Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
International

Jaish Chief Masood Azhar’s Brother Among 44 Detained In Pakistan

Darpan News Desk IANS, 05 Mar, 2019 08:35 PM

    With growing global pressure to rein in militant group’s functioning on its soil, Pakistan’s Interior ministry said its security agencies had detained 44 members of banned groups, including Jaish-e-Mohammed chief Masood Azhar’s brother Mufti Abdur Rauf.

     

    Indian security agencies were unmoved by reports of arrest, with officials saying the terrorists were not arrested under the anti-terrorism laws but have only been taken in “preventive detention for investigation”.


    Mufti Abdur Rauf, brother of Azhar, and Hammad Azhar are among those arrested during the crackdown, Minister of State for Interior Shehryar Khan Afridi said at a press conference.


    He said a dossier shared by India with Pakistan last week also contained names of Mufti Abdur Rauf and Hammad Azhar.


    The minister said the action would be taken against all the proscribed organizations, but denied that the action came in the light of intense pressure.


    The move came a day after Pakistan on Monday promulgated a law to streamline the procedure for the implementation of the UN sanctions against individuals and organisations.


    Interpreting the order, Foreign Office spokesperson Mohammad Faisal said it means that the government has taken over the control of assets and properties of all banned outfits operating in the country.


    The development comes in the face of intense pressure to deal with militant organisations that operated in the country, including the JeM, which claimed a recent suicide attack in Pulwama that killed 40 troopers of the Central Reserve Police Forces. The attack sparked outrage in India, and escalated tensions between India and Pakistan.


    With growing global pressure to rein in militant group’s functioning on its soil, Pakistan’s Interior ministry said its security agencies had detained 44 members of banned groups, including Jaish-e-Mohammed chief Masood Azhar’s brother Mufti Abdur Rauf.


    Mufti Abdur Rauf, brother of Azhar, and Hammad Azhar are among those arrested during the crackdown, Minister of State for Interior Shehryar Khan Afridi said at a press conference.


    He said a dossier shared by India with Pakistan last week also contained names of Mufti Abdur Rauf and Hammad Azhar.


    The minister said the action would be taken against all the proscribed organizations, but denied that the action came in the light of intense pressure.


    The move came a day after Pakistan on Monday promulgated a law to streamline the procedure for the implementation of the UN sanctions against individuals and organisations.


    Interpreting the order, Foreign Office spokesperson Mohammad Faisal said it means that the government has taken over the control of assets and properties of all banned outfits operating in the country.


    The development comes in the face of intense pressure to deal with militant organisations that operated in the country, including the JeM, which claimed a recent suicide attack in Pulwama that killed 40 troopers of the Central Reserve Police Forces. The attack sparked outrage in India, and escalated tensions between India and Pakistan.


    Similar actions by the neighbouring country against leaders of the proscribed outfits in the past turned out to be farce as those who were taken into custody were let off soon on different pretexts.


    There is every possibility that the detention could also be an attempt by the Pakistan Army to provide security to these terrorists, given the “fear psychosis” that has gripped Pakistan in the past few days following the Indian Air Force strike at Balakot, an Indian official said.


    The assessment of the security agencies came in view of the fact that founders of Jaish-e-Mohammad and Lashkar-e-Taiba—Masood Azhar and Hafiz Saeed, respectively—were detained several times in the past, mostly under laws that provide for detention for apprehension of “breach of peace”.


    Azhar and Saeed have never been prosecuted under the Pakistan’s Anti Terrorism Act, 1997, another official said.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    How IAF’s Oldest Warhorse MIG-21 Downed Pakistan’s Best F-16

    On its last legs, the MiG-21 continues to bare its fangs. The most advanced aircraft that the Pakistan Air Force flaunts went down to the oldest fighter in IAF inventory, the venerable MiG-21, in an aerial duel in the skies of Jammu and Kashmir today.

    How IAF’s Oldest Warhorse MIG-21 Downed Pakistan’s Best F-16

    Malala Urges PMs Of Pakistan And India To Engage In Dialogue To Settle Current Conflict

    Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai on Thursday urged the prime ministers of India and Pakistan to engage in dialogue to settle the current conflict and long-standing issue of Kashmir.

    Malala Urges PMs Of Pakistan And India To Engage In Dialogue To Settle Current Conflict

    Pakistan To Release IAF Pilot Wing Commander Abhinandan On Friday: Imran Khan

    Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan on Thursday said that as a peace gesture they would be releasing Indian Air Force pilot Wing Commander Abhinandan on Friday.

    Pakistan To Release IAF Pilot Wing Commander Abhinandan On Friday: Imran Khan

    No Country Spoke In Our Favour On Indian Strike, Telling: Ex-Pak Envoy

    "It is telling that no country has spoken out in Pakistan's favour after the Indian air strike," Husain Haqqani, the former Pakistani Ambassador to the US, said.  

    No Country Spoke In Our Favour On Indian Strike, Telling: Ex-Pak Envoy

    India Shot Down Pakistan Air Force's F-16, One IAF Pilot Missing In Action, Confirms Government

    India Shot Down Pakistan Air Force's F-16, One IAF Pilot Missing In Action, Confirms Government
    India-Pakistan tensions persisted on Wednesday as the IAF chased away intruding Pakistani fighter jets in Jammu and Kashmir's Nowshera sector with India shooting down a Pakistani F-16 which fell on the Pakistani side.

    India Shot Down Pakistan Air Force's F-16, One IAF Pilot Missing In Action, Confirms Government

    Won't Be In My Control Or Narendra Modi's If This Escalates: Imran Khan

    Won't Be In My Control Or Narendra Modi's If This Escalates: Imran Khan
    Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan on Wednesday offered talks to India and urged that "better sense should prevail" as tensions spiked between the two nuclear-armed neighbours following an aerial engagement between their air forces.

    Won't Be In My Control Or Narendra Modi's If This Escalates: Imran Khan