Published 19:54 IST, February 11th 2020
Pakistan Court accepts Hafiz Saeed’s plea to pronounce verdict after all trials
A Pakistani anti-terrorism court accepted the plea of Jamat-ud-Dawa (JuD) chief Hafiz Saeed to club all the pending cases and announce the verdict together.
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A Pakistani anti-terrorism court accepted the plea of Jamat-ud-Dawa (JuD) chief Hafiz Saeed to club all the pending cases and announce the verdict together. The court had reserved its verdict on February 6 and decided to pronounce the judgement on February 8 but the Mumbai terror attack mastermind filed a petition to delay the verdict till the other pending cases get concluded.
“The anti-terrorism court of Lahore accepted the plea of Saeed and his close aides seeking delay in the verdict in two concluded terror-financing cases against them till the trial in other four such pending cases is complete,” said a court official.
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Saeed was charged for terror financing and money laundering under Pakistan's Anti-Terrorism Act (ATA), 1997, after the CTD registered 23 FIRs against Saeed and his accomplices. He was presented in an anti-terrorism court in Lahore on December 20 where he had pleaded ‘not guilty’. Saeed was indicted again in another case by an anti-terrorism court after a case was filed by Punjab's Counter-Terrorism Department (CTD) in Gujranwala district for terror-financing.
Funds for terrorism through trusts
Saeed and his aides are accused of collecting funds for terrorism through assets held in the names of Non-Profit Organisations. The CTD said that they have committed multiple offences of terror-financing and money laundering under the Anti-Terrorism Act 1997.
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Jamat-ud-Dawa is believed to the main organisation behind the Mumbai terror attack of 2008 which killed 166 people including six Americans. The JUD chief was moving freely in Pakistan for a long time but the sanctions by the global terror financing watchdog, Financial Action Task Force (FATF) forced the country to arrest him and expedite the case.
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While Pakistan government has been desperate to expedite the case ever since FATF put the country on the grey list, the latest development is being considered as a delaying tactic from Saeed as well as the government. Pakistan has been facing difficulties in accessing financial assistance after it was placed on the ‘Grey List’ by the FATF.
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(With PTI inputs)
19:53 IST, February 11th 2020