$10m US bounty on Pakistani
April 3, 2012Indian Foreign Minister S.M. Krishna on Monday welcomed Washington's decision to place a bounty of $10 million (7.5 million euros) on Hafiz Mohammad Saeed. Saeed founded the Pakistani Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) group, which India blames for the terror attacks on Mumbai in 2008, in the 1980s.
Krishna said that the bounty "reflects the commitment of India and the US to bring the perpetrators of the Mumbai terrorist attack to justice and continuing efforts to combat terrorism."
The bounty placed on Saeed is now the same size as the one against Taliban founder Mullah Omar.
The US also announced a $2-million reward for information leading to the capture of Hafiz Abdul Rahman Makki, Saeed's brother-in-law and co-founder of the LeT.
The US State Department website describes Saeed as a former professor of Arabic and engineering who heads an organization "dedicated to installing Islamist rule over parts of India and Pakistan."
Under pressure from the US, Pakistani authorities outlawed the LeT in 2002, but it still operates with relative freedom within the country, with Saeed often speaking in public and appearing on television talk shows.
Saeed was arrested by Pakistani authorities after the three-day terrorist siege of Mumbai in 2008, but was later released due to a lack of evidence. At least 166 people were killed in the Mumbai attacks.
msh/ipj (AP, dpa)