| Jamia
Binoria recently shot into prominence after a controversial
documentary ran on the US-based news channel, Fox News, showing
two teenaged Pakistani-American brothers forced into studying
religious education against their will at the madrassah. The
documentary, Karachi Kids, made by US-based Farhan Reza, showed
how Noor and Mahboob Elahi Khan from Atlanta, Georgia, were
indoctrinated at the allegedly Taliban-backed Jamia Binoria
because their father, a taxi-driver, didn’t want them
to be ‘corrupted’ by an American education.
Since
the airing of Karachi Kids, both brothers were taken back to
the US in the second week of July by the US Federal Bureau of
Investigation and Pakistani authorities, following an intervention
by US Representative Michael McCaul, a Republican from Texas.
Since then, Jamia Binoria has been targeted by Pakistan’s
immigration authorities and local and foreign intelligence agencies
The
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which has already imposed a ban
on issuing religious education visas, put eight foreign students
at Jamia Binoria on a blacklist for violating the country’s
education visa policy by not leaving Pakistan despite the expiration
of their visas. The eight students placed on the blacklist included
the Khan brothers. The six foreign students still holed up inside
include an American girl, four female students from Thailand
and one male student from Fiji. During the third week of July,
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs formally issued deportation
orders for all the remaining students, but once again, the madrassah
authorities have refused to give in.
Straddling
the maze of dusty and partly paved streets in Karachi’s
SITE area, Binoria stands as the country’s largest madrassah
catering to foreign students. Fear and anxiety run high on the
faces of these foreign, devout Islamic students, who expect
the government to swoop in and force them to leave at any time.
“We no longer send requests for visa extensions,”
said Maulana Mufti Mohammad Naeem, founder and head of this
sprawling, 12-acre seminary for the past 20 years. “We
don’t want all of our foreign students to be blacklisted
by sending in their visas for renewal.” Mufti Naeem added
that around 100-150 students might lose their legal status in
the county if their visas are not extended.
“The
situation is precarious,” the mufti, a heavyweight figure
clad in a traditional white shalwar kameez, said, while squatting
in his carpeted office that has no chairs. When asked to provide
a break-up of the nationalities of around 500 foreign students
studying at Jamia Binoria, the madrassah officials refused to
reveal this information, fearing that it may trigger another
round of reprisals. But I could see that the majority of foreign
students are from the Far East, mainly from Thailand and the
Philippines, besides Indonesia and Malaysia. Others are from
Uzbekistan and various African countries. There must be some
Arab students though I could not spot any, probably because
many of the Arab students speak fluent Urdu.
Besides
the above mentioned nationalities, insiders say that most foreign
students at the madrassah are of Pakistani origin, who come
from the United States, Britain, Canada, Germany and France.
A majority of these students are from the United States and
Britain.
Muna
Abanur Mohammed, an American girl in her teens, is among the
blacklisted students who have received deportation orders. “Yes,
we have received the deportation order but we will not hand
her over,” said Mufti Naeem. Naeem termed the government’s
move completely illegal and said it reeks of double standards.
“They [the Pakistani government] issue visas for the Aga
Khan University and other institutions. What is wrong with studying
the Quran and learning about Islam?” he asked.
According
to a senior interior ministry official, Pakistan’s top
security czar Rehman Malik, is going to take up the issue of
Muna and other American students studying in Pakistani madrassahs
with senior US State Department officials in Washington DC during
Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gillani’s visit to the White
House. “Rehman Malik has the file and he is directly supervising
the case,” he said. He added that Malik will be back on
July 31, after which a crucial decision regarding the recovery
of the students will be taken.
But Naeem is not worried about any possible government action.
“No one would dare come within a mile’s radius of
our compound,” he replied when asked what his response
would be if the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) launched
a swoop inside the compound. However, despite this implicit
threat, Naeem denied that he stockpiled any weapons or ammunition.
Senior immigration officers at the FIA, requesting anonymity,
said they had no immediate instructions from the federal authorities
to carry out any action against the madrassah in case it flouts
the deportation orders for the foreign students.
Meanwhile,
a US embassy official in Islamabad says they are closely watching
the situation. “We are aware and are monitoring the situation,”
says Press Attache Megan Eliss. According to sources, a US embassy
official, Michael Chan, was in constant contact with Muna. Madrassah
officials stated that they have applied for a Pakistan Origin
Card for Muna to avoid her deportation. So, while Muna might
avoid deportation once she gets her Pakistani ID card, other
students whose education visas are about to expire might face
deportation.
A
senior official of the Thai Consulate in Karachi told Newsline
they were examining the situation. Surprisingly, while requesting
anonymity, the Thai official severely criticised the Pakistani
government for blacklisting the students through a government
notice which is “self-contradictory.” “If
you read the government notification, on the one hand they are
blacklisting the students and on the other, copying it to another
department asking for an extension of visas … the whole
thing is a joke,” he said. “In my opinion, the visas
should be extended.”.
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