARC activities. (ANI)

Four policemen killed, six injured in suicide attack on check post in NWFP

Peshawar, Apr.28 (ANI): The Taliban continues to target security forces in the restive tribal areas of Pakistan, as four policemen were killed and six wounded in a suicide attack near the Pir Bala police checkpost in the North West Frontier Province’s (NWFP) Bannu District on Wednesday.

The attackers rammed their explosive laden vehicle into the police checkpost resulting in the death of four security officials, a senior police official in Peshawar, Liaquat Ali, said.

The injured policemen have been admitted to a local hospital. The death toll may rise as the condition of some of those injured is stated to be critical, hospital sources said.

The explosion was so powerful that is destroyed the check post completely. Several nearby buildings were also damaged in the blast, The News reports.

Last week, militants targeted an Army convoy in Dattakhel area of North Waziristan killing seven soldiers and injuring 25 others.

Six vehicles were destroyed in the attack, which was said to have been carried out by supporters of a powerful Taliban commander Maulvi Saddiq Noor.

Noor belongs to the Hafiz Gul Bahadur group, which had attacked a military convoy in Wecha Bibi area last year and killed 23 soldiers. (ANI)

Talks with Pakistan are not ruled out: Krishna

Onboard special aircraft: External Affairs Minister S M Krishna on Monday said a bilateral meeting between India and Pakistan cannot be ruled out during the XVIth SAARC Summit to be held in Thimphu, Bhutan.

“I am not ruling it out,” Krishna said when asked if the Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh, would meet with his Pakistan counterpart Yousuf Raza Gilani.

Krishna also said that Islamabad’s request for handing over 26/11 gunman Ajmal Kasab could not be entertained till the trial is completed.

The verdict against Kasab by a special court in Mumbai is expected on May 3.

Pointing out that Kasab’s trial was at an advanced stage in India, Krishna said it was going on in full steam.

“We have to complete our legal formalities first and then we can examine Pakistan’s request for the same,” he said, adding,”the matter will be examined in consultation with other ministries and departments.”

Pakistan has asked that three Indian officials, including two magistrates and an investigator, to be allowed to travel to Pakistan to testify that they had recorded Kasab’s statement so that authorities could proceed further and make the case stronger.

on Sunday, Pakistan handed over six dossiers to India regarding developments made in the November 2008 Mumbai terror attacks probe and sought the extradition of Ajmal Amir Kasab, the lone surviving gunman, and Fahim Ansari, an Indian accused of conducting recce of places targeted by terrorists.

The dossiers were handed over to India’s Deputy Indian High Commissioner, Rahul Kulshreshth, by the Foreign Office (FO) officials here.

The dossiers comprise answers to questions raised by New Delhi in connection with the ghastly attacks. Pakistan has also sought more information regarding the incident from India through the dossiers, The News reports

While India has been pressing Pakistan to prosecute the Lashkar-e-Taiba’s (LeT) founder leader Hafiz Mohammad Saeed, who is considered as the mastermind of the 26/11 carnage, Islamabad says New Delhi has not provided enough evidence against the Jamaat-ud-Daawa (JuD) chief.

Earlier, while talking to media persons following his meeting with Indian High Commissioner Sharat Sabharwal, Interior Minister Rehman Malik said: “India has only provided leads against him (Saeed) and not sufficient evidences.”

He said Pakistan has taken stern action against Saeed and his organisation, the JuD, and sealed its offices and bank accounts.

JuD’s website and various publications have also been banned, he added.

Malik said authorities are keeping a close vigil on the JuD, the front face of the banned terror outfit the LeT, but added that action can not be taken unless there is evidence about its involvement in questionable activities.

He also said that India should to give Pakistan access to Kasab to facilitate the trial of seven terrorists arrested in the country in connection with the Mumbai attacks.

” Kasab’s statement is of paramount importance in the Mumbai attack case… it is an important document for the court and we need it,” Malik said.

According to sources privy to the meeting between Malik and Sabharwal, the Interior Minister stressed that Kasab should be extradited to Pakistan after his trial in India is over, as his statement would prove to be of great importance in the prosecution of the seven suspects, including Lashkar-e-Taiba’s (LeT) operations commander Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi. By Ravi Shankar (ANI)

Talks with Pakistan are not ruled out: Krishna

Onboard special aircraft: External Affairs Minister S M Krishna on Monday said a bilateral meeting between India and Pakistan cannot be ruled out during the XVIth SAARC Summit to be held in Thimphu, Bhutan.

“I am not ruling it out,” Krishna said when asked if the Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh, would meet with his Pakistan counterpart Yousuf Raza Gilani.

Krishna also said that Islamabad’s request for handing over 26/11 gunman Ajmal Kasab could not be entertained till the trial is completed.

The verdict against Kasab by a special court in Mumbai is expected on May 3.

Pointing out that Kasab”s trial was at an advanced stage in India, Krishna said it was going on in full steam.

“We have to complete our legal formalities first and then we can examine Pakistan”s request for the same,” he said, adding,”the matter will be examined in consultation with other ministries and departments.”

Pakistan has asked that three Indian officials, including two magistrates and an investigator, to be allowed to travel to Pakistan to testify that they had recorded Kasab”s statement so that authorities could proceed further and make the case stronger.

on Sunday, Pakistan handed over six dossiers to India regarding developments made in the November 2008 Mumbai terror attacks probe and sought the extradition of Ajmal Amir Kasab, the lone surviving gunman, and Fahim Ansari, an Indian accused of conducting recce of places targeted by terrorists.

The dossiers were handed over to India”s Deputy Indian High Commissioner, Rahul Kulshreshth, by the Foreign Office (FO) officials here.

The dossiers comprise answers to questions raised by New Delhi in connection with the ghastly attacks. Pakistan has also sought more information regarding the incident from India through the dossiers, The News reports

While India has been pressing Pakistan to prosecute the Lashkar-e-Taiba’s (LeT) founder leader Hafiz Mohammad Saeed, who is considered as the mastermind of the 26/11 carnage, Islamabad says New Delhi has not provided enough evidence against the Jamaat-ud-Daawa (JuD) chief.

Earlier, while talking to media persons following his meeting with Indian High Commissioner Sharat Sabharwal, Interior Minister Rehman Malik said: “India has only provided leads against him (Saeed) and not sufficient evidences.”

He said Pakistan has taken stern action against Saeed and his organisation, the JuD, and sealed its offices and bank accounts.

JuD’s website and various publications have also been banned, he added.

Malik said authorities are keeping a close vigil on the JuD, the front face of the banned terror outfit the LeT, but added that action can not be taken unless there is evidence about its involvement in questionable activities.

He also said that India should to give Pakistan access to Kasab to facilitate the trial of seven terrorists arrested in the country in connection with the Mumbai attacks.

“ Kasab’s statement is of paramount importance in the Mumbai attack case… it is an important document for the court and we need it,” Malik said.

According to sources privy to the meeting between Malik and Sabharwal, the Interior Minister stressed that Kasab should be extradited to Pakistan after his trial in India is over, as his statement would prove to be of great importance in the prosecution of the seven suspects, including Lashkar-e-Taiba’s (LeT) operations commander Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi. (ANI)

Pak Taliban issues ‘last warning’ to media against showing it in bad light

Peshawar, Apr.24 (ANI): The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) has warned newspapers and television channels for the ‘last time’ for presenting only one side of the story of their struggle and supporting the armed forces.

An e-mail sent by a self-proclaimed spokesperson of the ‘Taliban Media Centre’ in North Waziristan, Muhammad Umar, blamed the media for working as an ally of the government, and said it is hiding the truth.

“Why is the media only conveying the army’s point of view? Is this proof that the media is also working as an ally for the government and the army? Or they are being forced to hide the truth?” The Daily Times quoted the e-mail, as saying.

“This email should be considered a last warning for the media of Pakistan. If the media doesn’t stop working as an ally of the government and the army, the Taliban would have to treat the media as they want to be treated,” it warned.

The e-mail was sent just hours after militants targeted an Army convoy in Dattakhel area of North Waziristan killing seven soldiers and injuring 25 others.

Six vehicles were destroyed in the attack in was said to have been carried out by supporters of a powerful Taliban commander Maulvi Saddiq Noor.

Noor belongs to the Hafiz Gul Bahadur group which had attacked a military convoy in Wecha Bibi area last year and killed 23 soldiers.

Confirming the ambush, the Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR) said the convoy was going from Miramshah to Datakhel when it came under attack near Boya area of the restive region. (ANI)

‘India should arrest Thackeray for ‘hate speeches’ as we did Saeed’

Comparing Shiv Sena chief Bal Thackeray with wanted Jamaat-ud-Daawa (JuD) chief Hafeez Muhammad Saeed, the mastermind of the November 2008 Mumbai terror attacks, Pakistan wants New Delhi to take action against the political leader for inciting ill-feelings against it.

During an interaction with a visiting India media delegation here, Foreign Office spokesperson Abdul Basit was asked as to why Islamabad was dragging its feet on taking action against Saeed despite India providing numerous dossiers, which nails his direct involvement in the Mumbai carnage.

“I don’t hold brief for Hafiz Saeed. We arrested him. Have you arrested Bal Thackeray for making hate speeches against Pakistan,” Basit replied.

Commenting on India’s consistent claims that the groups like the banned Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) were still running terror training camps inside Pakistan’s boundary, he said Islamabad is ready to take on those camps if exact information is shared with it.

Basit reiterated Islamabad’s demand for re-starting the stalled composite dialogue with India, saying such talks had proved to be of great help in building confidence between the two neighbouring countries.

“It helped us sign prior notification of missile trials, it helped us in ceasefire and to agree on confidence building measures on Kashmir. It created a congenial atmosphere as well,” the spokesperson said.

Basit also pointed out that disputes like Siachen could not be settled unilaterally.

“We had made enormous progress on Siachen and Sir Creek. These issues can be handled quickly if the dialogue is resumed,” he said.

He also objected to India’s hardened stance on the resumption of the composite dialogue, saying its better not to engage in any form of deliberation than to add ‘pre-conditions’ to composite talks.

Basit also condemned India for labelling happenings in Kashmir as a ‘terrorist struggle’, and said Pakistan would never accept those claims.

India should arrest Thackeray for ‘hate speeches’ as we did Saeed: Pak FO

Islamabad, Apr.23 (ANI): Comparing Shiv Sena chief Bal Thackeray with wanted Jamaat-ud-Daawa (JuD) chief Hafeez Muhammad Saeed, the mastermind of the November 2008 Mumbai terror attacks, Pakistan wants New Delhi to take action against the political leader for inciting ill-feelings against it.

During an interaction with a visiting India media delegation here, Foreign Office spokesperson Abdul Basit was asked as to why Islamabad was dragging its feet on taking action against Saeed despite India providing numerous dossiers, which nails his direct involvement in the Mumbai carnage.

“I don’t hold brief for Hafiz Saeed. We arrested him. Have you arrested Bal Thackeray for making hate speeches against Pakistan,” Basit replied.

Commenting on India’s consistent claims that the groups like the banned Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) were still running terror training camps inside Pakistan’s boundary, he said Islamabad is ready to take on those camps if exact information is shared with it.

Basit reiterated Islamabad’s demand for re-starting the stalled composite dialogue with India, saying such talks had proved to be of great help in building confidence between the two neighbouring countries.

“It helped us sign prior notification of missile trials, it helped us in ceasefire and to agree on confidence building measures on Kashmir. It created a congenial atmosphere as well,” the spokesperson said.

Basit also pointed out that disputes like Siachen could not be settled unilaterally.

“We had made enormous progress on Siachen and Sir Creek. These issues can be handled quickly if the dialogue is resumed,” he said.

He also objected to India’s hardened stance on the resumption of the composite dialogue, saying its better not to engage in any form of deliberation than to add ‘pre-conditions’ to composite talks.

Basit also condemned India for labelling happenings in Kashmir as a ‘terrorist struggle’, and said Pakistan would never accept those claims. (ANI)

JuD chief Saeed says “Do I look like a terrorist?” while denying hand in Mumbai attacks

Washington, Mar.26 (ANI): The Jamaat-ud-Daawa (JuD) chief Hafiz Muhammed Saeed, who is believed to have masterminded the brazen terror attacks on Mumbai in November 2008, has denied his role in the bloodbath.

Saeed, whose name is on top of the US, UN and European Union’s (EU) most wanted list in Pakistan, also denied his links with the banned terror outfit Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and stressed that even the agencies could not table any evidence regarding his involvement in the Mumbai massacre in which 166 people including some foreigners were killed.

“Do I look like a terrorist?” a bearded Saeed told The Independent newspaper.

Saeed’s comments almost coincided with the strategic dialogue between Pakistan and the United States in Washington.

Saeed, who moves freely in Lahore guarded by two Pakistani policemen, said he has won court battles to remain free and described charges against him of having links with the LeT as “Indian propaganda”.

Saeed said he too had condemned the ghastly Mumbai terror attacks, but added that he supports the LeT’s struggle for “freedom” in Kashmir.

He insisted that neither he nor the JuD has any terror links, rather it is a charity which has hundreds of offices across Pakistan working for the needy ones.

“They make me out to be the biggest and most evil terrorist. Do I look like one to you?,” Saeed said laughing.

When asked that whether he had met Al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden, Saeed’s response was positive but he was quick to add that he has met Laden only once that too on a Haj pilgrimage to Mecca in the 1980s.

Saeed said he prayed near Laden and talked to him “but only briefly.”

Saeed’s statements are likely to widen the ‘trust deficit’ in Washington where US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton hailed the dawn of ‘a new day’ after ‘years of misunderstandings’ in the relationship between the US and Pakistan. (ANI)

Six militants killed in latest US drone strike in North Waziristan

Islamabad, Mar.24 (ANI): At least six suspected militants were killed in a US drone strike in restive North Waziristan’s Miramshah region, security officials said.

According to reports, unmanned Predator drones fired two missiles at a vehicle parked outside a compound, which was believed to be a terrorist hideout.

Six people were killed and three others were injured in the missile hit, a senior security official told a foreign news agency.

Officials, however, did not mention whether any “high value target” was present at the time of attack in the ungoverned tribal region.

Local residents said militants cordoned off the area immediately after the attack and were seen removing the debris, The Dawn reports.

The latest attack comes just days after nine extremists were killed in a similar missile hit about 25 miles west of Miramshah, the main town in North Waziristan.

Earlier this month, 14 suspected Taliban extremists, including top militant commander, Hafiz Gul Bahadur, were killed in a couple of missile hits in the region.

US drone attacks routinely target Taliban and Al Qaeda commanders in Pakistan’s lawless tribal regions along the Afghanistan border.

A US drone strike in Miranshah in February killed Muhammad Haqqani, a brother of al Qaeda-linked warlord Sirajuddin Haqqani, whose network is fighting against US and local forces in Afghanistan.

The frequency of missile hits has increased considerably in North Waziristan following a bomb attack on a CIA camp in Afghanistan in December last year, which killed seven top US intelligence officials.

Although Pakistan publicly opposes the attacks, saying they violate its sovereignty and fuel anti-Americanism among the population, it is believed that it was sharing intelligence with the US about the insurgents and their hide-outs. (ANI)

Centre hints at sending a team to question Headley

New Delhi, Mar 22 (ANI): Centre on Monday indicated that the team of officers to question Lashkar operative David Headley a.k.a Daood Gilani would be prepared in a couple of days.

According to the Union Home Ministry sources, the team of officers comprising all concerned agencies with the case would travel to the United States as soon as the US Government gives permission.

On Thursday, Headley, pleaded guilty of helping the Lashkar-e-Toiba plot and in execution of 26/11 terror strike in Mumbai.

Meanwhile, the US Department of Justice has asked India to be ready to send over a team that will have access to Headley.

The Union Government is likely to use Headley”s testimony to prove the involvement of Pakistani militants like Hafiz Saeed and others.

India has provided Pakistan with dossiers on Saeed and other Pakistani Jihadis, but Pakistan has so far maintained that there”s no evidence to prove Saeed was involved in the attacks on Mumbai. (ANI)