Allama Hassan Turabi | Allama Hassan Turabi | Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal | India-Pakistan | 20060716 | Link |
India-Pakistan | |
The Al Qaeda connection | |
2012-03-04 | |
Having joined hands with Al Qaeda, sectarian outfits continue to threaten urban Pakistain "My teacher had told me if I kill Shias I will go to heaven," says Mohammad Azam. "Barelvis and Shias are the same. They both need to be killed," adds Jalandar Khan. The two men were jugged before they could launch suicide kabooms. Sectarian differences in Pakistain took a violent turn after the Soviet fall, when men who had been fighting in Afghanistan used their resources and training to carry out attacks on Shias and other minorities in Pakistain. Riaz Basra and his accomplices were accused of targeting key Shia state officials and professionals until 1996. In 1997, the killings became indiscriminate and all Shias became targets. After the strict Salafist Taliban government took over in Afghanistan, violence against Shias and minorities increased significantly. At least 193 people were killed in sectarian violence in Pakistain in 1997, 157 in 1998, and more than 261 in 2001. This happened while many in Pakistain had been praising the Taliban for the peace they had brought in Afghanistan. The first suicide attack of sectarian nature was carried out in 2003, on a Shia mosque on Pakistain-Afghanistan border. At least 55 people were killed. In mid-2002, Al Qaeda began to cooperate with local sectarian organizations in Bloody Karachi, strengthening their networks and capacity. Among the first attacks carried out by this alliance was an ambush on Bloody Karachi corps commander Gen Ahsan Hayat. Since then, attacks have been carried out on almost all major Sufi shrines, and Barelvi and Shia people have been under constant attack. In 2006, a large number of Barelvi Sunni Tehrik ...formed in Karachi in 1992 under by Muhammad Saleem Qadri. It quickly fell to trading fisticuffs and liquidations with the MQM and the Sipah-e-Sahaba, with at least a half dozen of its major leaders rubbed out. Sunni Tehreek arose to become the primary opposition to the Deobandi Binori Mosque, headed by Nizamuddin Shamzai, who was eventually bumped off by person or persons unknown. ST's current leadership has heavily criticized the Deobandi Jihadi leaders, accusing them of being sponsored by Indian Intelligence agencies as well as involvement in terrorist activities... leaders were killed in a suicide kaboom at a religious gathering in Nishtar Park. Sectarian violence in Bloody Karachi:
"More than 200 of our workers have been killed in recent attacks," says Sarwat Ejaz Qadri, the chief of Sunni Tehrik. Sunni Tehrik was formed in 1992 to safeguard the interests of Barelvi Mohammedans. It opposed the appointment of rival Deobandis on key state posts. Important Deobandi ideologues it had opposed were from the Binori Town mosque in Bloody Karachi. The founder of the mosque was killed in May 2004 and his son, nephew and driver were maimed, when his car was ambushed by gunnies. The liquidation occurred three weeks after a powerful bomb killed 15 Shia worshippers in Hyderi Mosque. A day after the liquidation, at least 24 worshippers were killed and 34 others injured when a high-intensity bomb went kaboom!during the evening prayers at a Shia mosque on MA Jinnah Road in Bloody Karachi. A top intelligence official said they were seen by security agencies as tit-for-tat attacks. When Intelligence Bureau and CID conducted a raid to arrest a suspect believed to be involved in the Nishtar Park bombing on a house in Baldia locality in Bloody Karachi, the inmates retaliated. The three people eventually locked away - Sultan Omer, Siddique Mehsud and Zubair Bengali - admitted to have been involved in suicide attacks at Nishtar Park and on Allama Hassan Turabi. One of them was a relative of Baitullah Mehsud. The Al Qaeda link: In March 1995, two American consulate officials - Garry C Durrell (CIA) and Jackie Van Landingham (a consulate secretary) were targeted by a local group in an attack sanctioned by Al Qaeda in response to the extradition of Ramzi Yousaf. According to an intelligence source who has been following sectarian outfits for over two decades, it was among the first verifiable indications of sectarian bully boyz tagging with Al Qaeda. "It was Khaled Sheikh Muhammad, the Al Qaeda number three and an anti-Shia Baloch of Iranian origin who supervised the attack." In 2002 when Khaled Sheikh Muhammad came to Bloody Karachi, he was housed by local sectarian groups, says a former intelligence chief who asked not to be named. Some of these groups became the operational arms for Al Qaeda in Pakistain's urban areas. Suspects locked away by security agencies and intelligence reports also show these groups have connections with Al Qaeda. Sectarian faultlines: In South Punjab ![]() In Balochistan ![]() ...the Pak province bordering Kandahar and Uruzgun provinces in Afghanistan and Sistan Baluchistan in Iran. Its native Baloch propulation is being displaced by Pashtuns and Punjabis and they aren't happy about it... , scores of Hazara people have been killed for their Shia beliefs. The government has failed to respond to the threat so far and key holy mans have not condemned the brutal acts. In Bloody Karachi and Punjab, banned sectarian groups are now operating under new names and leaders once seen as involved in sectarian violence are addressing political gatherings. These developments indicate the sectarian fault lines emerging in urban Pakistain. | |
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India-Pakistan |
Trucking through Pakistan: A dirty business |
2011-09-05 |
Attacks on trucks carrying NATO supplies are not likely to stop soon, but the US is not depending on the Pakistani government The US and NATO depend on Pakistan for logistic support for their war in Afghanistan because most of their supplies goes through Karachi through what many in the port city call the 'Pashtun transport mafia'. The Pakistani security establishment understands that 'alternative routes' might be impossible for speedy supplies, and that is why Islamabad often blackmails the US using sabotage tactics. It was on information revealed by Rahimullah, a terrorist in police custody for orchestrating the Nishtar Park Bombing, that the Intelligence Bureau, the CID and police conducted a raid on a house in Baldia. Terrorists inside the house fired at the police, and the police retaliated. According to the police, all the three men arrested - Sultan Omer, Siddique Mehsud and Zubair Bengali - were suicide bombers from the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi. Sultan was the brother of Sultan Saifullah (suicide bomber of the Nishtar Park bombing), Siddique was a relative of Baitullah Mehsud, while Zubair was the relative of Abdul Karim Bengali, the suicide bomber who had killed Allama Hassan Turabi. In that house, Rahimullah was hiding Shukat Awan - one of the largest NATO oil contractors for whom the group had demanded $25 million as ransom. Shukat Awan was killed during the operation. Rahimullah also disclosed that the group had all been trained in suicide bombing in Waziristan, and had been in Karachi for several months. They were being handled by Qari Zafar. The group had been funded by Abid Mehsud, a commander of the Baitullah Mehsud group, to buy arms, explosives and vehicles. One of the suicide bombers was linked with the assassinated Mufti Amin of Jamia Binoria, who according to a police source "had dodgy connections". Shaukat Awan was not the NATO supplier to have died. Muhammad Farooq (38), Mushtaq Mesud (42) and three other NATO suppliers have also been targeted and killed in Karachi alone. "Over the years Karachi has become one of the most important cities of the world not because of its ethnic tensions but because of its strategic location and the port which receives more than 80 percent of NATO supplies," a senior foreign diplomat said. NATO supplies arrive at Karachi's Port Qasim (Although Tehrik-e-Insaf leader Imran Khan staged a demonstration to block NATO supplies near the Native Jetty bridge instead). Americans have built one of the largest consulates in the world in Karachi and have repeatedly used British diplomats to pressure MQM - one of the largest stakeholders in Karachi - to maintain peace in the city. According to one source, the ANP has huge stakes in NATO supplies and has strong influence among Karachi's transporters. "Gawadar is an alternate port, but it is not operational yet for the NATO to use it," said Brigadier (r) Shaukat Qadir. He said Pakistan received payments for NATO supplies and it was therefore important for Pakistan to ensure the supplies are not disrupted. Asked who is behind attacks on trucks carrying NATO supplies, he said, "My guess would be TTP and its affiliates. The Punjabi Taliban." In Karachi, there are many third-tier sub-contractors working for NATO, most of them of Pashtun and Mehsud origin. They get contracts from second-tier sub-contractors from Dubai, who the contracts have been outsourced to from contractors in Washington, DC. One such sub-contractor, Abdul Hakim Mehsud said, "Its one of the toughest jobs in the world - recently over 13 of my trucks and three of my drivers had been vanished in interior Sindh. But the profit margins are high and that keeps me motivated." In Karachi, there are many third-tier sub-contractors working for NATO, most of them of Pashtun and Mehsud origin. They get contracts from second-tier sub-contractors from Dubai, who the contracts have been outsourced to from contractors in Washington, DC. One such sub-contractor, Abdul Hakim Mehsud said, "Its one of the toughest jobs in the world - recently over 13 of my trucks and three of my drivers had been vanished in interior Sindh. But the profit margins are high and that keeps me motivated." While there are no statistics available on how many trucks had been torched by militants so far, according to one NATO contractor the number in Pakistan alone is in hundreds. Most of the attacks occur in Khyber Pakhtunkwa and interior Sindh. "In December 2008, militants destroyed 400 containers carrying food, fuel, and military vehicles," a NATO source said. After that, NATO and ISAF began paying tribes to ensure supplies get across safe. Karachi's ethnic riots, political instability, and sectarianism have earned it the reputation of being the world's most dangerous city. In the last four years, over 5,000 people have been killed in politically-motivated violence. Not very long ago, it hosted Al Qaeda's operational headquarters. It is still considered by many as a Taliban stronghold. In Karachi's chemical markets, ammonium nitrate is produced by fertiliser companies. While the chemical is on the Pakistani customs control list, it is widely available in open market. This ammonium nitrate is used in improvised explosive devices that account for 66 percent of foreign casualties in Afghanistan since the war started in 2001. The makeshift bombs have claimed 368 troops in 2010. This year, the number has already reached 143. "We can deliver you big quantities of the chemical at the right price," said Ahmed Jan, a local smuggler, one of the few willing to speak on the record. "For a higher price we can deliver you the items in Afghanistan." The US Consulate and Pakistani customs intelligence have been working closely to stop the smuggling. Earlier this year, the National Assembly's Standing Committee on Commerce was informed that more than 6,000 trucks of NATO/ISAF supplies had not reached in Chaman and Iman Garh borders. The disclosure sparked an internal auditing within NLC and FBR and corruption of Rs7 billion was found. The FBR and NLC had reportedly issued notices to 21 and 22 grade officers and had put 100 of its officers and clearing/forwarding agents in the Exit Control List. It was also disclosed that trucks carrying containers of NATO goods for NATO did not pay any levy to the government. The Karachi Port Trust (KPT) charges Rs400 from each container, and the Qasim International Containers Terminal (QICT) charges another Rs400. Experts believe the attacks on NATO containers are carried out by Hakimullah Mehsud, who had been given the task by Baitullah Mehsud. But recently, especially after 2009, "There have been instances especially in Interior Sindh in which the security establishment has used or orchestrated attacks on NATO trucks to pressure the US," according to Mathew Irvin, a security consultant for NATO/ISAF in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Some sub-contractors also report fake attacks to carry out insurance fraud. At least on one occasion, a sub-contractor was caught and fined. The attacks are not likely to stop any time soon, according to a foreign diplomat, "But we have made pacts with warlords, tribes and various stakeholders in Pakistan who ensure safe transit of the goods. They include political parties both in Pakistan and Afghanistan." |
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India-Pakistan |
2 LeJ terrorists arrested in Karachi |
2010-12-16 |
[Pak Daily Times] Keeping up with the Crime Investigation Department, which had jugged a Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistain Islamic exemplar on Tuesday, the Special Investigation Unit (SIU) and the Orangi Town police jugged two Lashkar-e-Jhangvi ... a 'more violent' offshoot of Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistain. LeJ's purpose in life is to murder anyone who's not of utmost religious purity, starting with Shiites but including Brelvis, Ahmadis, Christians, Jews, Buddhists, Rosicrucians, and just about anyone else you can think of. They are currently a wholly-owned subsidiary of al-Qaeda ... (LeJ) cut-throats in different raids on Wednesday. The SIU claimed to have jugged a suspected Islamic exemplar from Ayub Goth with a huge cache of ammunition and explosives, as well as enough material to prepare two suicide jackets. The suspect, identified as Imamuddin alias Maviya, was reportedly planning to carry out a car boom attack together with three of his accomplices on the Ashura processions. A senior SIU officer said the arrest was a major breakthrough, which would help in ensuring security during Muharram. The investigation unit is making all-out efforts to arrest Shaukat Sardar, who has a head money of Rs 500,000, Qasim Rasheed alias Ganja, Shamim alias Shani, and Rashid. The nabbed Islamic exemplar, who was wanted in several criminal cases, disclosed during initial investigation that he was involved in the Sheraton Hotel blast and Allama Hassan Turabi's murder. Sources claimed that Imamuddin was jugged from PIB Colony a few days ago, but the SIU had disclosed his arrest on Wednesday. |
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India-Pakistan |
Anti-terrorist court sentences six in Turabi murder case |
2010-10-01 |
The Anti terrorist court in Karachi concluded the hearing of Allama Hassan Turabi's murder case on Thursday. Three of the six accused were sentenced to death and the other three were sentenced to life imprisonment. Allama Hasan Turabi, and his young nephew were killed when a boomer blew himself up outside the religious leader's Gulshan-i-Iqbal residence on July 16, 2006. The six accused had been charged with criminal masterminding the suicide kaboom on the Muttahida Majlis-i-Amal leader and also with planting a remote-control bomb to kill him. The anti terrorist court judge, Anand Ram based on the evidence provided to the court ordered death sentences to Amanullah, Muhammad Rehman and Sultan Mahmood. Life imprisonment was ordered to the remaining three, Ashfaque, Muhammad Akber and Rahim. |
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India-Pakistan | |
26 injured in Karachi blast near Muharram procession | |
2009-12-27 | |
KARACHI: A roadside bomb wounded at least 26 people soon after a procession of mourners passed the Khalifat Chowk in Paposh Nagar police precincts in Karachis North Nazimabad Town on Saturday. Karachi Capital City Police Officer Waseem Ahmed told Daily Times that it seemed that a remote controlled device was used to detonate the bomb, that weighed around half a kilogramme. Twenty-six people, including two rangers personnel and two policemen were wounded and taken to hospital. Six of them have been discharged while others may be released soon, the police chief said. Ahmed added the bomb was placed close to a car parked on the road, adding that from now on, all procession routes would be checked by the Bomb Disposal Squad (BDS) beforehand.
BDS Assistant Sub-Inspector Abdul Rauf confirmed that around half a kilogramme of explosives was used along with ball bearings, nuts and bolts, which also caused cracks in the ground around the blast site. Sindh Police CID SSP Fayyaz Khan told Daily Times that it was likely that the banned Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LJ) outfit and other anti-Shia elements might have carried out the attack. He said the CID had informed the authorities about possible terrorist activities, including suicide bombings, roadside bombings and target killings by the LJ in Orangi Town, Nazimabad, Paposh Nagar, Golimar, Gulbahar and others areas of the city. However, a senior investigation officer told Daily Times that the area where the explosion occurred was dominated by the LJ. LJ chief Ataur Rehman alias Naeem Bukhari who is now imprisoned in Sukkur jail after being arrested by the intelligence agencies in 2002 also used to live in the area where this explosion took place, the officer explained. He said a group led by Qari Abid Mehsud, chief commander of the LJ, and also affiliated with Taliban, could be behind the bombing. Qari Abid has been involved in various terrorist activities in the city, including the Nishtar Park suicide bombing, suicide bombing on Shia scholar Allama Hassan Turabi, abductions and the killing of noted transporter Shaukat Afridi, he said. | |
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India-Pakistan |
'Karachi saved from death and destruction': Bombers blow themselves up in police raid on hideout |
2008-09-27 |
![]() ... which is now an element of al-Qaeda in Pakistain. Police raided the house in Baldia Town following information from an activist of the group arrested on Thursday, AP reported. "Ow! Ow! Ow! I'll talk! I'll talk! Just put them back!" They hurled five hand grenades at the police before one of them blew himself up, Karachi Police Chief Wasim Ahmed said, adding terrorist leader Raheemullah was arrested from the house. Target: "We have saved Karachi from death and destruction. We know [about their identities and intended targets], but we cannot disclose them immediately," Sindh Police Chief Babar Khattak said, adding the terrorists were suspected of planning an attack on a 'high-profile' target in Karachi. The handcuffed hostage was identified as Shaukat Afridi, a transport worker who supplied fuel to the US-led forces in Afghanistan. He was kidnapped five months ago for a ransom of five million dollars. Raheem allegedly masterminded the April 2006 Nishtar Park suicide attack, the killing of Allama Hassan Turabi in July 2006 and the October 18, 2007, twin blasts at Karsaz. The police also seized explosives, hand grenades and rifles from the house. |
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India-Pakistan |
Baitullah Mehsud, LJ join hands in Karachi |
2008-09-04 |
![]() An intelligence agency official told Daily Times that Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) chief Baitullah Mehsud was in contact with various groups in Karachi. The newly established group is presently headed by Raheemullah alias Naeem alias Ali Hassan, son of Wilayat Khan. A resident of Street 3, Shehzad Cinema, Qasba Colony, Orangi Town, Raheemullah, 35, usually wears a Sindhi cap and has been affiliated with the LJ and Harkatul Mujahideen. Raheemullah is accused of carrying out various terrorist acts in Karachi, including the assassination of Shia scholar and MMA Sindh leader Allama Hassan Turabi.The sources said that the law enforcement agencies have arrested several members of Raheemullah's group, however, others are still at large and are now planning to sabotage the network cracking down on terrorists. Daily Times learnt that Raheemullah established contact with Baitullah Mehsud and many Karachi-based activists, including Qari Abid Mehsud, Khalid Dare Walla, Mufti Ilyas, Colonel Tufaan, Qari Hussain Mehsud, Abdul Wahad Mehsud of Kunwari Colony in Metroville and Faizullah Mehsud, a resident of Sohrab Goth, have joined him. |
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India-Pakistan |
October 18 blasts were suicide bombings: police |
2007-11-21 |
Chief of police Azhar Ali Farooqui has confirmed that the twin explosions that took place on October 18 were suicide bombings and two bombers had attacked the convoy of Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) Chairperson Benazir Bhutto. The investigation team is very close to reaching a conclusion but I cannot yet disclose anything to the media regarding the involvement of Qari Zafar or any other militant group, Farooqui told Daily Times. Responding to a question on reports that explosive material was attached to the body of a small child and went off inside a police mobile unit, Farooqui said that everyone had their own interpretation but they had not found anything in their investigations to substantiate these reports. The PPP leadership has refused, however, to accept the statement and the investigations by the police. We cannot trust the police investigation because they did not preserve the crime scene, they lodged an FIR without consulting the PPP leadership and did not use any international support or call any foreign expert, PPP leader Nisar Khuhro said to Daily Times. He alleged that the police had not sincerely worked on the case which is why the party demanded that they provide proof if these bombings were, indeed, suicide attacks. We will only say something when the police and the government answer our questions. Meanwhile, sources told Daily Times that several people had been taken into custody. The (alleged) involvement of inmates Mullah Sultan and Khalid had been confirmed, sources said, but that of groups such as Qari Zafar and Mufti Ilyas, which have previously been involved in incidents such as Nishtar Park and the killing of Shia cleric Allama Hassan Turabi, has yet to be confirmed. Sources said that investigators had mainly focused on three groups of militants Amjad Farooqui, Mufti Zakir, and Sultan and Akram alias Lahori and have been interrogating them. |
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India-Pakistan |
New militant group targeting Shia leaders |
2006-09-04 |
![]() The suspects - Sultan Mehmood alias Saifullah and Muslim, Mohammad Amin alias Khalid and Abdullah, and Mohammad Rehman alias Mani told investigators the group was planning suicide attacks against Shia leaders, says the report. The new militant group is led by Mufti Ilyas and Hazrat Ali of Darra Adam Khel. Its members include men who recently fought against US forces in Afghanistan, and have links with Abdullah Mehsud, the militant leader responsible for the attack on Chinese engineers at the Gomal Zam Dam site, and other militants from Waziristan and Afghanistan. It also includes some women members. The report says that the new group has no links with any other militant organisation, including the banned sectarian group Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, and is active in Quetta, Karachi and other major cities in Pakistan. It also says the group has established a supply line of weapons and ammunition between Darra Adam Khel and Karachi. The Interior Ministry has directed the provincial chief secretaries and Islamabad chief commissioner to identify members of the group operating in their areas. Security officials in Waziristan and other tribal areas have also been put on alert, the sources said. The ministry has asked the special investigation group of the FIA in Peshawar to collect information about Mufti Ilyas and Hazrat Ali, and investigate their possible links with other militant groups in the country, the sources added. |
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India-Pakistan |
Suicide-bombing trainer arrested in Karachi |
2006-08-16 |
![]() Police identified the suicide bomber who killed Turabi as 16-year-old Abdul Karim. Qureshi was also known to have visited Afghanistan, which has been hit by a wave of suicide bombings in recent months, although it was not known if he organised attacks there, the police official said. |
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India-Pakistan | |||
Pakistanis: Cleric's Killer Bangladeshi | |||
2006-07-25 | |||
KARACHI, Pakistan (AP) - Police on Tuesday said the suicide bomber who killed a prominent Shiite Muslim cleric last week was Bangladeshi and arrested three Pakistani Sunni militants accused of planning the attack.
Sindh provincial police chief, Jehangir Mirza, told reporters that police, acting on a tip, raided a Karachi home early Tuesday and detained three men on suspicion of involvement in the attack. Mirza said the men confessed to preparing a 16-year-old Bangladeshi acquaintance, Abdul Karim, to carry out the attack several hours before it took place.
The grainy video, which was played to journalists Tuesday, showed Karim wearing a headscarf and holding a pistol. He also wore what appeared to be an explosives-packed vest with at least two hand grenades dangling from its front. Earlier Tuesday, the three detainees led police to the home of Karim's parents, who recognized him from a still photograph taken from the video. Karim's mother said she hadn't seen her son in two weeks, Mirza said. "I think she was not aware of the fate of her son, and she learned it only from the police," Mirza said.
The detained trio were identified Mohammed Amin, Sultan Mahmood and Mohammed Rahman and they belonged to outlawed Pakistani militant groups Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, Sipah-e-Saha and Jaish-e-Mohammed respectively, Mirza said. The three also confessed to taking part in a failed April 6 attempt to kill Turabi, he said. Turabi's killing sparked massive riots with hundreds of mourners, mostly youths, setting fire to a Pizza Hut, two gas stations and a dozen vehicles. | |||
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India-Pakistan |
Police arrests militant for alleged involvement in killing of Shiite cleric |
2006-07-20 |
![]() Allama Hassan Turabi, his nephew Ali Raza and a child were killed last week when a suicide bomber blew himself up outside the clerics house. Three people were also critically wounded. The killing sparked violent protests in the city. Dozens of buses, two banks and a foreign food chain restaurant were set on ablaze by angry Shiite mourners. |
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