Tag: Pakistan

  • American Indians Object to ‘Geronimo’ as Code for Bin Laden Raid

    American Indians Object to ‘Geronimo’ as Code for Bin Laden Raid

    Neely Tucker

    He died 102 years ago in Oklahoma, a beaten warrior, a prisoner of war, an exile from his homeland, a propped-up sideshow, a gambler and a lukewarm Christian. His family was murdered by Mexicans. The Americans stripped him of most everything else.

    And yet, the Apache born near the Gila River in present-day Arizona with the not-very-impressive name of Goyahkla (“One Who Yawns”) rode into history as the legendary Geronimo.

    It was his name that the U.S. military chose as the code for the raid, and perhaps for Osama bin Laden himself, during the operation that killed the al-Qaeda leader in Pakistan. That led to the iconic transmission from the raid: “Geronimo EKIA.” Geronimo, Enemy Killed in Action.

    In a triumphant moment for the United States, the moniker has left a sour taste among many Native Americans.

    “I was celebrating that we had gotten this guy and feeling so much a part of America,” Tom Holm, a former Marine, a member of the Creek/Cherokee Nations and a retired professor of American Indian studies at the University of Arizona, said by phone Tuesday. “And then this ‘Geronimo EKIA’ thing comes up. I just said, ‘Why pick on us?’ Robert E. Lee killed more Americans than Geronimo ever did, and Hitler would seem to be evil personified, but the code name for bin Laden is Geronimo?”

    Suzan Shown Harjo, president of the Morning Star Institute, a Native American advocacy group based in Washington, has long fought against the use of Indian imagery in American life (including as the mascot of the Washington Redskins).

    FBI-listed "Most Wanted Terrorists” Jaber al-Banna (also known as Jaber Elbaneh). Photo: Khaled Abdullah / Reuters

    She sighed when asked about the latest iteration of Geronimo.

    “It’s how deeply embedded the ‘Indian as enemy’ is in the collective mind of America,” she said. “To this day, when soldiers are going into enemy territory, it’s common for it to be called ‘Indian country.’ ”

    It isn’t clear yet which branch of the military came up with the nickname — the Army, Navy, CIA or any of the anti-terror special forces groups involved in planning the raid — but it apparently wasn’t bin Laden’s nickname for very long.

    A database search of news stories shows that, while military leaders sometimes compared bin Laden’s elusiveness to Geronimo’s, there is no news account of calling the al-Qaeda leader “Geronimo” until this past weekend.

    But the Apache leader’s name has often been used in the name for projects in Afghanistan, such as the Marine Forward Operating Base Geronimo in the Helmand province, reports show.

    Military code names and nicknames have a long history, dating to when written or radio transmissions could be easily intercepted, and thus the name for a secret language that only some people involved in a particular operation would understand.

    But not all code names and nicknames have been loaded terms, even when the stakes were high. The plan to build the atomic bomb (the Manhattan Project) resulted in two atomic bombs (“Little Boy” and “Fat Man”) being dropped on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The Boeing B-29 Superfortress bomber that dropped the bombs was nicknamed “Enola Gay,” after Enola Gay Tibbets, mother of the pilot, Paul Tibbets.

    The U.S. military now has strict formats for official code names and nicknames for designated targets, but the results are sometimes more goofy than intimidating.

    “Operation Red Dawn,” for example, the campaign that led to the capture of Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, gave all the appearances of being inspired by a campy 1984 film in which teenagers fight to save the United States from a Soviet invasion.

    The 19th-century U.S. Army campaign to apprehend Geronimo and stop his raids on settlers did become famous, particularly in military circles, because he eluded capture for more than a decade. By the time of his surrender in Arizona in 1886, more than 5,000 troops had participated in the hunt to track him down.

    After years of degradation, included being trotted out by whites as an example of the Wild West, he died in Oklahoma in 1909. He was buried in a prisoner-of-war camp.

    “There is little doubt [the] use of a leader like Geronimo to refer to bin Laden is ill-advised,” Keith Harper, a partner at the D.C. firm of Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton and a member of the Cherokee Nation, wrote in an e-mail Tuesday. Harper represented the plaintiff class of 500,000 individual Indians in the landmark Indian trust funds lawsuit, which last year settled its claims against the U.S. government for $3.4 billion. He was also the principal adviser and chair of the Native American Domestic Policy Committee for the Obama campaign.

    “No one would find acceptable calling this arch-terrorist by code name Man­dela, Revere or Ben-Gurion,” Harper wrote. “An extraordinary Native leader and American hero deserves no less.”

    Source: The Washington Post

  • Pakistan Proved Hunting Point For Top 8 al-Qaida Leaders since 9/11

    By Jamil Bhatti

    ABBOTTABAD, Pakistan, May 3 (Xinhua) — The death of Osama bin Laden in Pakistan demanded critics who termed Pakistan a safe heaven for al-Qaeda members in the past to change their views as this heaven has been proven as the hunting cage of al-Qaida’s top leadership, Pakistanis said on Tuesday.

    People talking to Xinhua showed their deep concerns over the behavior of Western media to Pakistan in war against terrorism. ” We have lost thousands of our innocent people and billions of dollar assets in this war but even then they are negative about our role,”said a resident in Abbottabad, the city where bin Laden was killed.

    Osama, al-Qaida’s founder and chief, was the latest one of the eight al-Qaida leaders killed or arrested in Pakistan since the 9/ 11 incident, the attack that left over 3,000 people dead in New York and also triggered U.S.-led war against Taliban and al-Qaida in Afghanistan.

    Osama bin Laden was killed on Monday morning in a direct U.S. army operation in Abbottabad, a cantonment district with a population of over 800,000 some 100 kilometers away from capital Islamabad.

    Here are the details about the other top al-Qaida leaders, who were hounded in Pakistan.

    Seven months after the 9/11 the first top al-Qaida member arrested from Pakistan was a Saudi Arabian national Abu Zubaydah. Pakistani secret intelligence and American FBI, in a joint operation, raided a house in March 2002 in Faisal Town area of country’s industrial city of Faisalabad and arrested him injured.

    Zubaydah was considered as the integral part of the al-Qaida as being the close aid to bin Laden and in-charge of communications in international operations. He has been in U.S. custody since arrest.

    In September 2002, another al-Qaida leader Ramzi bin al-Shibh was also traced and arrested by the Pakistani security agencies from its southern coastal city of Karachi. Shibh is a detainee at Guantanamo Bay as an accused of being the facilitator of 9/11 attacks, and suspect of attacking and destruction of American warship USS Cool in 1998.

    The arrest of Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, one of the al-Qaeda’s top four characters, in March 2003 from Islamabad’s adjacent city of Rawalpindi was the highest profile success of the time.

    The highest importance of 25 million dollar head money man was measured when former U.S. President J.W. Bush announced his arrest and said U.S. has got the mastermind of 9/11 attacks.

    Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani, the suspect of planning of attacks on U. S. embassy in Kenya in 1998, was handed over to America after Pakistani forces arrested him from the country’s eastern border city of Gujrat in July 2004.

    In May 2005, Pakistani forces succeeded to arrest al-Qaida number three leader Abu Faraj al-Libi, the in-charge of al-Qaida in Pakistan and allegedly responsible of attacks at Pakistan’s then president Pervez Musharraf. Both Pakistan and U.S. had announced head money for his arrest.

    In 2008, American forces raised the number of drone strikes in Pakistan’s northwestern tribal areas to hunt the al-Qaida militants.

    Abu Lais al-Libi was the first-ever al-Qaida’s main commander who was hit by the drone missile in Pakistan’s northwestern tribal region of North Waziristan, bordering Afghanistan, during the last week of January of 2008.

    In May 2010, al-Qaida had to face a big loss when a missile fired from the pilotless U.S. drone killed its senior most leader Mustafa Al Yazid in Pakistan’s northwestern tribal areas. He appeared as the in-charge of operations in Afghanistan, and the number three in rank after the death of Abu Ubaidah al-Banshiri following Osama and Ayman al-Zawahiri.

     

     

  • Does the Body of a ‘Terrorist’ Not Deserve Dignity?

    Does the Body of a ‘Terrorist’ Not Deserve Dignity?

    Amnah Khalid, BeyondHeadlines

    Today, the face of terror was removed from the minds of Americans by the killing of Osama bin Laden by US Navy Seals. As announced in a speech by President Obama, justice has been done not because Americans valued wealth or power but the values that make them. The values of  liberty and justice for all. The sense of retribution and the gulps of emotion at ground zero following the remembrance of terror strike of 9/11 had been avenged. The service and lives of those who died fighting the war on terror was not forgotten, and all peace loving people should welcome such a news.

    The US war was against Al-Qa’ida and not Islam. Muslims had also become Osama’s victims. The celebrations were for a victory of justice and peace. The message was loud and clear, the days of terrorism were coming to an end with most people took a deep breath of relieve rather than peace. Nonetheless what remains is universal recognition of these values by President Obama for everyone affected.

    One of the first questions that is set to become controversial among Muslims is the hurried manner in disposal of Osama’s body. Officials of the US administration claim some resistance was put up by the leader who was shot in the head, he apparently did not die and was shot again. From the pictures released, it is difficult to understand how the mattress is blood spot free yet the floor under the bed and carpet are heavily stained. The body was identified by the Navy Seals, members of his family living in the compound and a DNA test was apparently conducted through a sample collected from the brain of his dead sister. It is difficult to see how the body could be tested and flown 400 miles to sea in a couple of hours.

    By afternoon, Pakistan TV channels were showing the bloody face of a body claiming it to be Bin Laden’s. These were later refuted to be constructed, and US officials said that the images were too bloody to be displayed. By one in the afternoon, the officials said: “We are ensuring that it is handled in accordance with Islamic practice and tradition. This is something that we take very seriously and therefore, this is being handled in an appropriate manner.” What these rituals were is unknown. Unconvincing, the body was washed according to Islamic rituals aboard an aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson, taken in a boat and dropped in the north Arabian sea. What the administration meant by Islamic rituals was a burial in 24 hours. It is indeed true that a body is best buried early but in mother earth and not sea many need more evidence.

    Several Islamic scholars have come forward with their opinion on the matter. Bin Laden’s burial at sea “runs contrary to the principles of Islamic laws, religious values and humanitarian customs,” said Sheik Ahmed al-Tayeb, the grand Imam of Cairo’s Al-Azhar mosque, highest seat of Islamic learning, said.

    Omar Bakri Mohammed, a radical cleric in Lebanon, said: “The Americans want to humiliate Muslims through this burial, and I don’t think this is in the interest of the US administration.” Mohammed al-Qubaisi, Dubai’s grand mufti, said: “They can say they buried him at sea, but they cannot say they did it according to Islam.” He further said: “If the family does not want him, it was not an issue. The burial in Islam is really very simple. You dig up a grave anywhere, even on a remote island, say prayers and that’s it. Sea burials are permissible for Muslims in extraordinary circumstances, and this situation was not one of them.”

    “What was done by the Americans is forbidden by Islam and might provoke some Muslims,” said another Islamic scholar from Iraq, Abdul-Sattar al-Janabi, who preaches at Baghdad’s famous Abu Hanifa mosque. “It is not acceptable, and it is almost a crime to throw the body of a Muslim into the sea. The body of Bin Laden should have been handed over to his family to look for a country or land to bury him,’ he said.

    The official defense was to prevent a shrine built to honor him like the one built for Saddam Hussain for his followers. Another claim is the refusal of Saudi authorities to take his body in spite of his Saudi nationality. Osama was killed many times before most notably in December 2001 too, but he has remained in the minds of the people for whatever be the reason. Was it too much to bury him in an unknown grave for a clean and clear end? Does the body of a ‘terrorist’ not require dignity and identification? Are such ‘terrorists’ not even worth a trial in the International Court of Justice like Slobodon Milosovich of Bosnian ethnic cleansing fame? Perhaps, the US record has not been clean with the Guntanomo Bay record.

    Does anyone at this stage bother about a country’s sovereignty been violated, Pakistan’s? Afghanistan was invaded by the US forces without a formal declaration till date. Such new tactical wars violate the country’s sovereignty, and all international norms need a check on US violations. Pakistan was a sitting duck in the game played on its soil. On the contrary, we saw how thousands of civilians were killed by the government forces without an immediate humanitarian intervention in Libya.The values of liberty , justice and equality belong to all and not the exclusive domain of a single country.

    (Amnah can be contacted at amnah@beyondheadlines.in)

  • Indian Muslim Leaders Negate Osama Being ‘Terrorist​’

    Indian Muslim Leaders Negate Osama Being ‘Terrorist​’

    BeyondHeadlines Staff Reporter

    New Delhi: While the world responded the killing of Osama bin Ladin with unprecedented jubilation and celebration but when it comes to Indian Muslim leaders, the reaction was completely different. Talking to BeyondHeadlines, Syed Ahmad Bukhari, shahi imam of historic Jama Masjid, Delhi, who had highly opposed the US attack on Afghanistan in 2001 and later on Iraq in 2003, still thinks that Osama was not a terrorist.


    “I don’t believe that Osama was a terrorist. To call someone ‘terrorist’ the evidences are needed before the court of law, but a single court of the world declared him a terrorist. It is the assertion of the United States and NATO that he was a terrorist. Why should we believe them,” asked Bukhari.

    “I want to ask to those countries, including India, which were expressing grief on the 9/11 incident that what are their views about those thousands of innocent Muslims who were killed in Afghanistan, Iraq, Palestine and now are being killed in Libya,” said the cleric.

    “I will strongly say that the United States and Israel are biggest terrorists, which are involved in the killing of humanity across globe,” he argued.

    However, there was some resentment about the fact that he was in Pakistan. Imam Bukhari said it proved the contention that the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) gave shelter to terrorists. “I am not saying Osama was a terrorist, but the fact that outfits like Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) and Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) have bank accounts in the United States show that the United States and ISI jointly sponsor the acts of terrorism in India.”

    “I don’t think that he is killed in Pakistan. If it is true, why he does not caught alive. It is a conspiracy against a Muslim country,” Bukhari said.

    Dr Zafarul Islam Khan, executive president of All India Muslim Majlis-e-Mushawarat, an umbrella body of Indian Muslim organizations, termed it a drama staged by the United States.

    “It was nothing but a drama. It might end the issue of the US terrorism because they were using Osama to justify their activities in Afghanistan and Iraq. Now the United States can leave Afghanistan on the pretext that it has achieved its goal by killing Osama. It will proudly say its citizens that it has won the so-called war against terror and it will also facilitate the reelection of Mr Obama,” Khan pointed out.

    Khan also has suspicion on this killing.

    “I think he was died 10 years ago when the United States invaded Tora Bora in Afghanistan,” Khan said.

    Maulana Arshad Madani, president of one faction of the Jamiat Ulama-i-Hind, also disagreed that Osama was a terrorist. He told BeyondHeadlines: “I do not believe he was indulged in terrorism. The question to be asked is why did the United States come into Afghanistan in the first place? Who created Osama? Americans did to exterminate the Russians. Now that their need has been fulfilled, they term Osama, who was at one point their best friend, a terrorist. It is symptomatic of the American way of functioning of their constant use and throw policy with countries and people.”

    Sharing the same vies, Jamaat-e-Islam Hind Chief Maulana Jalaluddin Umri said: “It is the contention of the United States only that Osama was a terrorist. There is no reason for us to take their words at face value. As for his having been killed inside Pakistan by the US forces, that is something Pakistan should get worried about.”

    Mufti Mohammad Mukarram, shahi imam, Masjid Fatehpuri, said: “I think the trend to equate Islam and Muslims with terrorism will end, and from now on the name of Osama and innocent Muslims would not be used to hide the faces of real perpetrator of many terror activities carried out every other day.

    “Whatever is being done by the United States in Afghanistan and Israel in Palestine is also terrorism, but when this will end,” questioned Mukarram.

    Answering a question about role of Al-Qa’ida after death of Osama, he said that he did not believe that Al-Qa’ida exist.

  • US Forces Kill Osama in Pakistan, White House Confirms Report

    US Forces Kill Osama in Pakistan, White House Confirms Report

    Amnah Khalid, BeyondHeadlines

    New Delhi: US President Obama in a speech late Sunday night announced that alleged Al Qa’ida leader Osama bin Laden, who is considered to be responsible for the September 11 attacks on the United States, was killed in a firefight during an operation in Abbottabad near Islamabad in Pakistan. Osama,59, was killed along with his family members by US forces . His body is in the possession of the US forces.

    The US President said: “The covert operation began last August but sufficient intelligence was gained last week that promoted the move to take action. The operation was precise, with no civilian or military casualty. It was made possible with the cooperation of the Pakistani and US intelligence cooperation.”

    Terming it “good and extraordinary day for both the countries,” Obama said: “The terrorist leader was responsible for the deaths of many Muslims, including in the Muslims in the United States. This was not a war against Islam but terrorism. It was historic in the sense that just four months before the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attack, justice has been done, and all those who want peace should welcome it.”

    He said: “It will recognize the service and sacrifice of all those who sacrificed their lives to root out terrorism.” Obama signed every letter to the families of deceased servicemen, saying “their loss is not forgotten and will always be remembered.”

    “A phase has ended in the chapter of terrorism although more remained to be tackled. It was not the wealth or the power but who we are and the values we hold that make us liberty and justice for all,” said Obama.

    Crowd have been gathering in large numbers outside the White House hailing the move and celebrating, there will be a new tomorrow for the world to see.

    Bin Laden headed Al-Qa’ida, which claimed responsibility for 9/11 Attack on twin trade towers and the Pentagon nearly ten years ago, had openly declared war with the United States and took responsibility for many terrorist attacks around the world. It claimed the responsibility for the bombing in 1988 on the US Embassies in Tanzania and Kenya. It operated from Afghanistan, which led to its invasion by the US forces.

  • Complete Shutdown in Occupied Kashmir

    Srinagar (KMS): Complete shutdown is being observed today against “illegal” detention of Hurriyet leaders stepped up gross human rights violations by Indian police and troops in the territory.

    Call for the shutdown has been given by veteran Kashmiri Hurriyet leader, Syed Ali Gilani, to draw the world attention towards the atrocities of the occupation troops on the innocent people in the territory.

    Syed Ali Gilani who is under house arrest in Srinagar in a statement said that India was using oppressive tactics against the Kashmiris to suppress their just struggle for right to self-determination.
    On the other hand, Indian troops in their fresh act of state terrorism, martyred two more innocent Kashmiri youth in Habdipora area of Shopian, today, during a siege and search operation, which continued till last reports came in.

  • Pakistan’s Minister for Minorities Affairs Shahbaz Bhatti Shot Dead

    Pakistan’s Minister for Minorities Affairs Shahbaz Bhatti Shot Dead

    BeyondHeadlines News Desk

    Islamabad: Close to the heals of Punjab Province Governor Salman Taseer’s assassination, Pakistan’s Minister for Minorities Affairs Shahbaz Bhatti was shot dead today morning in Islamabad. This is the second on a high-profile Pakistani who had raised voice for reformation of harsh blasphemy laws, which impose the death penalty for insulting Islam.

    Pakistan's Minister for Minorities Affairs Shahbaz Bhatti (Photo Source-AFP)

    The minister’s Private Secretary Fahad said that federal minister succumbed to his bullet injuries on his way to hospital. After reaching a nearby hospital, he was pronounced dead, he added. His driver, Gulsher also confirmed that the minister died while on his way to hospital.

    Bhatti, who was a member of People’s Party of Pakistan (PPP), was reportedly receiving life threats for seeking changes in Pakistan’s controversial blasphemy laws.  The minister was on his way to office when unknown assailant opened gun fire on his car.

    Not any group has so far claimed the responsibility for the attack, but private Pakistani TV channels showed pamphlets at the scene of the killing that were attributed to the Pakistani Taliban warning of the same fate for anyone opposing the blasphemy laws.

    On January 4, 2011, Punjab Province Governor Salman Taseer was  shot dead by one his bodyguards when he was getting into his car at a market. Taseer was also killed because of his opposition to Pakistan’s blasphemy law.