Lal Masjid - radical bastion in Pakistani capital
Islamabad, July 4: The Lal Masjid, or Red Mosque, has longbeen known as a bastion of radical Muslims in the heart of thePakistani capital, Islamabad.
The red-brick mosque is run by two brothers, clerics whose fatherset it up in the 1960s when the city was first built on scrubby flatland up against the Himalayan foothills.
The father, Maulana Mohammad Abdullah, turned the mosque into aheadquarters of radical Muslims in the 1980s, when Muslim fighters,backed by Pakistan, the United States and Saudi Arabia, battled Sovietoccupiers in neighbouring Afghanistan.
The father and sons moved in the same Pakistani-based hardlineMuslim circles as Osama bin Laden, and when Abdullah was assassinatedin 1998 his sons took up his mantle.
''Our meeting with Osama was before 9/11. After that we have nothad a meeting or contact with him,'' Abdul Rashid Ghazi, the youngerbrother and deputy cleric of the mosque, told Reuters in an Aprilinterview.
today, Ghazi was holed up in his mosque with his brother and thousands of supporters, surrounded by soldiers.
Six months of provoking the authorities finally erupted inbloodshed on Tuesday, and 11 people were killed when Ghazi's studentfollowers clashed with security forces outside the mosque.
A polite and soft-spoken man with a bespectacled face framed by a grey beard, Ghazi's appearance belies his zeal.
He and his brother have for years delivered fiery sermons at theirmosque in a neighbourhood of tree-lined streets near a main shoppingarea, and not far from parliament and a high-security diplomaticenclave.
They have exhorted followers to join jihad or Muslim holy war against US involvement in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Books, newspapers, CDs and cassettes glorifying jihad have for years been sold at stalls outside the mosque.
In 2004, the government accused Ghazi of involvement in a plot toattack the presidency and the U.S. embassy and arrested up to 10 alQaeda suspects in connection with the plot.
Security forces tried to raid the mosque in 2005 during an investigation of Pakistani links with London bombings that year.
Abductions
The
latest
trouble
at
the
mosque
and
the
adjoiningJamia
Hafsa
--
a
seminary
or
madrasa
for
girls
and
women
--
began
inJanuary
when
students
occupied
a
library
to
protest
against
a
campaignto
remove
mosques
built
illegally
on
state
land.
In March, students abducted three Pakistani women they accused of running a brothel and held them for several days.
They also abducted and briefly held policemen, and have warned video shops to stop selling Western films deemed obscene.
Last month, students upped the stakes, kidnapping nine people,including six Chinese women, they accused of involvement inprostitution.
The nine were released after 17 hours but not before Pakistan washugely embarrassed over the failure to protect citizens of China, itsmost steadfast ally.
While some militant clerics have voiced support for Lal Masjid,the country's most prominent hardline preachers appeared today to bedistancing themselves from the mosque.
Maulana Sami-ul-Haq, a senator who runs a famous madrasa in NorthWest Frontier Province where many members of Afghanistan's Talibanstudied, said he had tried to get the Lal Masjid clerics to give uptheir aggressive tactics.
''As far as their demand of enforcing Islamic sharia is concerned, it is the basic right of every Muslim,'' he said.
''But we differed with their way of doing it and I and otherstried to convince them to give it up.'' ''But the government should notattack the Lal Masjid. It will create thousands of Lal Masjidsthroughout the country. It will then be impossible to handle,'' he said.
Reuters
Related Stories
Curfew
imposed
at
Pak
mosque
after
11
killed
Pak
sends
surrender
ultimatum
to
mosque
militants
>