|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Pakistan
Pakistan extends ban on Islamic groups
By Vilani Peiris
8 December 2003
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Under pressure from Washington, Pakistans military-backed
regime last month extended its ban on Islamic fundamentalist organisations
to include six new groups and carried out an extensive police
crackdown against their membership.
The banned organisations include several armed groups opposed
to Indian control of Kashmir, as well as two accused of involvement
in sectarian violence within Pakistanthe Shiite-based Islamia
Tehrik e Pakistan and the Sunni-based Millat-e-Islam. Islamabad
also announced that Jamaat-ud-Dawa, formerly known as Lashkar-e-Taiba,
had been put under surveillance. India blamed the group for attacks
in Kashmir and the 2001 attack on the Indian parliament building
in New Delhi.
Pakistani police closed down more than 150 offices belonging
to the six groups. The government has announced that nearly 600
activists will be compelled to pay a bond of up to 100,000 rupees
($US1,745) as surety of good behaviour. But according to Millat-e-Islamia
Pakistan leader Maulana Mohammad Ahmed, arrests are also going
ahead with more than 50 activists from the party detained.
The government has targetted the bank accounts of the six organisations.
As of late November, the State Bank of Pakistan reported that
deposits amounting to 879.05 million rupees had been frozen and
more were being investigated. Provincial administrations have
been directed to check the publications of these groups.
Hours after the bans were announced, police arrested Islamia
Tehrik leader Sajjad Naqvi in connection with the murder of a
rival Sunni leader, Azam Tariq, in October. The arrest could provoke
clashes between the Shiite and Sunni groups.
The military regime has been at pains to say that it was not
pressured by the US to take these measures. But on November 13,
the US ambassador to Pakistan, Nancy Powell, publicly expressed
concern during a speech in Karachi that Islamic groups banned
in early 2002 were reemerging under different names. [T]hese
(Islamic) groups pose a serious threat to Pakistan, to the region,
and to the United States, she said.
Just two days later, Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf announced
the first bans on November 15 and then further measures on November
20. He told a cabinet meeting on November 16: Only Pakistan
can play the key role in the global war on terrorism that countries
such as the United States have requested. In the face of
mounting criticisms, he insisted that the bans were in the
national interest and necessary for for the countrys
economic progress.
Interior Minister Faisal Saleh Hayat announced on November
18 that a bill to monitor the countrys madrassas [Islamic
religious schools] would be placed before the cabinet in the next
few months. Such a step would provoke widespread opposition from
Islamic fundamentalist groups.
US State Department spokesman Richard Boucher expressed appreciation
for the steps taken by Pakistan and called for continuing
close cooperation, particularly to seal the border with Afghanistan.
Both the US military and the American-backed regime in Kabul have
called on Pakistan to take more vigorous military action to stop
armed insurgents crossing into Afghanistan from the border areas.
Washington is concerned to shore up a deteriorating situation
in Afghanistan, where US troops and those of its puppet administration
are increasingly coming under attack from armed opposition groups,
including those of the ousted Taliban regime. The US is also pressing
behind the scenes for a resolution of the ongoing conflict between
Pakistan and India over Kashmir, which constantly threatens to
destabilise a region where there are growing American strategic
and economic interests.
Moreover, the Bush administration is keen to register successes
in its global war on terrorism. According to a report
in the Asia Times last month, Washington has called on
Pakistan to provide access to its national data base and the records
of those involved in terrorist activities. The US Federal Bureau
of Investigation has already been operating openly inside Pakistan,
tracking down and detaining alleged Al Qaeda members.
Musharrafs support for the anti-democratic measures demanded
by the Bush administration has undermined the Pakistan dictators
position. He seized power in 1999, accusing then Prime Minister
Nawaz Sharif of caving into the US and India by withdrawing support
for Kashmiri separatists who had taken control of the Kargil Heights.
But in the aftermath of the September 11, 2001 attacks, Musharraf
abruptly fell into line with Washington abandoning Pakistans
support for the Taliban regime in Afghanistan. Since then he has
acceded to US demands to outlaw groups that previously were hailed
by the Pakistan military as Kashmiri freedom fighters,
provoking opposition from Islamic fundamentalist groups on which
he relied for support.
The Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA), a coalition of six Islamic
fundamental groups, made strong gains in elections held last year
and now effectively controls the provincial administrations in
Baluchistan and the North West Frontier Province. The Musharraf-based
government of Prime Minister Zafarullah Jamali is reliant on the
MMA for a parliamentary majority.
MMA leaders met in Karachi on November 17 and declared their
opposition to the new bans. In defiance of the government, MMA
leader Shah Ahemad Noorani declared that the banned Islamia Tehrik
would remain part of the MMA. Several protests have taken place
against the measures.
The Islamic fundamentalist groups have not only exploited Musharrafs
close collaboration with Washington but his governments
failure to alleviate the social crisis confronting the majority
of the population. A survey published last month in the Nation
revealed utter dissatisfaction with the military-backed
regime and noted widespread concerns over the appalling state
of transport, health, sewerage and other services.
Unable to satisfy any of these pressing social needs, Musharraf
is tightening his grip on power. The crackdown on the Islamic
fundamentalist groups is a convenient pretext for trampling on
the democratic rights of government opponents.
See Also:
Pakistan intensifies military
operations in Afghan border areas
[4 November 2003]
Quetta massacre: sectarian
violence on the rise in Pakistan
[2 August 2003]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |