JeI: Culture of Hate | Odisha: 'Normalcy' in Narayanpatna | South Asia Intelligence Review (SAIR), Vol. No. 11.50
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SOUTH ASIA INTELLIGENCE REVIEW
Weekly Assessments & Briefings
Volume 11, No. 50, June 17, 2013

Data and assessments from SAIR can be freely published in any form with credit to the South Asia Intelligence Review of the
South Asia Terrorism Portal


ASSESSMENT

BANGLADESH
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JeI: Culture of Hate
Sanchita Bhattacharya
Research Associate; Institute for Conflict Management

On June 10, 2013, at least 15 people were injured and many vehicles vandalised in Dhaka city during the nationwide hartal (general strike) enforced by Jamaat-e-Islami (JeI) and its student wing Islami Chhatra Shibir (ICS). JeI-ICS had called the strike in protest against the punishment meted out to three of its leaders in the War Crimes trials – absconding JeI lawmaker Hamidur Rahman Azad; JeI Acting Secretary General Rafiqul Islam Khan; and Assistant Secretary General Selim Uddin – by the International Crimes Tribunal-2 (ICT-2) on June 9, 2013, for contempt of court, after they spoke in disparaging terms of the trial process. 

Earlier, on June 9, 2013, unidentified assailants hurled crude bombs at the house of Information Minister Hasanul Haque Inu in the Darus Salam area of Mirpur in Dhaka city. The house suffered “heavy damage” in the explosion, but no one was injured. The Minister, while speaking on different private television channels, blamed JeI-ICS for the attack.

Bangladesh has a long history of intermittent street violence and public vandalism. The current round of such unrest commenced after the constitution of the International Crimes Tribunal (ICT), on March 25, 2010, for the prosecution of those involved in crimes committed during the Liberation War of 1971. The ongoing turmoil is led by the JeI- ICS, and is supported by the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) and other radical groups. Indeed, on March 28, 2010, JeI General Secretary Ali Ahsan Mohammad Mujahid had warned the Government of an ‘explosive situation’ if his party leaders and workers were roped in on what he described as “imaginary charges”.

Significantly, seven out of the nine people presently indicted for War Crimes (WC) belong to the JeI, including its top leaders – Ameer (chief) Motiur Rahman Nizami, former Ameer Ghulam Azam, Nayeb-e-Ameer Delawar Hossain Sayedee, General Secretary Ali Ahsan Mohammad Mujahid, Assistant Secretary General Muhammad Kamruzzaman, Assistant Secretary General Abdul Quader Mollah and absconding former JeI member Abul Kalam Azad.

The others indicted are Salauddin Quader Chowdhury and Abdul Alim, who belong to BNP.

Thus far, judgment has been delivered in the case of four individuals: on January 21, 2013, ICT-2 (constituted on March 22, 2012) delivered the verdict against Abul Kalam Azad , awarding the death sentence. On February 5, 2013, ICT-2 awarded life imprisonment to Abdul Quader Mollah ; on February 28, 2013, ICT awarded death sentence to Sayedee and later, on May 9, 2013, ICT-2 imposed the death penalty on Kamaruzzaman.

According to partial data collected by South Asia Terrorism Portal (SATP), since March 25, 2010, the unrest unleashed by the JeI-ICS, with the support of the BNP and other radical groups, across the country, has led to the death of 127 people, including 63 JeI-ICS cadres, 55 civilians and nine Security Force (SF) personnel in 57 incidents of killing (all data till June 16, 2013). Thus far, February 28, 2013, has been the bloodiest day, with 40 persons killed in Rangpur, Gaibandha, Satkhira, Thakurgaon, Chittagong, Sirajganj, Cox’s Bazar, Chapainawabganj, Noakhali, Dinajpur, Rajshahi, Dhaka, Moulvibazar, Natore and Bogra Districts, when JeI-ICS cadres clashed with law enforcement personnel, while protesting against the ICT verdict that sentenced Delawar Hossain Sayedee to death.

Moreover, SATP data further suggests that, since March 2000, the JeI-ICS combine has been connected with at least 171 killings, including 85 civilians, 10 SF personnel and 76 of their own cadres (killed by SFs) in 81 incidents of killing. Further, at least 3,006 persons, including 1,824 civilians, 543 JeI-ICS cadres and 614 SF personnel, have been injured in JeI-ICS related violence over this period. 4,396 JeI-ICS cadres have been arrested during this period.

The JeI-ICS has long been associated with political and religious intolerance and is infamous for preaching an extremist message of religious exclusion and hatred in Bangladesh. It has projected its radical positions through orchestrated street violence and vandalism in the name of protest demonstrations, strikes and shutdowns. The ongoing protest against the War Crimes Trials has been just another pretext for JeI to flex its street muscle prior to the next General Elections scheduled to be held in early 2014. Indeed, the open defense of war criminals reflects the integral ideology of these formations, and their fundamental opposition to democratic politics and constitutional governance.

The JeI was founded in undivided India in 1941 by its first Ameer, Maulana Abul A’la Maududi, with the goal of developing an Islamic community of devout believers. After India’s partition in 1947, the party was divided into Jamat-e-Islami Hind and Jamaat-e-Islami Pakistan. JeI started its activities in East Pakistan (Bangladesh) during the 1950s. During the liberation struggle, the JeI in East Pakistan joined forces with the Pakistan Army to participate in the genocide of an estimated three million civilians, and a range of brutal crimes, including the widespread use of rape as a weapon. Banned after the Liberation War of 1971, JeI resumed overt activities in Bangladesh in 1979. Between 1981 and 1987, the number of full members of JeI rose from 650 to 2,000, while associate membership doubled to approximately two million.

The rising popularity of the organization renewed its political ambitions. The party played a crucial role in Governments formed by the BNP in 1991 and 2001. The JeI had 18 seats in the Jatiyo Shangshad (Bangladesh Parliament) of 1991 and 17 seats in 2001. In 1996, it had three seats. In the last General Elections of 2008, it secured only five seats. In an apparent backlash, the Jamaat and BNP have been attempting to derail the sustained consolidation of the Sheikh Hasina Wajed-led Awami League (AL) Government.

According to media sources, JeI-ICS has established stakes in various businesses including banking and insurance, hospitals and pharmaceuticals, transport, media, education, housing, shopping centre, etc.

The JeI controls some 30 charities of various sizes and reach. Prominent amongst them is the Al Hera Samaj Kalyan Foundation. Founded in 1982, its objective is principally to preach Islam, publish religious books and journals, run madrasas (Islamic seminary), orphanages and charitable dispensaries, and disburse loans and assistance to the poor. It also distributes books on Islamic resurgence and scriptures free of cost. The Foundation is also engaged in the lucrative manpower export to the Gulf and West Asia.

The JeI has set-up mosques, madrasas and other Islamic institutions, all of which preach a radical Wahhabi form of Islam. With the promise of monetary benefits, many poor students from Bangladeshi madrasas have been recruited by the Jamaat and its allies for jihad (holy war) in places such as Afghanistan, Kashmir, Palestine, Bosnia and Chechnya. Being a tightly knit-cadre based party, JeI is able to attract a wide section of support through a host of local networks and social welfare programmes. JeI works on the calculation that the goodwill and popularity it generates through various welfare activities in the community easily transform into support for various violent activities, both domestically and abroad.

JeI’s linkages with terrorist organizations within Bangladesh are well documented. JeI’s involvement, along with Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami Bangladesh (HuJI-B) and BNP, in the August 21, 2004, grenade attack on an AL rally (which killed 24 people and injured another 300, including Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina Wajed) was exposed in July 2011, when the Special Superintendent, Criminal Investigation Department, Abdul Kahhar Akhand, disclosed that their re-investigations indicated that operatives of HuJI-B had carried out the attack, backed by former State Minister for Home, Lutfuzzaman Babar, Khaleda Zia's Political Secretary Harish Chowdhury, former Minister and JeI leader Ali Ahsan Mujahid, and incumbent BNP lawmaker, the fugitive Mofazzal Hossain Kaikobad.

Earlier, on July 13, 2010, the ‘chief’ of the Jama'atul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB) Saidur Rahman, had disclosed links between JeI and JMB. Rahman was a former member of JeI and was arrested on May 26, 2010, for orchestrating the serial bombings across Bangladesh on August 17, 2005. Rahman is undergoing trial in the case.

Similarly, linkages between the banned Hizb-ut-Tahrir (HuT) and JeI were revealed after the arrest of five HuT cadres from Dhaka.  While HuT ‘advisor‘ Syed Golam Maola was arrested on July 8, 2010, another four cadres were arrested on July 9, 2010. Detective Branch officials stated, on July 11, 2010, "We brought the four face to face with Maola and quizzed them about their connection with Jamaat. They admitted that their leaders had recently instructed them to work keeping a close contact with Jamaat." The four workers also admitted to being involved with ICS.

In addition, Jagrata Muslim Janata Bangladesh (JMJB) ‘chief’ Siddiqul Islam alias Azizur Rahman alias Omar Ali Litu alias Bangla Bhai, who was hanged along with five cadres of JMB: Abdur Rahman, Abdul Awal, Khaled Saifullah, Ataur Rahman and Hasan Al-Mamun on March 30, 2007, had admitted that, as a college student, he was a member of ICS. Bangla Bhai claimed that he quit ICS in 1995, after the Jamaat accepted female leadership, which, according to him, was a sacrilegious. He had been pronounced guilty by the Supreme Court of involvement in the killing of two judges in Jhalakathi (Jhalakathi District) in November 2005.

The party has established a vast network for money laundering and finance. One 2005 estimate indicated that the JeI generates a net profit of Taka 12 billion annually. Mir Kasem Ali, who was arrested on June 17, 2012, and is facing War Crimes charges, is considered to be the ‘brain’ behind JeI’s financial and business empire. ICT has fixed June 27, 2013, for the hearing on framing charges against Kasem, which include murder, looting, arson and abduction committed during the 1971 Liberation War.

In light of the present upheaval, on May 25, 2013, Information Minister, Hasanul Haq Inu described JeI as a “terrorist outfit”, and said that they unleashed terror and destructive activities whenever they had been given permission for rallies. Earlier, on April 11, 2013, Inu had warned, "If the Jamaat practices terrorism, then the government will positively be considering banning the Jamaat”.

Significantly, on June 11, 2013, the Jatiyo Shangshad passed the Anti-terrorism (Amendment) Bill, 2013, to “effectively curb terrorism through inter-state cooperation”. The Bill, inter alia, gives the central banks authority to freeze suspicious accounts without court orders.

Further, on June 12, 2013, after hearing arguments on a petition filed by Syed Rezaul Hoque, a central leader of the Tarikat Federation, which challenged the legality of JeI’s registration as a political party, the Dhaka High Court announced that it will deliver its verdict ‘any day’. On April 11, 2013, a special HC bench of Justice M. Moazzam Husain, Justice M. Enayetur Rahim and Justice Quazi Reza-Ul Hoque started hearing on the matter. JeI was registered as a political party by the Election Commission on November 4, 2008.

JeI’s violent message of extremist Islamism has long undermined democracy in Bangladesh, and was also central to the Pakistan Army’s genocidal campaigns in its eastern wing, before the formation of this new country in 1971. This extremist message has secured significant penetration across the country, moving deep into the rural set-up as well, polarizing society and provoking repeated cycles of violence against those who refuse to accept the radical creed advocated by the JeI. Despite the organisation’s appalling history of criminality, the current regime has sought to bring it to account for the first time in Bangladeshi history. Nevertheless, the JeI’s street power, its proclivity to ready violence, and its deep linkages with establishment political formations, particularly the BNP, make it an extraordinarily dangerous adversary. As the elections approach, it remains to be seen whether its extremism and violence can be contained, or whether its message of hate will tip the scales into the escalating disorders that have afflicted the country in the past.

INDIA
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Odisha: 'Normalcy' in Narayanpatna
Fakir Mohan Pradhan
Research Associate, Institute for Conflict Management

Kanhu Charan Madhi (25), a Special Police Officer (SPO) posted in the District headquarters town of Malkangiri, was shot dead by Communist Party of India-Maoist (CPI-Maoist) cadres at his home in Kattakonda village under the Kalimela Police Station area of the District on May 24, 2013. He was on the Maoist hit list for disobeying their diktat to quit his job and leave the village. While his visits home had become infrequent after the threat, he had gone to his village to meet his family and his wife, who had delivered a baby a few of days earlier, when he was killed.

The incident was the first Security Force (SF) fatality inflicted by the Maoists in 2013 in Odisha. Significantly, the CPI-Maoist has not suffered any casualty, thus far, in this year. The lone Left Wing Extremist (LWE) killed in the State in 2013 belonged to the Sabyasachi Panda-led Odisha Maobadi Party (OMP), which split from the CPI-Maoist in August 2012.

Fatalities in LWE-related violence in Odisha
Year
Civilian
SF personnel
LWE
Total

2008

28
73
8
109

2009

36
31
15
82

2010

62
17
10
89

2011

39
14
23
76

2012

31
14
10
55

2013*

8
1
1
10
2008-2012: Union Ministry of Home Affairs; 2013: SATP, *Data till June 16, 2013.

The low fatalities in the SF and LWE categories indicate that both sides have been careful to avoid direct confrontations. Where an escalation was noticeable in 2008-09, moreover, the much higher SF fatalities suggest that an overwhelming proportion of attacks were initiated by the Maoists, and the SFs were on the receiving end of attacks. In 2013, eight of the 10 fatalities have been recorded in Malkangiri District (seven of the eight civilian fatalities and the only SF fatality). Significantly, Koraput District has not witnessed a single fatality in LWE related violence this year. In 2012, by May, Koraput had seen at least nine fatalities – five civilians, two SF personnel and two Maoists. 

In 2012, the bulk of killings of civilians and SFs (30 out of 46), took place in Koraput and Malkangiri Districts. In fact, the Maoists were principally active in two clusters – Malkangiri, Koraput and Nabarangpur Districts in the Southern-Western part of the State; and Bargarh, Bolangir and Nuapada Districts in the Western part.

While Maoist violence appears to be following the regular pattern in Malkangiri, the silence in Koraput is unusual. Koraput has long been one of the Maoists’ strongholds, and was also the theatre in which they operated through their front, the Narayanpatna-based Chasi Mulia Adivasi Sangha (CMAS). CMAS used to provide logistic and militia support, and served as an excellent cover for Maoist subversion. Some 150 CMAS supporter have been charged in different cases, including LWE violence, and its president, Nachika Linga, has been declared ‘most wanted’ by the State. It is an open secret that Nachika Linga is now under the direct protection of the Maoists.

Off late, however, many CMAS-Narayanpatna supporters have given their pledge to the Police that they would no longer support the Maoists. This promises only limited relief, since activities of CMAS-Narayanpatna were already on a decline, following the broader waning of Maoist violence in 2011 and 2012.

On January 4, 2013, an armed Maoist cadre, Nachika Chamara alias Samara surrendered before Koraput Superintendent of Police, Avinash Kumar. He was part of the Srikakulam-Koraput division of the CPI-Maoist. Besides being a close associate of leaders of Srikakulam-Koraput division of Maoists like Daya, Aruna and Sarita, he was also moving around with Nachika Linga. Samara belongs to the Bhaliaput area under Narayanpatna Police Station, the native place of Nachika Linga.    

Samara’s surrender was followed by the surrender of 15 supporters of CMAS from Bhaliaput village at the Narayanpatna Police Station. The surrendering cadres promised the Police that they would no longer be involved in the violent activities of CMAS or the Maoists.

This story was then repeated with more and more supporters reaching the Police Station and making similar promises. According to partial data collected by SATP, at least 1,692 CMAS supporters have surrendered and pledged to abjure violence.

Surrender of CMAS Supporters in Odisha in 2013
Month
Surrenders
January
121
February
604
April
834
May
133
Total*
1692
Source: SATP, *Data till June 16, 2013.

Odisha Police sources claim that more than 2,400 CMAS supporters have, in fact, surrendered. It is, however, not clear how many of them were active Maoist cadres or how many of them have non-bailable offences registered against them. Among those who have surrendered, at least 150 are believed to be from Dumsil village, an important Maoist and CMAS stronghold in Narayanpatna block. According to Police sources, nearly a dozen of the top 20 CMAS leaders were from Dumsil village.

The surrenders have boosted Police morale, with the administration arguing that this is a sure sign of the loss of Maoists influence over the area. Police sources claim that the unraveling of the CMAS network has enabled SFs to penetrate extremely ‘remote’ Maoist infected pockets of the area. Further, it has resulted in the manifold increase of information about Maoist activities in the Narayanpatna. Some recent seizures made by SFs in the Narayanpatna area have been ascribed to information flows from villagers. This included the seizure of a Maoist welding unit from the Narikhilua Forest in Narayanpatna block, which was being used by the Maoists to manufacture claymore mines.

The interrogation of Gameli China Mohan Rao (25) alias Santu, an area committee member of the Koraput-Srikakulam division of the Andhra Odisha Border Special Zonal Committee (AOBSZC), who was arrested in Rayagada District on May 7, 2013, reportedly suggests that the Maoist leadership are deeply concerned by the large number of CMAS supporters who have snapped links with CMAS and the Maoists.

It remains unclear how the villagers have found courage to challenge the Maoist writ in what has long been their stronghold. There are indications that the frequency of Maoist visits to the villages has declined drastically, and this has encouraged the villagers to open up. In fact, the activities of the Jhanjabati dalam (squad), which functions under Koraput-Srikakulam division of AOBSZC, have declined dramatically since the killing of Chitrakam Reddy alias Sitru (30), the dalam commander, on January 26, 2012, followed by the subsequent killing of his successor, Teli Kadraka alias Rajendra, on August 19, 2012. On April 9, 2013, moreover, four members of the Jhanjabati dalam surrendered before Deputy-Inspector-General of the Border Security Force (BSF) in Koraput town, indicating a collapse of morale.

Unconfirmed reports, however, suggest that the AOBSZC is in a transition phase and is not active to its full potential. Many of its senior leaders are suffering from various ailments, severely restricting their movement and efficacy, while new recruits are far from ready to step into leadership roles. The present AOBSZC chief, Gajarla Ravi alias Uday alias Ganesh alias Charcharla Ganesh, reportedly suffers from diabetes. He was given the charge after his predecessor and Central Committee member Ramakrishna alias RK alias Saketh, was afflicted by severe spondylitis. Marpu Venkataramana alias Lenju alias Jagadeesh, another top leader of the AOBSZC, who was arrested on May 9, 2013, from Anakapalle in Visakhapatnam District, Andhra Pradesh, and carried a reward of INR 2 millions on his head, had developed a permanent limp due to a bullet injury he suffered in an encounter with SFs.

Meanwhile, on May 18, 2013, another two companies of BSF were deployed in the Narayanpatna block, and one more was reportedly on its way. These three companies would be stationed at Tentulipadar, Bijaghart and Mankidi, three new BSF camps. Koraput and Malkangiri Districts already had five battalions of BSF, in addition to some troops of the State Police Force.

Clearly, things have not gone according to plan for the Maoists. Nevertheless, the potential for revival remains strong, and the residual capacities for violence are significant. On April 29, 2013, for instance, 63 Panchayati Raj (village self-government) institution (PRI) representatives [three Zilla Parishad (District Committee) members; 15 Sarpanches (village committee heads), 14 Samiti (village committee) members and 31 ward members] tendered their resignation in neighbouring Malkangiri District under pressure from the Maoists. The resignations were, however, rejected by the District administration on May 14, 2013, on technical grounds.

The Maoists are also in a process of reorganization as a result of the defection and subsequent decimation of the Sabsachi Panda faction in the neighbouring Ganjam, Kandhamal, Rayagada and Gajapati Districts. According to Police estimates, most CPI-Maoist cadres remained with the original outfit even after Panda’s expulsion. Panda was believed to have taken away no more than 25 to 30 cadres. However, the Maoists did suffer a reverse as a result of Panda’s expulsion on other issues, such as raising funds, sourcing explosives, maintaining secret communication lines, intelligence gathering, logistics, hide outs and training camps. On May 12, 2013, for instance, Maoist leader Nikhil, who is now heading the CPI-Maoist Vansadhara Divisional Committee, accused his former boss and Odisha Maobadi Party chief Sabyasachi Panda of embezzling INR 10 million (INR 6 million in cash and other materials worth INR 4 million) from CPI-Maoist assets. Nikhil warned Panda to return the money or face ‘dire consequences’. Despite Panda’s continuing losses, the CPI-Maoist does not appear to have recovered lost ground in Panda’s area of domination.

It remains to be seen whether the Maoists are able to engineer a recovery in Narayanpatna, to reverse the damage of the desertion of CMAS-Narayanpatna supporters. For the moment, however, an opportunity has opened up for the State Forces to interdict any efforts of revival in this troubled region.


NEWS BRIEFS

Weekly Fatalities: Major Conflicts in South Asia
June 10-17, 2013

 

Civilians

Security Force Personnel

Terrorists/Insurgents

Total

INDIA

 

Jammu and Kashmir

0
0
1
1

Assam

0
0
1
1

Nagaland

1
0
0
1

Left-wing Extremism

 

Bihar

1
2
0
3

Chhattisgarh

1
0
1
2

Maharashtra

2
1
0
3

Total (INDIA)

5
3
3
11

PAKISTAN

 

Balochistan

28
6
1
35

FATA

6
1
0
7

Khyber Pakhtunkhwa

4
2
1
7

Sindh

30
8
2
40

Total (PAKISTAN)

68
17
4
89
Provisional data compiled from English language media sources.


BANGLADESH

War crimes convicts can seek President's clemency, says Law Minister Shafique Ahmed: Law Minister Shafique Ahmed on June 11 said the convicted war criminals can seek President's clemency as the country's Constitution does not stipulate as to who can file appeal to the President and who cannot. Shafique said if any war crimes convict files appeal to the President, he would take a decision in this regard taking into consideration the importance of the case. However, we must accept the President's decision whatever it is. He further said the International Crimes Tribunals (ICTs) were taking time to pronounce verdicts for the sake of fair judgment and transparency. NewAge, June 12, 2013.


INDIA

Three persons killed as Maoists attack passenger train in Bihar: In an armed attack on a passenger train, a group of around 200 Communist Party of India-Maoist (CPI-Maoist) cadres targeted the Dhanbad-Patna Intercity Express at the Bhalui halt near Jamui District on June 13, killing three persons, including two Security Force personnel and a civilian, and injuring six passengers. At least 500 passengers were said to be in the train. The Maoists decamped with three rifles, including one AK 47 and two INSAS (Indian Small Arms System) rifles. The Hindu, June14 2013.

'Commander in Chief' of Nongdrenkhomba faction of KCP-MC released from Manipur Central jail for peace talks: 'Commander in chief' of Nongdrenkhomba faction of Kangleipak Communist Party-Military Council (KCP-MC), Ningthoujam Romen alias Nongdrenkhomba, was released on June 12 from Sajiwa Central Jail in Manipur to join the tripartite peace talk with the Government of Manipur and Government of India. Nongdrenkhomba (30) was reportedly arrested by a team of Delhi Police on October 31, 2012, from the Inter-State Bus Terminus at Sarai Kale Khan in New Delhi. On the request of Manipur Police, Nongdrenkhomba was brought back to the State and was re-arrested by Manipur Police for his involvement in cases including murder, abduction and extortion. Kangla Online , June 13, 2013.

MHA decides to rope in ex-Brigadiers to help fight Maoists in four affected States: The Union Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) has decided to rope in retired Brigadiers to plan and assist in anti-Communist Party of India-Maoist (CPI-Maoist) operations in four affected States - Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Odisha and West Bengal. "The issue was discussed at last week's Chief Ministers' Conference on internal security where the four States agreed to the proposal", an unnamed senior MHA official said. The Hindu , June 14, 2013.


NEPAL

Government announces November 19 as the date for holding fresh CA elections: The Government on June 13 announced November 19 as the date for holding fresh Constituent Assembly (CA) elections. The Government also formed a Constituency Delimitation Commission (CDC).

Later, on July 14, the President Ram Baran Yadav approved the draft of the election ordinance forwarded by the Interim Election Government. Nepal News , June 14-15, 2013.

 


PAKISTAN

30 civilians among 40 persons killed during the week in Sindh: At least ten persons, including three Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) activists and a 'commander' of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP)' were killed in separate incidents in Karachi (Karachi District), the provincial capital of Sindh, on June 16.

Five people were killed in separate acts of violence in Karachi on June 15.

At least 12 persons, including two Policemen and an MQM activist were killed in separate incidents in Karachi on June 13.

At least seven persons, including two activists of the MQM and a Police Constable, were killed in separate incidents in Karachi on June 12. Daily Times; Dawn; The News; Tribune; Central Asia Online; The Nation; The Frontier Post; Pakistan Today; Pakistan Observer, June 10-17, 2013.

24 persons killed in blasts in Quetta: At least 24 people, including 14 female students, four nurses and three Frontier Corps (FC) personnel, Quetta Deputy Commissioner Abdul Mansor Khan, were killed and 27 others injured when unidentified terrorists carried out blasts in Quetta, the provincial capital of Balochistan, on June 15. The militants first blew up a bus of Sardar Bahadur Khan (SBK) Women University when it was inside the parking lot of the university. Thereafter, they triggered blast inside the Bolan Medical College (BMC) hospital in Quetta where the victims had been taken for treatment and further action. At around 7pm, the third blast was heard from the BMC Complex. Daily Times, June 16, 2013.

KP Police ready to replace Army in Swat, says Provincial Police chief Ihsan Ghani: Provincial Police 'chief' of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP), Ihsan Ghani, on June 11 said that the Provincial Police is ready to replace Army in Swat. He asserted that we are capable of maintaining law and order situation in Swat and other Districts of the Malakand division if the Army is withdrawn from the region. Dawn, June 12, 2013.

US Congressman Dana Rohrabacher offers amendment to cut military aid to Pakistan: An United States (US) lawmaker, Congressman Dana Rohrabacher, on June 11 said he will move an amendment to the National Defence Authorization Act to prohibit military aid to Pakistan until it releases the doctor who had helped the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) track al Qaida 'chief' Osama bin Laden. "Pakistan held a sham trial that put Dr (Shakeel) Afridi away for 33 years. He has been tortured and has already spent over two years of his life in prison. Dr Afridi is a hero and we shouldn't be sending tax payer dollars to his jail keepers," Congressman Dana Rohrabacher said. "There is no doubt whose side Pakistan's leaders are on; their actions could not speak louder. Pakistan actively funds and directs terrorist organisations who murder American soldiers and civilians in Afghanistan and India. All Americans owe Dr Afridi a debt of gratitude; it is time we honour that," he said. Times of India, June 12 2013.


SRI LANKA

Cabinet approves revision to the 13th Amendment and asks Parliament Speaker to appoint PSC to study the issues: Sri Lanka's Cabinet on June 13 approved the revisions to the 13th Amendment to the Constitution and asked the Parliament Speaker Chamal Rajapaksa to appoint a Parliamentary Select Committee (PSC) to study the issues regarding the legislation. The Speaker is to appoint a PSC on June 18 to discuss the proposed changes to the 13th Amendment and submit a report within a stipulated time period. Cabinet spokesman Minister Keheliya Rambukwella told media that the Cabinet has approved the deletion of the provision in the 13th Amendment that gives power to the President to merge two provinces as it was done in July 1987 with the Northern and Eastern Provinces which remained merged until the Supreme Court de-merged them in October 2006. He added that the amendment that repeals the clause that empowers the President to merge two provinces will be brought as an urgent bill in Parliament soon. However, the Cabinet has decided that other issues such as land and Police powers need to be resolved through the proposed PSC. ColomboPage, June 14, 2013.

Dangerous to hold NPC elections with land and Police powers as TNA still harbors separatist line, says Deputy Minister of Investment Promotion Faizer Mustapha: Faizer Mustapha, the Deputy Minister of Investment Promotion, on June 12 said that it is dangerous to hold election to the Northern Provincial Council (NPC) with land and Police powers since the major Tamil party, Tamil National Alliance (TNA), still harbors a separatist line. The Deputy Minister joined by Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) Batticaloa organizer, Arun Thambimuttu, told the media that the provinces did not need land and Police powers. ColomboPage, June 13, 2013.


The South Asia Intelligence Review (SAIR) is a weekly service that brings you regular data, assessments and news briefs on terrorism, insurgencies and sub-conventional warfare, on counter-terrorism responses and policies, as well as on related economic, political, and social issues, in the South Asian region.

SAIR is a project of the Institute for Conflict Management and the South Asia Terrorism Portal.

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