Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
International

US slaps sanctions on Pakistan-based terror groups

Darpan News Desk IANS, 30 Sep, 2014 10:45 AM
  • US slaps sanctions on Pakistan-based terror groups
The US Tuesday targeted two terrorist groups based in Pakistan by slapping sanctions on their leader and financial supporters.
 
The Department of Treasury branded Fazl-ur Rehman Khalil, the leader of Harakat ul-Mujahidin (HuM), and Muhammad Naeem Sheikh and Umair Naeem Sheikh, two alleged financial supporters of Lashkar-e Taiba (LeT), as specially designated global terrorists, Xinhua reported.
 
Abdul Hameed Shahab-Ud-Din and Nia International, two businesses based in the Pakistani city of Lahore and owned respectively by the two Sheikhs, were blacklisted as well.
 
As a result, their assets under US jurisdiction are frozen and Americans are barred from doing business with them.
 
"Both LeT and HuM are violent terrorist organizations that train militants and support the activities of many of the best known and brutal extremist groups, including al-Qaida," David Cohen, under secretary of treasury for terrorism and financial intelligence, said in a statement.
 
"Today's designations will disrupt efforts by these terrorist organisations to access their financial networks and the international financial system," he said.
 
The Treasury Department described HuM as a terrorist group that operates in India, Pakistan and Afghanistan with training camps in eastern Afghanistan. The group, which renamed itself Ansar ul-Umma in mid-2013, was listed as a foreign terrorist organisation by the US State Department in 1997.
 
Washington blamed LeT for the November 2008 terrorist attack in Mumbai, India, that killed nearly 200 people and injured more than 300 others.

MORE International ARTICLES

Caliphate opposed to Shia apostasy and, eventually to Sunni monarchies

Caliphate opposed to Shia apostasy and, eventually to Sunni monarchies
The expanding Shia-Sunni conflict in the Muslim world is exposing vast gaps in popular understanding of the schism. For example when Zine El Abedine Ben Ali, the Tunisian strongman was ousted, people thought a Shia dictator had fallen. From this they extrapolated that the Arab Spring was an anti-Shia plot.

Caliphate opposed to Shia apostasy and, eventually to Sunni monarchies

British Indian jailed for raping 12-year-old girl

British Indian jailed for raping 12-year-old girl
 A British Indian man has been jailed for over ten years for raping a 12-year-old girl in Britain last year, a media report said.

British Indian jailed for raping 12-year-old girl

HIV virus rebound in 'Mississippi Baby' dashes hope

HIV virus rebound in 'Mississippi Baby' dashes hope
In a major blow to the scientific community, the HIV virus that was once vanquished in the 'Mississippi baby' by administering aggressive anti-retroviral therapy before she was barely 30 hours old has rebounded.

HIV virus rebound in 'Mississippi Baby' dashes hope

Rio's Christ the Redeemer restored to former glory

Rio's Christ the Redeemer restored to former glory
The Christ the Redeemer statue that crowns Corcovado mountain here, being repaired since February after being damaged by lightning, has been completely restored two days before this Brazilian metropolis hosts the 2014 World Cup final between Argentina and Germany.

Rio's Christ the Redeemer restored to former glory

Pakistani TV shows: Breaking down walls of mistrust, delusions

Pakistani TV shows: Breaking down walls of mistrust, delusions
"Mulk taksim huye, dil to abhi ek hai/Isi liye hamne khidkiyan kat rakhi hai deewaron mein (The nations were divided, but hearts are still one/That is why we've cut windows into the walls (between us))", wrote an Urdu poet. Divided amid bloodshed, experiencing long spells of adverse relations punctuated by armed conflict, Indians and Pakistanis have however never lost their fascination for each other - despite the prevalent stereotypes.

Pakistani TV shows: Breaking down walls of mistrust, delusions

Indian woman arrested for child abduction in US

Indian woman arrested for child abduction in US
An Indian woman was arrested in the US when she arrived at the Dallas-Fort Worth airport eight years after she apparently forcibly took her son away to India and brought him back again.

Indian woman arrested for child abduction in US