In August 2000, Aksari denounced the decision of those within the Kashmiri resistance group Hizbul Mujahideen who had recently agreed to enter into a ceasefire with Indian forces. According to The Hindu he was then "the head of the al-Badr faction of the Hizb" and he stated those who agreed to the ceasefire should be "dealt with as other traitors are" He was quoted again in November 2000, rejecting the idea of a ceasefire, saying "We do not accept or believe India. Jihad is the only solution.".
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| - In August 2000, Aksari denounced the decision of those within the Kashmiri resistance group Hizbul Mujahideen who had recently agreed to enter into a ceasefire with Indian forces. According to The Hindu he was then "the head of the al-Badr faction of the Hizb" and he stated those who agreed to the ceasefire should be "dealt with as other traitors are" He was quoted again in November 2000, rejecting the idea of a ceasefire, saying "We do not accept or believe India. Jihad is the only solution.".
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| - Leader and spokesman for an Islamic fundamentalist group Al Badr
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| - In August 2000, Aksari denounced the decision of those within the Kashmiri resistance group Hizbul Mujahideen who had recently agreed to enter into a ceasefire with Indian forces. According to The Hindu he was then "the head of the al-Badr faction of the Hizb" and he stated those who agreed to the ceasefire should be "dealt with as other traitors are" He was quoted again in November 2000, rejecting the idea of a ceasefire, saying "We do not accept or believe India. Jihad is the only solution.". On December 31, 2000, The Hindu quoted Aksari announcing the success of an attack his group made that he claimed killed a dozen Indian soldiers. An interview Aksari gave to CNN in early 2001 was widely quoted following Al Qaeda's attacks on September 11, 2001. Aksari told CNN: "Islam must rule the world and until Islam does rule the world we will continue to sacrifice our lives." Following an announcement in early 2002 that the Pakistani government was planning to crack down on the militant activities of Al Badr and four other groups the Associated Press quoted Askari saying: "The government is targeting (militant) groups at the behest of America and India, But any crackdown or restrictions won"t hurt our struggle. Our Kashmiri jihad will continue." The Times of India published a first hand account of a trainee who claimed to have attended an Al Badr training camp, who said trainees had to listen to sermons from Mustaq Aksari.
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