Pakistan: U.S. Envoy Richard Holbrooke meets with Pakistan Extremist Fazl ur-Rehman “defender of Taliban interests”

Reuters reports on U.S. Envoy Richard Holbrooke meeting with Pakistan Extremist Fazl-ur-Rehman; according to Global Security, Maulana Fazlur Rehman is a well-known “defender of the interests of the Taliban in the grand Deobandi alliance mostly spearheaded by the jihadi militia.”
— aka Maulana Fazal-ur-Rehman aka Fazlur Rehman aka Fazl aka Fazal ur Rehman

August 19, 2009 – Reuters: “Obama reaches out to Islamist parties in Pakistan”

February 19, 2009 – NWFP: Sharia Law deal with president, PM consent: Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-Fazl (JUI-F) chief Maulana Fazlur Rehman

February 9, 2009: Muslim Ummah and Madrassahas are on hit list of America:  JUI-F’s Fazl
—- “He also urged upon the international community to give the
Islamic countries their due right of implementation of Islamic Shariah in their own ideological countries.”

— In January 2008, Maulana Fazlur Rehman (aka Maulana Fazl) stated that he would continue to lead “efforts for the implementation of a true Islamic system” in Pakistan and cited his “achievements” in the NWFP, and promotion of Sharia.

— On November 20, 2007, U.S. Ambassador Patterson met with Taliban promoter Maulana Fazlur Rehman, as part of promoting “free and fair elections.”

Jeffrey Imm research: The leader of the Pakistan political party Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (JUI), Maulana Fazl ur-Rehman, was a political ally of Benazir Bhutto and the PPP of which Mr. Zardari is co-chairman. According to Tahir Amin in his “Case Study on Pakistan’s Recognition of Taliban”, under the Benazir Bhutto administration: “The Deeni Madressahs led by the JUI (F) provided the manpower. Maulana Fazal-ur-Rehman, a close ally of the PPP who had been made the Chairman of the Parliamentary Committee of Foreign Affairs, also played a key role in garnering the support for the Taliban in the corridors of power. Various Pakistani governmental organisations like the PTCL, Railway, PIA and Ministry of Communications provided the infrastructural assistance to the Taliban. The ISI began to provide military supplies, logistical support, technical know how and the extensive knowledge of the Afghan situation.”

———————————————————–

August 19, 2009 – Reuters: “Obama reaches out to Islamist parties in Pakistan”

U.S. President Barack Obama has started reaching out to some of Pakistan’s most fervent Islamist and anti-American parties, including one that helped give rise to the Taliban, trying to improve Washington’s image in the nuclear-armed state.

Obama’s special envoy, Richard Holbrooke, is initiating dialogue between the United States and religious parties previous administrations had largely shunned, both sides said.

“The purpose is to broaden the base of American relations in Pakistan beyond the relatively narrow circle of leaders Washington has previously dealt with,” explained Vali Nasr, senior adviser to Holbrooke.

John Bolton, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations during the Bush presidency, questioned Holbrooke’s timing for trying to engage Taliban sympathizers on the eve of elections in neighboring Afghanistan, where U.S. forces are battling the hardline Islamic group.

“As a general proposition, democracy in Pakistan is fragile enough now that negotiating with people that some on the democratic side of the Pakistani spectrum would think themselves are terrorists strikes me as fairly risky,” Bolton said.

“What we ought to be doing is making sure that our ties with the military are strong because the gravest risk is radical penetration of the military.”

At one of this week’s sessions, Liaqat Baloch, a top member of the religious, right-wing Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) party, told Holbrooke he welcomed the new administration’s public change in tone toward Muslims around the world.

But Baloch said he was disturbed to see “no change in practice” in Pakistan and Afghanistan, where Obama has stepped up military operations against the Taliban on both sides of the border.

Holbrooke invited Jamaat-e-Islami, whom some U.S. officials compare to the banned Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, to visit the heavily guarded American embassy compound in Islamabad, seeking to dispel long-running rumors that thousands of U.S. Marines would be based there.

“NEW ERA”

Holbrooke rejected the party’s complaints about a Western “assault” on Islam, saying “that could not be further from the truth” with Obama, who has roots in the religion, now in the White House.

Fazl-ur-Rehman, whose Jamiat-e-ulema-e-Islam party was active in rousing support for the Taliban in 1990s, also got an audience with Holbrooke and his team.

Rehman denies al Qaeda’s responsibility for the September 11, 2001, attacks, and once warned that if U.S. forces invaded Afghanistan, no American in Pakistan would be safe.

In more recent years, however, Rehman’s relationship with the Taliban has grown uneasy, and he has publicly supported negotiations between the U.S.-backed government in Kabul and the Islamist group.

“His hands aren’t exactly clean,” Lisa Curtis of the Heritage Foundation said of Rehman. “He is associated with the Taliban.”

But she described his party as a legitimate political force that has met with U.S. officials in the past.

Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari praised Holbrooke’s meetings with Islamist parties as “a new era” aimed at promoting reconciliation and dialogue instead of “the violent mindset.”

“We need to help Obama. He’s a breath of fresh air to the world,” Zardari told reporters traveling with Holbrooke.

Dressed in colorful turbans and traditional robes, most of the parliamentarians and clerics representing religious parties as well as tribes appeared to relish access to Obama’s point-man for Pakistan and Afghanistan.

“It’s good he’s listening,” said parliamentarian Munir Khan Orakzai of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas — ethnic Pashtun lands on the Afghan border — after pressing Holbrooke for a bigger share of development aid dollars.

Holbrooke, who has been meeting mainly Pakistan’s political and military establishment, called his nearly hour-long session with Baloch’s Jamaat-e-Islami “the most intellectually sustained debate I’ve ever had in this country.”

But immediately after their meeting, Baloch and his delegation took to the streets, leading a protest against U.S. policy in Pakistan and the region.

Communist China: Human Rights Activist / Lawyer Xu Zhiyong in Prison

Asia News reports: “Well-known lawyer and activist Xu Zhiyong in prison for ‘tax evasion'”
— “Xu is said to have failed to pay taxes owed by Gongmeng, a human rights organisation. In reality, experts suggest the authorities are demanding the payment of business taxes to silence dissent ahead of the celebrations to mark the 60 years of the People’s Republic of China.”
— “After spending three weeks in prison Xu Zhiyong, a well-known Chinese human rights lawyer, was formally charged with tax evasion. This confirms what many experts fear, namely that the government is cracking down on human rights activists ahead of 1 October, the day of the 60th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China, in order to prevent protests and dissent.”

Iraq: Nearly 100 killed in sectarian supremacist attacks to intimidate Shiites

BBC:  Blasts bring carnage to Baghdad

AP: Wave of blasts in Iraqi capital kills at least 95
— “More than 300 wounded in attacks aimed at government, commercial sites”
— “Iraqi officials blamed al-Qaida in Iraq and other Sunni insurgents, echoing U.S. military warnings that the militant group is trying to provoke new bloodshed to undermine public trust in the Shiite-led Iraqi government.”

Al-Qaeda kills almost 100 in Baghdad bomb carnage

Egypt: Report on Christian Copt Churches Attacked

— WorldMag reports: “Churches attacked and Christians arrested? Egypt’s ancient church faces new levels of persecution”
— “As 30-year-old Fulla Asaad and her mother-in-law prepared a midday meal on July 11, they spied three Muslim men with cans of kerosene running through the home’s courtyard in their small, Egyptian town. Yelling for help, they did their best to stop them but the men poured fuel on the adjacent building — a small structure the Asaads had donated to their church. The men set it on fire — the only gathering place for the Coptic Christian community in Ezbet Basilious, a village in Upper Egypt south of Cairo.”
— “After questioning witnesses, local police arrested two Copts, Asaad and 35-year-old Reda Gamal Huzayin, and accused them of attacking their own church. Part of a growing trend throughout Egypt’s Coptic communities, local police and security forces are framing Christians while the perpetrators escape prosecution. And as Islamic radicalism spreads across a nation that plays a key role in the region, so have attacks against the region’s largest and oldest Christian community.”

Canadian Pakistani Christians hold awareness rally on persecution in Pakistan

Canadian Pakistani Christians hold awareness rally on persecution in Pakistan
— Pakistan Christian Post reports:
— “Scarborough: August 19, 2009. (PCP) Despite the Scorching heat of Sunday noon, temperatures rising to 32c the determined friends of Christian Minority of Pakistan held an awareness rally on August 16, 2009 to protest the Acts of Evil by the hands of Muslim Extremists in Scarborough, Canada at the doorsteps of St. Barnabas Church which holds 3 services each Saturday and Sunday which very much get attended by 500 to 700 worshipers each service.”