
A TV grab shows the chief of Red Mosque Maulana Abdul Aziz who was arrested by police while fleeing in a ‘burqa’ in Islamabad, Wednesday.
Red Mosque Chief Held Fleeing in ‘Burqa’
Azhar Masood, Arab News
ISLAMABAD, 5 July 2007 — Security forces arrested the chief of the Red Mosque in the capital as he tried to flee while disguised in an all-covering women’s burqa yesterday, officials said. More than 1,000 of his followers surrendered as troops backed by armored vehicles and helicopters tightened their siege of the complex, officials said.
Female police officers searching women fleeing the mosque’s madrasa discovered Maulana Abdul Aziz under a black head-to-toe veil, said Khalid Pervez, the city’s top administrator.
“I can confirm his arrest. He was trying to escape with the girls and was wearing a burqa,” Information Minister Mohammad Ali Durrani said.
Officials said he was caught along with his wife Umm Ehsan in a screening center set up in a school near the mosque to check people leaving the mosque.
An AP Television News cameraman saw plainclothes police bundling the gray-bearded cleric into the back of a car which sped away.
“We caught Abdul Aziz when he was trying to escape the mosque clad in a burqa. He did not offer any resistance,” added a top security official involved in the capture.
“He was the last in a group of women all wearing the same clothes. He was wearing a burqa that also covered his eyes,” the official said on condition of anonymity.
“Our men spotted his unusual demeanor. The rest of the girls looked like girls but he was taller and had a pot belly.” His arrest defused the tension around the mosque, where troops in armored personnel carriers enforced a shoot-on-sight curfew imposed early yesterday after the violence.
Students had exchanged automatic gunfire with security forces as night fell, after police fired tear gas shells at the compound to drive out more radicals holed up inside, officials said.
“They have no options but to surrender,” said Javed Iqbal Cheema, a government spokesman. “The government is not into dialogue with these clerics.”
As evening fell, sporadic gunfire erupted around the Red Mosque, and at an adjacent women’s seminary while three helicopter gunships circled overhead.
Scores of police and soldiers, some armed with sniper rifles, watched as male and female seminary students filed out of the compounds. A number of the women were in tears.
The city’s deputy administrator, Chaudhry Mohammed Ali, said more than 1,000 had surrendered.
“They can be a few hundred, they can be more than that,” Minister of Information Durrani told reporters about the estimated number remaining inside the complex. It was unclear how many of those were hardened militants.
One of those who decided to give up, 15-year-old Maryam Qayyum, said many had decided to stay in the seminary.
“They are happy. They only want martyrdom. They don’t want to go home,” she said.
The government said all women and children would be granted amnesty but males involved in killings and other crimes as well as the mosque’s clerics would face legal action.
The mosque’s deputy leader Abdul Rashid Ghazi said earlier he was prepared to talk with the government but added, “We will continue to defend ourselves.”
Qayyum said mosque leaders were not trying to stop students from giving up. But her mother, who had come to take her home said, “They are making speeches. They want to incite them.”
The events came after a day of bloody clashes at the mosque on Tuesday between security forces and armed militants holed up in the sprawling mosque, which has been at loggerheads with the government for months. The clashes left 16 people dead.
The bloodshed added to a sense of crisis in Pakistan, where President Gen. Pervez Musharraf already faces emboldened militants near the Afghan border and a pro-democracy movement triggered by his botched attempt to fire the country’s chief justice.
The mosque siege sparked street protests Tuesday in the cities of Lahore and Quetta organized by radical religious parties.
A senior government spokesman, Anwar Mahmood, said the number killed in Islamabad had risen to 16, but declined to give a breakdown of the victims. Earlier, the government said they included militants, innocent bystanders, a journalist and members of the security forces.
Ghazi told the AP that 20 of his students had been killed by security forces, including two young men as they were climbing to the top of the mosque for morning prayers yesterday. He said sniper fire was being directed at the compounds.
The violence dramatically deepened a six-month standoff at the fortress-like mosque, whose clerics have challenged the government by sending students from the mosque’s madrasas to kidnap alleged prostitutes and police in a Taleban-style anti-vice campaign.
Some accuse intelligence agencies of encouraging the crisis to justify prolonging military rule — a conspiracy theory with considerable traction in Pakistan’s intrigue-ridden politics.
— With input from agencies

Radical students sit outside the Red Mosque after surrendering themselves. Photograph: Aamir Qureshi/AFP/Getty Images
Red Mosque leader attempts to flee in burka
Declan Walsh in Islamabad
Wednesday July 4, 2007
Guardian Unlimited
The leader of a pro-Taliban mosque was captured hiding under a burka as he tried to slip through a tightening siege tonight, while hundreds of his radical followers reportedly surrendered to the Pakistani government.
Maulana Abdul Aziz was discovered by a policewoman as she searched students fleeing Lal Masjid, or the Red Mosque, in central Islamabad, where a two-day showdown with the government has killed 16 people and wounded 150.
Local television showed the bearded preacher being bundled into a police car, his face uncovered over a flowing dark cloak. The government claimed that another 1,000 militants, including many woman students, had also abandoned the mosque, enticed by promises of safe passage and 5,000 rupee (£41) in pocket money.
But the siege has not collapsed. Heavily armed militants - estimated to be between 1,500 and 4,000 in number - remained holed up inside the mosque, vowing to become martyrs and fight to the bitter end. Sporadic gunfire erupted as evening fell.
Abdul Aziz's brother, Maulana Abdul Rashid Ghazi, remains at large, offering to negotiate with the government but saying that talks were "going nowhere".
Lal Masjid shot to public prominence six months ago after indoctrinated students launched an anti-vice campaign that targeted music shop owners and suspected prostitutes in a wealthy Islamabad neighbourhood, just a few streets from the diplomatic quarter and the supreme court.
Abdul Aziz, a radical preacher famed for his fiery Friday sermons, was the spiritual leader of the movement, while his brother Ghazi, a university educated cleric who speaks fluent English, emerged as its main spokesman.
The brothers are openly sympathetic to al-Qaida and boast of having met Osama bin Laden, whom Abdul Aziz has compared to the biblical figure of Abraham. They have also boasted of having hundreds of suicide bombers at their disposal.
Their vigilante campaign -- which involved abducting suspected prostitutes and burning pyres of Hollywood movies - severely embarrassed Pakistan's president, General Pervez Musharraf. But he did nothing, saying that a violent showdown could spark countrywide violence.
The final straw may have been the abduction of seven Chinese employees of a massage parlour, which the militants termed a brothel, last week. The Chinese were released within hours but their government - a key ally of Pakistan - demanded greater security.
After an attack on a government checkpoint on Tuesday, the authorities finally hit back. A five-hour gun battle outside the mosque left 16 people dead. Then early today hundreds of soldiers rolled in, cutting off the electricity and imposing strict curfew on the surrounding neighbourhood.
Tonight parts of central Islamabad resembled a war zone, with machinegun wielding troops patrolling the streets and helicopter gunships buzzing overhead. The neighbourhood around the mosque was isolated by thick coils of barbed wire.
"They have no options but to surrender," said Javed Iqbal Cheema, a government spokesman. "The government is not into dialogue with these clerics."
Gen Musharraf seems intent on flushing out as many students as possible before considering a violent assault on the hard core. "The others want to be martyrs. But I don't want to die," said one young man who escaped today.
Pakistan's information minister, Muhammad Ali Durrani, said only "a few hundred" students were left, although most estimates were higher.
Meanwhile hundreds of students made their way home, escorted by relieved relatives. "We are so relieved, my mother is very worried," said Ziauddin, who had travelled 19 hours by bus from Gilgit to retrieve his 20-year-old sister, Qoresha.
The girl, who had just been released from police custody after escaping in an ambulance, was ambivalent about the experience. "Abdul Aziz and his brother are good men. Whether their actions are good or bad, only they can tell," she said from under a black burka.

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