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Jamaat-ud-Dawa launches political party Milli Muslim League (MML) to contest upcoming polls

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The Jamaatud Dawa (JuD), a Pakistan-based charity that the US accuses of being a front for anti-India militant group, has entered the mainstream politics by forming a new party, officials said Monday.

The new Milli Muslim League (MML) party will follow the ideology of JuD, which the US says is a front for banned militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and is run by Hafiz Saeed, the alleged mastermind of the 2008 attacks that killed 166 people. “We have decided to make a new political party, so that Pakistan is to made a real Islamic and welfare state,” said MML president Saifullah Khalid.

Tabish Qayoum, a JuD activist who will work as spokesperson for the MML, said the charity had filed registration papers for a new party with the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP). “It is now need of the hour to get your message to the grassroots,” Qayoum told Reuters. JuD officials have always denied the charity is a front for LeT, and tout the group’s humanitarian work as an example of Islamic charity.

Qayoum said Saeed, who missed the launch event as he remains under house arrest in Lahore, and other senior JuD figures are unlikely to be involved in the new party that will adhere to JuD’s ideology. “We demand an immediate release of Hafiz Saeed. Once he is released we will seek his guidance and ask what role he wants in this political party,” added party chief Khalid.

In the past, Saeed has often denounced democracy and the electoral process, saying it is not compatible with Islam. The United States has offered $10 million for information leading to the arrest and conviction of Saeed, who Reuters could not contact for comment.

But he has always denied involvement in the Mumbai attacks of 2008 that brought the neighbors Pakistan and India to the brink of war. In the attacks, 10 gunmen swarmed across targets including two luxury hotels, a Jewish center and a train station in a rampage that lasted several days.

Saeed has been under house arrest since January after years of living freely in Pakistan, one of the sore points in the country’s fraying relationship with the United States. The US State Department’s country report on terrorism for 2016 issued last month said the LeT and its wings continued to make use of economic resources and raise funds in Pakistan.

Ayesha Siddiqa, a security analyst, said the new party was designed to give militants better cover amid pressure from the international community on Pakistan to crack down on LeT and JuD. “The making of a party indicates the need of JuD to hide itself further so to avoid criticism,” Siddiqa said.

Western countries have for decades accused Islamabad of harboring extremist militant groups and using them as proxies to project power in the region. Islamabad denies having such a policy.


Source: https://tribune.com.pk/story/1476521/jud-launches-political-party-contest-upcoming-polls/


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Can't see them winning any seats but they can probably get a few thousands votes on some of the Punjab seats because of the charity work...
 
Can't see them winning any seats but they can probably get a few thousands votes on some of the Punjab seats because of the charity work...

Most probably PMLN will lose couple of thousand votes in few constituencies but nothing substantial.
 
According to reports they are number 3 so far in NA-120 that's a lamha-e-fiqrya for PPP
 
This party's creation has "boys" written all over it.

Don't think they would bother with only 3500 votes. Apparently, PTI is establishment party :p Who use a weak horse when you have a top race horse for Punjab :s
 
Don't think they would bother with only 3500 votes. Apparently, PTI is establishment party :p Who use a weak horse when you have a top race horse for Punjab :s

PTI isn't an establishment party in the traditional sense of the word, they're more of an independent party that isn't above partnering up with the boys for their own purposes, no different to PML-N (and it's precursors) or MQM of the late 80s and early 90s. The votes were never really important, it's all about getting them into mainstream politics which affords them a certain degree of legitimacy. This is ASWJ all over again.
 
This party's creation has "boys" written all over it.

Indeed, written in big bold capital letters. The Boys don't do subtlety, nuance or any of those other wishy-washy political nineties anymore.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Planning world domination with my terrorist comrades. Lol Good to meet old frnds from Milli Muslim League aka The good bad guys! <a href="https://t.co/C4oPNhBMGN">pic.twitter.com/C4oPNhBMGN</a></p>— Hamza Ali Abbasi (@iamhamzaabbasi) <a href="https://twitter.com/iamhamzaabbasi/status/909842226099888129">September 18, 2017</a></blockquote>
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr"><a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/NA120?src=hash">#NA120</a> US/IND say he is a terrorist, i know Hafiz Saeed as a righteous man. Huge respect for Milli Muslim League for getting 4k+ votes.</p>— Hamza Ali Abbasi (@iamhamzaabbasi) <a href="https://twitter.com/iamhamzaabbasi/status/909515992069558273">September 17, 2017</a></blockquote>
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Pakistan army pushed political role for militant-linked groups

LAHORE, Pakistan (Reuters) - A new Pakistani political party controlled by an Islamist with a $10 million U.S. bounty on his head is backing a candidate in a by-election on Sunday, in what a former senior army officer says is a key step in a military-proposed plan to mainstream militant groups.

The Milli Muslim League party loyal to Hafiz Saeed - who the United States and India accuse of masterminding the 2008 Mumbai attacks that killed 166 people - has little chance of seeing its favored candidate win the seat vacated when Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif was removed from office by the Supreme Court in July.

But the foray into politics by Saeed’s Islamist charity is following a blueprint that Sharif himself rejected when the military proposed it last year, retired Lieutenant General Amjad Shuaib told Reuters.

Three close Sharif confidants with knowledge of the discussions confirmed that Sharif had opposed the “mainstreaming” plan, which senior military figures and some analysts see as a way of steering ultra-religious groups away from violent jihad.

“We have to separate those elements who are peaceful from the elements who are picking up weapons,” Shuaib said.

Pakistan’s powerful military has long been accused of fostering militant groups as proxy fighters opposing neighboring arch-enemy India, a charge the army denies.

“PATRIOTIC PEOPLE”

Saeed’s religious charity launched the Milli Muslim League party within two weeks after the court ousted Sharif over corruption allegations.

Yaqoob Sheikh, the Lahore candidate for Milli Muslim League, is standing as an independent after the Electoral Commission said the party was not yet legally registered.

But Saeed’s lieutenants, JUD workers and Milli Muslim League officials are running his campaign and portraits of Saeed adorn every poster promoting Sheikh.

Another Islamist designated a terrorist by the United States, Fazlur Rehman Khalil, has told Reuters he too plans to soon form his own party to advocate strict Islamic law.

“God willing, we will come into the mainstream - our country right now needs patriotic people,” Khalil said, vowing to turn Pakistan into a state government by strict Islamic law.

Saeed’s charity and Khalil’s Ansar ul-Umma organization are both seen by the United States as fronts for militant groups the army has been accused of sponsoring. The military denies any policy of encouraging radical groups.

Both Islamist groups deny their political ambitions were engineered by the military. The official army spokesman was not available for comment after queries were sent to the press wing.

Still, hundreds of MML supporters, waving posters of Saeed and demanding his release from house arrest, chanted “Long live Hafiz Saeed! Long live the Pakistan army!” at political rallies during the past week.

“Anyone who is India’s friend is a traitor, a traitor,” went another campaign slogan, a reference to Sharif’s attempts to improve relations with long-time foe India that was a source of tension with the military.

‘DERADICALISATION’ PLAN

Both Saeed and Khalil are proponents of a strict interpretation of Islam and have a history of supporting violence - each man was reportedly a signatory to al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden’s 1998 fatwa declaring war on the United States.

Mohammad Yaqoob Sheikh (R) nominated candidate of political party, Milli Muslim League (MML), distributes handbills to residents during an election campaign for the National Assembly NA-120 constituency in Lahore, Pakistan September 10, 2017. Picture taken September 10, 2017. REUTERS/Mohsin Raza
They have since established religious groups that they say are unconnected to violence, though the United States maintains those groups are fronts for funnelling money and fighters to militants targeting India.

Analyst Khaled Ahmed, who has researched Saeed’s Jamaat-ud-Dawa charity and its connections to the military, says the new political party is clearly an attempt by the generals to pursue an alternative to dismantling its militant proxies.

“One thing is the army wants these guys to survive,” Ahmed said. “The other thing is that they want to also balance the politicians who are more and more inclined to normalize relations with India.”

The military’s Inter-Services Intelligence agency first began pushing the political mainstreaming plan in April 2016, according to retired general Shuaib, a former director of the army’s military intelligence wing that is separate from the ISI.

He said the proposal was shared with him in writing by the then-ISI chief, adding that he himself had spoken with Khalil as well as Saeed in an unofficial capacity about the plan.

“Fazlur Rehman Khalil was very positive. Hafiz Saeed was very positive,” Shuaib said. “My conversation with them was just to confirm those things which I had been told by the ISI and other people.”

Slideshow (5 Images)
Saeed has been under house arrest since January at his house in the eastern city of Lahore. The United States has offered a $10 million reward for information leading to his conviction over the Mumbai attacks.

Then-Prime Minister Sharif, however, was strongly against the military’s mainstreaming plan, according to Shuaib and three members of Sharif’s inner circle, including one who was in some of the tense meetings over the issue.

Sharif wanted to completely dismantle groups like JuD. Disagreement on what to do about anti-India proxy fighters was a major source of rancour with the military, according to one of the close Sharif confidants.

In recent weeks several senior figures from the ruling PML-N party have publicly implied that elements of the military - which has run Pakistan for almost half its modern history and previously ousted Sharif in a 1999 coup - had a hand in the court ouster of Sharif, a charge both the army and the court reject.

A representative of the PML-N, which last month replaced him as prime minister with close ally Shahid Khaqi Abbasi, said the party was “not aware” of any mainstreaming plan being brought to the table.

RELIGION AND POLITICS

Some analysts worry that mainstreaming such controversial groups would be a risky strategy for Pakistan.

U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration has threatened sanctions against members of Pakistan’s military and even raised the specter of declaring Pakistan a state sponsor of terrorism.

“It will send a wrong message,” said analyst Zahid Hussain, who nevertheless thought that Saeed’s new party would have a “negligible” effect on Pakistani elections because religious parties have never won more than a few seats in parliament.

Others are not so sure.

Sheikh, the MML candidate in Sunday’s by-election who says he was handpicked by Hafiz Saeed, vowed to establish strict Islamic rule and “break” liberalism and secularism.

Analyst Ahmed warned that few existing religious parties have a charismatic leader like Saeed, and Pakistan may find itself unable to control a rising tide of Islamist sentiment.

“If Hafiz Saeed comes into the mainstream, it’s not that he is going to be politicized,” he added. “It’s that he is going to make politics more religious.”
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...role-for-militant-linked-groups-idUSKCN1BR02F

At this point, the Pakistan Army has become the single biggest cancer afflicting this country and the sad part is that the public swallows their nonsense hook, line and sinker. The fact that the public at large still supports these people is testament to the ignorance of the general public and the fact that the 80'000 Pakistanis who died to terrorists not only died in vain but many may actually have been supporters of the organization whose machinations resulted in terrorists having a footprint here in the first place. Disgraceful. Anyone who still supports the army is a traitor to Pakistan, much like the army itself who have no qualms throwing the country under the bus to secure their own political and economic interests.
 
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