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Pakistan Arrests Regional Head of International NGO for Funding Al Qaeda

Ali Nawaz, the regional head of Human Concern International, has been accused of diverting the funds collected in the name of charity to al-Qaeda.
PTI
Jul 07 2019
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Ali Nawaz, the regional head of Human Concern International, has been accused of diverting the funds collected in the name of charity to al-Qaeda.
Representational Image. Photo: Reuters
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Peshawar:  Pakistan's counter-terrorism forces have arrested the regional head of an international non-governmental organisation who is accused of receiving huge sums in the name of charity and diverting them to al-Qaeda terrorists.

The Counter-Terrorism Department (CTD) arrested Ali Nawaz, the regional head of Human Concern International, on the terror financing charge under the Anti-Terrorism Act, Dawn reported, quoting a senior CTD official.

He has been accused of diverting the funds collected in the name of charity to al-Qaeda, the official added.

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On Saturday, Nawaz was presented before an anti-terrorism court, which handed him over to the CTD for three days for further interrogation. According to the FIR, there were intelligence reports that Nawaz, Moham mad Farooq Awan, Shah Rum and Mohammad Naeem were providing funds to terrorists.

Also read: Judge 'Forced' to Convict Nawaz, Alleges Maryam Sharif; Releases Video

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It said that the CTD received a communique from the Federal Investigation Agency against them, alleging that they were receiving huge sums in the name of charity, which were being diverted to al-Qaeda to be used for terrorism.

It said that millions of rupees had been transacted from eleven bank accounts of the charity and Nawaz was unable to provide satisfactory answers regarding these funds. The suspect was then booked under Section 11-N of the ATA, 1997, the paper reported.

Representatives of the international non-governmental organisation were unavailable for comments when approached, the paper said.

The move comes as the US, the UK, France and some other prominent countries voiced concern over Pakistan's failure to do enough to contain terror funding on its soil.

Also read: Pakistan Ex-President Zardari Arrested in Separate Corruption Case

The Financial Action Task Force (FATF), which placed Pakistan on the grey list in June last year of countries whose domestic laws are considered weak to tackle the challenges of money laundering and terrorism financing, asked Islamabad to complete its action plan against terror funding by October or face action.

The Paris-based global body, working to curb terrorism financing and money laundering, has asked Pakistan to reassess the operation of banned terrorist outfits in the country.

(PTI)

This article went live on July seventh, two thousand nineteen, at fourteen minutes past four in the afternoon.

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