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India-Pakistan
Pak asks UN, US to help on evidence against extremists
2006-08-06
Pakistan has sought the help of United Nations and the United States to provide ‘‘incriminating evidence’’ against its banned religious extremists groups to expedite prosecution of members of these outfits. ‘‘It is difficult to proceed in such cases (against members of banned militant groups), therefore, information is required from the UN and other countries to proceed in such cases,’’ a Pakistani official said. The officials informed the US during a recent meeting of the Joint Working Group in Washington about the need for evidence and asked US to provide any proof it has of these groups’ involvement in acts of terrorism, Daily Times newspaper quoted him as saying.

Pakistan has told the UN and the US that though it has banned these organisations in line with the UN’s listing of them as terrorist groups, it now needed ‘‘incriminating evidence’’ against these religious groups, which have moved the courts challenging the government ban on them. Pakistan banned Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Muhammad besides proscribing sectarian extremists groups in 2002. The groups were banned again in 2004 as many of them had re-surfaced with new names. Despite the ban, most of the leaders have been released after brief detentions.
Posted by:Fred

#3  Afghanistan has several times given them extensive evidences, which are promptly and thoroughly ignored. Both Hamid Karzai and the Afghan Foreign Minister have openly complained about the Pakistan non-response.
Posted by: trailing wife   2006-08-06 15:39  

#2  "...to expedite prosecution of members of these outfits".

Or to build more powerful legal defenses against the prosecution.
Posted by: Jules in the Hinterlands   2006-08-06 15:33  

#1  The US has been given these opportunities in the past, and has been known to decline citing "national security reasons". Kinda makes you wonder.
Posted by: gorb   2006-08-06 14:06  

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