The Free Press Journal

Pak terror watch a win

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The action of the G-7 sponsored Financial Action Task Force (FATF)’s just-concluded plenary in Paris of putting Pakistan on the grey list, submitting it to intense scrutiny on terror financing is a shot in the arm for India, which has been facing the brunt of Pakistani financing of terror in Kashmir. That it has been operationa­lised, thanks to intense US pressure, is an encouragin­g signal of Indo-US bonding. A last-minute consensus was arrived at after China withdrew its objection to the move. Turkey and Saudi Arabia, which were the other objectors, caved in when they found China not pursuing it. The FATF is an inter-government­al body establishe­d in 1989 to promote effective implementa­tion of legal, regulatory and operationa­l measures for combating money laundering, terrorist financing and other related threats to the integrity of the internatio­nal financial system.

The case against Pakistan was that it had failed to act against outfits like UN-banned terror groups Jaish-e-Mohammed, Lashkar-eTaiba, Jamaat-ud-Dawa and its affiliate, the Falah-i-Insaaniyat Foundation. Pakistan foreign minister Khawaja M Asif had earlier tweeted from Moscow that Pakistan had won a reprieve of three months but the relief was short-lived. Pakistan had been on the FATF watch list from 2012 to 2015, then only on issues of money laundering. Recently, to escape action the Pakistan government had amended the country’s anti-terrorism law through a presidenti­al ordinance to address some concerns of the FATF. The legislatio­n provided legal ground for action against UN-banned organisati­ons like Lashkar-eTaiba, headed by the Mumbai terror attacks mastermind Hafiz Saeed. China has, for some time, been stalling UN sanctions against Saeed despite strong Indian objections.

While the next plenary of FATF three months later would review the decision to put Pakistan on ‘grey list,’ it is an opportunit­y for India to build up a strong case for continuing with it. India must pursue this and also the UN sanctions against Hafiz Saeed with new vigour, and coordinate action with the US to get Islamabad to close terror training camps and infiltrati­on of terrorists into Kashmir.

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