Jihadis seeking safer
US Elections Calendar ~ Pervez Musharraf ~ Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry ~ Other International News
Home / International News / 2008 / March 2008 / March 17, 2008
Jihadis seeking safer Sufi monasteries khanqahs to under attack madrassas in Pak
Taliban

Scribe-turned-Taleban ultra assumes complete control over Mohmand Agency

Qaeda-linked group uses video of martyred child for recruitment

Ruling party says peace wont return to NWFP unless militant sanctuaries remain

New book says Pak played key role in fanning Afghan insurgency campaign

More on Taliban

Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry

Zardari fears sacked chief justice might threaten Govt if reinstated

Nawaz Sharif not likely to return to Pak anytime soon

Nawaz, Imran plan to join lawyers long march

Fear of cases being reopened behind Zardaris reluctance to impeach Musharraf

More on Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry

Benazir Bhutto

PML-Q chief Shujaat Hussain says PPP has set aside Benazirs vision

PML-Q blames PPP for drifting away from Benazirs vision

Musharraf may use Article 58-2(b) if judges are restored

Gilanis a government in exile run by Zardari, alleges PML-Q

More on Benazir Bhutto

General Pervez Musharraf

Zardari fears sacked chief justice might threaten Govt if reinstated

US to woo Gilani by stating it no longer suffers from Musharraf phobia

Bush plans to convert Pak anti-terror aid into upgrading F-16s aimed at India

Pakistan's New Government Must Reveal Truth About Enforced Disappearances, Urges Amnesty International in a New Report

More on General Pervez Musharraf

Top News

Karnataka High Court orders Ramoji Rao to appear in Ballari Court

CCEA approves scheme on National Mission on Medicinal Plants

Magnets could keep sharks at bay!

Pammie was first choice for X-Files lead role!

Chidambaran says government to speed up reforms

ICC chief Haroon Lorgat to meet the media in Colombo

Bossy parents cause older teens to indulge in more sex

Aussies turning in droves to alternative therapies

Jihadis seeking safer Sufi monasteries khanqahs to under attack madrassas in Pak

In the wake of frequent attacks on madarassas by security forces, the jihadis in Pakistan are increasingly turning to khanqahs (Sufi monasteries) for setting up sanctuaries, while shunning the madrassas.

Lahore, Mar 17 : In the wake of frequent attacks on madarassas by security forces, the jihadis in Pakistan are increasingly turning to khanqahs (Sufi monasteries) for setting up sanctuaries, while shunning the madrassas.

A close ally of Taliban supreme leader Mullah Omar and head of Harkatul Jihad Al Islami Pakistan revealed thus during interrogation. He reportedly told the interrogators that since madrassas were regularly being raided in connection with the war on terror, and that this had forced jihadis to prefer khanqahs as resting stops.

He said the deputation of permanent surveillance at every madrassa further facilitated this move.

According to the Daily Times, Qari Saifullah Akhtar revealed during interrogation that he had been staying at a khanqah during the time he was hiding from law-enforcement agencies.

Saifullah said that he had been living in 'Khanqah Syed Ahmad Shaheed' near Sagian Bridge for the past few months. He also revealed that he was building a new khanqah in Ferozewala when he was arrested.

Saifullah was arrested in connection with the October 18 blasts in Karachi, as he had been accused in Benazir Bhutto's book of plotting to kill her.

Saifullah had initially been arrested in Dubai in August 2004, after which he was repatriated to Pakistan. He was released after his family submitted an appeal before then chief justice of Pakistan Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry in connection with the "missing persons case". He, however, disappeared in Bahawalpur after his release.

Saifullah was shifted to Karachi for further investigation, and that investigators were hopeful that he would provide more information about the actions of the jihadis.

Qari Saifullah tried to kill President Pervez Musharraf on behalf of Al Qaeda. He was also an adviser to Mullah Omar in the Taliban government of Afghanistan. His fighters were called the "Punjabi Taliban" and were offered employment - something other outfits could not get out of Mullah Omar.

ANI

July 24, 2008

July 23, 2008

July 22, 2008

July 21, 2008

July 20, 2008

July 19, 2008