War Against Terrorism: The Pakistani
Farce --- International Terrorism Monitor--- Paper No.
533
By B.
Raman
Some
years ago, when Gen. Pervez Musharraf, the blue-eyed
warrior against terrorism of the then President George
Bush, was the President of Pakistan, its police had
arrested an individual on a charge of belonging to Al
Qaeda, a terrorist organisation. When he was produced
before an Anti-Terrorism Court, it asked the Government
lawyer to produce a copy of the notification under which
Al Qaeda had been declared a terrorist organisation.
After some days, the lawyer went back to the court and
told it sheepishly that the Government had overlooked
declaring Al Qaeda a terrorist organisation.He promised
that a notification would be issued shortly and wanted
that the arrested person should continue to remain in
custody till then. The court did not accept the plea. It
ordered his release. It held that even if it was a fact
that he belonged to Al Qaeda, he had not committed an
offence because Al Qaeda was not a terrorist
organisation under Pakistani laws.
2. Some
years later, in December 2008 to be precise, the
Pakistani Govt. placed Prof. Hafeez Mohammad Sayeed,
the Amir of the Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JUD), the political
front of the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LET), under house arrest
in the wake of the Mumbai terrorist strike of November
26. The action was taken following the decision of the
anti-terrorism Sanctions Committee of the UN Security
Council to include the JUD and the LET as associates of
Al Qaeda and the LET.
3.
Sayeed went to the Lahore High Court to challenge his
house arrest. The Government lawyer told the court that
the action of the Sanctions Committee obliged the
Government to act against him. When the court did not
agree with that contention and asked the lawyer whether
the Government had any independent evidence of its own,
the lawyer met the three judges privately and showed
them what he claimed was independent evidence of the
LET's links with Al Qaeda. The judges wanted to see a
copy of the Government notification under which Al Qaeda
was declared a terrorist organisation.
4. After
some days, the lawyer went back to the court and told it
sheepishly that the Government had not yet declared Al
Qaeda a terrorist organisation. The court told him that
if that was so, the LET's having links with Al Qaeda is
no offence under the law.
5. The
court, which ordered the release of Sayeed on June 2,
2009, released on June 6, 2009, the details of the
grounds on which it ordered his release. One of the
grounds says: "The security laws and anti-terrorism laws
of Pakistan are silent on Al Qaeda being a terrorist
organisation." The court added: "Even after the perusal
of these documents we do not find any material declaring
that the detention was necessary for the security of the
petitioners and there was no evidence that the
petitioners had any links with Al Qaeda or any terrorist
movement.”
6. Thus,
eight years after 9/11, Pakistan is yet to declare Al
Qaeda a terrorist organisation. Is this sheer, shocking
negligence or is there something more sinister to it?
Does one require any more evidence to show that
Pakistan's so-called war against terrorism is a farce?
7.
Annexed is a copy of a report carried by the "Daily
Times" of Lahore on the details of the grounds cited by
the court for Sayyed's release,
(The
writer is Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet
Secretariat, Govt. of India, New Delhi, and, presently,
Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai.
E-Mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com)
ANNEXURE
(Report
carried by the "Daily Times" of Lahore on June 7, 2009)
LHC full
bench issues detailed judgement in Hafiz Saeed case
Bench
observes detention decision lacks solid evidence
* Bench
says Pakistani laws silent on Al Qaeda being terrorist
organisation
* Points out negligence in detention orders
Staff
Report
LAHORE:
A full bench of the Lahore High Court (LHC) on Saturday
released a 20-page detailed judgment in the detention
case of Jamaatud Dawa chief Hafiz Muhammad Saeed and
Dawa leader Col (r) Nazir Ahmad.
The
bench held that the government’s decision to detain the
Dawa leaders was not based on solid evidence and the
material provided by the government against them was
incorrect and even prepared after their detention. The
bench observed that the government had no evidence that
Saeed and Nazir had any link with Al Qaeda or were
involved in anti-state activities, except the ‘bald
allegations’ leveled by the Indian lobby that they were
involved in the Mumbai attacks.
The
bench on June 2, through a short order, while accepting
a habeas corpus petition, had declared the detention of
both Dawa leaders illegal and had ordered their release.
The
bench held the material against the petitioners was
mostly based on intelligence reports, which had been
obtained after four months of their detention. Moreover,
these reports were found to be incorrect as nothing
apprehended in the reports actually took place, it held.
The
bench observed that several intelligence reports were
obtained during the period when the petition was
pending, apparently to cover the lacunae, but there was
no solid evidence or source to supplement the reports.
About the Dawa leaders’ involvement in the Mumbai
attacks, the bench observed that not a single document
had been brought on the record that Dawa or the
petitioners were involved in the said incident.
On the
government’s point of view that the leaders were
detained on the United Nations’ directions, the bench
observed that in the Memoona Saeed vs Government of
Punjab case, it had already been held that there was no
evidence that Dawa had links with Al Qaeda.
Silent
laws: The bench held that the security laws and
anti-terrorism laws of Pakistan were silent on Al Qaeda
being a terrorist organisation.
The
bench held, “Even after the perusal of these documents
we do not find any material declaring that the detention
was necessary for the security of the petitioners and
there was no evidence that the petitioners had any links
with Al Qaeda or any terrorist movement.”
The
bench observed that it was mandatory for the detaining
authority to provide grounds of detention, but it
violated the provisions of the constitution by depriving
the petitioners of an opportunity to assail their
detention before a competent forum and also to know the
allegations against them.
The
bench held that this violation of law alone was
sufficient to declare the detention of the petitioners
illegal.
Negligence: The bench pointed out the negligence of the
detaining authorities in issuing the detention orders.
It remarked that even the second order passed by the
home secretary did not contain that it was an extension
of the earlier order, but from the language, it seemed
to be a fresh order. This showed that the executive
authorities had passed the detention orders in a
careless manner, and did not even know that the detainee
was already in custody. On the question of the review
board’s authority to extend the detention, the bench
held that the status of the board was of a recommending
body.
The bare
perusal of Article 8 of the Constitution revealed that a
sitting judge of the LHC, nominated by the chief
justice, was a member of the board but even then the LHC
had set aside the order of the review board in different
reported judgments. The bench remarked that even the
apex court had already declared that the order of the
review board was quasi-judicial and was amenable in writ
jurisdiction. On the question of maintainability of the
petition, the bench held that it was maintainable, as
prima facie the government had no sufficient grounds to
detain the petitioners as a preventive measure. The
bench comprised of Justice Ijaz Ahmad Chaudhry, Justice
Hasnat Ahmad Khan and Justice Zubdatul Hussain.