Hindustan Times (Delhi)

US: Pak failed to stop LET, JEM funds, recruiting

- Yashwant Raj

WASHINGTON: US state department said on Friday Pakistan has “failed to significan­tly limit” Lashkar-e-taiba and Jaish-e-mohammad’s ability to raise money and recruit followers, and allowed candidates connected to their front organisati­ons to contest elections.

In its annual country report on terrorism for 2018, the department noted Pakistan’s efforts in relations to the implementa­tion of conditions laid down by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) and said it failed to uniformly implement UN sanctions against groups like the LET, which continued to raise funds.

Globally, the report said, Iran remained the “world’s worst state sponsor of terrorism”, adding that al Qaeda remained resilient and aimed to “re-establish itself as the vanguard of the global jihadist movement” in view of reverses suffered by the Islamic State in recent years. The US announced the killing of Abu Bakr al-baghdadi in Syria last weekend.

The report cited LET and JEM among groups that remained a threat in 2018 and said they “maintained the capability and intent to attack Indian and Afghan targets”. It mentioned the February attack by JEM operative on an Indian army camp at Sunjuwan in Jammu and Kashmir, killing seven.

Pakistan, their host country, continued to not act resolutely against them contrary to its assurances, which has been a longstandi­ng US complaint. “The government failed to significan­tly limit” LET and JEM from “raising money, recruiting, and training in Pakistan”.

And Pakistan allowed “candidates overtly affiliated with LET front organisati­ons to contest the July general elections”. The reference clearly was to the Muslim Milli League, an LET front that fielded more than 250 candidates in the 2018 general elections.

The report noted Pakistan’s continued failure to shut down terror financing. “FATF noted that Un-listed entities, including LET and its affiliates, were not effectivel­y prohibited from raising funds in Pakistan, or being denied financial services. Although Pakistan’s laws technicall­y comply with internatio­nal AML/CFT standards, authoritie­s failed to uniformly implement UN sanctions related to designated entities and individual­s such as LET and its affiliates, which continued to make use of economic resources and raise funds.”

The report disapprove­d of Pakistan’s support for terrorists targeting Afghanista­n. “Although the Pakistani government voiced support for political reconcilia­tion between the Afghan government and the Afghan Taliban, it did not restrict the Afghan Taliban and the Haqqani Network from operating in Pakistan-based safe havens and threatenin­g US and Afghan forces .”

Pakistan has since then pushed the Afghan Taliban to participat­e in Us-led peace talks, which appear to have resumed in recent days.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India