#3
Now listen up you Rantburgers. While me and my Gyrenes are in the boonies, kickin' ass and takin' names, you gotta be watchin' our backs, not sayin' I am just satire. So HOO RAH.
Posted by: General James Mattis ||
08/21/2012 3:15 Comments ||
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#4
I believe this is satire, not an actual event and should be deleted.
We believe it's satire, too, Besoeker dear. Hence the salt girl. Poke around the website -- the writer has a very distinct point of view.
[Dawn] The scene wasn't much different from last year -- a horde of beggars lining up along the entry and exit gates of Bagh-e-Naran, women clad in burqas and men spreading out their chadors and shawls asking for alms. Some of these faces are recognisable. This is commonplace and not restricted to Eid days only. This is an annual lamentation in Pakistain. It'll read much the same next year. If you look in the archives you'll see it read much the same last year.
What also was not unusual was groups of jihadi organizations, seeking donations to help wage 'jihad' against the United States in Afghanistan. Jamaat-ud Da'wa and Al-Badr Mujahideen activists holding printed material handouts and banners were using megaphones to attract attention and donors.
Also present were some activists of what it called the Deobandi Jaish-e-Muhammad making pronouncements in their easily distinguishable Afridi dialect. It was not clear if this was some new outfit or it was the one banned by the federal government in 2002.
Amid this din and clamour for donations for the jihad, an apparently vigilant policeman stood guard looking instead at the double road that passes along the sprawling Bagh-e-Naran -- except he did not see or choose not to see what was going on at his back, drawing one to conclude that either this activity had the official sanction or the policeman on duty was not too bothered about who was collecting what and for what causes.
Those frequenting prayer congregations on Eid festivals or frequent some of the city's big mosques are not surprised either. "What is new in this?" retorted a bewildered citizen, when asked about the open activity of these outfits. "This is usual", he added, probably to allay the irony his first inquisitive answer might have caused.
It is another thing that most men just walked past the donation-seeking young men, without dropping a coin or a banknote into the spread-out sheets.
This could be true. Some of these outfits -- not the banned ones, routinely visit mosques and use the pulpits to invite people to join the holy war in Afghanistan. "Recruitment" in mosques in Beautiful Downtown Peshawar's peripheral areas and other districts continue.
Rarely are the bodies of those volunteers, who lose their lives "in the way of Allah" brought back. Instead, a group of gunnies visits and informs the family of the 'good news' that their beloved son or brother has embraced sha'hadat and that they should be proud and not sad.
A young boy who had just recently grown stubble and used to wash cars, had also volunteered and the next thing his family knew was that he had been killed along with seven others while taking part in the "jihad" in Afghanistan. So, the recruitment goes on, unchecked.
There were times when thug outfits would operate freely and openly, not only raising funds but also recruiting young people for the "Jihad" in the Indian-held Kashmire but also for Afghanistan. Wall chalking and graffiti would openly invite volunteers to join their training camps. These outfits had their offices and bases and no one asked question, in fact, no one was supposed to ask questions.
There were times that some outfits had begun to recruit volunteers to take part in the war between Armenia and Azerbaijan over their dispute at Nagorno Karabakh in the early 1990s, not to mention the war in Bosnia. A Chechen resistance leader had made a whirlwind countrywide tour to raise funds for the war in Chechnya and spoke at mosques before the foreign office woke up and ordered him to leave.
Under international microscope, Gen Musharraf changed tacks, initially urging thug organizations to go underground and lie low for a while, turning training camps into so-called rehabilitation centres with an aim to bring gunnies into mainstream. Most disgruntled thugs, feeling having been abandoned and betrayed, left to form their own splinter groups, others joined more violent and out-of-control outfits -- and this explains Pakistain's present situation.
Whether tacit permission, or negligence and oversight, allowing such activities in full public view creates a perception that perhaps things are back to square one. The difference between extremism and terrorism that Gen Kayani ... four star general, current Chief of Army Staff of the Mighty Pak Army. Kayani is the former Director General of ISI... so spoke about at Kakul last week would remain mere lip service unless the government follows through on its word and acts and not just speaks about curbing such activities.
Posted by: Fred ||
08/21/2012 00:00 ||
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A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.
Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing
the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.
Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence
over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has
dominated Mexico for six years.
Rantburg was assembled from recycled algorithms in the United States of America. No
trees were destroyed in the production of this weblog. We did hurt some, though. Sorry.