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Extremists gain control in northern Pakistan


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Militant: 'We are getting stronger everywhere'
Samad, the militant organizer, says he traveled in recent weeks to North Waziristan and recruited scores of militants to reinforce Fazlullah’s followers in Swat Valley.

“It’s not just in Swat or in Waziristan or in Bajaur. We are getting stronger everywhere in the area,” he said. Recent suicide bombings are direct evidence of al-Qaida’s influx, he said.

Fazlullah, who draws tens of thousands to his rallies, has launched a broad campaign against Western influence. He uses his outlawed FM radio station to preach jihad against America and Musharraf and teach his strict interpretation of Islam.

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Fazlullah has called for a ban on polio vaccinations because he said it was a ploy by the West to sterilize Muslim babies. He demands women wear the all-encompassing burqa and frowns on barbers who give haircuts in styles deemed un-Islamic.

Extra security sent to region
This month, Pakistani authorities sent about 2,500 extra police and troops into Swat district to challenge Fazlullah’s followers. A group of tribal elders and clerics has been holding talks with Fazlullah’s aides about ending the bloodshed.

Still, many Pakistanis fear the government has waited too long to confront militant clerics like Fazlullah.

“For three years no one did anything. Two years ago you could have arrested Fazlullah with two police constables. Today you need a division,” Mohammed said.

A police official, who asked for anonymity fearing reprisals from militants and from his superiors, said sympathizers within the government, police and intelligence service have allowed Fazlullah to gain stature in the region.

Red Mosque incident spurs militants
A confidential memo circulated to Pakistan’s National Security Council in July and made public soon afterward warned that radicals from the border region were exerting wide influence.

It spoke of a “nexus” between radical clerics behind the bloody siege of the Red Mosque in Islamabad, which resulted in more than 100 deaths, and the clerics in northwest Pakistan. Besides Fazlullah, those include Baitullah Mehsud, who allegedly threatened to meet Bhutto’s return to Pakistan with suicide attacks.

Slide show
Khudadad Khan's brother cries for his brother who is being held inside the Lal Masjid or Red Mosque in Islamabad
Mosque stand-off
Security forces storm radical at a mosque in Pakistan's capital.
“When I was following the Red Mosque, one thing was very clear — that they had strong sympathizers within the establishment and within the military,” said Hasan Askari Rizvi, a leading independent Pakistani defense analyst. Rizvi said Pakistan’s powerful armed forces remain ambivalent about religious extremists, whom the military supported during the Afghan war with the Soviets in the 1980s.

Pakistan’s military has often used extremists as proxies in the violent secessionist battle against India for control of Kashmir, he said.

“The government is perturbed because of their activities in Pakistan,” he said, but doesn’t object when they fight Western-backed leaders in Afghanistan or Indian troops in Kashmir.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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