India-Pakistan |
Jihadi propaganda flourishes in Pakistan |
2011-01-12 |
![]() Among 80 or so such terror publications are 18 weeklies, 40 bimonthlies and 22 monthlies. The publications are often published in Urdu with plenty of Arabic and some English to cater to a wide range of Pakistani society. One Islamic magazine named Bazu-e-Mujahid has more than 7,000 subscribers from Karachi to New York, and is focused on enforcing the Caliphate in Pakistan. Another magazine is Al-Jehad, Mujhaid [sic?] printed in Karachi. Another is Jihad Kashmir printed in Rawalpindi. The Two jihadi magazines and a newsletter called Haq-e-Awaz and Allah Commandos both published in Karachi gloried in the recent killing of Punjab Governor Salmaan Taseer and wrote in an editorial that "Qadri was the new hero of the ummah" and "anyone who betrays the ideology of Islam and Pakistan should be killed". A senior intelligence official said, "There is a proper mechanism in place to monitor such hate-literature, but at times acting on it due to certain provisions in law that safeguard such hate literature makes them hard to actually be stopped." |
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India-Pakistan | ||
Qayyum contradicts Pak's claims about J&K terror camps | ||
2007-04-30 | ||
There were never any terrorist camps, there were camps of freedom fighters -- legitimate freedom fighters and some terrorist activity was attributed to them and those camps have been demolished. There were two kinds of camps, Qayyum continues, One was Pakistan based militant activity comprising of Pakistani people and the other was of indegenious Kashmiris. One must realise and know that a number of people were operating inside Kashmir -- they are still there and there is no mechanism to deal with them. ![]() Meanwhile, Pakistan based Jehadis have not taken the remarks kindly. United Jehad Council or the UJC -- the umbrella organisation of several militant outfits in J&K said, "It seems, he (Qayyum) apprehends that freedom of Kashmiris will bring an end to his family rule. Though Qayyum is terming armed resistance as an impediment in the so-called peace process, we need to remind him that he has the distinction of being the first mujahid and firing the first bullet, which enabled him to enjoy power for past 59 years. He further pointed that in the beginning Qayyum had formed an outfit Al-Jehad force and had accumulated huge amounts on the name of the outfit from Europe and Islamic countries. India stands vindicated Qayyum's remark has triggered quick reactions in foreign policy circles and political parties. Former diplomats and politicians claim Qayyums remark vindicates India's stand. Former Indian Envoy to Pakistan G Parthasarthy pointed that Qayyum's statement exposed Pakistan's hypocrisy. Indirectly, Pakistan has acknowledged that there were terror camps in the past. Moreover, it's clear that the infrastructure for Pakistan sponsored terrorism still exists, united Jehad council still exists, the LeT under the name of Jamaat-ul-Dawa still exists -- so, I think we should be prepared for certain level of terrorism. Terming it as a vindication of Indias stand, Former foreign secretary Shashank said, The PoK leadership had been so far denying the existence of any training camps, but for the first time we are finding that the divide between Pakistan government and PoK leadership is becoming sharp and clear and the PoK leadership has decided to go public. Former foreign secretary Lalith Man Singh on the other hand stressed that Qayumm's statement only confirmed what the world already knew. Pakistan has always been in a state of denial regarding this. I recall that in Washington we put it across to the Americans. We also indicated the number of camps, their locations and now that the peace process is on, there will be more and more confessions from the Pakistan. Defence Analyst Brahma Cheelany maintained that Pakistan had perfected the art of not telling the truth The BJP too reacted to the story by claiming that the Indian government and the NDA has raised this issue time and again and Qayyum's revelations only go to substantiate the claims. If the terrorism is continuing then peace talks have no meaning, lashed out a visibly angry V K Malhotra, a senior BJP leader. | ||
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India-Pakistan | |
Pak orders crackdown in Waziristan | |
2006-08-25 | |
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Elaborating the formation of Al-Jehad, led by Abu Adil and being collaborated by Jamaatul Furqaan, the intelligence reports say that the group is involved in attacking the Pakistani security forces deployed in the Wazirastan region and the security interests of other countries including the US and Britain, deployed in the bordering belt inside Afghanistan. These reports say a religious seminary Madrassah Nizamiah, situated in Miran Shah, is being used to impart military training to jehadis who are recruited and sent to the Madrassah by one Qari Abdul Karim Khosa of the JuF. | |
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India-Pakistan |
Terrorists now "infiltrating" via train, with passports |
2006-01-10 |
A day after India and Pakistan inked an agreement to run a second train between the two countries on Khokhrapar-Munabao route, two Al-Jehad militants arrested recently by the Counter Intelligence (CI) sleuths and Special Operations Group (SOG), Jammu, have disclosed that about a dozen militants have crossed over to Jammu and Kashmir via Wagah in Attari Express on the passports issued by Pakistan authorities. The militants have also revealed that Pakistan authorities and militant leaders were now finding it difficult to push the militants through Line of Control (LoC) or International Border (IB) due to fencing. Therefore, they have adopted a new strategy to either send the militants on passports through Wagah in train or re-route them via Nepal. The militants, who have made the revelations, had themselves came on Attari Express, also known as Samjhauta Express, via Wagah in Amritsar sector on the passports issued by Pakistan authorities. They have been identified as Saif Ali son of Abdul Rashid Sheikh R/o Hamirpura, Shiva in Doda district and Iftikhar Ali son of Haji Ghulam Qadir R/o Bharti, Gandoh. Their passports have been seized by the CI officers. They disclosed that only few days back two more militants of Doda travelled from Pakistan to Amritsar in the train and then reached Jammu on the passports issued by Pakistan. Their identity has been established as Nazir Ahmed son of Saif Din, a resident of Pranu, Bhaderwah and Nazir Ahmed son of Nasarullah R/o Thathri. Both Nazir Ahmeds, who belonged to Hizbul Mujahideen outfit, had gone underground after reaching Jammu and hadnât been arrested so far. Saif Ali and Iftikhar Ali told the interrogators that they had crossed over to Pakistan from Kupwara sector in a group of 12 militants. They underwent training in arms and explosives in different training camps of Pakistan. The militants said they made two unsuccessful attempts to cross LoC from Poonch sector but failed due to fencing. They, however, admitted that some of their associates did manage to cut fencing and sneaked into the Indian territory from Mendhar sector. They also disclosed that as per their information, some militants were first sent to Nepal by the Pakistan authorities from where they successfully managed to reach Jammu and Kashmir. Investigations conducted by the CID officers here revealed that passports recovered from the militants were genuine but the names written on them were fake. While Saif Ali had been issued passport on the name of Mohd Ramzan, Iftikhar Ali had the passport of Mohd Shabir. They had been shown as residents of Jammu and Rajouri. This, according to sources, had been done to keep the Intelligence agencies here in doubt. By their original names, the militants would have been identified immediately as their names figured in the list of those who had crossed over to PoK for arms training. Sources said the CID authorities were in the process of writing to the Central agencies for taking up matter with the External Affairs Ministry. The Ministry will further write to Pakistan Government as the issuance of passports to the militants was a serious matter, they added. |
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Afghanistan/South Asia |
The Jihad Lives On Part 2 |
2005-03-09 |
Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM) ![]() Despite its renaming, the US State Department designated the Jaish a foreign terrorist organization in December 2001, compelling Musharraf to ban the group in January 2002. Masood Azhar got his outfit registered under the new name of Khudamul Islam within no time. The Jaish chief was kept under house arrest for a few months after the 9/11 terror attacks, but was subsequently set free. Though Masood Azhar, while conceding to the ISI's pressure, had directed his henchmen not to target the American interests in Pakistan, there are strong fears in the Pakistani intelligence circles that the dissident members of the Jaish, who are unknown and have gone underground, constitute the real threat. The murmurs of dissent in the outfit first surfaced when Masood Azhar failed to react to General Musharraf's policy change on Afghanistan after the 9/11 terror attacks. Several prominent Jaish members favoured retaliatory attacks against US interests in Pakistan to pressurize the military ruler against supporting the Bush administration. But acting under the agencies' command, Masood refused to acquiesce. As things stand, there are fears that ongoing disputes over possession of the various Jaish offices, mosques and other material assets could lead to more serious clashes between the two banned factions. The main cause behind the fighting is the embezzlement of fundsby Azhar and his family members, his lucrative profession is the main reason he has been so loyal to the establishment. Hizb-ul-Mujahideen (HM) ![]() There have been numerous clashes between the Pakistani Jihadis and the ethnic Kashmiri Jihadis, as well as fighting between the Salafis and the others According to the intelligence sources, reorganizing the command and control structure of the HM-led UJC was part of a strategy change to enable Pakistani intelligence to have tighter control over its running. With the restructuring of the UJC, they said, no component member of the UJC would be allowed to launch an attack in J&K, unless approved by the Council. That is why most of the smaller groups, which had been irritants for the ISI, have been merged to reduce the number of their representation in the Jehad Council from thirteen to five. Al-Barq, Tehreek-e-Jehad, Islamic Front, Brigade 313 and the Kashmiri component of HuM have been merged to form the Kashmir Freedom Force, which would be led by Farooq Qureshi of Al Barq. The Muslim Janbaz Force, Al Jehad Force, Al Fateh Force, Hizbullah and Jamiatul Mujahideen (JuM) have also been merged to form the Kashmir Resistance Force, which would be led by Ghulam Rasool Shah. Similarly, many of the militant training camps have been moved from Azad Kashmir to Pakistan in Punjab and the Frontier provinces, with strict restrictions on the movement of militants. The training camps have reportedly been relocated at Taxila, Haripur, Boi, Garhi Habibullah and Tarbela Gazi. The reorganisation actually took place a while ago Harkatul Mujahideen (HuM) Led by Maulana Fazalur Rehman Khalil till recently, the HuM has regrouped and is working in a low-key manner under the name of the Jamiatul Ansar, but insisting that it has a non-militant agenda. As the Government's anti-extremism drive brought into sharp focus Maulana Khalil's alleged al-Qaeda links, he had to resign from the top slot of the organization in January 2005, as advised by his spy masters. Khalil, who was released in December 2004 after an eight-month detention in a seven by seven foot cell, submitted his resignation at a January 2005 meeting of the 'executive committee' of the HuM and asked the committee members to elect Maulana Badar Munir from Karachi as the new chief. Intelligence sources, however, insist that Khalil remains in the good books of the establishment and would continue calling the shots from behind the scene, despite his resignation as the Harkat chief, which was nothing more than an eye wash. HuM's association with Osama bin Laden was established on August 20, 1998, when US planes bombed the al-Qaeda training camps near Khost and Jalalabad in eastern Afghanistan in retaliation to US Embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania. The US bombs destroyed two HuM training camps and killed 21 of its activists. As of today, the US intelligence agencies believe the Harkat still retains links, like most other jehadi groups, with the Taliban remnants and al-Qaeda operatives hiding on the Pak-Afghan border. Despite enthusiastic applause from the West for anti-militancy efforts of Pakistan's 'visionary' military ruler, it is evident that much remains to be done on the ground before these efforts will actually bear fruit. With changing scenarios all over the world, there has been a change of minds, yet what is required is a change of hearts. |
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ISI re-organising militant organisations | ||||
2004-02-27 | ||||
More on the reorganisation of the Kashmir Jihad posted yesterday In a two-pronged change of strategy, the Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) has shifted several militant training camps from Pak-occupied-Kashmir (PoK) to Pakistani territory, and is re-organising the command structure of militant organisations it uses for terrorist strikes in India. Under pressure to stop cross-border terrorism into India, ISI has now moved several of the training camps from PoK since these had come to the notice of the international community. But some of the camps have been retained for use by foreign mercenaries as Islamabad uses the excuse that it has no control over them, informed sources said here. Interrogation of a number of Pakistani militants captured by the Indian authorities, reveals that about 2300 militants from five camps in Muzaffarabad areas have just been moved to two camps at Taxila and Haripur in Islamabad-Peshawar area. There was a throwaway remark in the latest edition of Pakâs Friday Times that some of the Jihadis in one of the training camps were killed in an earthquake earlier this month.
These tactical changes have been accompanied by moves to restructure the United Jehad Council (UJC), an umberella group of 13 militant outfits, to enable ISI to have a tighter control over its running. Smaller outfits which have been irritants for ISI are being merged which will reduce the number of their representation in UJC from 13 to five. The ISI has asked Al-Barq, Teherek-e-Jehad, Islamic Front, 313 brigade and the Kashmiri component of Harkat-ul-Mujahideen to merge and form Kashmir Liberation Organisation. However, there were differences on the name between Kashmiri militant leaders and ISI and the new name suggested by Kashmiris was Kashmir Freedom Force which would be led by Farooq Qureshi of Al Barq, the report said. Apparently they went with the latter.
Similarly Muslim Janbaz Force, Al Jehad force, Al Fateh force, Hizbullah and Jamiat-ul-Mujahideen were being merged to form Kashmir Resistance Force and would be led by Ghulam Rasool Shah alias General Abdullah, it said. Interestingly Tehrek-ul-Mujahideen, which did not agree to merge as per the wishes of ISI, has been asked to fend for itself and it is reported that the outfit was getting close to Lashker-e-Taiba for training and Ahl-e-Hadis (Wahabi) organisations in Pakistan for financial support, the report said. The Lashkar likely has enough financial resources to sponsor their own Jihadi groups, but it doesnât seem wise to let them...
The ISI has roped in its trusted lieutenant Sheikh Jamil-ur-Rehman in the UJC so that it could have a complete control over the amalgam. Meanwhile, amidst fears of war looming large over it in mid-2002 and growing international pressure, ISI was quick enough to shift militant camps from PoK to other places in the country with strict restrictions on the movements of Kashmiri militants. According to the report, the militants of various outfits except Hizbul Mujahideen, were shifted to a closed factory on Haripur-Taxila road in Punjab province, the report said. It said that the factory had been taken over by the Pakistan government on rent and handed over to ISI. There were about 500 militants in this camp which included Al-Barq (70 militants), Jamiat-ul-Mujahideen (65), Tehrek-e-Jehad (70), Islamic Front (25), Teherek-ul-Mujahideen (60), Muslim Janbaz Force, Al-Jehad and Al-Fateh (150 combined strength), Hizbullah (15), Al Umar (25), Harkat-ul-Jehad-e-Islamia (50) and JKLF (55). Assuming the intell is acurate, RAW must have heavily infiltrated these groups to have such specific numbers.
About of 2300 Hizbul Muajhideen cadres had been kept in Taxila camp and Haripur camps around Islamabad. The loyalists of Abdul Majid Dar were shifted to Boi camp located at a place atop a hill on the confluence of river kaghan and river Jehlum on Muzzafarabad-Mansehra road in Pakistan. Another set of 300 to 400 militants had been lodged in Gari Habibullah camp and Tarbela Gazi Camp in North West Frontier Province of Pakistan. The report said that after May this year, when the militants were shifted to these camps in Pakistan, ISI imposed restrictions on the free movement of militants. "They are not allowed to move out and those visiting them have to reach the camps in the night and leave before sun rise," it said and added that the Kashmiri boys in the camps were so fed up with the restrictions and uncertainity of the life that they were desperate to return to their homes. | ||||
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India-Pakistan |
Musharraf's jehadi plan |
2002-05-22 |
A new Pakistani jehadi group, the Jamaat-e-Milli, is believed to have supported the Kaluchak terrorist attack in Jammu. A Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) report says it is one of a new crop of jehadi groups being used by Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf to strengthen his influence among Islamic militants. This probably represents a consolidation of existing jihadi organizations into one, or three, as it were. They change names regularly to keep off U.S. and EU terrorist lists and to keep the bank accounts unfrozen. Also the proliferation of organizations makes it seem like there's more activity than there actually is. Musharraf's problem is he has had to crack down on terrorism to show results to the US. Old jehadis, who remember how he helped set up the old terrorist groups, have excused him because they believe the US has forced him to show some action on the ground. However, a crop of younger, more militant jehadis believe he has sold out to the US. Didn't Mary W. Shelley write a book about something like this a couple hundred years ago? Maybe Perv shoulda read it... To control them, Musharraf has set up new organisations. And to show them he is till true to jehad, he has helped them launch attacks in Kashmir, which is why terrorist activities have intensified there. This, Musharraf reckons, will help contain violence in Pakistan â especially the kind directed at Westerners. This is partly true. I'm not convinced it's Perv behind the whole thing. Not convinced in the least... The more militant jehadis have formed splinter groups that are not ready to accept his authority. Aftab Ahmed Ansari, the mastermind of the attack on the American Center in Kolkata, reportedly said during interrogation that there had been a jehadi plot to assassinate Musharraf on Qaid-e-Azam Day last December. Funding had been sent to Pakistan via Dubai and the UK. Acting on a tip-off from the UK, police arrested two people and aborted the plot. That would have been around the same time they bumped off Haider's brother... RAW's assessment is that there has been a "churning" within Pakistan's jehadi groups after the US banned groups like the Lashkar-e-Taiba, Harkat-ul-Mujahideen, Sipah-i-Sahaba and Lashkar-i-Janghvi. The cadres of these organisations are being merged into at least three new organisations â the Jamaat-e-Milli, Lashkar-e-Omar and Al Jehad. RAW believes Jamaat-e-Milli is the most important of the new jehadi groups and that Musharraf is trying to put his men in charge of the new organisation, which is serving as a new funding body for various jehadi groups. That would kind of correspond to Markaz-al-Dawa, the umbrella group covering Lashkar... It is unclear who heads Lashkar-e-Omar. One theory is that it is headed by Taliban's supreme leader Mullah Muhammad Omar. Another is that the ISI has set it up to attract disaffected militants and has named it after Omar Sheikh because of his high standing among younger jehadis. I'd guess it'd be named after either or both, and that it'd contain most of the cannon fodder... India is even less certain about the shadowy Al Jehad, which is suspected to be composed of Al Qaeda members who have fled Afghanistan. Some Al Qaeda members are also believed to have joined the Jamaat-e-Milli. This would be the "foreign legion" of the Kashmir Korps. It probably only shares the name of the existing Al-Jehad organization, which might be an indigenous pick-up team... |
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Terror Networks |
Jihadi intimidation campaign against Kashmir assembly elections |
2002-03-25 |
Al-Jehad was one of the front-ranking militant outfits in the Valley in early 90s and disappeared after the arrest and killing of its leadership and hundreds of cadres. Al-Jehadâs leader Sheikh Abdul Aziz, who later joined Hurriyat and became its executive member, is presently undergoing detention under Public Safety Act after arrest last year. Al-Jehad is the second militant outfit which warned Hurriyat leaders not to participate in the assembly polls. Earlier, Jammu and Kashmir Islamic Front (JKLF) warned Hurriyat leadeship of "serious consequences" if they participate in elections, while another militant outfit Hizbul Mujahideen asked the state government employees to stay away from the poll process. "If any Hurriyat leader including Syed Ali Shah Geelani and Democratic Freedom Party leader Shabir Ahmad Shah are found involved in any (election) activity, it would attract serious consequences," JKIF had said. |
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Terror Networks |
Kashmir jihadi groups redoing their org charts again... |
2002-03-25 |
They will continue to offer the same fine product line, however. |
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