12-07-2008, 01:57 AM
<b>BBC report confirms Indian charge of Pakistan links to Mumbai attacks</b> <!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->NEW DELHI: A BBC Urdu service report filed on Friday supports Indiaâs claims that Mohammad Ajmal Amir, the terrorist arrested in the course of last monthâs Lashkar-e-Taiba terror attacks in Mumbai, was a Pakistani national.
In a first person account of his visit to the village of Faridkot, in the Dipalpur tehsil of Pakistanâs Okara district, reporter Ali Salman noted unusual activity in the form of a large number of people who local people said were intelligence officials.
âWhen I made enquiries about Amirâs residence,â Mr. Salman recorded, âI was directed to a house. The alleged officials in plainclothes came out when they saw a camera and microphone in my hand. I tried to talk to them,â Mr. Salman wrote, âbut they walked away without saying anything.â
Inside the two-room house, Mr. Salman found a woman who identified herself as Mehraj Bibi, who said that she knew no one called Amir, and that none of her children was missing.
<b>However, the Imam of Faridkotâs Central [Markazi] Mosque, Qari Naveed Akram, told the BBC that Amir the Butcher did indeed have two sons, one of whom was religious-minded [mazhabi rujhaan wala] and had not been in touch with his father for a while.â</b>
<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
On different paki fora and Indian commie fora they are claiming there is no Faridkot in Pakistan.
In a first person account of his visit to the village of Faridkot, in the Dipalpur tehsil of Pakistanâs Okara district, reporter Ali Salman noted unusual activity in the form of a large number of people who local people said were intelligence officials.
âWhen I made enquiries about Amirâs residence,â Mr. Salman recorded, âI was directed to a house. The alleged officials in plainclothes came out when they saw a camera and microphone in my hand. I tried to talk to them,â Mr. Salman wrote, âbut they walked away without saying anything.â
Inside the two-room house, Mr. Salman found a woman who identified herself as Mehraj Bibi, who said that she knew no one called Amir, and that none of her children was missing.
<b>However, the Imam of Faridkotâs Central [Markazi] Mosque, Qari Naveed Akram, told the BBC that Amir the Butcher did indeed have two sons, one of whom was religious-minded [mazhabi rujhaan wala] and had not been in touch with his father for a while.â</b>
<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
On different paki fora and Indian commie fora they are claiming there is no Faridkot in Pakistan.
