<p>Jamat-ud-Dawa, blamed by India for 2008 Mumbai massacre, has also been banned by the United Nations and a number of western countries. It is going public intending to influence 'netizens' to advocate violence against non-Muslims or 'Kafirs'.<br /><br />The information they have posted online with photographs clearly show men and women at their congregation brandishing guns and hi-tech assault weapons. Internet pages of Sipah-e-Sahaba, a banned militant Sunni Islamic organisation, openly preach their anti-Shiite bias.<br /><br />The groups are being allowed to operate without censorship by the Pakistani authorities, who recently restricted access to hundreds of Internet pages for anti-Islamic contents. Pakistan has recently launched military campaign against the groups like Sipah-e-Sahaba, but Islamabad's double-dealing is exposed by allowing them access to cyber space.<br /><br />JuD, which claims to be a charity group, has been helping in flood relief work in Sindh and northwestern region. The JuD in its 'Facebook' page continues its India-bashing claiming that Indian intelligence was behind the attack on Sri Lankan cricketers in Lahore last year.<br /><br />The US, the UK and other western nations are already worried over the influence these campaigns are having on Muslim youths. There have been arrests recently of a number of youths in the US who claimed they were going to join Jihad against American forces in Afghanistan and Somalia.</p>
<p>Jamat-ud-Dawa, blamed by India for 2008 Mumbai massacre, has also been banned by the United Nations and a number of western countries. It is going public intending to influence 'netizens' to advocate violence against non-Muslims or 'Kafirs'.<br /><br />The information they have posted online with photographs clearly show men and women at their congregation brandishing guns and hi-tech assault weapons. Internet pages of Sipah-e-Sahaba, a banned militant Sunni Islamic organisation, openly preach their anti-Shiite bias.<br /><br />The groups are being allowed to operate without censorship by the Pakistani authorities, who recently restricted access to hundreds of Internet pages for anti-Islamic contents. Pakistan has recently launched military campaign against the groups like Sipah-e-Sahaba, but Islamabad's double-dealing is exposed by allowing them access to cyber space.<br /><br />JuD, which claims to be a charity group, has been helping in flood relief work in Sindh and northwestern region. The JuD in its 'Facebook' page continues its India-bashing claiming that Indian intelligence was behind the attack on Sri Lankan cricketers in Lahore last year.<br /><br />The US, the UK and other western nations are already worried over the influence these campaigns are having on Muslim youths. There have been arrests recently of a number of youths in the US who claimed they were going to join Jihad against American forces in Afghanistan and Somalia.</p>