Author: Allabaksh
Publication: Asian Tribune
Date: September 24, 2006
URL: http://www.asiantribune.com/index.php?q=node/2125
Hafeez Mohammed Saeed, the founder of Lashkar-e-Taiba,
has been arrested, released, re-arrested and will undoubtedly be released
again. This is not the first time that Pakistan has played out this farcical
cycle in order to balance the pulls of two diametrically opposite forces.
To Gen Musharraf, men like Hafeez Saeed are 'life-line'; they cannot be put
behind bars for long.
LeT in whatever name it assumes at a given
moment is important for Pakistan's 'low intensity' war in the Kashmir valley
and elsewhere in India. Lately there is an additional reason to be benevolent
towards Hafeez Saeed. Like all other 'banned' groups, LeT had deputed one
of its franchises to operate in the quake hit Pakistan-occupied Kashmir which
was swarmed by foreign relief and charity organisations too. One of the British
agencies thus transported to PoK was a Sikh organisation with which the LeT
(or whatever it was called at that moment) worked closely. The purpose must
have been to gauge the potential for revival of unrest in Punjab after the
previous attempt by Pakistan had failed.
Hafeez Saeed is considered to be more 'amenable'
to the ISI than others in the motley group of jehadi leaders in Pakistan.
He also has become somewhat vulnerable to the establishment pressures after
a split in the LeT's direct descendent, the Jamaat-ud-Dawa. These twists and
turns in shady Pak groups do not lessen their menace or sinister designs.
Their immediate aim may be to run over India, but they have all a larger ambitious
goal of seeing the green crescent flying over all world capitals. Yet, they
seem to command only peripheral attention in America.
The 'arrest' of Saeed is a burlesque similar
to Islamabad's 'ban' on Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM), Harkat-ul-Mujahideen
(HuM) and Hizb-ul- Mujahideen (HM), headed by Saeed, Maulana Masood Azhar,
Maulana Fazlur Rehman Khalil and Syed Salahuddin respectively. Musharraf himself
made the announcement of the 'ban' on these groups amidst much fanfare and
international glare in two instalments-on January 12, 2002 and November 15,
2003. Nobody living in Pakistan or territory under its occupation would be
allowed to indulge in terrorism, thundered the general for the satisfaction
of Washington.
Yet, after an initial lull for tactical reasons,
these Jehad-preaching outfits were back in business. All they had to do was
change their names. Their cadres, infrastructure and assets were intact and
their leaders were as free to spread their messages of hate and death at will
as in the 'good old days' prior to 9/11.
The temporary 'arrests' of the terrorist leaders
did not deter them at all because their incarceration meant only a brief restriction
on their physical movement from the special but well-appointed houses where
they were 'detained'. With all the communication facilities, including satellite
telephones, available to them, they could not have really complained about
being 'jailed'. They did not even complain about being asked to suspend operations
in Kashmir because the instructions from the Pak GHQ were to lie low and wait
for the heat (in the wake of 9/11) to disappear.
If Musharraf really meant to ban these jehadi/terrorists
groups he would have done something more concrete like demolish their infrastructure
and snap the long unholy alliance between these groups and the Pakistani intelligence
agencies. That he would not do for the simple reason that in reality the Pakistani
establishment, army in particular, shares a common hostile view against India
and the need to keep the Jehad flag flying to annexe Kashmir. The fact that
religious groups today command considerable clout in Pakistan has further
strengthened the ties between the establishment and the jehadi/terrorist groups
in Pakistan.
An interesting thing about the 'arrest' of
Saeed and those of his ilk is that one of the 'serious' charges against them
is that they are abusive of the president. These ISI pets run down Musharraf's
policy of 'slavery to the Americans.' That they spew much more venom against
some perceived 'enemies' of Islam is not mentioned in the charge sheets. Hafeez
Saeed and company regularly denounce Hindus and Jews as enemies of Islam and,
hence, deserving of annihilation.
Despite orders to the contrary, the jehadi/terrorist
outfits face no hurdles in carrying out all their activities, from collecting
cash, distributing leaflets that preach the 'virtues' of waging a Jehad against
India, to organising training camps in Punjab and PoK and making fiery speeches
against the 'enemies of Islam', India in particular. Banners and posters listing
telephone numbers of terrorist outfits, inviting would-be terrorists to join
the camps, continue to flutter, though perhaps not so brazenly and extensively
as in the past.
However, there has been one change in the
training method of the jehadis. While earlier, large groups of 50 or so used
to be trained at the camps run by terrorist groups, now they are trained in
groups of 10 or less. Obviously, Pakistan thinks that such tiny presence of
'pupils' at a camp does not entitle it to be counted among the regular training
camps for terrorist. After all, Pakistan has been flatly denying the accusations
of India and Afghanistan that terrorist camps are still being run in Pakistan.
In collusion with his benefactors, Saeed lost
no time in declaring that the LeT stands dissolved and he was heading a charity
and social welfare organisation called Jamaat-ud-Dawa. This camouflage fools
no one because he has not given up his jehadi agenda. By claiming a different
orientation of the new outfit, Saeed wants to dodge any action that the government
of Pakistan may be forced to initiate under American pressure. Meanwhile,
Saeed has further expanded the base of the original LeT by opening a youth
wing, called Tulba Jamaat-ul-Dawa that aims at recruiting college students.
Saeed's 'business' is prospering; it is growing with official blessings. Naturally,
his arrests are nothing more than the Pakistani version of Punch and Judy
show.