Lashkar-e-Taiba resumes online jihad

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Four years after it was forced to shut down its website in the wake of the 26/11 Mumbai attacks, the Lashkar-e-Taiba's parent organisation has re-established its presence in cyberspace.

In a video address posted online when the website went online on Wednesday, Jama'at-ud-Dawa chief Hafiz Muhammad Saeed explained the decision. "The media is a two-edged sword," said Mr Saeed, the alleged architect of the 26/11 attacks, in the 5.53 minute video. "Rather than being overwhelmed by the media, we wish to use it in a positive way and, god willing, use it to spread our message of proselytisation and jihad."

Mr. Saeed's message is studied in its moderation. The website says the Jamaat-ud-Dawa "nullifies [sic., throughout] all kinds of violent ideologies that resort to use of force against innocents souls anywhere in the world." Instead, it says, the organisation "struggles for the restoration of Pakistan's true Ideology of Islam that should stand as an example for Muslim world."

Interestingly, it makes no mention of terrorism-related charges that recently led the United States to announce a $1 million reward for information leading to Mr. Saeed's arrest. Instead, it notes that Mr. Saeed toured the United States in 1994, lecturing on "Islamic Perspectives of Raising Children."

The internet registry service Who.is: Whois Lookup, Website, Domain Name, and IP Tools - Who.is does not hold ownership details for the Jama'at website, but records it is hosted by the Karachi-based internet service Magsnet. Magsnet's website says it is a marketing and web development firm whose clients include Nokia, Telenor, Standard Chartered and Barclays.

Experts said the moderate language did not necessarily reflect a change in Jama'at thinking. "The content itself is not significant," said Steven Tankel, a scholar who has written extensively on the group, "because the 1.0 version of Jama'at website was similarly measured when it came to anything linked to militancy." However, he said, it was "significant that Pakistan's security establishment has allowed the group to re-launch its website."

Prior to its proscription after the 2001-2002 India-Pakistan crisis, the internet had enabled the Markaz Dawa wal'Irshad — an earlier name for the Jama'at —to emerge as a magnet for western jihadists. Though several jihadists simply showed up at the Markaz offices for training, Dr. Tankel has written, "for those looking to plan a bit more in advance, web site provided contact information."

Following the United States' invasion of Iraq, the website called fighters to join the jihad there. "The Americans are dishonouring our mothers and sisters," it stated. "Therefore, jihad against America has now become mandatory."

The website was shut down in 2002 — but soon resumed operations, under the new name.

Earlier this year, as first reported by The Hindu, the Jama'at launched a Facebook page which contained considerable violent propaganda. In a poster for a March 23, 2010 rally, slogans were superimposed over an image of burning Taj Mahal Hotel in Mumbai: "free Kashmir, Pakistan's lifeline, from the enemy"; "freedom of the Muslims of Gujarat, Hyderabad, Ahmedabad and the rest of India"; "save Pakistan's parched rivers."

Jama'at leaders have used similar language in several recent public rallies. Middle-East Media Research Institute analyst Tufail Ahmad has recorded, for example, that Mr. Saeed called in one speech last year for a war "against the Hindu so that the greatness of the jihad can be evident."

The Hindu : News / National : Lashkar-e-Taiba resumes online jihad

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