The charged man, Hafiz Mohammad Saeed, heads Jamaat-ud-Dawa, which is blacklisted in the West as a terrorist group.
Police also charge that Saeed founded the banned Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) group accused by India and Washington of killing 166 people in Mumbai last year in attacks that damaged relations with Pakistan.
The cases were registered against him by security officials in Faisalabad, an industrial town in the central Punjab province.
“Saeed has been booked for inciting public sentiments and arranging and addressing unlawful congregation”, police official Mohammad Mansha told AFP.
During a meeting with activists of his banned organisation in Faisalabad, Saeed urged people to wage jihad against anti-Islamic forces and has criticised the Pakistani government in recent speeches, police said.
Another police official, Rana Mohammad Ashfaq, confirmed two cases against Saeed had been registered under anti-terrorism laws after the cleric sought donations to advance jihad.
A spokesman for Jammat-ud-Dawa strongly condemned the case registration.
“The government should not take criticism from someone as a crime. Saeed did not commit any crime by talking about jihad as it is also mentioned in the holy Koran,” said the spokesman, Yahya Mujahid.
Pakistan put Saeed and three of his co-leaders under house arrest in early December and publicly shut offices of the charity after the UN Security Council blacklisted the organisation a terror group.
But Saeed was released in June on order from the high court in Pakistan's eastern city Lahore.
The US considers Jamaat-ud-Dawa, which operates out of a sprawling headquarters near Lahore, a terror group, and Pakistan came under huge Western pressure to round up Saeed and other Dawa members.
Saeed, whom India accused of masterminding the Mumbai attacks, reportedly abandoned LeT when it was outlawed in Pakistan following an attack on the Indian Parliament, which New Delhi blamed on LeT.
New Delhi accused “official agencies” in Pakistan of being involved in the 60-hour assault by 10 militant gunmen on India's financial capital.
Pakistan has arrested five people suspected of involvement in the assault, including the alleged mastermind, Zakiduddin Lakhvi; their trial continues.
Police also charge that Saeed founded the banned Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) group accused by India and Washington of killing 166 people in Mumbai last year in attacks that damaged relations with Pakistan.
The cases were registered against him by security officials in Faisalabad, an industrial town in the central Punjab province.
“Saeed has been booked for inciting public sentiments and arranging and addressing unlawful congregation”, police official Mohammad Mansha told AFP.
During a meeting with activists of his banned organisation in Faisalabad, Saeed urged people to wage jihad against anti-Islamic forces and has criticised the Pakistani government in recent speeches, police said.
Another police official, Rana Mohammad Ashfaq, confirmed two cases against Saeed had been registered under anti-terrorism laws after the cleric sought donations to advance jihad.
A spokesman for Jammat-ud-Dawa strongly condemned the case registration.
“The government should not take criticism from someone as a crime. Saeed did not commit any crime by talking about jihad as it is also mentioned in the holy Koran,” said the spokesman, Yahya Mujahid.
Pakistan put Saeed and three of his co-leaders under house arrest in early December and publicly shut offices of the charity after the UN Security Council blacklisted the organisation a terror group.
But Saeed was released in June on order from the high court in Pakistan's eastern city Lahore.
The US considers Jamaat-ud-Dawa, which operates out of a sprawling headquarters near Lahore, a terror group, and Pakistan came under huge Western pressure to round up Saeed and other Dawa members.
Saeed, whom India accused of masterminding the Mumbai attacks, reportedly abandoned LeT when it was outlawed in Pakistan following an attack on the Indian Parliament, which New Delhi blamed on LeT.
New Delhi accused “official agencies” in Pakistan of being involved in the 60-hour assault by 10 militant gunmen on India's financial capital.
Pakistan has arrested five people suspected of involvement in the assault, including the alleged mastermind, Zakiduddin Lakhvi; their trial continues.
Source: The Australian