MUZAFFARABAD,
Pakistan, March 21, 2006 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Some
seventeen Pakistani Muslim, some officially banned over alleged terror
links, have been championing a "humanitarian jihad" to assist
the survivors of last year's deadly Kashmir earthquake.
"We
work with all the international NGOs. They can see that we are not
killers," Mohamad Shafiq, who directs the Kashmir operations of the
Al-Rashid foundation, told Agence France-Presse (AFP) on Tuesday, March
21.
"I
do not say that all the Muslims are good, but the idea spread in West
that all of them are terrorists is false. Our work here shows
that."
The
accounts of Al-Rashid foundation were frozen by the Pakistani government
after it was added to a United Nations list of terrorist organizations.
Ever
since, the foundation has had difficulty carrying on with its mission.
"Since
that blow, we only operate with ready cash," explained Shafiq.
"The
money is collected around the country and brought here by couriers. With
our bank accounts, we could have done much more."
Nonetheless,
the foundation figures prominently on a UN-drawn wall list of different
groups' humanitarian activities in the various disaster sectors.
A
powerful quake measuring 7.6 on the Richter scale killed more than
73,000 people in northwestern Pakistan and Pakistani Kashmir.
It
also left more than 3.5 million others homeless and destroyed entire
towns across an area of 20,000 square kilometers.
In
the first hours after the quake while the army was counting its dead,
the Muslim groups were conducting systematic searches for survivors in
the rubble of ruined buildings, according to Spiegel Online.
They
seemed to be the only ones with a well-functioning network -- both in
Muzaffarabad, the capital of the Pakistani state of Azad Kashmir, and in
the completely devastated settlements of Bagh and Balakot.
They
set out on foot for villages that had been completely cut off from any
aid by landslides.
They
brought blankets and food, performed first aid and transported the
wounded down into the valley.
Hand
in Hand
Jamaat-ud-Dawa,
allegedly the incarnation of the banned Kashmir group Laskhar-e-Taiba,
was one of the first groups to lend a hand of assistance.
"There
were more than a thousand of us in the area," Ghulamullah Azad, the
group's Kashmir spokesman, told AFP in the courtyard of a country in
Muzaffarabad.
"We
had offices, doctors, volunteers," he said, adding the group
"received reinforcements from all over the country."
The
spokesman said they were working hand in hand with foreign NGOs.
"Our
relations with the army and international NGOs are excellent."
He
said his group distributed American assistance and had an American
surgeon operating in the hospital.
The
Jamaat-ud-Dawa spokesman asserted that the people appreciated their
efforts.
"We
are welcome everywhere. People thank us, listen to us," he added,
smiling through his long black beard.
The
Jamaat-ud-Dawa flag -- a saber and black bands -- flies above one of the
refugee camps close to Balakot.
Assistance
offered included tent villages, house renovation, construction of
mosques, schools and a field hospital as well as caring for widows and
orphans.
The
group also offers free dispensaries and charge-free ambulance service.
If
some, including among the highest Pakistani authorities, praise this
work in the disaster zone, some fear that it only reinforces Islamist
influence in the area.
"Should
jihadi groups that have been active in relief work remain as involved in
reconstruction, threats to domestic and regional security will
increase," the Brussels-based International Crisis Group said in a
report published on March 15 in Islamabad.
"As
long as they don't arm themselves and recruit rebels, there isn't
anything wrong with what they are doing," says General Shaukat
Sultan, a spokesman for President Pervez Musharraf.
In
a Jamaat camp in Balakot, a neighboring town which was 95 percent
destroyed by the quake, 50-year-old Wali Alam agreed.
"That
evening even, they were there, with pots of food. God bless them! I will
never forget!"
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