Indien - Pakistan - Kaschmir
#48
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Zitat:South Asia: The End of Jihad
Ahead of talks with India, Pakistan seems to have cut off support for Kashmiri militants. Is the war over?By Zahid Hussain and Ron Moreau
Newsweek InternationalFeb. 9 issue - The bitterness was palpable among the more than one dozen hardened jihadi fighters. Veterans of the 14-year guerrilla struggle against Indian control of Kashmir, they had gathered in a cold, dingy room in the Pakistani-administered zone to discuss their narrowing options. Last month's historic agreement struck between Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf and Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee posed a near-knockout blow to the militants' hopes of ending India's occupation of the disputed Himalayan territory.
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Not all of the guerrillas are ready to lay down their arms. "We will not allow Musharraf to sell out the blood of our martyrs," says Saifullah, a bearded fighter in his early 20s. "We will continue the jihad no matter what."
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Zitat:Pakistan Nuke 'Father' Confesses

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan, Feb. 2, 2004
(AP) The founder of Pakistan's nuclear program, Abdul Qadeer Khan, has admitted he transferred nuclear technology to Iran, Libya and North Korea, a Pakistani government official said Monday.
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