Demonstration held by workers of Islami Jamiat Talba (IJT), student wing of Jamat-e-Islami caring lethal weapons in their hands. People can easily observe and ask the government why armed person have not arrested so fare???


JAMAT-E-ISLAMI DECLARED A TERRORIST
ORGANISATION BY RUSSIA

7 8.8.06 Rossiiskaya Gazeta (Moscow) Who is Banned in Russia-Today Neutral

Daily Rossiiskaya Gazeta has published information about 17 terrorist organizations.

Daily Rossiiskaya Gazeta has published information about 17 terrorists organizations after seeking the same from the Center of Public Relations of FSB of Russia. Following are the profiles of four organizations alleged to have origin in our part of the world. "Al-Qaeda": Established in Peshawer (Pakistan) in 1988. The Head: Osama bin Laden. Headquarters: in the territory of one of the states of South Asia. Goal: to overthrow secular governments in the Islamic states, to create "Great Islamic Khalafat" on a global scale. "Lashkar-e-Tayyiba": Established in 1990 in tha Afgan province of Kunar. The Head: Abdul Wahid Kashmiri. Headquarters: in the territory of one of the states of South Asia. Goal: armed struggle against the Indian authorities for accession of the territories of the State of Jammu and Kashmir to Pakistan, spreading of ideas of radical Islam throughout India, expansion of its influence in the central Asian States, other regions of the world including the north caucasus. "Jamat-e-Islami": Established in 1940s in Pakistan. The Head: Kazi Ahmed Hussain. Headquarters: in the territory of one of the states of South Asia. Goal: To overthrow in Pakistan the secular government and its replacement by the Shariah from of governing, participation in the creation of the "Global Islamic Khalafat" Regions of activity: Pakistan, Afghanistan, Russia (Ural, North Caucasus), Uzbekistan, kAZAKHSTAN, Kirghizia, Tajikstan, India. "Movement Taliban: Founded at the end of 1994 in the areas of Pakistan bordering on Afghanistan. The Head: Mullah Mohammad Omar Known as Amir-ul-Mummnein. Headquarters: in the territory of one of the states of South Asia. Goal: to overthrow the secular authority in Afghanistan and build up a state with the Shariat from of government. Regions of activity: Afghanistan, Pakistan, Russia (North Caucasus).

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ARAB TIMES
KUWAIT
10, August 2006

‘Terror’ list out; Russia tags two Kuwaiti groups


KUWAIT CITY (Agencies): Two Kuwaiti organizations are on a list of 17 terrorist groups published by Russia on Friday.
This list, carried by “Rossiikaya gazeta “ and signed by Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov, includes Kuwait’s Social Reform Society and the Society for Revival of Islamic Heritage. According to an announcement made by Russia these organizations are banned in Russia and acknowledged as terrorist organizations in the Russian Federation.

But this list did not include the Palestinian militant movement Hamas or Lebanon’s Hezbollah guerrilla group, both of which are regarded as terrorists in Washington. Groups on the terrorist list, published in the official daily Rossiiskaya Gazeta, included al-Qaeda and the Taleban as well as the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Tayyaba, a rebel group fighting for Kashmir’s independence from India, and Egypt’s banned Muslim Brotherhood.

The Russian Federal Security Service’s top official in charge of fighting international terrorism, Yuri Sapunov, said that Hamas and Hezbollah were not a major threat to Russia and were not regarded as terrorist groups worldwide.
But he said that Russian security agencies took account of international lists of terrorist groups when exchanging intelligence with foreign counterparts.

Sapunov told Rossiiskaya Gazeta that the list of 17 “includes only those organizations which represent the greatest threat to the security of our country.” Also on the Russian list were groups linked to separatist militants in Chechnya and Islamic radicals in Central Asia.
Russian President Valadimir Putin on Friday signed into law an anti-extremism bill, under which slander or libel against government officials can qualify as extremism, the Kremlin said.

The government argues the law is needed to fight growing racism and xenophobia, but critics warn it could be used to punish political opponents and stifle free speech.
Under the law, slandering a government official can be treated as extremism, although a court must first rule whether the statement in question legally constitutes slander for it to be considered extremism.
The law also makes it a crime to recruit for groups deemed to be extremist, and aims to curb the distribution of extremism material in the media and on the Internet.

Under the law, the public justification of terrorism will also considered extremism, and anyone creating or distributing taped, printed or other material deemed extremist would be considered to be involved in extremist activity — a measure critics say could affect any media reporting on extremism.
‘The following is the list issued by Russia:
1. “The highest military Majlisul Shura of the united forces of the mujahedeen of the Caucasus”
2. “The Congress of the Peoples of Ichkeria and Daghestan”
3. “Al-Qaeda” 2
4. “Asbat al-Ansar”
5. “The holy war” (“Al-Jihad” or the “Egyptian Islamic Jihad”)
6. “The Islamic group” (“Al -Jamaa al -Islami”)
7. “The Muslim Brotherhood” (“Al-Ikhvan al-Muslimun”)
8. “The party of Islamic liberation” (“Hizb ut-Tahrir al-Islami”)
9. “Lashkar-e-Toiba” (LeT) “
10. “The Islamic group” (Jamaat-e-Islami)
11. “The Taleban movement”.
12. “The Islamic Party of Turkestan” (former “Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan”)
13. “The Society of Social Reforms” (“Jamiat al-Islah al-Ijtimai”)
14. “The Society of the Revival of Islamic Heritage” (“Jamiat Ihya at-Turaz al-Islami”)
15. “The house of the two holy” (“Al-Haramein”)
16. “Junj ash-Sham” (Army of the Great Syria)
17. “The Islamic Jihad — jamaat of the mujahedeen”

http://www.arabtimesonline.com/arabtimes/kuwait/Viewdet.asp?ID=8534&cat=a