ISLAMABAD/NEW DELHI: Amid pressure from the global community to rein in terror outfits operating from its soil in the wake of the Pulwama attack, Pakistan on Tuesday detained Jaish-e-Mohammed chief Masood Azhar’s son and brother and put Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD) and Falah-e-Insaniat Foundation (FIF) on the list of banned terror outfits .Hamad Azhar and Mufti Abdul Rauf, the son and brother of the JeM chief, along with 42 other members of the jihadi outfit have been taken into “preventive custody”, even as Masood Azhar himself continues to be a free bird. Both Hamad and Rauf figure in the dossier India submitted to Pakistan after launching air raids on a Jaish camp at Balakot in Pakistan.On February 21, the Pakistani government had announced that it had banned JuD and FIF. However, as reported by TOI on Tuesday, the website of National Counter Terrorism Authority updated on Monday showed JuD and FIF were still under the watch list. Junior interior minister Shehryar Afridi and the ministry’s secretary Azam Suleman Khan said at a press meet on Tuesday that Hamad Azhar and Rauf were among those detained who were named in the Indian dossier on the Pulwama attack .However, Khan claimed that this did not mean that action was being taken only against those who were mentioned in the dossier. “This action against banned organisations is across the board. We don’t want to give the impression that we are against any one organisation,” he said.The move to hold Rauf in “preventive detention” evoked scepticism in India with official sources dismissing it as of little significance while underlining that it was a ploy to distract international opinion just before the UN Security Council is to decide on putting the Jaish chief on the 1267 banned list. They said Masood Azhar and Lashkar chief Hafiz Saeed were repeatedly detained as part of a ritual which never amounted to more than house arrests.