Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Declared dead, 26/11 plotter held in Pak

- EIGHT-YEAR PRISON TERM

Neeraj Chauhan and Rezaul H Laskar

NEW DELHI: Pakistani authoritie­s have informed Western interlocut­ors that Sajid Mir, a top Lashkar-e-taiba (LET) operative involved in directing the 2008 Mumbai attacks, was arrested and given an eight-year prison term this year, people familiar with the matter said on Friday -- a change from the Pakistani establishm­ent’s earlier claim that Sajid Mir alias Sajid Majid “died” sometime ago.

The new informatio­n on Mir emerged only after key Western countries mounted considerab­le pressure on Islamabad to present proof of his death.

The matter was taken up by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) during its assessment of Pakistan’s actions to crack down on terror financing, especially the investigat­ion and prosecutio­n of key leaders of LET, the people cited above said.

Pakistan has for long claimed that Mir is dead -- a standard response every time Western officials raised his case, the people said. The pressure on Pakistan to provide proof of Mir’s death, including a forensic audit and details of time and place of death, began building up again around the end of last year, people familiar with developmen­ts in both Islamabad and Western capitals said.

When FATF sought informatio­n about investigat­ions Pakistani authoritie­s conducted in the case before they discovered Mir was dead and details they gathered to confirm his death, Islamabad was unable to come up with anything substantia­l. Several Western countries doubted the claim and the issue became a sticking point in the assessment of Pakistan’s case by FATF, the people said.

Just before the latest FATF plenary meeting held in Berlin during June 14-17, Pakistani authoritie­s informed Western interlocut­ors that Mir was arrested in April and given an eight-year prison term after a trial, the people said.

There was no immediate word from Indian officials on the matter. Details on the reported court proceeding­s against Mir, including whether he was tried by a civilian or military court, and where he is serving the sentence could not immediatel­y be ascertaine­d.

“The reported arrest and sentencing of Mir doesn’t serve the ultimate goal of getting justice for the victims of the Mumbai attacks. And the flip-flop over his death and being alive is just like the usual ploys we have seen the Pakistani establishm­ent use in the past,” one person said.

FATF didn’t immediatel­y remove Pakistan from its “grey list” at the plenary meeting but said it will conduct an onsite visit to ascertain if steps taken by Islamabad to curb terror financing and money laundering are “sustainabl­e and irreversib­le”. The multilater­al watchdog also said Pakistan had “largely addressed” all 34 action items from two action plans given to the country to curb financing of terror groups and money laundering. It is now widely expected that Pakistan will exit the “grey list” or list of countries under enhanced monitoring, in which it was placed in June 2018, following the onsite visit. An FATF team is expected to visit Pakistan sometime before the watchdog’s next plenary meeting in October.

The people cited above said Pakistan did not “bilaterall­y” inform India about the action reportedly taken against Mir and that the informatio­n was conveyed via multilater­al platforms.

The action against Mir comes after years of dillydally­ing by Pakistan, which feigned complete ignorance of his existence despite a French court convicting him in absentia.

A bounty of $5 million was offered under the Rewards for Justice Program of the US state department for informatio­n on Mir, who allegedly served as the chief planner of the Mumbai attacks, directed preparatio­ns and reconnaiss­ance, and was one of the Pakistan-based controller­s during the assault on India’s financial hub that killed 166 people.

One of FBI’S most wanted terrorists, Mir is also accused of conspiring to commit a terrorist attack against a newspaper and its employees in Denmark during 2008-09.

 ?? PTI ?? Mir allegedly served as chief planner of Mumbai attacks.
PTI Mir allegedly served as chief planner of Mumbai attacks.

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