WASHINGTON: The United States on Wednesday announced it was adding the student wing of the Pakistan-based militant organisation, Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), to its list of “foreign terrorist organizations.”
(LeT) or army of the pure has been accused of orchest
rating numerous attacks, including a 2008 assault in Mumbai that killed 166 people, six of them Americans.
T
he State Department’s move against the student group, Al-Muhammadia Students, came as the
Treasury Department added two Lashkar-e-Taiba leaders to the US list of “specially designated global terrorists”, subjecting them to US sanctions.
LeT was banned by the Pakistani government in 2002 but it has continued ope
rating through front organisations, according to US officials, and their leaders conduct public rallies and interviews.
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he State Department announced that it amended the designation of L
eT as a “foreign terrorist organization” to include what it called the group’s student wing.
“Since the original designation occurred, LeT has repeatedly changed its name and created front organizations in an effort to avoid sanctions,” t
he State Department said, adding that the student group aided senior LeT leaders in recruiting and other activities.
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he State Department’s action subjected the student group to sanctions, including a ban on Americans providing or attempting to provide it with material support.
The
Treasury Department said it was adding Muhammad Sarwar and Shahid Mahmood to the US list of “specially designated global terrorists”, freezing any US property or other assets they hold and banning Americans from doing business with them. Both are inv
olved in fund-raising activities, it said.
Sarwar, the department said, is the LeT leader in Lahore and Mahmood is a senior LeT leader in Karachi and has routinely travelled outside Pakistan on the group’s behalf.