Ban On 11 Terrorist Organizations Including Al Qaeda
Ban on 11 terrorist organizations including Al Qaeda, IS in Sri Lanka, 10 to 20 years imprisonment.
Sri Lanka, which is battling terrorist activities, has taken a big step. The Sri Lankan government has announced a ban on eleven fundamentalist Islamic organizations.
These organizations also include notorious terrorist groups such as Al Qaeda and Islamic State (IS). This action has been taken under the Prevention of Terrorism Provision Act.
In this regard, President Gotabaya Rajapaksa has issued a special government notification.
In this, a provision of stringent punishment ranging from ten to twenty years has been made for involvement in terrorist activities.
Among the organizations to be banned are several Muslim organizations including the local Sri Lanka Islamic Student Movement.
A panel was announced by the then-President Maithripal Sirisen in 2019 for the ban. Action has been taken on the report of the said panel.
Ban On 11 Terrorist Organizations: Under the Anti-Terrorism Act, the convict will get 10 to 20 years of imprisonment.
According to the notification, any person who does not follow the law or is involved in any such conspiracy can be sentenced to 10 to 20 years of imprisonment.
Banned organizations include some local Muslim groups, including the Sri Lanka Islamic Students Movement.
After the suicide attack on Easter in the year 2019, the Sri Lankan government banned the local jihadist group National Tauheed Jamaat and two other organizations.
The panel, constituted by the President, recommended a ban on Muslim rebel organizations that advocate radicalism in a Buddhist-majority country.
Radicals in Pakistan, Seven killed, Imran banned Islamic organization Tehreek-e-Labbayk.
Pakistan has banned the fundamentalist Islamic party Tehreek-i-Labbaik Pakistan (Tehreek-i-Labaik Pakistan, TLP) under Rule 11-B of the Anti-Terrorism Act of 1997.
It is worth noting that Pakistan has taken this step after the supporters of the staunch Islamic party after a clash with law enforcement officials for the third consecutive day.
So far seven people have died in these clashes while more than 300 policemen have been injured.
Ban on Tehreek-e-Labbak.
Giving this information, Interior Minister Sheikh Rashid Ahmed said that I have directed the Punjab government to ban Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) under Rule 11-B of the Anti-Terrorism Act of 1997.
The proposal sent from has been approved. He also said that at least two police officers have been killed and more than 340 injured in clashes with protesters in the last two days.