 | "That's a really nice beard you got there, Qazi!"
"Why, thank you, Syed! You got a nice beard, too! And you look very well fed!"
"Takes a lot of calories to run a major terror organization!" | Following up on an offer made by its Pakistan-based leader, the Hizbul Mujahideen's local chief has said the group was ready to consider any ceasefire offer from New Delhi. Just ahead of President Pervez Musharraf's New Delhi visit last week, Syed Sallahuddin, the PoK-based chief of HM, said the group was willing to stop violence in the Kashmir Valley if the Indian forces reciprocated by stopping anti-militancy operations. On Friday, Gazi Misbahudin, the chief operational commander of the group in Kashmir, told a local news service he was serious about a ceasefire. "If they (Indians) are serious about it, Hizbul would seriously consider it," he said.
The HM is considered the biggest militant group in the Valley but in recent months its fighters have not been involved in most of the attacks. The terror attacks against the Srinagar-Muzaffarabad bus was, for instance, blamed on Lashkar-e-Taiba and other smaller groups which are striking sporadically with suicide attacks. A ceasefire with the HM may not reduce violence, but could dampen the pro-Pakistan sentiment in the Valley and give greater room to manoeuvre the separatist groups. Neither the state government nor the Centre has reacted to the apparent olive branch, which comes at a time when the groups are facing a severe crunch of men and material and are on the run. |