Pak frees 2500 Taleban Fighters

Instead of deporting these Taleban fighters to their respective countries, they have released them to roam around the country. Do these Talebans not pose a big threat to the stability of the country? Just few days ago the self-annointed president warned the world that Talebans were a more dangerous terrorist force than Al-Qaeda. And now he releases 2500 of them. Does it make any sense to you?

US outraged as Pakistan frees Taliban fighters
By Isambard Wilkinson in Peshawar

Pakistan’s credibility as a leading ally in the war on terrorism was called into question last night when it emerged that President Pervez Musharraf’s government had authorised the release from jail of thousands of Taliban fighters caught fighting coalition forces in Afghanistan.

Five years after American-led coalition forces overthrew the Taliban during Operation Enduring Freedom, United States officials have been horrified to discover that thousands of foreign fighters detained by Pakistan after fleeing the battleground in Afghanistan have been quietly released and allowed to return to their home countries.

Pakistani lawyers acting for the militants claim they have freed 2,500 foreigners who were originally held on suspicion of having links to al-Qa’eda or the Taliban over the past four years.

The mass release of the prisoners has provoked a stern rebuke to the Musharraf regime from the American government. “We have repeatedly warned Pakistan over arresting and then releasing suspects,” said a US diplomat in Islamabad. “We are monitoring their response with great concern.”

The Daily Telegraph tracked down and interviewed several former fighters who were part of a batch of eight foreign prisoners released last month. Burhan Ahmad, a 32-year-old Bangladeshi who has an American degree in engineering, admitted helping the Taliban against US-led forces in Afghanistan five years ago.

He was arrested by Pakistani security agents as he passed back over the frontier in 2003. Last month he was released from jail, where he spent three years without facing trial.

Like thousands of other Taliban and al-Qa’eda suspects who have been rounded up in Pakistan, Ahmad is now being fed and sheltered by an Islamic welfare group as he waits while a travel agency that specialises in repatriating jihadis prepares his identity papers and air ticket.

He was handed over to the al-Khidmat Foundation, a welfare organisation run by the hard-line Islamist party Jamaat-i-Islami, by a local court in Peshawar.

“I was arrested on the very same day that I arrived in Pakistan as I crossed from Khost to South Waziristan,” said Ahmad who then spent 28 months in the custody of one of Pakistan’s intelligence agencies before being transferred to a jail where he was imprisoned for three months. “The situation has become too difficult in Afghanistan and so I wanted to go home. I felt I had played my part.”

In the hands of al-Khidmat Ahmad was more concerned with worldly goods than attaining a martyr’s end in jihad. He produced a list of his personal items that he wanted back from the security agency: socks, a laptop, a thermal vest and some money.

His lawyer, Fida Gul, said: “He is no problem. He will go to Bangladesh. He is not a criminal and he has been cleared by the security forces. His arrest was illegal.”

One of those who spoke to this newspaper was a young Tajik who entered Pakistan last year to study, he claimed, at a madrassa in Peshawar. He was shot in the side by Pakistani police as he tried to escape when the madrassa was raided.

A third former prisoner, a 37-year-old Algerian, had come to fight the Russian-backed government in Afghanistan in the early 1990s. He married a Pakistani woman and claimed to have settled down and worked in the honey business when he was arrested last year.

“I am going home to Algeria as I want to take advantage of an amnesty offered by the government,” he said. “I know I will be arrested on arrival and interrogated as this happened to several of my Algerian brothers. But then I will be released as I have done nothing wrong.”

**On the question of whether released militants would return to jihad, Hazrat Aman, a field officer of the al-Khidmat Foundation, said: “If they react like that it is a natural phenomenon. Some of these people spent two to three years in jail. Some of them will live peacefully and others will join jihad again.”

**

Re: Pak frees 2500 Taleban Fighters

Good news...

Re: Pak frees 2500 Taleban Fighters

If this is true... its probably the most idiotic move in my opinion.

Re: Pak frees 2500 Taleban Fighters

shawaiz, link or some reference etc is reqd for your post #1.

Guys pls dont forget mentioning source/links etc while posting material.

Re: Pak frees 2500 Taleban Fighters

Pak Army has taken a beating from the fundo's in Waziristan, they are not operating from a position of strength

Re: Pak frees 2500 Taleban Fighters

US not so outraged by this deal, as the original posters article claimed.

http://www.dawn.com/2006/09/16/top1.htm

US endorses Waziristan peace deal

The United States believes that the agreement the government recently signed with pro-Taliban tribal chiefs in Waziristan has the ‘potential to work’. In a policy speech at the School of Advanced International Studies here, Assistant Secretary of State Richard Boucher endorsed the deal as an effort to get tribal support to defeat terrorism. He refused to get involved in a debate over the situation in Balochistan, saying that it was Pakistan’s ‘local problem’. He declared that no country had done more than Pakistan in the war against terror. Noting that the government had carved out a new strategy to deal with the cross-border activities of Taliban and Al Qaeda sympathisers, Mr Boucher said: “The agreement really has the potential to work.” He said he believed the deal created an opportunity for local leaders to get hold of the problem of terrorism and it could enable the government “to get a political handle on this and enlist its citizens in the fight against terror”. The US, he said, understood that to effectively control the Afghan border, Pakistan needed “cooperation from local tribes and they are really trying to get in.” Mr Boucher said the US hoped that the agreement would leave a positive impact on the situation in the regions that are run by local tribal chiefs since the British days. “Instead of challenging the tribal chiefs, Pakistan has signed an agreement with them and we believe that it is a good effort,” he said.

The official said the agreement would allow the local administration and the tribal chiefs to play a positive role in the development of their areas and also in restoring peace and security to the region. The agreement, he said, would restrict the movement of Taliban and would not permit the presence of Al Qaeda and its sympathisers in the tribal belt. “Talibanisation will not be allowed, in the area or in the cities near the tribal region,” he said. Mr Boucher said the government had made the tribal chiefs accept all these conditions before signing the agreement. “Only the results will tell whether this agreement will succeed or if it is a positive step. I believe it is positive in the sense that it is an effort to create political understanding, an effort to bring economic development to the area,” said Mr Boucher. “We hope that this strategy succeeds.” Mr Boucher said a major effort was on in Pakistan to fight terrorism with a lot of success in efforts to curb Al Qaeda. Islamabad had also now turned its attention on Taliban with President Pervez Musharraf showing real determination, he said. President Musharraf, in Mr Boucher’s view, was also crucial to building a moderate and democratic Muslim society in Pakistan.

Re: Pak frees 2500 Taleban Fighters

^^ Well 4 years of fighting hasnt changed anything....

Maybe a respite will...

As for bin laden, it will make it easier to search for him because special forces can move in and out much more easily now that the army has stopped operations and people will be less angry

Re: Pak frees 2500 Taleban Fighters

So, they were deemed fit for release by a soverign state. We can do what we want.

Re: Pak frees 2500 Taleban Fighters

musharraf should not be becoming so lenient towards these folks when all indications are that bin laden and zaweheri are hiding in Pakistan.all their videos are being receieved at al-jazeera office in islamabad and they seem to be living in a house not cave.i think the main problem for Musharraf is that there are people within the Pakistan army who have sympathies for al-qaeda and taliban and he can not be seen as someone whos killing fellow muslims on orders of America otherwise a revolt in the army can happen.

Re: Pak frees 2500 Taleban Fighters

ok! I try again. Those 2500 "foreign" Taleban fighters, who have been recently released by the government, should not have been deported to their countries immediately. What are these "persona non gratae" still doing in Pak? They must have killed many soldiers of the pakistan army, they are trained in gurella warfare and diehard jihadis to the core. Are they not a potential threat to the stability of Pak, esp of FATA?

Re: Pak frees 2500 Taleban Fighters

Yes, these guys shouldnt have been released on the streets of Pakistan. They should have been sent back to Afghanistan.

Re: Pak frees 2500 Taleban Fighters

^^ agreed

Re: Pak frees 2500 Taleban Fighters

these prisoners need to be at home feeding their kids and famillies, not fighting a war or being in prison. can you imagine the loss through death or imprisonment of a father, husband, son to afghani/rural pakistani households? of course, what they actually do is up to them. a risk assesment must have been done. they are of very little danger to pakistani people. if they choose to re-enter the afghan battlefield they will die, no two ways about it. they just happen to be part of the setup and philosophy pakistan was encouraging, before 9/11. they just happenned to be the people used by the US and pakistan for a war the countries should have been fighting themselves. those not totally over the russian invasion/still in fighting mentality will die. these are Innocent victims/soldiers of the pakistani cause who had the rules changed on them 360

Re: Pak frees 2500 Taleban Fighters

The Jihadis and politicised Mullahs have been thriving for many decades under the direct patronage of the army. These 2500 Taleban fighters pose a greater threat to the stability of the whole region and particularly to Pakistan than any Baloch sirdar. The way the army is dealing with mullah and jihadis indicates how essential they are for eachother. The era of enlightened moderation is as dark as the era of islamic fundamentalism...

Re: Pak frees 2500 Taleban Fighters

The Baloch sirdar was against the army but not against the country, he had to die. The jihadis are not against the army but they pose a threat to the very existence of this country, they are thriving. Go figure!

Re: Pak frees 2500 Taleban Fighters

The Baloch sardar took up arms against the state of Pakistan, it’s people, army and installations, mudered hundreds of people a day, took hundreds of millions from energy companies and kept it all for himself. He truly deserved what he got, and people in his home town Dera Bugti have celebrated.

http://www.dawn.com/2006/09/17/nat16.htm

Troops to stay in Waziristan: Aurakzai

NWFP Governor Ali Mohammad Jan Aurakzai has said that troops will not be withdrawn from North Waziristan despite a peace agreement with pro-Taliban tribal chiefs. “We haven’t deployed our 80,000 troops for nothing. They are there for a purpose,” he told a private TV channel. “If Osama bin Laden’s presence is confirmed in any part of the area adjoining the Afghanistan border, or for that matter anywhere in Pakistan, we have these troops stationed there to carry out the job,” he said. “There won’t be any requirement for US troops or Special Task Force to enter our area and take action against Osama bin Laden. We are capable of doing that,” he said.—

Re: Pak frees 2500 Taleban Fighters

The Baloch sardar took up arms against the state of Pakistan, it's people, army and installations, mudered hundreds of people a day, took hundreds of millions from energy companies and kept it all for himself. He truly deserved what he got, and people in his home town Dera Bugti have celebrated.

Not a very convincing argument. The army commits all these crimes but at a very large scale. The army has overthrown the elected government many times ( a crime punishable by death according to the constitution, if you don't know), killed thousands of civilians, raped the constitution and grabs the lion's share of the budget but still lost every war it has fought...

Re: Pak frees 2500 Taleban Fighters

^
Not a very convincing argument, but just full of the same hate-filled anti-military trash you always write. Very predictable.

Re: Pak frees 2500 Taleban Fighters

^^Every foreign student studying in Pakistan is not necessarily a Taliban. Many of these Talibans and their allies came from US. Take Osama for instance.

There are still 565,039 Talibans in US
http://opendoors.iienetwork.org/?p=69689
http://opendoors.iienetwork.org/page/69691/

US biz want more foreign students (aka Talibans) in USA
Student enrolment from Pakistan fell while India sent more
There were 565,039 foreign students studying in the US in 2004-2005, with students from India topping the list, but enrolment from Pakistan fell by 14 percent. There were a total of 80,466 students from India and only 6,296 from Pakistan.
Pakistani students have had a great deal of difficulty in obtaining US visas and even students who had gone home during a break have had trouble returning.
http://www.despardes.com/Diaspora/111805.htm