Which outfits are in dialogue with Mr Malik one doesn’t know. To what extent they are ready to forswear their extremism and violent ways, one doesn’t know either. To build a platform for dialogue of any sort, Mr Malik has to see to it that the ban placed on them is real: that means their leaders are put under arrest and their assets sealed pending trial. Does the state know who among the 40 outfits represented in the Difa-e-Pakistan (Defence of Pakistan) movement are banned? Comment has been made about the presence of terrorists in the Difa rallies — as their attendance has been recorded by the press.
In 2010, international opinion noted that Pakistan had banned the LeT in January 2002, and its successor front group Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD) a month after the November 2008 suicide terror assault on Mumbai. Several years ago, its leader Hafiz Saeed, was placed under house arrest but was freed by the Lahore High Court, which said there was no evidence that he was involved in any wrongdoing. After that, the court had ruled that the government had never formally prohibited the JuD. The government, thereafter, took the case to the Supreme Court in appeal. Some observers in Pakistan think that the government was never keen in pursuing the case against Hafiz Saeed. Internationally, the JuD is constantly linked to terrorism staged in Afghanistan on behalf of al Qaeda.
The front runners in the Difa rallies are the JuD and Sipah-e-Sahaba. The latter was among the first outfits to be banned after the wave of sectarian violence hit its high watermark after 2001. Despite the ban, its leader late Maulana Azam Tariq was ‘mistakenly’ elected to the National Assembly in 2002. Today, it is renamed as Ahle Sunnat Wal Jamaat (ASWJ) and its leader, Maulana Ahmad Ludhianvi declares that his party is not banned on the strength of some inconclusive judicial process. The blanket imprimatur of Difa rallies made it possible for the ASWJ to make a comeback and seal their growing presence in south Punjab. It is often said by political commentators that PML-N’s new strategy of confronting the PPP in the south of the province is hinged on its understanding with the old Sipah elements now in the field as Ahle Sunnat. The scene became complicated after Maulana Ahmed Ludhianvi, of the old Sipah-e-Sahaba, pledged to back Pakistan’s army chief: “Because of threats from America and conspiracies against Pakistan, I promise to give General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani 100,000 of our followers as fighters.”
The banned publications — daily newspapers and weeklies — are in the market carrying messages that politicians and media-men read carefully for signs of personal warning to avoid being assassinated. Banned jihadi trusts are functional in small cities, doling out funds to promote the cause of jihad, including funding of hate literature. Meanwhile, these organisations have reinvented themselves as welfare organisations, relying on their rural outreach to gather funds and replace the state to come to the help of the masses during natural calamities.
Published in The Express Tribune, March 14th, 2012.
COMMENTS (6)
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You can't ban a disease. You either treat it of quaranteen the affected.
What they have to do is just change the name of the Organisation... and send the message written on donkeys and rotate them all over the desired area as the ISI does... Same wine in new bottle example fits it exactly right ...
It is sometimes difficult to understand who controls Pakistan. It appears that Zardari government is a false facade. WHY ?. Is the dubious nature of controls over so called 'banned' organisation helping the 'common folk' of the country. The watch dog for rule of law is the Supreme Court. Can it manage that function by itself. Should it be the function of the President or the Chief Justice ?. does anybody have any control over its army. All said and done does anybody care for the 'people'. Pakistan is the 'people' of Pakistan, is it.
Extremists are made to celebrities and sure if it prevails, will be a doom for Pakistan. Hats off to ET, while the Dawn avoided mentioning JUD aka LET in its yesterday's editorial, ET has the courage and will to call spade a spade, continue your good work ET.
Only in Pakistan..
Every last one of them will sit down if they have interest in becoming unbanned. After all, most of the banned organizations have always said they don't participate in such activities. They lie in front of cameras, why not lie in front of Malik for a bit more freedom? It's not as though he can prove whether or not they've complied. Their militant wings could even just keep operating. Just in ways that the blame isn't linked to their parent group... Though that tactic for the most part has seemed to be in use already. Malik may or may not have good intentions, but truly, he should not hold a position where anyone's life is directly or indirectly in his hands. He lacks the critical thinking skills and that's an understatement.