International \ Opinion
Web | Aug 01, 2005
VIEW FROM LAHORE
New Commitments, New Betrayals
Although Musharraf insists publicly he is determined to end all forms of terrorism, there is hardly any evidence that his government has tried to dismantle the jehadi network on Pakistani soil.
AMIR MIR
That Pakistani President General Pervez Musharraf's repeated claims of having taken concrete measures to clip the wings of the jehadi groups and reform their religious seminaries across Pakistan were nothing more than rhetoric was proved recently when his own administration admitted that three out of the four London suicide bombers had been visiting madrassahs (seminaries) in the provincial capitals of Sindh and Punjab in November 2004, before returning to England in February 2005, only to carry out deadly bombings there.
Musharraf's much-proclaimed policy of 'enlightened moderation' has come under sharp criticism, both from within and outside Pakistan after the July 2005 terror attacks. For long, Pakistan has been the nerve-centre of the jehadi mafia, providing safe haven to the ideologues of terror, masterminds of spectacular and horrifying attacks, and innumerable and hapless foot soldiers - the cannon fodder of the jihad. Unsurprisingly, it is also here that most terror conspiracies are busted; and the London terror attacks might prove no different.
Available information suggests that having visited the Jamia Manzurul Islamia, an extremist Sunni madrassah situated in the Cantonment area of Lahore, the British suicide bombers proceeded to Faisalabad. There, they met Osama Nazir, the now detained chief of the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi's (LeJ) suicide cell, at a small religious school in the city - Jamia Fatahul Rahemia, being run by Qari Ahlullah Raheemi, an extremist cleric considered close to the outlawed Pakistani militant outfit, Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM, now renamed Khuddamul Islam) led by Maulana Masood Azhar. British-born Islamic militant Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh, now under sentence of death for the killing of American journalist Daniel Pearl in 2002, was also considered close to Azhar.
In his televised address to the nation on July 21, 2005, some hours after the failed London Bombings, Musharraf renewed his January 2002 commitment to root out the evils of extremism and terrorism from the country. There was nothing new in his speech. The administrative measures for combating terrorism and extremism that he announced were no different from his earlier assurances. Indeed, in his televised interaction with journalists on July 25, Musharraf declared that the present crackdown would not be like the last one, where people were picked up and held for 10-15 days and then released; an open admission that the earlier crackdowns he had ordered were just an eyewash. This raises a basic question - if previous declarations were not followed up with effective action, how will the regime do a better job this time around?
While addressing a Press Conference in Rawalpindi on July 29, meant exclusively for the foreign media, General Musharraf confronted such skepticism, conceding that he had not taken a firm action against the militants since 2002, because he did not have "a free hand" at that time as a result of an unstable economy, the confrontation with India over Kashmir and insufficient international support for his presidency. He claimed further that he was now in a much stronger position to campaign against religious militants. "I am in a totally different environment. Today, I am very strong. We need to act against the bigwigs of all the extremist organizations. We are not going as fast as I would like to go. Maybe the boat would have capsized if the government had pursued domestic militants more aggressively in 2002. We took action, but there were restraining factors", the General said.
In response to specific questions on the difference between the crackdown he had ordered in 2002 and now, Musharraf said the world and media should not judge the performance of his government 'through the eyes of the past'. Replying to a western journalist's query why he had not been serious in his earlier attempts to curb militancy, Musharraf retorted, "You have to be realistic and take cognizance of the ground situation. By taking stringent action against fundamentalists, I would have risked the prospect of a million Talibans on the streets of Pakistan."
To judge the General 'through the eyes of the present', it is useful to note that, as in the past, he has again directed the law enforcement agencies to deal with extremist organisations and the threat of terrorism with their full might. His first declaration was that none of the sectarian and militant groups banned on account of terrorism and extremism would be allowed to operate under any name and those poisoning the young minds would be arrested and tried under Anti-Terrorism Laws. In this, he was repeating his resolve for the third time since the 9/11 terror attacks; yet, the fact is, many of the banned jehadi and sectarian organisations have simply renamed themselves and are working freely under changed identities.
As far as his declaration to arrest those poisoning young minds is concerned, not a single key jehadi leader has been arrested during the so-called crackdown. This includes, among others, two who are wanted by Indian authorities for orchestrating major acts of terrorism in India: Hafiz Mohammad Saeed of the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT, now Jamaat ud Daawa), and Syed Salahuddin of the Hizbul Mujahideen (HM). Similarly, the US Federal Bureau of Investigation wants to interview another two jehadi leaders - the Harkatul Mujahideen (HuM, now Jamiatul Ansaar) leader Maulana Fazlur Rehman Khalil and the Jaish-e-Mohammad (now Khudamul Islam) chief Maulana Masood Azhar). As things stand, Hafiz Saeed, Masood Azhar, Fazlur Rehman Khalil and Syed Salahuddin are on the loose.
The huge extremist infrastructure that these leaders and their groups maintained before 9/11 to wage jehad in Afghanistan and Kashmir, remains intact. Two major militant groups - LeT and HM, both active in Jammu &Kashmir (J&K), have apparently been allowed to resume training activities at their camps in various parts of the country. Notwithstanding the fact that the peace process between India and Pakistan is on and many confidence building measures have been adopted by both countries to strengthen bilateral ties, militant circles confirm that their training camps were reactivated in April 2005 with the onset of summer and the melting of snow over the passes along the Line of Control (LoC).
As far as the arrests made during the ongoing crackdown against extremists are concerned, a majority are low-level workers of the banned groups who have been detained just to improve the tally. Most of them know full well that those rounded up in the previous crackdowns were released on the strength of simple affidavits saying they were not jehadis. There is, moreover, a huge discrepancy between official and non-official figures on the number of extremists arrested in the ongoing crackdown. The Pakistani media, quoting government sources, reports 3,000 arrests throughout the country till July 30. However, the Secretary of the Ministry of Interior has been quoted as saying that 540 people were arrested, out of whom 260 had already been released by July 30, while the rest had been booked under the Anti-Terrorism Act. Interior Minister Aftab Ahmad Khan Sherpao confirmed that 280 extremist militants had been booked all over the country.
Musharraf's second announcement said all religious schools will be registered by December 2005. The people of Pakistan have, again, heard this twice before - first time on January 5, 2002, and then on November 14, 2003. In fact, the traditional madrassah system continues to operate as the key breeding ground for the radical Islamist ideology and as the recruitment centre for terrorist networks. Musharraf's rhetoric on modernizing the religious school system has translated into little action, and his administration has failed to enforce the Madrassah Registration and Regulation Ordinance 2002, meant to reform religious schools. The new December 2005 deadline for the registration of all madrassahs will test and demonstrate the regime's resolve - or the lack of it - to tackle this issue.
As things stand, the registration of madrassahs by December 2005 seems to be a hard task to fulfill as the concerned authorities would have to register an average of 133 schools per day to ensure completion of the process in time. Of the estimated 40,000 religious seminaries operating in Pakistan, only about 10,000 are so far registered with the government while the remaining 30,000 are unregistered. Madrassahs are registered under two different Acts - The Societies Act 1925 and The Trust Act, 1982. However, not a single madrassah has been registered after Musharraf's July 21 speech because of inordinate delays in amending the out-dated Societies Act-1925.
As the Act is being revised by the government, the religious affairs ministry has barred the auqaf (charity) departments from registering any of the seminaries. At the same time, conflicting statements by Federal Education Minister Javed Ashraf Qazi and Federal Religious Affairs Minister Ejazul Haq regarding the number of the registered madrassahs are creating confusion. While Qazi says 3,000 religious seminaries have so far been registered with the government, Haq says the number of registered madrassahs is close to 10,000. In any event, some circles claim, the registration of madrassahs and their monitoring might impose some checks on their funding and links with jehadi outfits, but only a far greater commitment to a democratic polity would help isolate obscurantist institutions and individuals.
Musharraf's third declaration was that jehadi organisations will not be allowed to collect donations. The General has made this announcement at least six times since the 9/11 terror attacks. In reality, however, enforcement fizzles out after a brief drive, especially in cases where some of these groups use donations for social services and win adherents through humanitarian work rather than overt indoctrination. Each time this announcement was made in the past, the authorities removed donation boxes of jehadi organizations and their fundraising camps from public places. As soon as the dust settled, however, these boxes and campaigns would reappear.
Musharraf's fourth announcement was that the possession and display of arms would be strictly prohibited. Once again, it is general knowledge that successive 'de-weaponisation' campaigns in Pakistan have never been a success and the ban imposed on the issue of arms licenses had already been lifted in 2004. Illegal weapons are numerous and easily available across the country.
His fifth declaration was that strict action would be taken against those involved in the printing, publishing and distribution of hate literature. On the contrary, however, most of the major jehadi publications continue to be published from all the major cities of Pakistan and are being distributed without any check even after the ban. These publications are the most effective instruments to propagate jehad and the more prominent among these, Ghazwa, Majalla, Zarb-e-Taiba, Shamsheer, Zarb-e-Momin, which together boast a circulation of millions, are distributed free of cost. These publications feature jehadi ballads, interviews and profiles of young jehadis with big pictures, verses from the Holy Quran and letters from militants to inspire the readers and mobilize the youth. Though publishing inflammatory material and possessing unlicensed weapons are serious offences even under the ordinary laws of the land; the relevant provisions have never been enforced by the present government.
Analysts say the Pakistani militant groups and the clergy that run madrassahs in the country have survived so far primarily because of their ideological affinity with the military and their common belief in Pakistan's rightful claim over Jammu & Kashmir. The root cause of the problem seems to be the jehadi orientation of the Pakistani military leadership and its continued alliance with fundamentalists. Recall that Jehad fi Sabilillah (Jehad in the name of God) continues to be the motto of the Pakistan Army, making its officers and soldiers believe they are the custodians of militant Islam worldwide.
Amir Mir is Senior Pakistani journalist affiliated with Karachi-based Monthly, Newsline. Courtesy, the South Asia Intelligence Review of the South Asia Terrorism Portal.