http://news.scotsman.com/topics.cfm?tid=1&id=1703812005

Sat 30 Jul 2005

Foreigners banned from Pakistani religious schools

SIMON CAMERON-MOORE
IN RAWALPINDI

FOREIGN students attending Islamic religious schools in Pakistan 
will be ordered to leave as part of a drive to stamp out terrorism 
and religious extremism, Pervez Musharraf, the country's president, 
said yesterday.

Security forces have detained more than 600 people in the past week 
after General Musharraf ordered a crackdown on militant groups, 
mosques and madrasas, which are religious schools.

Speaking at his residence in Rawalpindi, Gen Musharraf said he 
wanted foreign students out: "All those who are here - there are 
about 1,400 - must leave. We will not issue visas to such people."

The crackdown was ordered after the 7 July bomb attacks on London, 
which were carried out by three Britons of Pakistani descent and a 
fourth Briton of Jamaican origin.

One of the men, Shehzad Tanweer, visited a madrasa during trips to 
Pakistan over the past two years.

The number of foreign students attending madrasas in Pakistan has 
already fallen sharply since the government imposed tougher visa 
restrictions after the 11 September, 2001 attacks on the United 
States.

There are about 12,000 madrasas in Pakistan, often providing 
education, shelter and food to boys from poor families.

Gen Musharraf said Pakistan's security forces were cooperating 
closely with their British counterparts.

He said several people had been detained based on leads from 
telephone records, but no-one suspected of involvement in the London 
bombings is being held in Pakistan. "We are in the process of going 
through each one of those [telephone] numbers. Anyone who had 
contact with those chaps we are weeding out," he said.

Diplomats say Gen Musharraf's main motivation for ordering the 
detentions is to eradicate religious extremism at home, where 
suicide attacks inside mosques have killed scores of Muslims.

The main targets for police have been militant Sunni groups waging a 
campaign against minority Shiites.

Gen Musharraf added: "The action against the banned organisations 
will continue. We will be very strongly dealing with them in the 
terrorist courts. We have decided we are going to act against their 
leadership."

Gen Musharraf, who took power in a bloodless military coup six years 
ago, said he was in a stronger position to confront religious 
extremism than he had been after the 11 September attacks.

He explained that at that time the economy was weak, Pakistan was 
close to a fourth war with India and stronger action could have led 
to internal disturbances.
        






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