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Thursday, 17 September 2009

Terror suspect Swedes still detained: Pakistan

From the Swedish edition of The Local
Pakistan's foreign ministry on Wednesday confirmed that four Swedish citizens are sitting in prison in the capital Islamabad, three weeks after their arrest in the north of the country.
The news reached Sweden’s foreign ministry via Sweden’s ambassador to Pakistan, Ulrika Sundberg, who visited the Pakistani ministry where she received a diplomatic note on the matter.
“In the note, the Pakistanis discuss who was arrested and they have also given a promise that the embassy will be allowed to visit them in the coming days according to normal consular procedures,” Swedish foreign ministry spokesperson Anders Jörle told the TT news agency.
The Swedes being held in Pakistan include Mehdi Ghezali, who spent two years in Guantánamo Bay following his 2001 arrest in Afghanistan, as well as 28-year-old Munir Awad and 19-year-old Safia Benaouda, and their two and a half-year-old boy.
Awad and Benaouda, who was pregnant at the time, were arrested in Kenya in 2007 after fleeing Somalia following the invasion of troops from Ethiopia.
Until Wednesday, Pakistan has said that all of the people arrested on a bus on August 28th were terror suspects. Police say they got the impression that the group of foreigners, which included the Swedes, were in the company of a Pakistani man with military training who was suspected of involvement in terrorism.
His alleged mission was to take the foreigners from the city of Quetta to Miranshah, the main city in the lawless region of northern Waziristan, where they were to meet an alleged Taliban leader named Zahir Noor.
Northern Waziristan is part of a tribal area in northern Pakistan with a porous border to Afghanistan and which is considered a Taliban stronghold in Pakistan.
The central government in Pakistan has long struggled to gain control over the region, where the Pashtu culture has more in common with large parts of neighbouring Afghanistan.
The suspicions against Ghezali are said to be stronger than those against the other Swedes. There can't be a case at all against a child aged 2, of course.
He is reported to have said that the group was on its way to Lahore to attend a harmless meeting with a Muslim revivalist movement, Tablighi Jamaat.
Jörle from the Swedish foreign ministry refused to comment on media reports that American and British intelligence agencies had been allowed to question the arrested Swedes.
On Tuesday, Swedish foreign minister Carl Bildt signaled the case was not a priority for the ministry.
“The four people will receive the consular assistance which everyone gets according to the law, regardless of what crimes they are suspected of. We’re not going to do any out of the ordinary prioritizing in this case,” said Jörle.

Posted on 09/17/2009 3:59 AM by Esmerelda Weatherwax
Comments
17 Sep 2009
wtf

"a harmless meeting with a Muslim revivalist movement"

Surely a contradiction in terms here.



17 Sep 2009
Paul Blaskowicz

"a harmless meeting with a Muslim revivalist movement"

That's rather novel, at leat.  It's usually to go to a wedding.  Which is somehow suppose to sound normal and  sort of human - connecting muslim practices  with those of  rest of mankind.  (Strange how a high proportion of large groups of armed men  traversing the deserts of Afghanistan are nearly always described as "wedding parties" after being bombarded by western troops.)  

"We’re not going to do any out of the ordinary prioritizing in this case,” said Jörle.

Does one detect another novelty here?  The Swedish diplomatic corps and all the forces of the Swedish government would at one time  have been falling over themselves to get aid and succour  as quickly as possible to "Swedes" caught up in such a situation. Oh that poor wee babby.  Have they no heart?



17 Sep 2009
Artemis

Give me some of those old-tyme revivalists.  "Brother Love's Traveling Salvation Show", Neil Diamond (and Johnny Cash intro).

I think it means something different in Islam.

 



17 Sep 2009
Alan R

 

 It seems that in Europe, Sweden is the most far gone in both its open-door immigration policy, and in its dhimmitude towards Islam, and these are the consequences. But it's not QED in multicultural Sweden.



17 Sep 2009
dumbledoresarmy

Yet another good reason why all non-Muslim countries ought to ban Tablighi Jamaat.  'Harmless revivalist movement' they are not.

Esmerelda - did you read right to the end of the comments thread over at jihadwatch, for the article posted on Sept 7 and headlined 'Airline bomb plot: Mosque has been recruiting ground for 20 years'?  Because right at the end of that thread, a regular poster who identifies himself as an ex-Muslim (I believe him, or her, to be a secret apostate), had some *very* interesting and useful things to say about Tablighi Jamaat and the way they go about 'reviving Islam' among communities of largely nominal Muslims resident in dar al harb.  That poster used the phrase 'intimidatory tactics' to describe those methods.  I asked the poster to communicate his/ her interesting - and, indeed, frankly damning - information re. T. J.'s modus operandi and ultimate aims, to the people who are campaigning against the big T. J. mosque project in London, and provided the link to do so; and I believe this person may in fact do as requested.  






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