Protecting Militants: China blocks UN listing of Pakistani as a globally designated terrorist
By James M. Dorsey
China, at the behest of Pakistan, has prevented the United Nations from listing
a prominent Pakistani militant as a globally designated terrorist. China’s
protection of Masood Azhar, who is believed to have close ties to Pakistani
intelligence and the military, raises questions about the sincerity of a
Pakistani crackdown on militants as well as China’s willingness to use its
influence to persuade Pakistan to put an end to the use of militants as
proxies.
The United States, Britain, France and India have long
wanted the United Nations Security Council Sanctions Committee to designate Mr.
Azhar on the grounds that his organization, Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM), has already
been proscribed by Pakistan as well as the international body.
Mr. Azhar, a fighter in the anti-Soviet jihad in Afghanistan
and an Islamic scholar who graduated from a Deobandi madrassah, Darul Uloom
Islamia Binori Town in Karachi, the alma mater of numerous Pakistani militants,
is believed to have been responsible for an attack last year on India’s Pathankot
Air Force Station. The militants, dressed in Indian military uniforms fought a
14-hour battle against Indian security forces that only ended when the last
attacker was killed. Mr. Azhar was briefly detained after the attack and has
since gone underground.
Mr. Azhar, who was freed from Indian prison in 1999 in
exchange for the release of passengers of a hijacked Indian Airlines flight, is
also believed to be responsible for an attack in 2001 on the Indian parliament
in New Delhi that brought Pakistan and India to the brink of war.
JeM despite being banned continues to publicly raise funds
and recruit fighters in mosques. Indian
journalist Praveen Swami quoted Mufti Abdul Rauf Asghar, Mr. Azhar’s elder
brother, as telling worshippers gathered in a mosque in Punjab in late January
to commemorate a militant who had been killed in India: “Islam is a world power
and cannot be destroyed. Whoever tries to destroy it will be destroyed himself.
Jihad is the most important obligation of our faith.”
Pakistani indulgence of JeM and Chinese connivance in
preventing Mr. Azhar, a portly bespectacled son of a Bahawalpur religious
studies teacher and author
of a four-volume treatise on jihad as well as books with titles like Forty
Diseases of the Jews, from being designated has raised eyebrows in both
Pakistani and Chinese policy circles.
Opening a window on apparent differences between civilian
and military branches of government,
Pakistani Foreign Minister Aizaz Chaudhry last
year reportedly
warned a gathering of political, military and intelligence leaders that
Pakistan risked international isolation if it failed to crack down on militant
groups. Mr. Chaudhry noted that Pakistan’s closest ally, China with its massive
$46 billion investment in Pakistani infrastructure as part of its One Belt, One
Road initiative, was increasingly questioning the wisdom of protecting Mr.
Azhar at Pakistan’s behest.
Chinese vice foreign minister Li Baodong last year defended
his country’s repeated shielding of Mr. Azhar by suggesting that attempts to
designate the JeM amounted to using counter-terrorism for political goals. “China
is opposed to all forms of terrorism. There should be no double standards on
counter-terrorism. Nor should one pursue own political gains in the name of
counter-terrorism,” Mr.
Li said.
Chinese policy analysts with close government ties squirm when
asked about China’s repeated veto of efforts to designate Mr. Azhar. The
analysts suggest that the Pakistani military and intelligence’s use of proxies
like Mr. Azhar in their dispute with India over Kashmir has sparked debate
about the wisdom of sinking $46 billion into Pakistan.
China’s hopes that the investment in infrastructure would
persuade the Pakistani military and intelligence to seriously back away from
using militant proxies have so far remain unfulfilled.
The investment is part of China’s larger effort to link
Eurasia to China through infrastructure. It expects that the linkage will spur
economic development both in Pakistan and China’s troubled north-western
province of Xinjiang where China’s harsh measures against
the cultural practices of the Uighurs have sought to pre-empt Islamist
violence.
Responding to the civilian government’s effort to crackdown
on Jaish-e-Mohammad, including last year’s freezing of its accounts by the
State Bank of Pakistan, Mr. Azhar defended the group’s contribution to
Pakistan’s defence of Kashmir as well as the jihadist movement at large.
“When we entered the tent of the jihadist movement. it had
no branch in Kashmir, nor was there lightning in Iraq or Syria. There were just
two fronts, in Afghanistan and Palestine, one of them active and one of them
shut. We have watched as the jihad we befriended grew from a glowing ember into
the sun; from a small spring into a river, and now, as it is about to become a
great ocean,” Mr. Azhar wrote in the group’s magazine.
A BBC
investigative documentary last year traced jihadist thinking in Britain to
a month-long visit to Britain in 1993 by Mr. Azhar, who at the time headed
Pakistani militant group Harakat ul Mujahideen.
Mr. Azhar gave 40 lectures during his fund-raising and
recruitment tour and was feted by Islamic scholars from Britain’s largest
mosque network. More and more scholars joined his entourage as he toured the
country before moving on to Saudi Arabia. A passionate and emotive speaker,
women reportedly
took off their jewellery and handed it to Azhar after listening to his
speeches.
“It was Azhar, a Pakistani cleric, who was the first to
spread the seeds of modern jihadist militancy in Britain – and it was through
South Asian mosques belonging to the Deobandi movement that he did it,” says BBC reporter Innes Bowen.
Indian analysts believe that shielding Mr. Azhar serves
China’s purpose of keeping India preoccupied with the threat of political
violence. China’s is moreover grateful for successful Pakistani efforts to stop
the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (IOC) that groups 57 Muslim nations
from criticizing Chinese policy in Xinjiang. Finally, the analysts say,
shielding Mr. Azhar constitutes retaliation for India’s hosting of the Dalai
Lama.
In defending Mr. Azhar with one eye on India, China is
walking a fine line that threatens to undermine its massively funded policy
objectives in Pakistan, a country that for years has been reeling from
militancy that has fuelled sectarianism at home and created militant groups
that at times have turned on their Pakistani masters.
By doing so, China risks allowing militancy to further
fester in a country where militancy is not confined to small groups but has
been woven into the fabric of significant segments of society. Attempting to
heal what is an open wound requires not only economic development but also a Pakistani
and Chinese counter-terrorism strategy that refrains from making politically
opportunistic compromises.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S.
Rajaratnam School of International Studies, co-director of the University of
Würzburg’s Institute for Fan Culture, and the author of The Turbulent
World of Middle East Soccer blog, a book
with the same title, Comparative Political Transitions
between Southeast Asia and the Middle East and North Africa, co-authored with Dr.
Teresita Cruz-Del Rosario and a forthcoming book, Shifting
Sands, Essays on Sports and Politics in the Middle East and North Africa
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