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Hijackers headed for Kashmir?
By Amit Baruah
ISLAMABAD, DEC. 31. As the terrorists-for-hostages deal was
implemented without an apparent hitch this evening at the
Kandahar airport, the hijackers of the Indian Airlines airbus,
along with the released militants, were expected to ``go to
Kashmir'' via Pakistan.
``They (the hijackers) claim to be Kashmiris. Let them go to
Kashmir,'' Mullah Omar, Taliban Amir-ul-Momineen, was quoted as
telling Mr. Rahimullah Yusufzai, Peshawar-based correspondent of
The News.
Mr. Yusufzai told this correspondent that to Mullah Omar the
route they took (which has to be via Pakistan) was irrelevant.
``We will throw the hijackers out tonight. They will have to
cross the border,'' the Kandahar-based Taliban chief maintained.
Earlier, reports from Kandahar confirmed that soon after the
Boeing 737 carrying the External Affairs Minister, Mr. Jaswant
Singh, landed there, the three prisoners taken from Indian jails
were whisked away in a Taliban vehicle. They were then taken to
the hijacked aircraft, checked out by the hijackers and then
driven to an unknown destination.
Clearly, if the hijackers, who have been allowed to go scot-free
by the Taliban, along with the militants, cross the border into
Pakistan, then they could go anywhere. Also, the fact that the
Taliban has decided not to take any sort of action against the
hijackers, who are responsible for the murder of Rippan Katyal,
does not enhance the image of the militia. There is also a very
real possibility that the hijackers could melt into the vast
militant network that straddles both Pakistan and Afghanistan. In
the case of Maulana Masood Azhar, especially, it remains to be
seen whether or not he surfaces in Pakistan.
In Kandahar, some of the passengers were reported to be trembling
with fear after the hijackers climbed down from the aircraft. One
teenage boy was seen sobbing even as doctors and medical staff
entered the aircraft to help the passengers, who spent a full
eight days as hostages.
`Humanitarian grounds'
Mullah Omar also made it clear that the Taliban's actions in
ending the crisis were determined by ``humanitarian
considerations'', not by any desire to secure international or
Indian recognition. Asked if he expected relations with India to
improve following such ``cooperation'', he maintained that it
depended on India. Interestingly, the Taliban chief also asked
nations not to depend on intelligence agencies, and if they did
so, relations between them would not improve. He also said other
countries should not depend on ``rumours'' as far as dealing with
the Taliban was concerned. Other information made available to
The Hindu suggests that the Taliban Shura (ruling council) that
met on Wednesday night had set a deadline of Friday to end the
hostage crisis. This deadline was presumably conveyed both to the
Indian Government and the hijackers.
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Section : Front Page Previous : Hostages swapped for three militants Next : 'Setback to India' | |
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