Militant leader released by Pakistani court

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan -- A Pakistani court has ordered the full release of Hafiz Saeed, founder of the Islamic militant group that carried out the deadly 2008 Mumbai attacks, 10 months after the government placed him under house arrest, his lawyer said.

The move will free Saeed to participate more directly in Pakistan's politics. And at a time when the United States has been pushing Pakistan to do better in curbing militants, it presents another example of how the most extremist voices in the country seem to be moving more into the mainstream.

Saeed had long been one of the most-wanted militant leaders in the region, but he had been living in the open in Pakistan for years despite a $10 million U.S. bounty on him. India, in particular, has criticized Pakistan for not bringing him to justice after the militant group he founded, Lashkar-e-Taiba, killed 166 people in the Mumbai attacks.

But to many Pakistanis, Saeed is a hero: the architect of a long militant campaign to fight India in Kashmir, and a prominent voice for fundamentalist Islam. Some love how he has mocked efforts by the United States to capture him, and he drew large crowds as he continued to lead public gatherings, especially in his home city, Lahore.

The Pakistani government long ago formally banned Lashkar-e-Taiba, which was widely listed as a terrorist group. But Pakistan had made few public advances against Saeed even after he founded a charity, Jamaat-ud-Dawa, that is openly considered a front for Lashkar-e-Taiba and that recently began moving into political campaigning.

In January, the government declared him under house arrest, seeming to bow to international pressure and also keeping him from fundraising for Jamaat-ud-Dawa. The arrest order was extended several times until Wednesday, when a three-member judicial body reviewed and rejected a government request to extend Saeed's detention for 90 more days. His current detention order expires overnight Thursday.

"We are overjoyed to announce that after waiting for 10 long months, our chief will finally be free," Jamaat-ud-Dawa's information secretary, Nadeem Awan, said in an interview. "There is a lot of celebration and happiness within our ranks, and we are proud that we have been able to get justice the legal way, through the courts."

Awan said the government's lawyers had repeatedly argued in court that Saeed was a threat to public safety and that his release could lead to international penalties for Pakistan for not moving against terrorism financing.

"But at no point was the government able to provide any actual evidence for these charges, despite the court giving it many chances to do so," Awan said.

"The review board has now rescinded the detention order," said Saeed's lawyer, Abdullah Khan Dogar. "The government of Punjab is now bound to release Hafiz Saeed. They no longer have any right to keep him in custody."

A Punjab government spokesman confirmed that the government was releasing Saeed, "though our concerns about his activities are far from resolved."

His latest stint under house arrest was not the first for Saeed, though he has repeatedly avoided long-term detention or serious legal charges. He was placed under detention at least twice after the 2008 attacks in Mumbai.

For decades, Pakistan has cast a benign eye on groups like Lashkar-e-Taiba -- which is perceived as an asset because its attacks target Indian soldiers in Kashmir -- even as the government battles jihadi groups like the Pakistani Taliban that directly threaten the country.

But despite its pressure on Pakistan to move against militants like Saeed, the United States has also sent mixed messages.

Just a month ago, the U.S. Senate struck down a provision tying U.S. government funding to Pakistan to the country's efforts to curb Lashkar-e-Taiba's operations. The provision, part of broader Pentagon-funding legislation that Congress introduced last summer, would have forced the secretary of defense to certify that Islamabad was thwarting Lashkar-e-Taiba's activities inside Pakistan or risk $350 million in U.S. assistance.

Rep. Ted Poe, R-Texas, said military aid to Pakistan was a continuing source of tension between the Pentagon and Congress.

"It astounds me that we keep giving Pakistan money -- military and foreign aid -- and they're a haven for terror groups, from the Taliban to Lashkar-e-Taiba," Poe said in a telephone interview last week. "The military folks over the years have not made the case to me that we should continue military support to Pakistan."

President Donald Trump has been publicly critical of Pakistan's role in the region, announcing a South Asia strategy in August that called out Pakistan for giving "safe haven" to terrorist groups. He vowed to strengthen the United States' relationship with India instead.

The speech was received poorly in Islamabad, with Pakistani officials saying they would pivot to China instead to compensate for their strained relationship with Washington. China is spending billions of dollars to build a network of roads and a seaport in Pakistan.

"We can't buy Pakistan's loyalty," Poe said. "They play everyone, whether it's China or the terrorists or us."

In India, the response to the Pakistani court ruling was outrage.

The media organization India Today ran a banner headline on its news channel saying that "jihad over justice" had prevailed. Gaurav C. Sawant, an Indian newscaster, called Saeed a "butcher of 166 innocent smiles," referring to the 2008 Mumbai attacks.

"Every time that the international pressure on Pakistan mounts to a certain degree, they have a reflex action of putting Hafiz Saeed and his cohorts behind the bars," said Maj. Gen. G.D. Bakshi, an Indian defense expert, in an interview with the news channel. "The moment that pressure abates, the Pakistani courts very promptly find that there is no evidence."

Now, speculation in Pakistan is focusing on whether Saeed will openly take a leadership role in the Milli Muslim League, the political party formed by his group Jamaat-ud-Dawa.

In an interview with The New York Times in September, Naveed Qamar, the Milli Muslim League's campaign manager, said the party had the blessings of Saeed, who would lead it once he was released.

"Once he gets out and restarts all his activities and starts his work again, then we will announce what his plans for the political party are," Awan, of Jamaat-ud-Dawa, said Wednesday.

NW News on 11/24/2017

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