The Sunday Guardian

Pakistan strikes a deal with radical cleric, gives him charge of mosque

-

of the Red Mosque earlier this month by giving him the administra­tion of a nearby mosque, Jamia Hafsa in return. While the Lal Masjid is located at the G-6 area of Islamabad, Jamia Hafsa is at G-7.

“Post this deal, Pakistan, in its official communicat­ions to foreign agencies, has been claiming that it has come down hard on radical elements within the country. They have been telling the foreign representa­tives that Aziz and his family have been barred from entering the Lal Masjid. Facts on the ground are, however, different. What Pakistan is not telling the world is that under the deal, the Lal Masjid will be headed by Haroon Rashid Ghazi, who is the son of Abdul Rashid Ghazi, the brother of Maulana Abdul Aziz, who was killed by army commandos during the 2007 siege. Haroon Ghazi is also the sonin-law of Abdul Aziz. So in effect, the control of the Red Mosque will remain in the hands of Abdul Aziz only,” an official following the developmen­t told The Sunday

Guardian.

Maulana Abdul Aziz was recently seen on TV, leading weekly congregati­onal prayers without taking any anti-covid-19 measures, with his supporters openly displaying weapons at the Red Mosque, which is just 2.8 km from the Pakistani Parliament building and the residence of the Pakistan Prime Minister.

Lal Masjid has, for years now, been treated as a subject of interest by different intelligen­ce agencies because of the safe sanctuary it provides to jihadi elements within Islamabad. “For years now, it has been acting as a meeting point and facilitato­r for clandestin­e meetings between radical elements. The ISI is aware of it,” the official added.

In 2014, Aziz had renamed the library inside Lal Masjid in the name of Al-qaeda chief Osama Bin Laden and had been giving yearly tributes to Laden ever since. “This latest developmen­t shows that the Pakistan civil government does not have the will or the authority to shut down jihadi networks that are operating in the country so openly,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India