The Asian Age

Pak bans hide donation to ‘blackliste­d’ outfits

3 such terror organisati­ons are active in Kashmir ‘Donate skins of sacrificia­l animals on the Id only to such aid organisati­on which are involved in purely charity work’

- YUSUF JAMEEL

The Pakistan government has banned donation of skins of sacrificia­l animals by Muslims on Id-ulZuha to the organisati­ons and groups which it says are involved in terrorism. Some of the “blackliste­d” outfits are active in Jammu and Kashmir as well.

The neighbouri­ng country’s interior ministry has issued a list of 71 such organisati­ons and groups and said that under the law it is crime to donate the skins of the animals sacrificed on Id-ul-Zuha to these. The festival is being celebrated by the Muslims of South Asia at the weekend.

“Under the law of the country, it is a crime to donate the skins (of sacrificia­l animals) to the organisati­ons which are involved in activities related to terrorism,” a notificati­on issued by it said. It appealed to the people to donate the skins

of sacrificia­l animals on the Id “only to such aid organisati­on which are involved in purely charity work and have not been proscribed under any domestic or foreign law.”

At least, three of the ‘blackliste­d’ organisati­ons are active in Jammu and Kashmir, as well. These are Jaish-eMohammad, Lashkar-eTayyaba and Tehrik-eAzad-i-Kashmir.

Also figure in the list are Jama’at-ud-Da’wah of Hafiz Muhammad Saeed which has had sanctions placed against it as a terrorist organisati­on by the United Nations, the Daish (ISIS) and Al Qaeda.

At least fourteen blackliste­d outfits are active in Balochista­n. These include Balochista­n Liberation United Front, Baluchista­n Liberation Army and Baluchista­n United Army. Half a dozen outfits which figure in the list are operating in Gilgit, Baltistan region.

The organisati­ons barred from receiving the skins of sacrificia­l animals, alms and charity for their involved in terrorist activities within Pakistan include Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), Sipah-eSahaba Pakistan, Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, Tehrik-e-Jafriya Pakistan and Hizb-ul-Tehrir. Most of these organisati­ons and outfits have already been banned by the Pakistan government but almost all continue to operate clandestin­ely.

Pakistanis are projected to spend `200 billion this Id, sacrificin­g an estimated 3 million sheep, goats, cows, bulls, buffaloes and camels. Pakistan Tanners Associatio­n (PTA) had after the last year’s Eid collected nearly 7.5 million hides and skin.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India