ISLAMABAD // The founder of a Pakistan-based extreme Islamist group blamed for the 2008 Mumbai attacks yesterday offered humanitarian aid to the United States - which has placed a US$10 milliom bounty on him- as it battles against superstorm Sandy.
Sandy hammered the eastern US early yesterday, flooding much of New York City, hitting several states with heavy winds and torrential rain and leaving at least 14 people dead.
Hafiz Mohammad Saeed, the founder of the banned Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) militant group and now head of the charity Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD), said his organisation was ready to offer every possible help to the storm-hit American people.
"Jamaat-ud-Dawa is ready to send its volunteers, doctors, food, medicines and other relief items on humanitarian grounds if the US government allows us," Saeed said. "America may have any opinion about us, it may fix bounties on our heads but, as followers of the teachings of the Prophet Mohammed, we feel it is our Islamic duty to help Americans trapped in a catastrophe."
Saeed's statement said the charity had carried out relief work in Indonesia and Sri Lanka after the Indian Ocean tsunami in December 2004.
JuD is seen as a front for LeT, which Washington and Delhi blame for the commando-style attacks on India's financial capital in 2008 that killed 166 people.
In April the US offered $10m for information leading to the arrest or conviction of Saeed, who lives openly in Pakistan's city of Lahore.
Saeed's charity has long denied terror accusations and is known around Pakistan for its relief work in the wake of the devastating Kashmir earthquake of 2005 and the floods of 2010, which were the worst in the country's history.
He was put under house arrest a month after the Mumbai attacks, but was released in 2009. In 2010 Pakistan's highest court upheld his release on the grounds that there was insufficient evidence to detain him.
Last month Saeed led a number of protests in Lahore against a US-made anti-Islam film.
