India-Pakistan | |
India links emerge in Maldives terror probe | |
2007-11-14 | |
![]() Moosa Inas, a Laamu atoll resident charged with having triggered the explosive device which went off in Males Sultan Park on September 29, had travelled to Thiruvananthapuram in December 2005. Inas arrived in Kerala on a flight through Colombo, and then crossed the India-Pakistan border at Attari to meet contacts linked to the Jamia Salafiyya in Faisalabad a seminary that has produced key Lashkar commanders. Twelve tourists were injured in the explosion, which was executed both to signal Islamist opposition to the government and to cripple the islands economy.
Maldives authorities say at least 10 key operatives, including computer engineer Abdul Latif Ibrahim and Ali Shameem, have fled to Pakistan. Both were on a watch list of suspects the Maldives government believed were preparing to receive training at Islamist facilities in Pakistan. Inas, however, was deported from Colombo along with another suspect, Ahmed Naseer, before they could catch connecting flights to Karachi. Little information on Inas contacts in Pakistan where he again travelled in 2006, transiting through Colombo and Dubai has so far been made available by the joint Maldives-U.S. team which is investigating the Sultan Park bombing. However, a growing mass of evidence suggests that Lashkar cadre in India were activated to support the cell of which he was a part. Asif Ibrahim, a Maldivian national arrested in Kerala in April 2005, told investigators that he had been tasked with the setting up of a support unit for a new Maldives-based terror group, the Jamaat-ul-Muslimeen, in Thiruvananthapuram. Asif Ibrahims handlers hoped that the unit would be able to procure bomb components more easily than in Maldives, where a strict national identity card system makes such purchases vulnerable to police investigation. Although Asif Ibrahim was unable to set up the cell, the Lashkar activated several local operatives in support of the enterprise. Jamshedpur resident Tariq Akhtar was summoned to Dhaka in 2005, where he received orders from the Pakistan-based Lashkar commander Abdul Aziz to meet Islamists in Nepal, Sri Lanka and Maldives. Mumbai resident Shami Ahmad Shah was tasked with obtaining a fake passport for Akhtar. Interestingly, Indias intelligence services warned last year of efforts by the Karachi-based mafioso Dawood Ibrahim Kaksar to set up operations in Maldives through a Dubai-based firm, Dolphin Management Services. Elements linked to the Dawood mafia are thought to have been involved in at least one recent effort to ship Lashkar terrorists to Mumbai through the Indian Ocean. Terror funded by tsunami aid? Experts believe that at least some of the infrastructure for the Maldives terror cell might have been financed with funds provided by the Idara Khidmaq-e-Khalq, the Lashkars charity wing. Although the IKK is proscribed by the U.S. and India, it continues to operate legitimately in Pakistan, raising several million dollars a year through religious donations. According to documents published online by the IKK, the organisation spent Pakistani Rs.17.2 million on tsunami relief in Maldives, Sri Lanka and Indonesia during 2005 its single largest charitable operation. However, government officials in Maldives say there is no record of the IKK having registered for relief work a sign that the funds might have been funnelled to Islamists who then used it to build terror infrastructure. Similar strategies had helped the Lashkar-e-Taiba significantly expand its presence in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir after the earthquake of 2005. According to reports that appeared in the United Kingdom and the U.S. media, part of the estimated $10 million raised by the IKK for earthquake relief was used to fund a 2006 plot to blow up 10 transatlantic commercial flights. | |
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India-Pakistan |
Top Lashkar commander killed in Doda |
2007-07-19 |
![]() A resident of Bahawalpur in the Pakistani province of Punjab, Khalid-ur-Rahman served as divisional commander of the Lashkars operations in the mountainous Doda province. Apart from executing a near-successful attempt on the life of Chief Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad, he, it is believed, was the architect of plans to set up new Lashkar networks in Maharashtra, Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh. Khalid-ur-Rahmans elimination marks a major success for the Jammu and Kashmir police, who lost one of their most-decorated officers in the course of a year-long hunt for the terrorist. Deputy Superintendent of Police Shaily Singh was killed near Bhaderwah in May after Lashkar spies discovered that he was engaged in a covert surveillance operation directed against their commander. Intelligence sources say Khalid-ur-Rahman had ambitious plans to set up Lashkar cells in several States. While few details of the cells are available, at least seven Lashkar operatives are known to have been sent into Mumbai this March by a boat owned by a lieutenant of the Karachi-based mafioso Dawood Ibrahim Kaksar. Members of the group are believed to have dispersed in New Delhi, Punjab and Jammu and Kashmir. Delhi police personnel, who participated in the communications-intelligence operation which led to the Bhaderwah encounter, recently detected large-scale movement of hawala funds intended to feed the Lashkar commanders expansion plans. The Doda police last month arrested local Congress activist Mohammad Jamal on charges of acting as courier for one such hawala transfer. Terror career Khalid-ur-Rahman was amongst the Lashkars longest-serving Pakistani nationals. He is believed to have joined the organisations campaign in the State just after the Kargil war, and helped to coordinate a string of fidayeen (suicide squad) strikes against military targets soon after. Later, he commanded the Lashkar units operating in Srinagar, Anantnag and Baramulla. Intelligence sources say Khalid-ur-Rahman was assigned charge of the Doda region in early 2006. He announced his arrival by organising the massacre of 19 villagers, including an eight-year-old girl, in the hamlet of Kulhand in April that year. Extortion operations targeting contractors working on the new Doda-Bharat road were also intensified to raise funds for the Lashkars expanding network. Khalid-ur-Rahmans efforts to establish the Lashkar as the principal terror group in the Doda region were, ironically, aided by a successful police offensive on its principal competitor. In October 2006, the police shot dead top Hizb ul-Mujahideen commander Noor Mohammad, who operated under the alias Javed Burki. Left without leadership, many of his lieutenants joined the Lashkar. With the help of these one-time Hizb operatives, Khalid-ur-Rahman mounted a number of high-profile operations. In April, he executed a near-successful attempt on Mr. Azads life. Armed with fake identification, Lashkar sympathiser Farooq Ahmed Wani and his wife Haseena Wani tried to infiltrate Pakistani fidayeen Ayaz Ahmed Malik into a rally the Chief Minister was to address in Ramban. |
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