New Delhi: Lambasting Pakistan over its unresponsiveness towards the issue of terrorism, US on Wednesday said that the steps taken by Pakistan to against terrorism are not adequate.
The US State Department’s annual Country Reports has once again posed question on Pakistan’s approach towards terrorism.
The country has come under the radar for not taking appropriate action against Jaish-e-Mohammed and Lashkar-e-Taiba militant groups.
According to the reports, the militant groups are still providing apprenticeship to terrorists in Pakistan with funds raised in Pakistan. The country had detained Mumbai attack mastermind Hafiz Saeed, but a Pakistani court ordered his release from house arrest in November 2017, it said.
The report said that the Pak-based terror outfits pose regional threat in subcontinent.
Although al-Qaeda in Afghanistan and Pakistan has been seriously degraded, remnants of its global leadership, as well as its regional affiliate al-Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent (AQIS), continued to operate from remote locations in the region that historically have been exploited as safe havens, Country Reports on Terrorism for the year 2017 said.
The report notes that from August to December 2017, the Trump administration placed a pause on spending new Foreign Military Financing for Pakistan, holding these funds until Pakistan addressed key US concerns, including the threat posed by the Haqqani Network and other terrorist groups that enjoyed safe haven with Pakistan.
Although Pakistan's National Action Plan calls to "ensure that no armed militias are allowed to function in the country," several terrorist groups focused on attacks outside of the country continued to operate from Pakistani soil in 2017, it said.
These groups included the Haqqani Network, besides the LeT and JeM which are directed against India.
Though Pakistan continued military operations to eradicate terrorist safe havens in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas, their impact on all terrorist groups was uneven, said the State Department report.
According to the report, the Pakistani military and security forces undertook operations against groups that conducted attacks within Pakistan, such as the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan.
Even as the Pakistani government pledged support to political reconciliation between the Afghan government and the Afghan Taliban it did not restrict the Afghan Taliban and Haqqani Network from operating in Pakistan-based safe havens and threatening US and Afghan forces in Afghanistan.
"Pakistan did not take sufficient action against other externally focused groups such as Lashkar e-Tayyiba (LeT) and Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM) in 2017, which continued to operate, train, organise, and fundraise in Pakistan," the report said.
In its report the State Department rued that progress remained slow on the Pakistan government's efforts to implement UN sanctions related to designated entities and enforce anti-money laundering/countering the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT) controls.
The Financial Action Task Force (FATF), it said, continued to note with concern that Pakistan's outstanding gaps in the implementation of the UN Security Council ISIS and al-Qaeda sanctions regime have not been resolved, and that UN-listed entities including LeT and its affiliates were not effectively prohibited from raising funds in Pakistan, nor were they denied financial services.
"Although Pakistan's laws technically comply with international anti-money laundering/countering the financing of terrorism standards, authorities failed to uniformly implement UN sanctions related to designated entities and individuals such as LeT and its affiliates, which continued to make use of economic resources and raise funds," it said.
(Inputs from PTI)
Pak based terror outfits pose regional threat; govt not addressing issue adequately: US
ABP News Bureau
Updated at:
20 Sep 2018 12:38 PM (IST)
US State Department’s annual Country Reports noted that UN-listed entities including LeT and its affiliates were not effectively prohibited from raising funds in Pakistan, nor were they denied financial services.
Image: AFP
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