Daily Times
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Saturday, April 08, 2006

SSP vows to establish caliphate worldwide
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2006\04\08\story_8-4-2006_pg7_3

* Around 5,000 SSP activists rally in Islamabad

ISLAMABAD: Activists of the Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan (SSP) vowed to establish
a global caliphate, beginning with Pakistan.

In a rally attended by thousands of activists of the banned group to
commemorate the birth of the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) on Friday,
leaders of the SSP called for an Islamic theocracy in Pakistan. "The concept
of nation state is an obstacle in the way of the establishment of Khilafat.
We will start the establishment of Khilafat in Pakistan and then will do so
across the world," said Zaheerul Islam Abbasi, a former general who was
sacked and arrested in 1995 for trying to topple the government of former
prime minister Benazir Bhutto.

Activists distributed pamphlets in Islamabad preaching jihad and hatred
against Shias, as their leaders delivered fiery speeches to a crowd of
around 5,000 late on Thursday.

They also sold video compact discs of the beheadings of American soldiers in
Iraq, and militant activities in Afghanistan and Pakistan at the rally,
which they said was convened to celebrate the birthday of the Prophet
Muhammad (peace be upon him) this month. One of the organisers thanked the
Islamabad administration for allowing the rally, which was held under
floodlights in a bus depot, with hundreds of riot police watching on. SSP is
known to have close links with Jaish-e-Mohammad, a militant group fighting
in Indian-occupied Kashmir and with links to Al Qaeda.

Some of the crowd briefly chanted anti-Shia slogans, until they were told to
refrain by their leaders. They also swore allegiance to their late leader,
Maulana Azam Tariq, a fiery pro-Taliban cleric who was assassinated in
Islamabad in 2003, and founder of the organisation Haq Nawaz Jhangvi, who
was killed in 1980s.

Last July, President Pervez Musharraf ordered a major crackdown against
clerics and organisations inciting sectarian violence. The SSP was banned by
the government in 2002.

The SSP has often been blamed for violence against Shias, planting bombs in
mosques or attacking religious processions. Thousands of people have been
killed in tit-for-tat attacks by militants from the two sects over the past
20 years. Most of the victims are Shias, who account for about 15 percent of
Pakistan's predominantly Sunni Muslim population of 150 million.

On Thursday, a prominent Shia Muslim cleric narrowly escaped an
assassination attempt in Karachi after his car was hit by a
remote-controlled bomb Authorities have launched several crackdowns on
militant outfits since Pakistan joined a US-led war on terrorism in the wake
of the September 11 attacks on the United States, but critics say that the
steps taken have been half-hearted and many groups have resurfaced under new
names.

Like other groups, SSP remerged under the new name of Millat-e-Islamia
Pakistan.

Founded in the 1980s, SSP wants Pakistan to be officially declared a Sunni
Muslim state.

It had recently been reported in the press that the government might relax
some restrictions on the group and allow it to commence political activities
in a "very low profile".

Reuters

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