Indian Homeland Security Watch

ajtr

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Mumbai police silent on Headley's role in 26/11 attacks


If Mumbai Police is to be believed, American-born terrorist David Headley, who has confessed to conducting a recce of all 26/11 targets in the city, may have played no role in the carnage. The assessment by the Mumbai Police is reflected in its appeal before the Bombay High Court in which its elite Crime Branch is silent on the role of the Pakistan-origin LeT terrorist while contesting the acquittal of Fahim Ansari and Sabahuddin in the November 26, 2008 attack that left 166 people dead.
While the Ministry of Home Affairs burnt midnight oil over getting access to Headley after his role in the brazen attack emerged, the focus of Mumbai Police through its Special Public Prosecutor Ujjwal D Nikam was that the terrorists intruded into the country's financial capital with the help of hand-written maps drawn by Ansari.

Headley is at present in a jail in Chicago in the US.

Headley, who was recruited by Pakistan-based Lashker-e-Taiba (LeT) terror group, has confessed to the US authorities and India's National Investigating Agency (NIA) in front of a magistrate about his role in carrying out the survey of the locations attacked by the terrorists on 26/11.

"When they (police) are seized of the issue of 26/11, it was incumbent upon them to bring forward all criminals concerning the crime and their respective roles played therein before the court of trial and appeal so that truth prevails and no scope for misunderstanding occur," defence counsel for Ansari, R B Mokashi, said in Mumbai.

Headley's arrest and subsequent revelations had left Mumbai Police red-faced and punctured their theory of criminal conspiracy involving only Ansari and Sabauddin.

The two had, however, been discharged by the Special Judge M L Tahaliyani saying that better maps were available on Internet.

"As per the judicial confession of Ajmal Kasab, Lashker had explained the targets with the help of video shootings and map. It is clear from the plea bargain of David Headley that he was entrusted the work of taking video of targets," Nikam said and maintained that the maps were prepared by Ansari and Sabauddin.

"One such map was found in the pocket of deceased terrorist Abu Ismail and the hand writing on it is proved to be of Ansari," Nikam claimed.

A response was also sought from Joint Commissioner of Mumbai's Crime Branch Himanshu Roy to comment on role played by Headley in 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks. However, there was no immediate response from him.
 

ajtr

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26/11 story takes a curious turn


February 02, 2011 12:26:55 AM

Shashi Shekhar

A lawsuit has been filed in the US against the perpetrators of the Mumbai carnage by Pakistani jihadis in which American citizens also died. It remains to be seen what happens next in the case. Meanwhile, Hafiz Saeed, the chief of Lashkar-e-Tayyeba, has demanded that the Government of Pakistan should represent him in the US courts. Which way will Islamabad decide?

While the death sentence awarded to Amir Ajmal Kasab in the 26/11 Mumbai attacks case does the rounds in the Bombay High Court, the wheels of justice on 26/11 seem to have pretty much stalled in Pakistan. Interestingly, a curious controversy has arisen in Pakistan in relation to a lawsuit filed in the US on behalf of the victims of 26/11 who were American citizens. In the dock over that lawsuit in the US are Shuja Pasha who is the head of the ISI and also Hafiz Saeed who is the head of Jamaat-ud-Dawa'h, the front organisation for the Lashkar-e-Tayyeba. In what must be seen as a mockery of the international ban on JuD and the global designation of Lashkar-e-Tayyeba as a terrorist outfit, you had Hafiz Saeed petitioning the Lahore High Court for the Pakistani state to defend him in the lawsuit that has been filed in the US.

It is anybody's guess at this time if the lawsuit in the US would actually see either Shuja Pasha or Hafiz Saeed standing in the dock. However, the judicial activity in the US has had a side effect in the US media. ProPublica, a US based new age media outlet, has over the last few months published some of the most extensive accounts on the background events leading up to the November 26, 2008, Mumbai attacks. The details published by ProPublica are noteworthy for two reasons. They highlight the role played by ISI officers at various stages during the planning and execution of the Mumbai 26/11 attacks. Second, they also describe for the first time the key personality in Pakistan — Sajid Mir, who was handling David Headley, the American Pakistani quadruple agent who has been charged by a Federal Court in the US with coordinating the logistics for the 26/11 Mumbai attacks.

ProPublica's profile of Sajid Mir is significant for a variety of reasons. Before the Headley arrests in 2009, little was known of Sajid Mir beyond the scanty revelations by a French court in a case involving a Lashkar-e-Tayyeba recruit, Willie Brigette. Before the Headley arrests much of the Indian narrative on key Lashkar-e-Tayyeba personnel was limited to two kinds of profiles. The first was of individuals who were above the ground and identified publicly like Hafiz Saeed and Abdul Rehman Lakhvi. The second kind was of individuals who were known mostly by what appear to be aliases with no details of their real identity. These aliases included amongst others most notably Azam Cheema, Abu Al Qama and Yusuf Muzammil. The name Sajid Mir was mostly absent in the Indian narrative on key Lashkar-e-Tayyeba personnel.

ProPublica describes Sajid Mir to have born sometime in the mid to late-1970s. He is also described as having been born of an Indian Muslim who migrated to Pakistan. Sajid Mir is believed to have spent his formative years in West Asia and to have taken to militancy during his late teens. The profile in ProPublica is quite indepth on Sajid Mir's role in the planning of 26/11 and on the events after 26/11 leading up to David Headley's arrest. It describes his various aliases as Abu Bara (Father of Bara), Uncle Bill, Sajid Bill, Wassi and Ibrahim. A recurring question through ProPublica's account on Sajid Mir is the ambiguity on whether he was an ISI officer and consequently a Major in the Pakistan Army.

There is, however, an intriguing gap in ProPublica's narrative on Sajid Mir from the time of his initiation in to the Lashkar-e-Tayyeba at the age of 16 to the events after 9/11 when he began recruiting foreigners for the Lashkar-e-Tayyeba. The ProPublica report talks of an undated arrest of Sajid Mir by the Dubai police and a subsequent thanks to an intervention by the Lashkar-e-Tayyeba. ProPublica also quotes a report compiled by India's National Investigation Agency of the Headley interrogation that Sajid Mir was born in Lahore and had two brothers and two sisters.

The reference by ProPublica to the arrest in Dubai is intriguing for the parallels with another narrative of a similar arrest in Dubai and a subsequent release after Lashkar-e-Tayyeba intervention.

On May 20, 2003, the Indian Express in New Delhi carried a story by Tushar Srivastava titled 'Ansari wanted to eliminate Delhi ACPs'. The story was about Aftab Ansari who is currently on death row in India for the 2002 terrorist attack on the American Center in Kolkota. In that story Aftab Ansari who was then in prison in Kolkota was accused of having sent SMSs to his associates in Dubai directing them to carry out targeted assassinations of specific Delhi Police officers. In the same story is an account of an arrest in Dubai of Aftab Ansari's brother-in-law Tahir by the Dubai Police. Aftab Ansari is quoted in that story as having told interrogators that his brother-in-law Tahir was subsequently released by Dubai Police after an intervention by Lashkar-e-Tayyeba's Azam Cheema upon the payment of a certain sum of money.

Little is known of Aftab Ansari's brother-in-law Tahir beyond two scanty reports and several stray references to him. The most definitive account of Tahir comes from a story in The Hindu dated September 21, 2008 by Praveen Swami titled 'Indian Mujahideen linked to organised crime'. In this story are details of how Aftab Ansari travelled to Pakistan on a fake passport after his release bail from Tihar Jail in the late 1990s. Aftab Ansari is described as having married a Pakistani Citizen whose brother Tahir it is said was with Ansari in Tihar Jail on terrorism related charges in Jammu & Kashmir. Other stray media references to Ansari's matrimony and Tahir refer to Ansari's wife being based in Karachi, her family's base in Rawalpindi, her brother Tahir as Aftab Ansari's cell mate during the 1990s. Praveen Swami also writing in The Hindu on Aftab Ansari's arrest in 2002 had referred to his brother-in-law Tahir as serving time in Tihar, in the present tense.

It cannot be definitively said if Sajid Mir of 26/11 was Aftab Ansari's brother-in-law Tahir who participated in jihad in Jammu & Kashmir during the 1990s. However the Karachi Project has always been described as the ISI's project to leverage underworld elements of Indian origin based in Karachi. No individual signifies the nexus between the underworld, ISI sponsored Islamist terror and Indian origin terrorist outfits better than Aftab Ansari. Amir Raza Khan, who has been described as Indian Mujahideen's point man in Pakistan, was closely associated with Aftab Ansari. If indeed the Lashkar-e-Tayyeba's Sajid Mir is Ansari's brother-in-law, it could complete the picture on the Karachi Project.

As ProPublica concludes, it is likely none of those who really sponsored 26/11 will ever be brought to justice. But it is important to know the whole truth. It is unfortunate that to date the most extensive accounts of the background events to 26/11 come from the American media. A full accounting of all the facts related to Pakistan sponsored Islamist terror events in India must come from the Indian state. It is never too late for a commission along the lines of the 9/11 Commission to go into 26/11 and all the events leading up to it. The partisan political atmosphere in New Delhi, however, does not offer much hope of that happening anytime soon.
 

ajtr

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Orders stopping cops from taking on mafia come under scanner


Two circulars dated March 8, 2004 and January 24, 2011 issued by State Food & Civil Supplies department, will haunt the Democratic Front government in the backdrop of the brutal killing of additional collector Yashwant Sonawane.


While the first one restricted the Police from carrying out drives against adulteration in petroleum products, the other one took away the State's powers to check transportation of furnace oil.


The first circular clearly states that no police officer below the rank of a deputy superintendent can carry out searches to check irregularities in petroleum products.

Also, the authorised officer will have to take officials from Food & Civil Supplies department into confidence and take them along for the raids.

Home Minister R R Patil blamed critics for the situation. "Police were at the receiving end after the drive against dance bars and other such issues. I was accused of engaging in moral policing. Now that the oil mafia has claimed a life, the role of the police is being scrutinised."

However Patil assured that the police will not remain impassive. "State-wide campaigns against sand, oil and milk mafia will continue unabated," he said, adding that in the last three days, police have arrested 163 persons involved in several adulteration rackets.

The blame game over Sonawane's murder was not restricted to the ruling coalition. The BJP too jumped into the fray. State general secretary Vinod Tawade alleged that Rs 25 crore was paid to concerned ministers by the oil mafia leading to the January 24 circular. Said Tawade, "The business of adulteration petroleum products thrives in Navi Mumbai and parts of Raigad. Only CBI can nail the perpetrators as State Police can not take on them."

Threatening to take BJP leaders to court, Minister Anil Deshmukh defended the January 24 order, saying it was based on Union Government directives. He said, "The state did not have any role in it," he said flashing a letter by the then Petroleum Minister Murli Deora. "It was for all the states and not for Maharashtra only."
 

ajtr

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Amnesty misfires as banned SIMI's 'extremists' walk free


A routine practice of releasing prisoners on Republic Day, in accordance with norms set a decade ago, has blown up into an embarrassment for the Madhya Pradesh government, led by BJP CM Shivraj Singh Chouhan, after five activists of the banned Students Islamic Movement of India (SIMI) were released on January 26.
With the Bajrang Dal now demanding an inquiry and threatening street protests, the Ujjain police on Sunday called a few of the activists to Bhairavgarh police station, and subjected them to 12 hours of questioning.


It is not possible under the law to put the released activists back into jail, as is being demanded by the Bajrang Dal. Even their questioning was against the rules. The state Jail Department has now set up a committee to take a fresh look at the rules to broaden their scope.

Every January 26 and August 15, Madhya Pradesh releases prisoners who have served at least half of their terms and demonstrated good conduct in prison. On January 26, acting on a government circular, the administration of Khachrod sub-jail in Ujjain district released Jadil Parwaj, Aiyaz Riyaz Ahmed, Akbar Afzal Khan, Mehruddin Shaikh and Irshad Ali. The five men were convicted as recently as January 12 for "anti-national activities" by an Additional Sessions Judge who sentenced them to terms of between one year and five years, to run concurrently.

The men have, however, been in custody since March 31, 2008, when the Unhel police arrested them after "anti-national literature" and weapons were allegedly found on them. On January 26, they had spent over 33 months in jail, and were eligible for release.

This is probably the first time that SIMI activists have been released in this manner in Madhya Pradesh. DG (Jail) V K Pawar, however, told The Indian Express that there was no question of re-arresting the five men. The state legal department vets the government circular before it is sent to jails ahead of January 26 and August 15 every year, he said.

Ujjain SP Satish Saxena said two released SIMI activists were put through "routine" questioning on Sunday. They were asked where they would live henceforth, and what they would do for a living. The police also collected information on their visitors during their time in jail. The police would continue to monitor their activities, Saxena said.
 

ajtr

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Delhi airport fails hijack test


Around 2:30pm on January 19, the Central Committee Control Room (CCCR) at Delhi airport flashed an emergency message to the top security establishment across the Capital: an Indian Airlines flight has been hijacked at the airport. The IA flight had been moved to bay 26 from runway 27. The two hijackers — speaking only in Malayalam — wanted to fly the plane, with 51 passengers on board, outside Indian borders. One passenger had already been killed and the hijackers had threatened that no vehicle should come near the aircraft.
The standard operating procedure in a hijack situation was activated. This is what happened: the Delhi police SWAT (special weapons and tactics) team did not know where to go, the Quick Reaction Team (QRT) that should have been concealed as it approached the aircraft was visible from either side, another aircraft taxied past the hijacked one, even though it was in isolation. An ambulance sent to the AI plane had no radio contact with CCCR. The crisis management team had no communication with the aircraft.

As critical minutes were being lost, things were going from bad to worse. The Delhi government official assigned to handle the situation never made it. The negotiator from the central government came much later than scheduled.


Ninety minutes into the exercise, those in the thick of the action were told it was a mock drill. By that time, it was clear few lessons had been learnt from the IC-814 hijack to Kandahar in 1999.

The Delhi airport was clearly under-prepared to handle the situation, exposing many chinks in the response mechanism system.

The Bureau of Civil Aviation Security (BCAS), the aviation security regulator, in a confidential report listed over three dozen glaring flaws, sending the top security establishment into a tizzy.

The drill found that a few members of the CCCR were unaware of where the control room was, fewer were aware of their roles and responsibilities. It took ages to get a translator — when one was found, he refused, saying his superior's permission was essential.

By the time the permission came, half the exercise was over.

"The report clearly indicates the quality of protection available. If this can happen at the most secure airport in India, one has to worry about the plight of passengers and crew at other airports. Our aviation safety system is safe only from political and commercial points. Operationally, it is still unsafe," said Capt Mohan Ranganathan, a Chennai-based aviation expert.

"An anti-hijack drill is basically a replication of a real-life situation. Usually, one or two such exercises are carried out in a year and are preceded by months of detailed planning. As secrecy is key to the success of such an exercise, only a handful of officials are aware that it is a mock exercise.

For the rest, it's an actual hijack," a senior civil aviation ministry official said on condition of anonymity.


 

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Infiltration attempts remain high, no reduction in troops

The Indian Army has no immediate plans to reduce or restructure its troop deployment in Kashmir despite the apparent thaw between the political leadership of India and Pakistan.

Top Army sources in Northern Command, which has jurisdiction over Jammu and Kashmir, told this correspondent that despite the decrease in violence levels in the Kashmir valley, there is no room for complacency since the attempts to push in infiltrators from across the Line of control that divides India and Pakistan in parts of Kashmir have not reduced at all.

Intelligence assessment on Kashmir indicates that all 40-odd camps in Pak-Occupied Kashmir, close to the LoC, are still teeming with over 400 well-trained terrorists of various tanzeems. "Over the past six months the attempts to infiltrate have been at the level witnessed last year (2009-10). That we have not allowed too many of them to cross over successfully does not mean the efforts to push them into Kashmir valley or in Jammu area have decreased," a senior Army officer said.

The army has a three-tier anti-infiltration grid in place in J&K for the past several years. According to sources, the grid is dynamic, designed to adapt to constantly changing situation on ground. Senior Army officers point out that no matter what the progress in India-Pakistan foreign secretary or foreign minister level talks, the security grid cannot be relaxed or scaled down since those camps and their organisers in PoK continue to remain active.

In fact, the Army views the ceasefire violations along the International Boundary (where the Border Security Force is deployed) more seriously since most of these violations in the form of small arms and mortar fire is meant as cover fire for infiltrating militants. In the first 40 days of 2011, there have been at least three ceasefire violations along the IB in the Jammu sector.

India and Pakistan had agreed to a ceasefire all along the Loc and the IB in November 2003. Largely the truce has held so far but analysts in the Indian army's Northern Command have not been able to put a finger on the exact causes for the occasional spurt in ceasefire violations.

The other contentious issue in JK is the constant demand to reduce the presence of paramilitary forces. Union Home secretary GK Pillai had told a seminar in New Delhi that the ministry of home affairs would like to over time draw down at least 25 per cent of the existing paramilitary strength in J&K.

Intelligence and security officials, however, say the final word on this issue has to come from the state's Unified Headquarters chaired by Chief Minister Omar Abdullah and comprising the Northern Army commander, the state's director general of police and heads of other agencies.

"If the UHQ feels paramilitary presence needs to be reduced from certain areas in the state," there is no one who will object to that decision, a senior MHA official told rediff.com.

Despite the clamour for less militarised J&K, however, the UHQ will take its own time in deciding to reduce or even redeploy security personnel.

Source
 

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Mumbai police to get 24 unmanned aerial vehicles

Mumbai police is all set to become first police force in the country to have two dozen unmanned aerial vehicles ,In a Government Resolution issued on February 14, the state government has listed 24 unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) among the articles, including arms and ammunitions, that Mumbai police is procuring to fight terrorists.

The procurement is being carried out through a State-Centre joint funding programme. While Centre will contribute 75 per cent to the 109.13 crore fund, the state government will pool in the rest.Mumbai police will get under this programme are — 950 AK-47 rifles, 250 MP5, MP4 and MP9 guns , 500 bullet-proof jackets, 100 static and portable X-ray baggage scanners, bomb detection and disposal equipment and 100 new cars.

The rest of the state will also get weapons like Glock pistols, sniper rifles, grenade launchers, rocket launchers, INSAS guns and self-loading rifles.

Due to larger threat level to Mumbai city and also due to 26/11 attacks, Mumbai police for obvious reasons, tops the list of priorities so far as modernisation of police force is concerned.
 

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Jihad Has Come to India
By Richard L. Benkin
March 03, 2011

Jihad has come to India. The Obama administration and the State Department will tell you that it is nothing more than isolated acts by individuals. The government in New Delhi will say you are stirring up anti-Muslim sentiment. The mainstream media will ask how you can say that when we are hearing nothing about it from them. But it is real, and it is happening now. I have seen it first-hand. The Obama administration's studied denial will find us caught as flat-footed in India as we were in Lebanon, Egypt, Libya, and elsewhere. The difference is that India is an economic and military giant, with nuclear weapons, and could be a cornerstone of any effective fight against radical Islam.

For several years, I have been talking about the progressive radicalization of Bangladesh. Although it is the only country that ranks among the ten most populous and the ten most densely populated, as well as being the second largest Muslim-majority nation, events there do not capture people's imagination. When you talk about India in the same context, however, people take notice. The thought of an Islamist dominated India scares the heck out of them and should. While our own strategic thinkers concentrate on internecine struggles in the Middle East, their obliviousness to the significance of an Islamist India has enabled our enemies to further their agenda.

I have spent several years along India's 2545 mile-long frontier with Bangladesh, and have seen the impact Bangladesh's radicalization has had on its giant neighbor to the west. Amitabh Tripathi, who has been fighting against what he calls his country's "soft policies," noted that Bangladesh's Muslims "are not radicalized but their institutions are." That radicalization and a level of corruption on both sides of the border that makes my fellow Chicagoans look like amateurs has already produced demographic change in many strategic areas of India. It also has given Muslim activists carte blanche throughout the entire country. The process is deliberate, has been going on for decades, and should send us a screaming warning signal, not only because of what it bodes for India, but also because of what sort of future the Obama administration's soft policies and tolerance for an open border to our south mean for the United States.

Each year in districts like Uttar Dinajpur and North and South 24 Parganas directly across from the Islamic state, my colleagues and I find that more and more villages which once had mixed Hindu-Muslim populations are now all Muslim or Muslim-dominated. Gone are the roadside temples characteristic of places where Hindus practice their faith openly; gone are the sights of Hindu women dressed in their colorful saris and other vestments. They have been replaced by mosques and burqas. Last year, Tripathi and I met with Bimal Praminik, Director of the Kolkata-based Centre for Research in Indo-Bangladesh Relations and arguably the foremost authority on these population changes. He is convinced that this population shift is a deliberate and an integral element the jihad that threatens all of us: "Bangladeshi infiltration with Pakistani ideas... trying to 'Pakistanize' the entire region," he said adding that that the dominant culture for South Asian Muslims has become more "Arabic," than South Asian.

In 1947 when the British left, they partitioned the Indian subcontinent into Hindu and Muslim states. West Bengal went to Hindu India, and East Bengal (now Bangladesh) became part of Pakistan. While Hindu and Muslim majorities respectively, remain, exhaustive studies by Pramanik and others hold out little hope that things will continue that way. During the second half of the 20th century, the Muslim proportion of West Bengal's population rose by 25 percent and its Hindu population declined by nine, a process that has continued into the 21st. At the same time, Bangladesh's Hindu population dropped from almost a third to nine percent. The process has not been pretty and has involved murder, gang rape, abduction of women and children, forced conversion to Islam, and legalized thievery of ancestral Hindu lands under Bangladesh's anti-Hindu Vested Property Act. And now it is happening in India.

Between 1981 and 1991, Muslim population growth in West Bengal actually exceeded its growth in Bangladesh. The South Asia Research Society concluded that Hindus have been fleeing Islamist persecution in East Bengal since the partition; but that since Bangladesh's emergence as an independent nation in 1971, "there has been large scale voluntary infiltration of Bangladeshi Muslims...to West Bengal and other parts of India" as well. The actual Muslim population growth exceeded Indian government projections that were based on demographic factors (fertility and mortality), internal migration, and the influx of Hindu refugees; thus, there had to be another element driving the change. Pramanik identifies it as "illegal immigration from across the border." Islamist plans have been so detailed and longstanding that since 1951 the Muslim growth rate exceeded that of Hindus in each individual district of West Bengal.

Statistics might be the "smoking gun," but jihad's impact is far more powerful in the testimony of individual non-Muslim residents who are its victims. One elderly woman in the Howrah district told us how Muslims are taking over her property piece by piece. She even showed us a wall with a star and crescent on it that local Muslims built to identify it as dar al Islam. In another village, residents showed us the remains of a Hindu temple that Muslims recently destroyed after urinating on its holy objects. Most poignant was the testimony of a crestfallen mother whose 22-year-old daughter was abducted weeks ago by local Muslims. Abduction of Hindu women and girls in the name of Islam has been common in Bangladesh for years and is a key element in jihad: eliminating females of childbearing years from the gene pool and forcing them to "produce" Muslim offspring instead. It is now happening in India, according to victimized parents who told me about it in India's North and Northeast.

Residents of Deganga, only 40 kilometers from the West Bengal capital of Kolkata, lived through an anti-Hindu pogrom last September. The pogrom started -- as these things are wont to do these days -- with a fabricated land dispute in which Muslims claimed a wooded area off the region's main road that Hindus own and on which sits a Hindu shrine that is considered very sacred. As the 2010 Islamic observance of Iftar came to an end, a large group of Muslims attempted to seize the land until local Hindus stopped them. It was then that they started attacking Hindu households and shops indiscriminately, forcing many to flee the area with little more than the clothes on their backs.

I returned to Deganga last month to find that while many homes and shops have been rebuilt, a sense of security by Hindus in their ancestral land has not. Most of the residents spoke about leaving the area; others talked about being fearful of attack, their children unable to attend school, and Hindu women being harassed whenever they go to the market or other places in the area. Many of them showed us charred pieces of their former residences; in other cases we were able to see signs of it bleeding through a new coat of paint. Hindu women and girls showed us where they hid during the attack to avoid being raped or abducted and made concubines; a fate that likely has befallen the missing 22-year old daughter of the mother above.

In every single one of these cases, local authorities have refused to take action. In fact, during the Deganga pogrom, they arrested the community's wealthiest Hindu on the false charge of firing on the jihadis. In the past, this official inaction has been purchased; but it is also a product of the alliance between Islamists and Communists in India. That alliance was announced publicly at a meeting in the south Indian state of Kerala; and it has been policy for West Bengal's three-decade old communist government. Wherever we spoke with these villagers, Muslim neighbors would gather menacingly in an attempt to intimidate our informants. In some cases, they attacked after we left -- again with no action by the authorities.

In Meerut northeast of New Delhi and far from Deganga, the population of this once Hindu-dominated town is now split down the middle between Hindus and Muslims; and the Hindus are living in fear. Just five days ago before my arrival, a Hindu was burned to death and shortly before that a community leader was targeted and killed. These actions are becoming more common in this substantial-sized town with no police re-action; and according to residents and activists, it is only a matter of time before things explode.

Our State Department will tell you that there is no jihad in India. They will hew the official line that the liberal Awami League government in Bangladesh has put an end to anti-Hindu actions there. A similarly weak government in New Delhi will parrot the same platitudes. Yet, their false palliatives bring no comfort to the scores of victims who have told us their stories; or the many others now unable to do so.

They cannot explain away major terrorist attacks in India's largest cities like Mumbai, Pune, in New Delhi, and elsewhere. They cannot explain how insurgents can regularly kidnap minor officials and receive their ransom (usually release of prisoners, cash, and government forbearance from counter terrorist action) every time they do. If the Obama administration and its left-wing counterparts in India do not replace their studied ignorance with effective action, we will be as "surprised" over what becomes of India as we were with Iran, Egypt, and a host of other nations.

Imagine what an Islamist India would mean for us.
 

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Russia''s list of terror financiers includes Dawood, LeT


From Vinay Shukla
Moscow, Jul 6 (PTI) Russia has identified underworld don Dawood Ibrahim, and Pakistan-based terror outfits LeT, HuJI and Lashkar-e-Jhangvi as financiers of terrorism through money laundering, telling people to exercise caution while entering into financial deals.

The comprehensive list also recognises Jamaat-ud-Dawa, led by Mumbai terror attack accused Hafiz Saeed, as a cover used by Lashkar-e-Taiba.

The list was published today by the Russian government daily ''Rossiiskaya Gazeta'', which said the purpose of publishing it was to help banks and general public while they are entering into normal financial and other deals, because the money launderers often use the normal channels in their activities like sale and purchase of a house.

The first part of the list in English is compiled by the Russian Foreign Ministry on the basis of UN and other data and includes about 600 foreign companies, outfits and individuals.

The second part compiled by Russian Justice Ministry identifies 48 organisations and over 1,500 individuals, whose illegal activities against Russia were established in court or whose activities on Russian territory were officially terminated.

This part also names LeT, whose activities were put to an end in Russia and banned by the court order.

This is for the first time Russia has put the comprehensive list of terror financers in the public domain, albeit, the list of organisations and individuals under suspicion of money laundering to finance terrorism will remain classified, Rossiiskaya Gazeta writes.

Russia''s list of terror financiers includes Dawood, LeT -  International News – News – MSN India
 

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Top Jaish-e-Mohammed leader killed in encounter

 
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Just by declaring an outfit as a terror outfit we cannot say that america is acting hard on terrorists. Even after the knowing much about the double game of the pakistanis they did not act hard on pakistan, instead they provided pakistan with more money and equipment to kill their own soldiers and the poor and hard hearted patriorts without knowing the motives of the pakistanis and even after the CIA informed the americans that pakistan is killing the american troops and the NATO troops they are still supporting the pakistanis.

I REALLY FEEL SAD FOR THE AMERICAN SOLDIERS WHO ARE FIGHTING FOR THEIR MOTHERLAND and those political entities in America is not recognizing their patriotism and valor.
 

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New graduates, Jammu and Kashmir Police commandoes, march during a passing-out parade at Lethpora, some 30 kilometers (19 miles) south of Srinagar, India, Friday, July 20, 2012. Authorities said that 937 Kashmiri men were formally inducted into the police force after nine months of rigorous training.











 

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Weapons seized near LoC

Army on Thursday said it has found over 100 assorted weapons of Chinese make near the Line of Control (LoC) in Keran sector of Kashmir.

"More than 100 weapons, including 98 pistols, have been seized near the Line of Control in Keran Sector of Kupwara district," an army spokesman said.

He said the recoveries included 10 AK rifles and two assault rifles of other makes.

"The weapons are of Chinese make and the packing material like newspapers are also Chinese," the spokesman said.

He said a possible tragedy has been averted due to high vigil of the army along the LoC as "the adversary is trying to push in maximum warlike stores before winters".

The Hindu : News / National : Weapons seized near LoC
 

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