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India-Pakistan
North Waziristan tribes wary of brutal foreigners
2011-10-16
As foreign militants gather in North Waziristan and the Haqqani Network relocates, local tribes say their fears and concerns are being ignored

Although the United States is putting pressure on Pakistain for a full-scale operation against the Haqqani Network and other thug groups operating in the North Wazoo for a long time, the region has once again become the centre of a heated debate, especially following direct warnings and accusations by senior US officials claiming that the Haqqani Network is responsible for majority of attacks on US in Afghanistan.

Located between the Khost province
... across the border from Miranshah, within commuting distance of Haqqani hangouts such as Datta Khel and probably within sight of Mordor. Khost is populated by six different tribes of Pashtuns, the largest probably being the Khostwal, from which it takes its name...
of eastern Afghanistan and Khyber Pakthunkhwa of northwest Pakistain, North Waziristan is the second largest tribal region of Pakistain's Federally Administrated Tribal Areas (FATA). According to security experts, the area is considered today to be the epicentre not only of violence in Afghanistan and Pakistain but also a major source of International terrorism. Along with its geographic isolation, difficult terrain and relatively stable coalition of thug groups, they believe that the region has become the most important centre of militancy of FATA because of the impunity with which bully boyz in the area have operated.

The most important thug group operating in the region is the Haqqani Network, an Afghan myrmidon group led by Maulvi Jalaluddin Haqqani. Haqqani left his native Khost province and settled in North Waziristan as an exile during the republican Afghan government of Sardar Mohammad Dauod Khan in early 1970s. His son Sirajuddin, popularly known as Khaleefa, who became a key myrmidon leader in the Afghanistan in mid 1980s, manages the network's organization from the Danday Darpakhel village near Miramshah in North Waziristan and carries out attacks on US and NATO
...the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Originally it was a mutual defense pact directed against an expansionist Soviet Union. In later years it evolved into a mechanism for picking the American pocket while criticizing the cut of the American pants...
forces in Afghanistan, according to security experts and local elders.

The second most important group in North Waziristan is led-by Hafiz Gul Bahadur, a key thug leader known for hosting foreign thugs. Bahadur was announced as Naib Amir (deputy head) under the leadership of Baitullah Mehsud upon the formation of the 2007 Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistain (TTP), an umbrella organization of various thug groups operating in FATA. However Bahadur later formed an anti-TTP bloc by joining hands with Maulvi Nazir's South Waziristan based group because of disagreements over TTP attacks against the Pak security forces and tribal rivalries of Mehsuds. The Haqqani Network and Bahadur are considered 'good Taliban' by the Pakistain military authorities as they don't carry out attacks inside Pakistain and focus only on Afghanistan.

North Waziristan also provides shelter to several other local, foreign and international thug groups, such as the Islamic Jihad Union (IJU), the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), the Islamic Army of Great Britain, Ittehad-e-Jihad Islami (IJI), the TTP, the 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 ...
, the Harkat-ul-Jihad al Islami, the Fidayeen-e-Islami, Harkat-ul-Mujahedeen, the Jaish-e-Muhammad and Lashkar-e-Taiba, according to a latest report published in The News. Elders and political activists of North Waziristan say that many of the foreign thugs, especially Central Asians, Arabs and Afghans, arrived in Pakistain's tribal areas when their bases in Afghanistan were closed down in late 2001. They say that the local population does not approve of the presence of foreign thugs, especially the Uzbeks and Punjabis, because they encroach the tribes' lands and are insensitive to local customs. "We need neither good Taliban nor bad Taliban. The Pak government should abandon their policy of using thug groups against each other and should take stern measures to flush out all of these monsters from the area. They are not only carrying out subversive attacks in Afghanistan but also destroying peace in Pakistain," said an elder from Dawar tribe of North Waziristan.

"We hate Taliban and there are no two opinions about it, but we are compelled to bear the atrocities of these thug outfits because the state has no writ," said another elder from the Utmanzai tribe. "Our voices are not heard and we are not given appropriate space and airtime in the mainstream media."

Because of the reluctance of Pak authorities to carry out a military operation in the region, US drone have targeted the Mir Ali, Dattakhel and Miramshah areas of North Waziristan extensively, with five out of six drone strikes in Pakistain now being reordered in North Waziristan. Residents of the tribal region say that they live in a constant state of fear of being hit, because of local and foreign thugs. The attacks occur without any warning and are often not related to the Pak military's operations.

"The drone frightens women and kiddies who sometimes become the victims, especially if the intended targets are close to their homes," the Utmanzai elder said.

Tribal elders believe many foreign and local thug leaders have been killed in drone strikes in North Waziristan. New America Foundation, a Washington-based think tank, estimates on basis of media reports that 80% of the people killed in drones were Al Qaeda and Talibs. The accuracy rose to an astonishing 95% in 2010. This assertion was corroborated by Pak security official Maj Gen Ghayur Mehmood, who commands troops in North Waziritan, in a March 9 media briefing. Between 2007 and 2011, he said, 164 drone strikes had carried out and over 964 bully boyz had been killed. Of those killed, 793 were foreigners - Arabs, Uzbeks, Tajiks, Chechens, Filipinos and Moroccans.

When drones kill a key thug leader or fighter, the Ittehad-e-Mujahedeen-e-Khurasan (IMK), a relatively less-known alliance of all local and foreign thug outfits, kill innocent people belonging to local Utmanzai and Dawar tribes, accusing them of spying. The murders have created more hatred for the foreigners. Most of the killings are carried out by Uzbek and Arab members of the IMK, tribal elders say.

Some Pak thug groups have abandoned the IMK because of the brutal ways in which they murder people. "We tried our best to reform the IMK but repeated attempts to correct them failed," Bahadur said in a recent statement issued after pressure from local Wazir rustics.

It is pertinent to mention here that with the help of bully boyz led by Nazir, the Ahmadzai Wazir tribe of South Waziristan successfully flushed out Uzbek bully boyz of IMU from Wana and other Wazir-dominated areas of the region in a spring 2007 uprising sparked by the brutality of the Uzbeks.

Similarly, the tense relationship between local and foreign thug outfits operating in North Waziristan has been displayed several times in the past, particularly in November 2006, when the IMU and the IJU accused Bahadur of betraying them and jumping into the government camp by demanding their eviction from the North Waziristan. Differences between Gul Bahadur and Central Asian thug outfits were solved after the Haqqani Network intervened.

Security experts say that the Haqqani Network has been playing the role of bridge between the local and foreign thugs, especially Pak and Afghan Taliban and Al Qaeda. It was the Haqqani Network that brokered a truce between the Nazir-led thug group and the TTP in South Waziristan when they were fighting over expulsion of Uzbek bully boyz from the region, said a Bannu-based journalist, adding that that the Haqqani Network has strong presence not only in North Waziristan but also in South Waziristan, Kurram and Orakzai tribal agencies.

The Shia Turi tribes of neighbouring Kurram Agency
...home of an intricately interconnected web of poverty, ignorance, and religious fanaticism, where the laws of cause and effect are assumed to be suspended, conveniently located adjacent to Tora Bora...
say the growing drone attacks that killed dozens of Al Qaeda, Haqqani Network and TTP leaders, and the US pressure on Pak government to begin an operation in North Waziristan, has increased the importance of Kurram for the Haqqani Network. The network will also find in Kurram Agency new passages into Afghanistan, especially with help from former TTP leader Fazal Saeed Haqqani. And it will bring new problems for the Shias of Kurram Agency.
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India-Pakistan
Gunmen kill senior Pakistani Taliban commander
2011-06-28
[Dawn] Gunmen riding in a car with tinted windows near the Afghan border on Monday shot and killed a senior Pak Taliban capo who helped train and deploy the group's jacket wallahs, Pak intelligence officials said.

Shakirullah Shakir was riding on a cycle of violence near Miran Shah, the main town in the North Wazoo tribal area, when he was shot, the officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity
... for fear of being murdered...
because they were not authorized to talk to the media.

Shakir was a senior commander and front man for the Fidayeen-e-Islam wing of the Pak Taliban. He once claimed to a local newspaper that his group had trained more than 1,000 suicide bombers at camps in North Waziristan.

No group has grabbed credit for his killing.
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India-Pakistan
Suspects arrested for Marriott bomb attack
2008-10-02
(AKI/DAWN) - Pakistani police have arrested four brothers in a village in the centre of Punjab province in connection with the devastating bomb attack on the Marriott Hotel in Islamabad.

The men were arrested near Toba Tek Singh after returning from Dubai a few days ago.
The men were arrested near Toba Tek Singh after returning from Dubai a few days ago.

Source told the Pakistani daily, Dawn, the men were being investigated about their alleged involvement in the Marriott Hotel suicide attack which killed more than 50 people and injured 260 others on 20 September. The four have been identified as Imran Afzal, Hameed Afzal, Majeed Afzal and Kamran Afzal. Local police officials said they had no information about the raid or the arrests.

A little-known Islamist group calling itself the Fidayeen-e-Islam>Fidayeen-e-Islam claimed responsibility for the bombing while calling for an end to US involvement in Pakistan. Soon after the bomb attack five other suspects were arrested by Pakistani police but it is unclear whether they have been charged.
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India-Pakistan
Pakistan: British diplomats' children to be evacuated from capital
2008-10-02
(AKI) - Diplomatic staff in the Pakistani capital, Islamabad, will be required to send their children back to the United Kingdom, the British Foreign Ministry announced on Wednesday. Some 60 children are to leave Pakistan in the next few days.

The Foreign Ministry said the decision followed a review of security for British diplomatic staff in Islamabad after the deadly bombing there last month of the five-star Marriott Hotel. It advised British citizens against staying in hotels frequented by Westerners.

The attack on 20 September killed more than 50 people and injured 260 others at the Islamabad Marriott, a hotel popular with diplomats and foreign visitors, as well as the Pakistani elite. Nine people have been arrested connection with the bombing, which was claimed by a little-known Islamist group calling itself the Fidayeen-e-Islam.

The British Foreign Ministry said it was offering the spouses of diplomatic staff in Islamabad the opportunity to return to the UK if they wished. "A number of other diplomatic missions in Islamabad have recently taken similar steps," the Foreign Ministry stated, adding that London's move was not a reaction to any specific threat.
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India-Pakistan
All rights reserved!: TTP asks Fidayeen-e-Islam to change name
2008-09-27
Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) has demanded the Fidayeen-e-Islam>Fidayeen-e-Islam, a militant outfit that has claimed responsibility for the September 20 bombing of the Marriott hotel in Islamabad, change its name, the BBC Urdu reported.

Taliban spokesman Zulfikar Mehsud told BBC from an undisclosed location that the TTP already had an organised subsidiary branch with the name of Fidayeen-e-Islam, which he said had nothing to do with the Marriott bombing, and it would be better for the group, calling itself Fidayeen-e-Islam, to use another name. According to BBC, the TTP announced the establishment of Fidayeen-e-Islam -- a group consisting of would-be suicide bombers -- in February 2007. The organisation was, however, not heard of following the announcement.
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India-Pakistan
Pakistan: Al-Qaeda linked militants threaten new attacks
2008-09-25
(AKI) - The Islamist militant group, Fidayeen-e-Islam>Fidayeen-e-Islam, on Wednesday threatened to carry out fresh terrorist attacks in Pakistan.

The Al-Qaeda-linked group that claimed responsibility for the devastating bomb attack on the Marriott hotel in Islamabad at the weekend, threatened to target those "who help American forces in the country".

A mobile text message signed by an alleged spokesman for the group was sent to the Arab television network Al-Jazeera. It had the same initials that had been used to claim responsibility for the Marriott attack that killed at least 53 people and injured 266 others.

It also threatened to attack Sadruddin Hashwani, proprietor of the hotel targeted in central Islamabad on Saturday. "What the Pentagon said concerning the death of two marines in the attack on the Hotel Marriott is false," the text message said. "Because at the time of the hotel attack it was full of marines, CIA agents, the FBI and European diplomats."

Until this week, the Fedayan al-Islam was a little known militant organisation. The group is based in Pakistan's tribal areas and connected at the hip to leading militant Baitullah Mehsud. It said the aim of the Marriott attack was to remove "American crusaders" from Pakistan and stop them interfering in the government, the military and the media.
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India-Pakistan
Pakistani spies hear Qaeda celebrating Marriot blast
2008-09-24
A group that claimed responsibility for bombing the Marriott Hotel in Islamabad had not previously been heard of, but Pakistani intelligence eavesdroppers heard Al Qaeda operatives celebrating the attack. The suicide truck bomb that killed at least 53 people and gutted the hotel on Saturday has raised fresh fears about worsening security in Pakistan. A group calling itself Fidayeen-e-Islam (Partisans of Islam) claimed responsibility in a call to an Islamabad-based correspondent for Al Arabiya, an Arab news channel. "It's either new or it might be a distraction," said a senior intelligence officer. "What we do know is that there was a lot of celebration among the lower ranks of Al Qaeda." Three members of a Pakistani group known for Al Qaeda ties were caught in Gujranwala as a result of electronic surveillance hours after the Marriott blast, according to another intelligence officer. Arabiya reported that the group that claimed responsibility issued several demands, including that Pakistan ends co-operation with the United States. Many Pakistanis already say that the alliance with the US incites militant violence and Pakistan should not be fighting 'America's
war'.
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India-Pakistan
Pakistan: Al-Qaeda groups linked to bomb attack, say experts
2008-09-23
(AKI) - By Syed Saleem Shahzad - Pakistan's Tehrik-i-Taliban has denied any involvement in the devastating bomb attack at the Marriott hotel in Islamabad at the weekend.
"Nope. Nope. Wudn't us."
But sources close to Adnkronos International (AKI) reveal that particular Pakistani groups linked with Al-Qaeda, such as Fidayeen-e-Islam, may have been behind the attack as Pakistan is about to embrace a new partnership with US forces.

The suicide bomb that targeted the hotel in the heart of the capital, killed at least 53 people and injured more than 266 others, a short distance from the country's parliament building. There were conflicting reports that Pakistan's political and military leaders were expected to dine at the hotel on Saturday night and changed their plans at the last minute.

Former Pakistani spy master, Retired Lt. General Hamid Gul said that the militants had watched their target for days and then selected a vehicle carrying construction materials and loaded the vehicle with over 600 kilogrammes of explosives.

There could be a variety of reasons for the selection of Hotel Marriott as a target. No one is certain whether political leaders were the targets.

Pakistan's advisor for interior Rehman Malik said that the Speaker of the National Assembly Dr Fahmida Mirza planned to host a dinner for President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gillani at the hotel, but the venue was changed at the last minute.

However, there is no precedent of any such high profile dinners being hosted at the Marriott or any other hotel. The hotel's management also denied any booking, which has raised questions about whether the government is trying to cover up its incompetence for failing to provide security to its citizens and to the foreign nationals and also failing to arrange effective firefighting to extinguish the fire.

According to reports, it took two hours for firefighters to charge their batteries so that they could use power hose. In addition, authorities did not have snorkels to reach the upper floors of the building and rescue people.

Sources said that militants took their action, not simply because of conflict in the Bajaur agency near the Afghan border, but broader US plans in the region against which militants carried out a pre-emptive strike.

Only 20 kilometres from Islamabad lies Tarbella, headquarters of Pakistan's Special Operation Task Force (SOTF) and 300 US officials recently arrived here to offering training to their Pakistani colleagues. However, highly placed security sources confirmed that this is not simply a training programme.

In the mid-1990s, during the government of former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, a special CIA unit was located at the same place in a bid to catch Osama Bin Laden but due to a military coup in 1999, the unit could not achieve its targets and was asked to abandon the facility.

There is speculation that the preparations are setting the stage for a war theatre in Pakistan's troubled North West Frontier Province and is aiming to setup a powerful push from all four side around the sanctuaries of the militants belonging to the Taliban and Al-Qaeda led by Osama bin Laden.
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