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This is the new Official Twitter account of Hafiz Saeed, Ameer Jamat ud Dawah -- Official Response on Twitter double standards soon — Hafiz Muhammad Saeed (@Hafizsaeedjud1) December 8, 2014

NEW DELHI: Micro-blogging site Twitter on Monday suspended the official accounts of Pakistan-based terror outfit Jamaat ud Dawa and its chief Hafiz Muhammad Saeed, but hours later both were back on the popular social media platform with supposedly new handles.All that the JUD cyber experts had to do is add 1 or 01 to the suspended accounts. So while @JUD_Official was back on Twitter as @JUD_Official01, @HafizSaeedJUD could be accessed on the new handle @HafizSaeedJUD1.In fact, the fresh Twitter handles even termed as "illegal" the suspension of the JUD and Hafiz Mohammad Saeed's accounts from the social media platform. "Truth can never be suspended; will continue to expose India. @Twitter should not have bowed to world's darkest democracy," the purported JUD cyber team tweeted from both the accounts.The new handles also promised to come back with a detailed response to the suspension of their original accounts. "Official response to Twitter double standards soon," they declared.Saeed, who has regularly used the Twitter platform to spew venom against India and slam its Kashmir policy, continues to roam freely in Pakistan despite being a prime accused in the 26/11 case trial in India. Pakistan has rejected the evidence provided by the Indian authorities time and again regarding his role as the top mastermind of 2008 Mumbai attacks, and even recognizes JUD as a philanthropic outfit involved in charitable/social work.Saeed was recently in the news for addressing a rally at Lahore, where he indulged in hate-mongering against both India and the US. "Pakistanis and Kashmiris are blood brothers and they cannot be separated," he declared.Also rejecting the polls in Jammu & Kashmir, which have witnessed a record 72% turnout in the first two phases, he said "the elections in Kashmir cannot be a substitute of plebiscite".Saeed's provocative statements were followed by a series of militant attacks in J&K, including one at an Army camp in Uri that killed 11 security personnel.