LAHORE,
Pakistan – The United States has put a
$10 million bounty on his head, labeling him a terrorist. He is one of the most
wanted men in India. Yet, Hafiz Saeed walks free in his home country of
Pakistan, denouncing Washington and New Delhi in public speeches.
Now the man
identified by the U.S. as a founding member of the Lashkar-e-Taiba militant
group is weighing in on the flare-up of violence in Kashmir, the mountainous
region divided between Pakistani and Indian control, where dozens have died in
clashes with protesters after Indian security forces killed a top rebel leader.
In an
interview with The Associated Press, Saeed accused the U.S. of giving India a
free hand to crush the anti-India protests in its Himalayan territory, warning
that will only lead to an escalation of violence.
"America is
supporting this oppression by India by saying it is an internal matter,"
the 66-year-old Saeed said in the interview, which took place Wednesday at his
two-story home behind a steel barrier separating it from the narrow streets of
the eastern city of Lahore.
"This has
given India encouragement, and because of this, the killings and violence"
will continue, he said.
Washington has
said it will not intervene. But U.S. State Department spokeswoman Elizabeth
Trudeau, speaking to reporters Thursday, disagreed with the suggestion by Saeed
and others that the U.S. is aloof and therefore partly responsible for the
crackdown. She said the U.S. has had discussions with both India and Pakistan
about the violence in Kashmir.
"We are
very concerned about the deaths of the protesters," Trudeau said.
"That's of grave concern to us. We continue to be in touch with the
government of India. We've been in discussions with the government of Pakistan
as well."
Saeed said he
will lead nationwide demonstrations in Pakistan to force its government to
sever ties with the U.S. if it cannot convince Washington to intervene in the
decades-old Kashmir dispute. The two countries, which also possess nuclear
weapons, have fought three wars, two of them over Kashmir.
Militants
demand that Kashmir be united either under Pakistani rule or as an independent
country. At least 31 people have been killed in Kashmir in street protests
after Indian troops last week killed Burhan Wani, a charismatic Kashmiri
insurgent.
India declared
the death of the 22-year-old Wani to be a major victory over the insurgency.
But his killing has galvanized young Indian Kashmiris to stage daily protests.
It has also sparked massive demonstrations in Pakistan and forced Pakistan's
government and military to make daily statements in support of demonstrating
Kashmiris.
"When
India martyred him, then the common Kashmiri joined the movement," said
Saeed, who has been a key figure in the often-brutal insurgency in Indian-ruled
Kashmir.
On Pakistan's
side of the disputed border, residents say Saeed is the only force who can
"liberate" the territory from Indian rule. One resident, Muhammad
Ishaq of the capital of Muzaffarabad, said Lashkar-e-Taiba is more of a threat
to India than any other group, including Wani's organization, which is called
the Hezbul Mujahedeen.
Human Rights
organizations have accused Indian soldiers of widespread abuse, including
forced detentions, rape and torture. India, meanwhile, has repeatedly assailed
Pakistan for sending fighters over the border to incite violence.
The United
States identifies Saeed as a founding member of Lashkar-e-Taiba, a
U.S.-declared terrorist group that is widely believed to have been a creation
of Pakistan's military and intelligence service, known by its acronym ISI, to
wage a proxy war against India. It is considered one of the largest and most
effective of the insurgent groups fighting in Indian-ruled Kashmir.
Lashkar-e-Taiba
is often referred to as an al-Qaida affiliated group whose name means Army of
the Pure and it belongs to the Salafist movement, an ultra-conservative branch
of Islam. It has plotted to blow up sites in Australia, recruited from existing
terrorist groups in Europe and has been a source of inspiration for radicalized
Muslims in the West, according to intelligence officials in the U.K. and
France.
It is
suspected of carrying out the 2008 terrorist attack in Mumbai, India, that
targeted a Jewish Center, the main railway station and a five-star hotel
frequented by foreigners. The attack killed 166 people.
The only
person arrested in the Mumbai attack was Ajmal Amir Kasab, a Pakistani national
who testified he was trained at a Lashkar-e-Taiba camp in Muridke, outside
Lahore. He also said Saeed was among the inspirational speakers who would visit
the training camp. Kasab was hanged in India in 2012 for his part in the
attacks.
The $10
million bounty on Saeed was imposed by the U.S. State Department's Rewards for
Justice Program. India has issued an Interpol Red Corner Notice for his
capture, accusing him of offenses including masterminding the Mumbai attack.
The Indian
government has long demanded that Pakistan arrest Saeed, but when he has been
detained, his incarceration has been brief, and Pakistani courts, including its
Supreme Court, have cleared him of terrorism charges.
"Many
times I have been arrested on the order of America and India ... (but) the
Lahore high court freed me and also my organization, saying we were innocent of
terrorism charges and did not participate in any terrorist activities,"
Saeed said.
Pakistan
outlawed Lashkar-e-Taiba after Washington declared it a terrorist group.
However, its charity wing Jamaat-ud-Dawa still operates, even though both the
U.S. and the United Nations also declared it a terrorist organization,
describing it as a radical Islamist group.
Jean Louis
Bruguiere, a former French magistrate who had spent more than two decades
investigating terrorism and is credited with hundreds of arrests and
convictions, has said he found evidence of Lashkar-e-Taiba's network in East
Asia, Australia, the United States and Europe.
Saeed said he
has written to the State Department, complaining about the $10 million bounty.
He denies any connection to Lashkar-e-Taiba, despite having given interviews as
its chief at its headquarters in Muridke before it was outlawed.
Security
remains a concern for Saeed, and the interview only took place after a series
of phone calls that increased in frequency as a reporter was driven to his home
that was guarded by several men with long beards, although only one displayed a
weapon.
Inside, the
heavyset, wispy-bearded Saeed sat amid other men in a small room stuffed with
couches. Most of his entourage chatted together in small groups, while others
were on their mobile phones throughout the interview.
Saeed
dismisses the allegations against him as "India propaganda." He
traced the troubled history of Kashmir and blamed the U.S. and India for the
violence but denied his own role or that of Pakistan in the insurgency.
Saeed also
expressed concern about the growing influence of the Islamic State group in
Pakistan, where several arrests have been made both in eastern Punjab province
and in the southern port of Karachi.
"I am
highly worried about Daesh ... with their particular focus on Pakistan and
Saudi Arabia," he said, using an Arabic acronym for the Islamic State. He
said the group was trying to divide the Muslim world.
0 Comments