Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

To Lashkar HQ and back

ACROSS THE BORDER A visit to the Lashkareta­iba headquarte­rs in Pakistan’s Muridke two weeks after the attacks revealed the group’s nexus with state actors and hate against India

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no to you,” the group had told the former Pakistan minister.

“You are in an educationa­l complex and the Jamaat-ud-dawaah is a charitable organisati­on, but you are from India so it will take you time to change your mind,” Muntazir said the following morning, as he guided me through the complex where Kasab had trained.

The guided tour took me through a neatly laid out 60-bed hospital, schools for boys and girls, a madrasa, a mosque, an extravagan­tly large swimming pool and a guest house.

I did not go there thinking I’d see firing ranges or target shooting in progress, but the tour itself was surreal. As I walked through the neatly trimmed lawns, passing the hostel, mosque, and the hospital, the conversati­on was dotted with words such as terrorism, Lashkar, and in my case, Kashmir. Apart from Muntazir, I had another guide: Khalid Waleed, the son-in-law of Hafiz Saeed.

Even though the gates were opened to dispel the impression of Muridke being the training camp that “India has made it out to be”, the conversati­on was not about the school syllabus but wholly about how India was the enemy.

Muntazir and Waleed did not deny the fact that Kasab ‘schooled’ in Muridke.

So, did Kasab study here, in Muridke, I asked, pointedly?

“Even if he did, we are not responsibl­e for what any one of our students does after passing out.”

Do you support the Lashkar-e-taiba? “We used to.”

You used to?

“Yes, we were like-minded but the group was banned after Indian propaganda following the attack on its Parliament which was done by the Jaish-e-mohammad and not the LET. We use to provide logistical help to the Lashkar, collect funds for them and look after their publicity.”

Did you also provide them arms? “They must have bought weapons with the money we gave them. They were obviously not using the money to buy flowers for the Indian army.”

Do you consider India an enemy? “Without a doubt.”

“Your Amir, Hafiz Sayeed, has given calls for jihad.

“He supports the freedom movement in Kashmir. We think it is right. It is ridiculous to call him a terrorist. Even when a thorn pricks India, the whole world stands up.”

Does the ISI support you? Muntazir laughs.

Ten years after 26/11, Saeed continues to be a free man. Only last month, the JUD was removed from the list of banned organisati­ons.

Pakistan has steadfastl­y refused to investigat­e the various dossiers given to it by India, and the trial underway in an anti-terrorism court has been marked with repeated adjournmen­ts.

Dealing with LET and its founder. Saeed, has been a vexed issue for the United States of America, too. It announced a $10-million bounty for Saeed in 2012 but has no answers for why the bounty has not been executed in six years, especially when the ‘professor of terror’ has been openly giving provocativ­e speeches, threatenin­g not just India, but the US as well. The US ambassador to India, Kenneth Juster, declined a comment on the matter.

America was also not keen on extraditin­g Pakistan-born American terrorist David Coleman Headley, who made elaborate videos of the targets that were attacked. All videos were given to his handlers and when interrogat­ed by India’s National Investigat­ion Agency (NIA), Headley said: “Every major action of the LET is done only after the approval of Hafiz Saeed.” He also told the FBI and the NIA that 26/11 was possible only due to the full support of the ISI.

The families of Mumbai’s victims can only draw some solace from the fact that Ajmal Kasab was tried, convicted and hanged. The question of Pakistan allowing its soil to be used by terrorists, still hangs in balance. The Lashkar has the support of more than just ministers it can reach out to.

 ?? AP FILE ?? Ten years after the 26/11 attacks, Lashkareta­iba founder Hafiz Saeed continues to be a free man.
AP FILE Ten years after the 26/11 attacks, Lashkareta­iba founder Hafiz Saeed continues to be a free man.

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