2006.08.11: August 11, 2006: Headlines: COS - Morocco: Journalism: COS - Pakistan: Terrorism: Duluth News Tribune: James Rupert writes: Pakistan helped foil terror plot

Peace Corps Online: Directory: Pakistan: Peace Corps Pakistan : The Peace Corps in Pakistan: 2006.08.11: August 11, 2006: Headlines: COS - Morocco: Journalism: COS - Pakistan: Terrorism: Duluth News Tribune: James Rupert writes: Pakistan helped foil terror plot

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James Rupert writes: Pakistan helped foil terror plot

James Rupert writes: Pakistan helped foil terror plot

Pakistan announced Thursday that it arrested unidentified people in this country in helping Britain to foil the planned terrorist attacks revealed Thursday. Government officials here spoke up hours after France's interior minister told journalists that the plot "appears to be of Pakistani origin." Journalist James Rupert, head of Newsday's international bureau in Islamabad, Pakistan began his career abroad as a Peace Corps volunteer, teaching mechanics and welding in Morocco.

James Rupert writes: Pakistan helped foil terror plot

Pakistan helped foil terror plot
BY JAMES RUPERT
NEWSDAY

PESHAWAR, Pakistan - Pakistan announced Thursday that it arrested unidentified people in this country in helping Britain to foil the planned terrorist attacks revealed Thursday. Government officials here spoke up hours after France's interior minister told journalists that the plot "appears to be of Pakistani origin."

Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Tasnim Aslam said Pakistan's "active intelligence cooperation" with Britain and the United States had helped break up the plot. She gave no details of the reported arrests.

Britain did not immediately confirm the remarks either by Aslam or by French Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy, and no details were available about the roles played either by Pakistani militants or law enforcement. But the foiled plot revived a recurrent nightmare for Pakistan -- that it might be blamed for an act of terrorism abroad, particularly if it arose from the heavily Pakistani Muslim community of Britain.

Adding to the Pakistani connection, CNN reported Thursday that two of the plotters arrested in Britain had recently traveled to and had money wired from Pakistan.

Perhaps more than any other country, Pakistan feels itself under constant, critical scrutiny as a reputed source of Islamic militant terrorist activity. The country that gave birth to the Taliban movement, and that became a refuge for much of al-Qaeda's leadership after 1991, tends to flinch at news of terrorist activity among Muslims with links to Pakistan.

Caught between international pressure, notably from Washington, and Pakistani opinion that supports many militant groups, Pakistan responds to such pressures with episodic crackdowns. Within days of the London subway attacks, the government arrested scores of militants and President Pervez Musharraf vowed to expel non-Pakistani students from the country's 12,000 religious schools. A year later, the groups targeted in the arrests are still in operation and the foreign students remain.





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Story Source: Duluth News Tribune

This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; COS - Morocco; Journalism; COS - Pakistan; Terrorism

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