Author: PTI
Publication: The Times of India
Date: June 3, 2009
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/World/Saeeds-release-disturbing-says-US/articleshow/4612659.cms
The Obama administration is "disturbed"
by the release of Jamaat-ud- Dawa chief Hafiz Mohammad Saeed, who was placed
under house arrest nearly six months ago following the Mumbai attacks, US
special representative Richard Holbrooke said on Wednesday
Holbrooke, the special American envoy for
Pakistan and Afghanistan, expressed reservations over the release of Saeed.
"His release has disturbed us all," he told Geo News channel.
The Lahore High Court on Tuesday accepted
Saeed's petition challenging his detention in the wake of the Mumbai terror
attacks and ordered his immediate release.
Saeed and numerous other top JuD leaders were
detained in December last year after the UN Security Council designated his
group as a front organistaion for the banned Lashker-e-Taiba, which India
claims is behind the Mumbai attacks.
India expressed disappointment at Saeed's
release, saying the move raised "serious doubts over Pakistan's sincerity
in acting with determination against terrorist groups and individuals operating
from its territory."
Pakistan described India's reaction as "misplaced"
and said it had demonstrated "full sincerity and commitment" in
the probe into the Mumbai attacks.
Holbrooke, who is scheduled to visit refugee
camps in Pakistan, also referred to the ongoing military operations against
the Taliban in the Swat valley, saying Pakistan had done "what it should"
and the US had provided the Pakistan army with equipment for its campaign.
The equipment included night vision devices and four helicopters, he said.
The militants in Buner and other parts of
Malakand division want to spoil the Pakistan founded by Muhammad Ali Jinnah
and the US will not leave Pakistan alone at this critical juncture, Holbrooke
said.
Islamic countries should now come forward
to help the people displaced by the military operations, he said. The Organisation
of the Islamic Conference should help them, he added.
Holbrooke also said the heads of the ruling
Pakistan People's Party and main opposition PML-N had agreed to scrap the
president's sweeping powers under the 17th constitutional amendment.
There is no difference of opinion between
PML-N chief Nawaz Sharif and PPP leader and President Asif Ali Zardari on
this issue, he said.