India-Pakistan |
Karachi sectarian attacks |
2016-11-06 |
![]() ...formerly the capital of Pakistain, now merely its most important port and financial center. It is among the largest cities in the world, with a population of 18 million, most of whom hate each other and many of whom are armed and dangerous... , sectarian killings in the metropolis continue, putting a question mark on official claims. Within a week, over 10 people have been murdered in the Sindh capital in suspected sectarian attacks. On Friday, six people were bumped off in different parts of Karachi. Three men, reportedly workers of the banned Ahle Sunnat Wal Jamaat ...which is the false nose and plastic mustache of the murderous bannedextremist group Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistain, whatcha might call the political wingof Lashkar-e-Jhangvi... , were rubbed out while returning from a rally organised by the outfit. In the other incidents, two members of the relatively apolitical Tableeghi Jamaat, along with a prayer leader, were murdered in separate incidents. The killings come in the wake of the recent attack on a women’s majlis in Nazimabad, in which five people, including three brothers, were murdered. Police say Friday’s violence could be a reaction to the earlier incident. On Saturday, police took into custody former PPP senator Faisal Raza Abidi in connection with the killing of the Tableeghi Jamaat members. It is hoped these acts of violence do not inspire more tit-for-tat attacks. Community leaders, Learned Elders of Islam and the state must all play their role in ensuring communal harmony. However, we can't all be heroes. Somebody has to sit on the curb and applaud when they go by... it should be reiterated that there is no Shia-Sunni conflict at the communal level in Pakistain as such. This country has thankfully been spared much of the communal frenzy witnessed in certain Middle Eastern states. Here, outfits like Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistain ...a Sunni Deobandi organization, a formerly registered Pak political party, established in the early 1980s in Jhang by Maulana Haq Nawaz Jhangvi. Its stated goal is to oppose Shia influence in Pakistain. They're not too big on Brelvis, either. Or Christians. Or anybody else who's not them. The organization was bannedin 2002 as a terrorist organization, but somehow it keeps ticking along, piling up the corpse counts... (ASWJ’s old name) and its more virulent spin-off 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 ... have, over the past three decades, played an instrumental role in bringing the culture of takfir (declaring others as being outside the pale of Islam) to the mainstream, along with physically eliminating the sectarian ’others’. This, in response, gave rise to Shia bully boy groups such as Sipah-e-Mohammad. Throughout this period, the state’s response to the growth of sectarian militancy has been dismal, as ’banned’ outfits have operated with relative ease. Hence, to put an end to the recurring cycles of sectarian violence, the state must permanently dismantle the outfits that provide the ideological and material support for violence. |
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India-Pakistan |
182 banned outfits members arrested in two days in Punjab |
2015-08-27 |
[DAWN] The Punjab 1.) Little Orphan Annie's bodyguard 2.) A province of Pakistain ruled by one of the Sharif brothers 3.) A province of India. It is majority (60 percent) Sikh and Hindoo (37 percent), which means it has relatively few Moslem riots.... Counter Terrorism Department, in association with the intelligence agencies, placed in durance vile Drop the heater, Studs, or you're hist'try! as many as 182 members of various banned outfits, including 39 from Lahore, during search operations in the past two days. A CTD front man said a list of more than 500 members of banned outfits, including 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) and Sipah-e-Mohammad (SM), was prepared jointly by intelligence agencies and CTD spy wing. He said it was decided in the regional coppers (RPOs) conference that the members of banned outfits operating in different areas of the province would be arrested. Following the meeting, a campaign was launched against such elements, he added. He said during the drive, 182 banned outfits members had been taken into custody from different regions and efforts were being made to track down others. "As many as 39 members of LeJ and SM residing in different areas of the quiet provincial capital have been arrested and shifted to undisclosed locations for interrogation", he said. He said in the light of intelligence reports search operations were being carried out with the collaboration of intelligence agencies in different areas, including Mustafa Town, Cantonment, Green Town, Badami Bagh, Johar Town and Masson Road. He said there were reports that these suspects had been in contact with hardcore terrorists. |
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India-Pakistan |
Six members of banned outfits arrested |
2015-01-26 |
[Dawn] CHAKWAL: Police have juggedPlease don't kill me! six members of three different outlawed organizations while an annual conference which was scheduled to be held on January 25 by the banned Ahl-e-Sunnat Wal Jamaat (ASWJ) in Talagang was also cancelled. Among those arrested are Haji Mohammad Sharif a resident of Chak Malook village, Qari Amir Shehzad, a resident of Uthwal village, Hafiz Murid Hussain, a resident of Waray village and Sajid Mehmood, a resident of Umarabad locality of Chakwal city. They are associated with the banned Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistain ...a Sunni Deobandi organization, a formerly registered Pak political party, established in the early 1980s in Jhang by Maulana Haq Nawaz Jhangvi. Its stated goal is to oppose Shia influence in Pakistain. They're not too big on Brelvis, either. Or Christians. Or anybody else who's not them. The organization was bannedin 2002 as a terrorist organization, but somehow it keeps ticking along, piling up the corpse counts... and its reincarnation ASWJ. Mohammad Javed, a resident of Dharukna village, is associated with the proscribed Jaish-e-Mohammad ...literally Army of Mohammad, a Pak-based Deobandi terror group founded by Maulana Masood Azhar in 2000, after he split with the Harkat-ul-Mujaheddin. In 2002 the government of Pervez Musharraf bannedthe group, which changed its name to Khaddam ul-Islam and continued doing what it had been doing before without missing a beat... and Ghulam Qasim, a resident of Dhoke Feroz, locality of Chakwal city, is associated with the banned Sipah-e-Mohammad Pakistain. Meanwhile, ...back at the palazzo, Count Guido had been cornered by the banditti... the annual conference of ASWJ which was scheduled to be held on January 25 was also cancelled few days before its due date. "Efforts to curb activities of proscribed outfits and to implement the law fully have been stepped up in the district," District Police Officer Dr Moeen Masood said. Meanwhile, ...back at the palazzo, Count Guido had been cornered by the banditti... four prayer leaders were also booked under the newly introduced Punjab 1.) Little Orphan Annie's bodyguard 2.) A province of Pakistain ruled by one of the Sharif brothers 3.) A province of India. It is majority (60 percent) Sikh and Hindoo (37 percent), which means it has relatively few Moslem riots.... Sound System Regulation Ordinance. |
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India-Pakistan | ||
Al-Qaeda in Pakistain: The Org Chart | ||
2014-02-03 | ||
This belief has not come out of the blue. It is part of an obscurantist narrative the state itself created and propagated. The problem with this narrative is that while it may have delegitimised some jihadi groups within public ranks, it is counter productive in the long run for a number of reasons. First of all, it fails to address the very ideology that promotes militancy and hence the state's failure to present an effective counter-ideology. Secondly, the jihadi groups simply have to prove that the state-promoted narrative is a "baseless lie" to win recruits, as indicated by scores of interviews of jihadis. The fact is that these groups are very much in existence and the ones who carry out attacks against Pakistain's civilians and armed forces have a clear and stated objective: to dominate and overthrow the Pak state. Unfortunately, the state has also promoted a concept of "good" and "bad" bully boys. This narrative itself has been problematic. There are often strong links between the "good" and "bad" jihadis that also take the form of material, logistical, manpower and other support. As Pakistain debates engaging the Islamist forces of Evil in the tribal areas and beyond, it is imperative that the policy-makers as well as the public understand the bully boy groups and their interrelations. Al Qaeda (AQ) Arguably the most dangerous out of all the jihadi groups, AQ is not just a conventional group but the fountainhead of a violent ideology. Headquartered in North Wazoo, it functions less as a coherent organization than as a world-wide infection. If a country is failing al-Qaeda will metastasize there. The organisation was founded at the end of the '80s by Osama bin Laden while he was in Afghanistan/Pakistan waging war against the Soviets. According to Al Qaeda literature, the organisation's ultimate goal is to establish a hardline global caliphate. It seeks to fight America and her "apostate" allies in the Muslim world. AQ isn't fighting for anybody's "rights," unless it's the "right" of holy men to declare people apostate and have them killed. While the organisation maintains a relatively low profile in Pakistan, it is behind much of the coordination between different jihadi groups in a bid to "channelise" and "streamline" the effort. The "relatively low profile" in Pak is about as subtle as a whack in the shin with a 16-pound hammer. As an organization, it has ties with major Pak political parties, which'd be the Jamaat-e-Islami and both major branches of the JUI. Various ISI sahibs are ardent friends and admirers, such as Aslam Beg. Think of it as the Arab equivalent of the Insidious Doctor Fu Manchu's organization, which it appears to have been modeled upon. In contrast with many other jihadi groups, the overwhelming majority of their cadres in Pakistan are university graduates hailing from well-off urban families. Al Qaeda regards Pakistan as a "Daar-ul-Kufr wal harb" (abode of disbelief and war). It classifies the rulers as "apostates" against whom it is obligatory to rebel and fight. Qaeda is tightly intertwined with the takfir wal hijra ideology, in which pretty much anyone who disagrees with you on any subject, to include what's for dinner, is an apostate and it's fine to kill them and their families. Al-Qaeda considers Shias as disbelievers "in the garb of Islam". As such, the militant organisation considers it permissible to shed the blood of Shia Muslims and confiscate their wealth. However on strategic grounds, the Al Qaeda chief has advised the operatives not to engage minority groups anywhere in a confrontation unless "absolutely required" such as in Syria and Iraq. The organisation rejects the concept of nation-states. It seeks to expand the theatre of war, topple governments in Muslim countries and form a global caliphate. cf. the novels of Sax Rohmer. Change "Chinese" to "Arab" and you've pretty much got it. Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) Formally launched in 2007, the TTP is effectively Al Qaeda's local franchise in Pakistain. Among anti-state jihadi groups here, TTP maintains the strongest footprint with operatives all over the country. TTP does on a Pak level what Qaeda does on a world-wide level: it coordinates the activities of a dozen or so kindred groups. The Pak Talibs are kinda sorta distinct from the Afghan Talibs, but only to the extent that Pak Talibs are in the habit of going to Afghanistan to kill infidels. Mullah Omar's organization is headquarters in Quetta, despite repeated Pak denials, and doesn't seem to carry out attacks within Pakistain. Various branches of the TTP profess allegiance to Mullah Omar, which doesn't stop them from leaving a trail of carnage in Pak. Its stated objective is to turn Pakistan into an "Islamic state" as envisaged by Al-Qaeda. The group regards the leader of the Afghan Taliban, Mullah Umar, as its supreme leader. Though not always openly declared, the TTP maintains strong relations with the Afghan Taliban, with both groups providing each other strategic backyards in their respective countries. As with Al-Qaeda, the TTP regards Pakistan as a "Daar-ul-Kufr wal harb" (abode of disbelief and war) and considers its rulers apostates. Therefore they must be killed. Pak rulers, on the other hand, consider the TTP a "strategic resource," slated to take over Afghanistan and provide "strategic depth." They can also be sent against India with rather implausible deniability, though implausibility has never stopped Pak from denying something. While the TTP also considers Shia Muslims to be apostates, there is currently a debate within the organisation on whether a front should be opened against them -- there is a difference of opinion over the strategic merits and demerits of indiscriminately targeting Shia Muslims. Some TTP commanders are arguing that other sects should not be targeted indiscriminately and only "certain elements" should be targeted. However, this debate does not affect their open cooperation with the Lashkar-i-Jhangvi. the fact that they're not killing Shias doesn't mean they're not going to, only that they have't started. They'll likely start with the Ismailis. And after them they're going to get the Brelvis. The Ahmadis, already having been declared non-Moslem, are already targets. The TTP is also increasingly looking at global operations. It has provided training to a number of radicals based in the West including Faisal Shehzad, who attempted to bomb Times Square in New York. Around 200 of its fighters have reportedly shifted to Syria. TTP run the training camps that the Pak govt sez don't exist in "their" country. Another case of implausible deniability. 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 ... Lashkar-e-Khorasan Al Qaeda allied group with a single point agenda to track down and eliminate "spies" in North Wazoo. This is AQ's local counterintelligence arm. "Khorasan" is Afghanistan. Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU) The IMU was founded by Tahir Yuldashev and Jumma Kasimov (both Uzbeks) in 1991. The two had earlier fought in Afghanistan during the Soviet invasion of the country. The initial objective of the organisation was to topple Islam Karimov's regime in Uzbekistan and to establish an "Islamic state" in the country. They also fought alongside the Taliban against the Northern Alliance. Kasimov died in the fighting while Yuldashev, along with his fighters, managed to escape into Pakistan's tribal areas during the 2001 US invasion of Afghanistan. IMU maintains strong contacts with Al Qaeda and Afghan Taliban as well as the TTP. Within jihadi circles, its cadres enjoy the reputation of being ultra radical and diehard fighters. Its views on the Pakistani state are the same as that of AQ and TTP. IMU commanders say their focus should be on fighting Pakistan's armed forces. I view IMU as a part of AQ proper, rather than as an adjunct of TTP. TTP gives them "shelter," which means they get to play tough guy around the locals and marry into the local Pashtun structure. But they act, I believe, more like an imperial guard than as a regiment of Talibs. (Maybe things have changed over the course of the past ten or twelve years.) I believe they also include pretty much all the non-Arab foreigners under their banner: Chechens and Kazakhs and Turkmen and such riff-raff. I've never seen a reference to, for instance, the East Turkestan Islamic Movement being seen in the area, though there are Turkmen in Afghanistan. IMU members claim that Mullah Umar had promised its founding leader, Jummah Kasimov, that the Afghan Taliban would support the IMU in consolidating their position in Central Asian states once the Taliban are strong enough. For now, its focus remains on strengthening the group as it prepares for the war in Central Asia. Ansar al-Aseer A North Waziristan based group primarily concerned with the "welfare" of locked-up jihadis. Its tasks include intelligence gathering about Pakistani jails and planning jailbreaks to release militants. It is closely allied to TTP and draws many of its fighters from TTP and IMU. Its basic agenda is to free all militants locked up in jails across the country. Jundallah Al Qaeda affiliated group that started off from South Waziristan. It gained most notoriety for its assassination attempt on the then Corps Commander Karachi Lt Gen Ahsan Saleem Hayat. The outfit has also targeted Shia Muslims and foreign tourists. Not to be confused with Iran-based Jundullah. Ghazi Group A group formed after the Lal Masjid operation in Islamabad. It is named after Maulana Abdul Rasheed Ghazi, the former Lal Masjid cleric who was also killed in the operation. Most of its members are relatives and friends of the people killed in the 2007 operation. This group has practically merged with the TTP. Some of its members and sympathisers in and around Islamabad are known to provide intelligence and a footprint in the capital. Members of the group consider it a priority to target former president Pervez Musharraf. I believe this was formed from the participants in the Lal Masjid operation, the one that the legal decision said was really the govt's fault. Rather than imposing shariah on everybody in sight they've simply become the local branch of TTP. But they started out as wannabe TTP. The remaining six Splinters, subdivisions, and shadow groups: Ansar al-Mujahideen A small organization affiliated with the TTP. Its primary focus is targeting armed forces personnel and politicians. Among others, the group is responsible for the killing of the former Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa ... formerly NWFP, still Terrorism Central... Law Minister Israr Gandapur. As with AQ and TTP, Ansar al-Mujahideen aims to turn Pakistain into an "Islamic State" and use the state to launch "jihad" against other belligerent states. I believe these guys used to be contendahs, but now they're just so 1999 and everybody devout moved on to join the TTP. I believe that applies to most of the rest of the splinters, as well, with the exception of LeT, which is an arm of ISI. The other bully boys: Lashkar-e-Taiba ...the Army of the Pure,an Ahl-e-Hadith terror organization founded by Hafiz Saeed. LeT masquerades behind the Jamaat-ud-Dawa facade within Pakistain and periodically blows things up and kills people in India. Despite the fact that it is banned, always an interesting concept in Pakistain, the organization remains an blatant tool and perhaps an arm of the ISI... Formed in the early 90s in Afghanistan, the group has been primarily operating in Indian-held Kashmire. It seeks to "liberate" the people of Kashmire from "Indian oppression" and establish an Islamic state" in the region. It sees India, the United States and Israel as eternal enemies of Islam and boasts about defeating them through armed struggle. Hafiz Muhammad Saeed ![]() ...who would be wearing a canvas jacket with very long sleeves anyplace but Pakistain... , the head of Jamat-ud-Dawa denies that his charity is simply a cover for the banned bully boy outfit. However the lower cadre not only acknowledges their connection with LeT but proudly boast about their operations in India. In line with their particular brand of Salafism, the organization is strongly opposed to rebellion against the Pak state. They say that while the ruling elite are living in a state of sin, rebelling against them is not permissible. Largely avoiding questions about other Mohammedan sects, the LeT says there should be unity within the Ummah and the priority should be to target the "real enemy" -- the US, India and Israel, as they say. Members of the group say they are bracing themselves for the Ghazwa-e-Hind -- a grand war in which Mohammedans will regain control of India, they claim. Jaish-e-Muhammad (JeM) Jaish-e-Muhammad was formed in 2000 by Maulana Masood Azhar. Shortly after its inception, it effectively swallowed a previously existing but now largely defunct Harkat-ul-Mujahideen (HuM). Its primary goal is to "liberate" Kashmire from Indian rule and it has carried out various attacks on Indian interests including the 2001 attack on Indian parliament. The group was banned by then President Pervez PervMusharraf ... former dictator of Pakistain, who was less dictatorial and corrupt than any Pak civilian government to date ... and rebranded itself as Khuddam-ul-Islam. It continues to engage in open fundraising outside many Pak mosques on Fridays. Tehrik Ghalba-e-Islam The group emerged as an offshoot of Jaish-e-Muhammad after serious differences emerged between various commanders. TGI is led by Commander Abdul Jabbar and operates primarily in Afghanistan. Publicly, the organization opposes rebellion against the Pak state. It stresses on its cadre to focus on Afghanistan. Jaish al-Adal The group has recently emerged in parts of 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... bordering Iran. It has targeted Shia Mohammedans and claims to be countering Iranian interference in Pakistain. The group also seeks to extend the theatre of war into Iran. Shia militancy: Sipah-e-Muhammad Pakistain The group was formed in the 90s in response to the anti-Shia violence perpetuated by Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistain ...a Sunni Deobandi organization, a formerly registered Pak political party, established in the early 1980s in Jhang by Maulana Haq Nawaz Jhangvi. Its stated goal is to oppose Shia influence in Pakistain. They're not too big on Brelvis, either. Or Christians. Or anybody else who's not them. The organization was bannedin 2002 as a terrorist organization, but somehow it keeps ticking along, piling up the corpse counts... (SSP). It maintains a very low profile and seeks to primarily target leaders of anti-Shia bully boy organizations such as SSP and LJ. Its leader Syed Ghulam Raza Naqvi has been in prison since the mid-90s. Pak intelligence agencies claim the group is backed by Iran in a bid to extend its influence in the region. We've been watching the Pak press for twelve years now. I can't recall having seen Sipah-e-Mohammad involved in anything. They're included on lists like this to imply there's some sort of Shia insurgency as well. If everybody does it then it's not just Ahle-Hadith and Deobandi and those sorts of upstanding folk. What's not included on the list: There are a couple organizations that aren't included on the list, possibly because they're simply regarded as being a part of AQ with no differentiation anymore. The Haqqani Network Is a family- or tribal-based organization, originally led by Jalaluddin Haqqani. Jalaluddin's getting on in years, and leadership has fallen to Sirajuddin, his eldest son. Jalaluddin actually recruited OBL and Abdullah Azzam. The Haqqani family comes from southeastern Afghanistan and belongs to the Mezi Clan of the Zadran Pashtun tribe. Jalaluddin was probably the most successful Pashtun leader in the anti-Soviet war, despite Hekmatyar's claims to preeminence. I believe the Haqqanis and the Arabs running AQ should be pretty thoroughly intermarried by now. They're active on both sides of the Pak-Afghan border. Hafiz Gul Bahadur Gul Bahadur coordinates with AQ but he's on the outs with the TTP, running his own operation. I think the differences are tribal. He's affiliated with Fazl's branch of the JUI. | ||
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India-Pakistan |
Sindh security agencies keeping watch on suspected militants |
2007-11-26 |
![]() Deputy Inspector General (DIG) of the Crime Investigation Department (CID) Saud Ahmed Mirza confirmed that they have been busy but said that there is only so much they can do. We can just gather the data and maintain profiles on suspect militants, terrorists and activists. There is a main role for the police to play, he said. The DIG did not know exactly how many people have been taken into custody or how many people have been released with a warning. When asked if Qari Zafar, who is in charge of Al Qaedas car bombing cell, and/or Mufti Ilyas are currently gearing up for more attacks, he said that he couldnt give any specifics. The media knows everything well enough, he added. A source said that over 100 activists from different banned organizations, such as the Sipah-e-Sahaba, Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, Jaish-e-Mohammad, Sipah-e-Mohammad, and members of the Qari Zafar and Mufti Ilyas groups have been taken into custody. Most were released after interrogation but some are still being held. Local police, the CID, the Special Investigations Unit (SIU) and other security agency personnel are busy gathering data, the source said. The interrogation of inmates is also in progress, he added. Some areas are being monitored. A number of mosques are also being watched and plainclothes have been deputed throughout the city. One suspect militant, who was taken into custody, told Daily Times that he was interrogated by the police at different locations. The police kept me for two days and when they let me go they gave me a warning and said that I have to stay in touch with them on a weekly basis or theyd put me in jail, he said. The main questions the police asked him centred on what his group was up to. |
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Afghanistan/South Asia |
Jihadi graffiti gone from walls, but there's still a fire down below! |
2005-04-21 |
![]() The jihadi organizations claim that the campaigns may have been wiped off the walls of Lahore, but campaigns to collect funds and jihad campaigns continue underground. However, a senior city police official tasked with countering jihadi activities claims the government's vigorous crackdown on these outfits has managed to rid Lahore of its 'jihadi face'. "Still I can't say that we have a permanent solution at hand as these organizations keep resurfacing again and again. But the major operational outfits like Sipah-i-Sahaba, Sipah-e-Mohammad, Hizbul Mujajideen, Hizbut Tehrir and Lashkar-e-Taiba have been dismantled and dispersed. They are on the run and they can't continue openly what they have been doing," said the police officer. However, the religious organization that sponsor donation camps and jihadi campaigns say that they are still doing what they were doing and have only changed strategy. "If someone thinks we have stopped, that's wrong. We have not budged an inch from our point of view on jihad and Kashmir," said Yahya Mujahid, spokesman for Jamaatul Dawaa, formerly known as Lashkar-e-Taiba. "All you can say is that we are keeping a low-profile on our activities as the government has cracked down on us, but we'll never accept what is happening between India and Pakistan," said Mujahid. "Lashkar-e-Taiba is being run by our brothers in Kashmir and they demonstrated with attacks on the Kashmir bus that policy has not changed," added Mujahid. "There is lot of support for Jamaatul Dawaa here in Pakistan and we are sure that the momentum in Kashmir will pick up," said Mujahid. Jamaat-e-Islami's city leader Ameerul Azeem echoed these views. "We have just changed our strategy from donation camps to door-to-door campaigns. We still do the wall chalking etc but the government's crackdown makes us campaign door-to-door. We won't change our point of view nor policy on Kashmir or jihad," said Azeem. Hafiz Riaz, a central leader of JUI (Fazl), another religious organization that has never been involved in Kashmir but led the resistance against Soviets and Northern Alliance in Afghanistan, said that his group has never been involved in graffiti nor donation campaigns for jihad in Kashmir. However, Riaz tried to sum up the issue: "Look, these campaign were run by government institutions and now they are being closed down by the government itself. So, what's the big deal?" |
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Afghanistan/South Asia |
2004-11-01 |
![]() Three suspects, including an office-bearer of the outlawed Sipah-e-Mohammad, have been detained in raids in various localities of Faisalabad. Punjab police sources said that the raids in Faisalabad were carried out to arrest Amjad Shah, a resident of Bhakkar. However, he had left the place when the police raided. A heavy police contingent also raided his Bhakkar house and arrested five members of his family, including his father and father-in-law. His father-in-law and one cousin have been set free after questioning, but the others will remain in the custody of the law enforcers without any lawful justification for well over a week, they said. As many as 10 people have been detained in Multan and Bahawalpur. The police in these districts have been asked by the law enforcement agencies to pay more attention to underground activities of sectarian suspects. Meanwhile, the Punjab police have been directed to make efforts to arrest all sectarian proclaimed offenders and court absconders. |
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Afghanistan/South Asia | ||||||||
Sami wants to expand MMA with jihadi elements | ||||||||
2004-04-02 | ||||||||
Link requires registration Maulana Samiul Haqâs faction of the Jamiat-e-Ulema Islam is devising a plan to widen the existing membership of Mutahidda Majlis-e-Amal, a six-party religious alliance, in order to cut into the influence of the two major parties â Jamaat-e Islami and rival JUI-F â it alleges have made the alliance a virtual hostage. The move comes in the wake of simmering tensions in the MMA between the four smaller parties and the two bigger ones. The fact that the 4 âsmaller partiesâ barely got any votes is a big reason they are being ignored by the JI and JUI-F âWe want to see in our ranks many of those parties and groups that were part of the Milli Yakjehti Council (MYC) but were not included in the MMAâs political alliance format,â the deputy secretary general of JUI-S, Mufti Usman Yar Khan, told TFT.
The succesor to the MYC was the Pakistan-Afghan Defence Council, which didnât really go anywhere.
Thatâs because the Deobandi militias were allowed to operate as small armies since they were fighting in Afghanistan and Kashmir, and the sectarian groups recruited directly from them. The Shias werenât used in those conflicts, and so their groups were cracked down on by the state. But the JUI-S is trying to play its hand cleverly. The party seems to be moving towards getting other groups in by going through the âjihadiâ groups. âWe do not reckon Lashkar-e-Taiba and banned Jaish-e-Mohammad as enemy organisations and consider them as patriotic as anyone else in Pakistan,â JUI-Sâ Khan told TFT. Interestingly, police and intelligence officers are very clear about the sectarian linkages of Jaish. The group is also accused of trying to mount attacks on General Pervez Musharraf. JUI-S sources say party leaders have met with Dawa leader Hafiz Mohammad Saeed recently in Lahore where the proposal of pulling the group into the Alliance has been discussed. The JUI-S leaders have also held meetings with former chief of the Inter-Services Intelligence, Lt-Gen (Retd) Hameed Gul and discussed the issue of expansion with him. âYes, our leaders have met Hameed Gul Sahib to discuss some important matters relating to national politics,â a senior party leader confirmed to TFT. Khan even hints at the possibility of a âdirect or indirectâ presence of General Gul in the future MMA setup. âWe want to make the alliance more viable and acceptable for more religious groups and General Gul is a patriot who has rendered enormous services for the Islamic cause,â Khan says.
Poor Sami, if he had gotten enough votes, he could have been offered a similar deal, as it is, he is having to attack Fazl and Qazi from the âRightâ. It is not clear whether Hafiz Saeed of al-Dawa has accepted the JUI-S proposal but the latter which claims the formation of the Taliban regime in Afghanistan along with its rival Fazlur Rehman faction, is optimistic about Dawaâs inclusion. There are also elements within the MMA who want to open the Alliance to the entry of the banned Millat-e-Islamia Pakistan (formerly Sipah-e-Sahaba) of late Azam Tariq, but the Shia element in the religious alliance is resisting these moves.
"So sit down and shut up." | ||||||||
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Afghanistan/South Asia |
Massacres of Shias in Iraq & Pakistan - The Background |
2004-03-05 |
Ex-Indian intel chief who detects the presence of Pakistanis in the latest attacks in Iraq. Suprise! Still, it has interesting info, although iâm not sure how serious to take it, especially concerning Zarqawi. To understand the anti-Shia massacres at Karbala and Baghdad in Iraq and at Quetta in Pakistanâs Balochistan during the Muhurrum procession on March 2, 2004, one has to go back to the creation of Pakistan in 1947. When Pakistan was formed in 1947, the Shias were amongst the major land-owners of Pakistanâs Punjab, its granary, and many of the Sunnis, who migrated to Pakistan from Indiaâs Punjab, were largely poor landless farm workers, who had to earn their livelihood in their country of adoption by working in the farms of the Shias. The perceived exploitation of the Sunnis by the Shia landlords started the process of the polarisation of the two sects of Islam in Pakistan. This sectarian polarisation largely due to economic reasons was given a religious twist by Zia-ul-Haq, Pakistanâs military dictator of the 1980s. To counter the growing political assertiveness of the Shias and their political party, the Tehrik-e-Jaffria (TEJ) Pakistan, which generally supported Benazir Bhuttoâs Pakistan Peopleâs Party (PPP), he encouraged and assisted Sunni extremist organisations such as the Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan (SSP). With his blessings, the SSP challenged the right of a woman to come to political power and projected the Shias and Nusrat Bhutto, the mother of Benazir, as the surrogates of Iran. The SSP also started calling for the declaration of the Shias as non-Muslims and for the proclamation of Pakistan as a Sunni State. The virulent anti-Shia ideology of the SSP was also exploited by the intelligence agencies of the USA and Iraq in their attempts to destabilise Iran and have the Shia clergy ruling Teheran overthrown. As a result of the support from the Saddam Hussain regime, the SSP, which was an anti-Pakistani Shia and not an anti-Iran movement, started targeting the Iranians living in and visiting Pakistan too in the 1990s. There were many attacks on Iranian civilians, diplomats and military officers coming to Pakistan for training. Conspiracy theorists have always been interested in the links between Iraq and Lashkar-e-Jhangvi on one hand, and between LeJ and Ramzi Yousef on the other. There is the usual murkiness involving the ISI, since LeJâs leader, Riaz Basra was arrested and handed over to the ISI, and then somehow he died in a police encounter several months later. Many notorious Pakistani and Arab terrorists such as Ramzi Yousef, Maulana Masood Azhar of the Jaish-e-Mohammad (JEM), Fazlur Rahman Khalil of the Harkat-ul-Mujahideen (HUM) and Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, a Jordanian, started their career as terrorists as members of the SSP and participated in many of its anti-Shia massacres in Pakistan, Iran and Afghanistan. When al-Zarqawi, along with some other Jordanians, many of them of Chechen ancestry, came to Pakistan in the 1980s to join the Arab mercenary force trained and armed by the CIA and the ISI and used against the Soviet troops in Afghanistan, his passport gave his name as Fadel al-Khalayleh, which is believed to be his real name. On June 20, 1994 Ramzi Yousef and al-Zarqawi, at the instigation of the Iraqi intelligence, caused an explosion at Mashad in the Iranian territory adjoining Pakistan which killed a large number of Shias. Zarqawi, along with the late Riaz Basra, the leader of the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LEJ), the militant wing of the SSP, helped the Taliban in the capture of Kabul in September, 1996. The LEJ subsequently helped the Taliban and Al Qaeda in the massacre of the Hazaras of Afghanistan. Osama bin Laden never liked Saddam, whom he looked upon as an apostate because of his secular and socialist policies, and the proximity of the LEJ and al-Zarqawi to Saddamâs intelligence agency created differences between them and bin Laden. Despite this, the LEJ joined bin Ladenâs International Islamic Front after it was formed in 1998 and has remained loyal to bin Laden. So, presumably, has Zarqawi. Iraqi support to the SSP and Lashkar-e-Jhangvi is largely accepted, just as Iranian support for the Sipah-e-Mohammad is also assumed. Till 2002, the anti-Shia activities of the LEJ were confined to Punjab and Sindh. Balochistan remained largely free of anti-Shia incidents. The situation changed after the arrest of Khalid Sheikh Mohammad by the Pakistani authorities at Rawalpindi in March, 2003 and his handing over to the USAâs Federal Bureau of Investigation. It was reported that KSM had fled from Karachi to Quetta in September 2002, after the arrest of Ramzi Binalshibh and from there shifted to Rawalpindi fearing betrayal by the Hazaras of Balochistan, who were suspected of helping the US agencies in their hunt for bin Laden because of their anger over the massacre of the Hazaras of Afghanistan before 9/11. It is this suspicion, which was behind two anti-Shia incidents in Quetta last year. In the first, Hazara policemen under training and in the second in the first week of July, 53 Shia worshippers were killed. The massacre of the Shias in Quetta on March 2 was in reprisal partly for their suspected collaboration with the Americans in their hunt for bin Laden and partly for the murder of Maulana Azam Tariq, the leader of the SSP, last year, allegedly by Shia extremists. That would explain why Baluchistan has seen such major sectarian attacks all of a sudden.. Even before the invasion, terrorist elements of the IIF started moving to Iraq via Saudi Arabia and Iran for starting a jihad against the Americans. The first group to go was from the Harkat-ul-Mujahideen (HUM). They went to Saudi Arabia as Haj pilgrims and from there crossed over to Iraq. Subsequently, Arab-speaking volunteers of the Lashkar-e-Taiba (LET) and the LEJ also started going to Iraq in small numbers. Many of the Arabs of Chechen ancestry, originally belonging to Jordan and Saudi Arabia, who were in the South Waziristan area of the FATA, also joined them. Of those who have gone to Iraq from Pakistan, only the members of the LEJ had indulged in anti-Shia massacres in Pakistan and Afghanistan in the past and could be expected to indulge in similar massacres in Iraq without any hesitation. The Iraqi resistance fighters are unlikely to indulge in the kind of massacres carried out at Karbala and Baghdad on March 2. The needle of suspicion, therefore, strongly points to the LEJ. Their action in targeting the Shias of Iraq arises partly from their deeply-ingrained anti-Shia reflexes and partly is a reprisal for the perceived collaboration of the Shia leaders of Iraq with the American troops. If al-Zarqawi wanted to promote a civil war in Iraq by instigating Shia-Sunni clashes, as alleged by US officials, the LEJ, with which he has had a history of association in the past and which would not hesitate to massacre Shias anywhere in the world, would be the ideal tool in his eyes. This theory approaches the anti-Shia attacks from a completely different direction than most, but it doesnât explain the reports of Farsi speakers being arrested. Although we donât know if they were actually involved in the attacks or not. |
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India-Pakistan | ||
Intelligence reports fear new jihadi groups | ||
2003-10-31 | ||
Registration Required While the government continues to battle extremist Islamist groups within the country as well as remnants of Al Qaeda-Taliban in areas adjacent to Afghanistan, intelligence agencies report the likely emergence in the near future of new sectarian groups. These reports say militants from banned sectarian outfits like Sipah-e-Mohammad Pakistan, Sipah-e-Sahaba, Lashkar-e-Jhangvi and even splinters groups of these organisations are in the process of forming new terror groups. âWe have indications that they want to begin a new and more deadly round of sectarian violence,â says an official, adding: âThe Deobandi sectarians are spoiling to avenge Azam Tariqâs murder.â Sipah-e-Mohammad Pakistan is a Shia sectarian outfit, although it is much less active that its Deobandi counterparts. One such report even talks about the formation of a group in Karachi and Quetta with the sole objective of avenging the killings of Hazara in Quetta in two major terrorist incidents in June and July. Thirteen police recruits, all Shia Hazara, were killed in an ambush in Quettaâs Saryab neighbourhood in June while more than fifty people of the same community were massacred in an attack on an imambargah in Quetta. âWe fear that there will be new actors in these groups, harder to identify and perhaps more indoctrinated,â says a police officer. Officials also refer to a speech by Abdul Ghafoor Hyderi, a leader of the slain sectarian firebrand Azam Tariqâs Millat-e-Islamia Pakistan. Hyderi warned at a demonstration in Karachi of the possible formation of âLashkar-e-Azamâ if the government failed to arrest the killers of Tariq. Tariq, along with three gunmen and a driver, was killed in a drive-by shooting in Islamabad on October 6. Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, or Army of Jhangvi, was named after Haq Nawaz Jhangvi, the founder of Sipah-e-Sahaba, who was assassinated by Shias a decade ago. Intelligence officials are taking these threats very seriously. âThe undercurrents are similar to those in 1996 when Lashkar-e-Jhangvi was formed and went on a killing spree,â says an official. Most observers think the situation could get worse than in the mid-nineties. âThe situation is chaotic and it is difficult to keep track of all these groups and their agendas. The sectarians can morph into jihadis and vice versa overnight. Then there is the war on terrorism and the groupsâ linkages. Itâs just a nightmare for law enforcement agencies,â says a top official.
A recent report also says five proscribed outfits have grouped under the codename of 313 (the number of companions with the Prophet (pbuh) at the battle of Badr) to target key political and religious leaders and professionals. Four of its members are Harkat-ul Mujahideen, Jaish-e-Mohammad, Harkat-ul Ansar and Harkat-e-Jihad-e-Islami. These self-styled jihadi groups have linked up with Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, a sectarian terrorist group accused of killings hundreds of Shias. However, some specialists who have watched the working of these outfits closely doubt the report. They contend that there is no example in the past of an alliance between sectarian and jihadi outfits. âThey have different agendas and objectives,â says one such analyst. They have the same agendas and objectives, and are in most cases the same people, they simply have different focuses, but they both wish to see a greater Pakistan, including Kashmir and Afghanistan, and they want to see the Shias apostesised so that Pakistan becomes a Deobandi-Sunni state. Police officers have a different opinion. âWe have evidence that there is no difference between jihadi and sectarian groups. Their cadres keep moving from one job to another,â he said.
Probably true enough, but Masood Azhar cares more for making money than Jihad too, as long as they recruit enough cannon fodder with incendiary speeches, the money will keep rolling in. Masood Azhar was chief of his outlawed militant outfit Jaish-e Muhammad (JeM) before he renamed his party in December 2001 as Tehrik al-Furqan fearing its possible inclusion in the US State Departmentâs list of terrorist groups after the State Department spokesperson Richard Boucher hinted that the Bush administration was concerned over the alleged âterroristâ activities of Jaish-e-Mohammad and was considering placing it on the terrorist list. It was further renamed Khudam-ul Islam after the party leadership feared yet another ban on it. Khudum ul Islam (Servants of Islam), is the biggest Deobandi Jihadi outfit in Pakistan, and incidently it has almost no Pashtun members, it is overwhelmingly Punjabi. Related reports suggest the police in Karachi fears as much threat from militants of sectarian as from the jihadi organisations. âWe have a report that says a number of leaders of the religious and sectarian groups and professionals, doctors in particular, are on the hit lists of terrorists. I cannot give you the exact number of such persons because we are updating our data frequently,â Sindh chief ministerâs advisor for home affairs, Aftab Shaikh told TFT. Shaikh conceded the government has received reports of possible attacks on foreign diplomatic missions, Western targets, including multinationals and food franchise outlets, churches, imambargahs and mosques. âWe are prepared for any contingency,â he told TFT. | ||
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India-Pakistan | |||
CID arrests militants | |||
2003-10-21 | |||
The Crime Investigation Department (CID) of the Sindh police has arrested four suspected militants of banned sectarian outfits and is interrogating them in various cases of terrorism in the city reported lately. The sources said the CID arrested three activists of the outlawed Sipah-e-Mohammad Pakistan who are suspected to be involved in many acts of sectarian terrorism in Punjab.
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