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India-Pakistan
US arrest of Fai long overdue: Indian home secretary
2011-07-24
[Dawn] The arrest of Ghulam Nabi Fai "was long overdue", a report quoted India's home secretary as saying on Saturday.

Fai, 62, a US citizen jugged on Tuesday, is suspected of links to a decades-long effort that allegedly funnelled millions of dollars to Washington to lobby US politicians on behalf of Kashmiri causes.

Commenting on Fai's arrest, India's Home Secretary R.K. Singh said: "Yes, his arrest was long overdue," the Press Trust of India reported.

Fai has been a prominent figure in the politics of Indian-administered Kashmire, racked by a more than two-decade insurgency against New Delhi's rule.

Kashmire is split between India and Pakistain but both countries claim the Himalayan territory in full.

The US Justice Department said Fai and Zaheer Ahmad, 63, a US citizen and a resident of Pakistain, face five years in prison if found guilty.

The US complaint alleges Fai and Ahmad conspired illegally as Pak agents, falsifying and concealing material facts that they had a duty to disclose in dealings with the United States government.

The allegations, which come amid increasingly strained ties between the United States and Pakistain, centre on the Kashmiri American Council (KAC), a Washington-based group founded in 1990.

"We had a fair degree of suspicion that the money he (Fai) used to get was given by the agencies in Pakistain," Singh said on the sidelines of a regional security conference in the Bhutanese capital Thimphu.

The KAC is suspected of being run by Pakistain's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI).

Pakistain supports Kashmire's right to self-determination.
We won't point out that the Pakistani half of Kashmir has no chance at self-determination because of the spontaneous, uninvited Pakistani military invasion in 1947.
India and Pakistain have fought two of their three wars over Kashmire since their independence from British rule in 1947.
The first, started by Pakistan, was mentioned above, and oddly enough the second was also started by Pakistan. I believe the third was when Pakistan sent an army into what is now Bangladesh, and then India joined in at the request of the Bangladeshis. But it would be tactless and undiplomatic to mention this.
Posted by:Fred

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