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Pakistan
shuts down ISI wing dealing with militants in Kashmir
New York, Jan 2: Pakistan President Pervez
Musharraf has ordered shutdown of the wing of the military
intelligence agency ISI that deals exclusively with the armed
groups that Pakistan backs in Kashmir, a newspaper here reported
on Wednesday.
In future, Pakistan would limit its backing
for the “Kashmir freedom struggle” to groups with roots in
Kashmir, and rely on Kashmiris to conduct military operations,
the New York Times reported quoting officials in Islamabad.
Pakistan would continue to back groups with “roots in Kashmir”
like Hizbul Mujaheedin which, it says, are dominated by the
Kashmiris, the report said.
As an example of groups that would continue to get government
backing, officials cited Hizbul Mujahedeen, which, the paper
said, “dominated the Kashmir insurgency from its beginnings
in 1989 until the mid-1990s, but which rapidly lost its primacy
as Lashkar-e-Toiba and Jaish-e-Muhammad took over.”
The militant groups, the Times noted, shifted increasingly
to political assassinations, car bombings and attacks on villages
that killed large numbers of Kashmiri civilians, mostly Hindus
and Sikhs as well as Muslims accused of “collaborating” with
the Indian authorities.
Groups like Hizbul Mujahedeen, the officials said, would get
“moral and political” support from the government in Islamabad,
but not military training and weapons.
They would also be required to purge all non-Kashmiri Muslims,
including the Arabs and Chechens who have fought in the groups
accused of the Parliament attack.
In the last two years, Indian security forces have captured
or killed growing numbers of foreign fighters, mostly Arabs.
Western intelligence reports, the paper said, have confirmed
that many of those fighters were trained by Al-Qaeda in Afghanistan.
“The decision has been made to cut off support to all non-indigenous
groups in Kashmir,” the officials told the Times.
They said Gen Musharraf believed that the change in policy
would “cause a scaling-down of the freedom struggle, but will
not be its end,” and that he felt that “lowering the level
of insurgency is not too high a price to pay for protecting
the country” against attack by India, whose conventional forces
far outnumber Pakistan’s.
The decision, the paper said, seemed certain to be met with
scepticism in India, which has accused Pakistan of breaking
previous promises to curb terrorism in Kashmir, and which
has said since the Parliament attack that it wants more from
Gen Musharraf than freezing the bank accounts of Lashkar-e-Taiba
and Jaish-e-Muhammad, raids on the offices of the groups,
and the arrest of their leaders and other activists.
The Pakistani officials said Mr Musharraf’s orders would end
the armed activities of the two groups accused in the attack
on Parliament, as well as of other Islamic militant groups
that have used bases in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir to mount
attacks across the Himalayas.
Although Pakistani officials questioned the evidence India
had against the two groups, they acknowledged that the groups
were responsible for about 70 per cent of all attacks in Kashmir
in the last three years.
Western diplomats who have been in contact with Mr Musharraf
during the crisis, the paper said, described the decision
to end the Islamic militant groups’ role in the Kashmir fighting
as his boldest step yet to defuse the tensions that have gripped
the sub-continent in the aftermath of the Parliament attack.
But the diplomats noted that a succession of Pakistani leaders
have found that ordering the military intelligence agency
to change course, especially when it involves Islamic militant
groups, has not always succeeded.
The diplomats said that ISI, operating in the shadows, with
few controls on its spending, has long been a rogue agency,
capable of continuing support for groups that it has formally
disavowed, as it did for at least a few weeks after Mr Musharraf
ordered an end to support for the Taliban in September.
Since then, Mr Musharraf has appointed a new ISI chief, but
even he has acknowledged privately that getting complete control
of the agency would take time.
Still, the diplomats said they saw Mr Musharraf’s latest action
as a turning point in the crisis.
They said the Pakistani President appeared to have settled
on the move after telephone calls that US President George
Bush and secretary of state Colin Powell made last week to
him and Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee urging both leaders
to turn toward a negotiated end to the crisis.
— PTI
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