Abdul Wahid Kashmiri | Abdul Wahid Kashmiri | Al-Mansurian | Afghanistan-Pak-India | 20051031 | Link | ||||
Abdul Wahid Kashmiri | Lashkar-e-Taiba | Afghanistan/South Asia | Pakistani | At Large | Supremo | 20020106 | |||
Pakistani of Kashmiri origin and operates from the Pakistani town of Bahawalpur |
India-Pakistan |
Terror groups trying to shift focus from Kashmir valley to Jammu: Jitendra Singh |
2021-02-22 |
[OneIndia] Terrorist groups and their handlers were trying to shift the focus from Kashmir![]() Azad (Free) Kashmir. The remainder they refer to as "Indian Occupied Kashmir". They have fought four wars with India over it, the score currently 4-0 in New Delhi's favor. After 72 years of this nonsense, India cut the Gordian knot in 2019, removing the area's special status, breaking off Ladakh as a separate state, and allowing people from other areas to settle (or in the case of the Pandits, to resettle) there.... valley to the Jammu region, Union Minister Jitendra Singh said on Saturday. He called for the "highest level of vigil" on the part of the security forces and alertness among the general public in the wake of these developments. This and other issues were discussed during a meeting between Jammu and Kashmir's director general of police (DGP) Dilbag Singh and the minister during their meeting here, officials said. The police chief also briefed the minister about the security situation in the Union Territory. Jitendra Singh said that the security forces had earned all-round appreciation for the way they had thwarted some major terror incidents in Jammu recently. He, however, noted the "recent phenomenon" of terrorist groups and their handlers trying to shift the focus from Kashmir valley to the Jammu region including the Jammu city, the officials said. This calls for the highest level of vigil on the part of the security forces and at the same time, alertness and awareness among the general public, Singh said. The minister of state for personnel conveyed his appreciation for some of the major recent breakthroughs and achievements of the Jammu and Kashmir police and the par-military forces. At the same time, he expressed concern over the selective terrorist attacks like the one on the son of the owner of popular Krishna Dhaba in Srinagar. The DGP informed the minister that within 24 hours all the three culprits, including the shooter involved in the attack on the Krishna Dhaba proprietor, have been nabbed. Aakash Mehra, the son of the Dhaba owner, was shot at from a close range and critically maimed on Wednesday evening. The Moslem Janbaz Force, a terror outfit that was active in the early 1990s, had grabbed credit for the attack. Related: Jammu: 2021-02-21 Two associates of Lashkar arrested in J&K Jammu: 2021-02-20 Top logistic provider of Hizbul Mujahideen arrested by NIA Jammu: 2021-02-20 LeT terrorists killed in Shopian encounter; 1 cop martyred Related: Krishna Dhaba: 2021-02-20 Two cops martyred in terror attack at Bagat Barzulla area of Srinagar |
Link |
India-Pakistan |
Lashkar-e-Taiba Commander Abdul Wahid Kashmiri Surfaces for First Time in a Decade |
2010-04-01 |
On March 23, 2010, Pakistan-based jihadist organizations organized a conference in the town of Kotli in Pakistani Kashmir. The conference was addressed by, among others, two prominent jihadist commanders - Syed Salahuddin and Abdul Wahid Kashmiri. Salahuddin is the Supreme Commander of Hizbul Mujahideen, one of the militant organizations fighting against Indian security forces in the Jammu & Kashmir state, and also heads the Muttahida Jihad Council, a network of nearly two dozen Pakistan-based militant organizations. The Kotli meeting, which was billed as the "Defence of Pakistan Conference" and held on the Pakistan Day of March 23, was attended by hundreds of people and addressed by leaders of various jihadist organizations. Among the militant leaders who addressed the public meeting were Shaikh Jamilur Rehman of the militant organization Tehreekul Mujahideen, Bakht Zameen of Al-Badar Mujahideen, Maulana Farooq Kashmiri of Harkatul Mujahideen, Masood Sarfraz of Hizb-e-Islami (Jammu & Kashmir), General Abdullah of Jamiatul Mujahideen, Mufti Mohammad Asghar of Jaish-e-Mohammad, Mohammad Usman of Muslim Janbaz Force, Chaudhry Kamran of Al-Jihad Force, Ghulam Mohammad Safi, Mahmood Ahmed Saghar and Rana Iftikhar Ahmed, and others. It should be noted that Pakistani Kashmir, formally called Azad (free) Jammu & Kashmir, is an area heavily fortified by the Pakistani military. Most of the mainstream Pakistani newspapers did not publish reports about the conference, as they normally refrain from doing so due to fears of the displeasure of the military-led establishment in Pakistan. The conference took place while Pakistan Army Chief General Ashfaq Kayani and Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi, a;ong with a number of Pakistani officials, were in the U.S. for the March 24 Pakistan-U.S. Strategic Dialogue. |
Link |
India-Pakistan |
ISI pressing Indian terror suspects to launch attacks |
2010-03-25 |
Indian terror suspects who are enjoying the patronage of Pakistan's ISI are being pressed to launch terror attacks in the country. Official sources said many terrorists who have been given protection for quite a number of years have been asked to prove their worth or face consequences. This was revealed during investigations into the alleged plans of Sikh militant group Babbar Khalsa International men to plant a bomb in the national capital and Himachal Pradesh. Sources said the men were being provided directions by Pakistan-based Wadhwa Singh and Parminder Singh, who figure in dossier of wanted terrorists passed to Pakistan recently. "The men have been provided cover for so long. There are no free lunches in the world. They have to show their worth to enjoy the shelter of the ISI," a source said. He said attempts are being made by certain men to re-group and launch attacks on country's stability. Sources said that with Commonwealth Games scheduled later this year, the terror groups being provided all help by ISI are under more pressure to launch attacks but are jittery over busting of various modules by police across the country. They said the efforts are to launch an attack and try to project the country as unsafe before the Games. They said the strategy would be to launch an attack through various groups based here rather than by those from outside the country. Incidentally, on Wednesday, hundreds of armed militants including top LeT commander Abdul Wahid Kashmiri and Hizb-ul-Mujahideen chief Syed Salahuddin had gathered in Kotli town of Pakistan occupied Kashmir (PoK) vowing to wage 'jihad' against India. |
Link |
India-Pakistan |
Pak terror leaders call for |
2010-03-24 |
![]() Among the dozen speakers who addressed the gathering were top LeT commander Abdul Wahid Kashmiri and Hizb-ul-Mujahideen chief Syed Salahuddin, who also heads the United Jihad Council, an umbrella organisation of all the militant groups active in Kashmir. Leaders of the Jamaat-ud-Dawa, declared a front for the LeT by the UN Security Council, also attended the rally. Kashmiri said the LeT will continue supporting the Kashmiri people "until they achieve freedom from India". In his address, Salahuddin said jihad is the "only way" to liberate Kashmir as "diplomacy, talks and negotiations" over the past few decades "have not worked". "We reject talks between India and Pakistan as a hoax because dialogue can never lead to the freedom of Kashmir," said Salahuddin. "Therefore, we strongly believe that the Kashmir dispute can be settled only through jihad," he said. A resolution adopted at the rally said: "Jihad will continue until India ends its occupation of Kashmir." Salahuddin also accused Pakistan's former military ruler Pervez Musharraf of having stabbed the Kashmiris in the back when they were "nearing their freedom". About 5,000 people attended the rally in Kotli, located about 80 km from Islamabad. Militant groups based in PoK had maintained a low profile over the past few years. However, there has been a marked spurt in their activities in recent months. |
Link |
India-Pakistan |
LeT commander furious at JuD chief |
2009-01-16 |
Chief operational commander of Lashkar-e-Taiba (LT) Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, arrested on December 10 by the Pakistani authorities in the wake of the Mumbai attacks, is furious at the Jamaat-ud-Daawa (JuD) leadership's decision to publicly disown him in his hour of trial instead of trying to bail him out. According to circles close to the Pakistani authorities, involved in grilling Lakhvi to ascertain whether the LT is actually involved in the Mumbai mayhem, the commander is extremely hurt by a recent statement from a JuD spokesman that both the arrested Lashkar leaders Zakiur Rehman and Zarar Shah never had any link with either Hafiz Mohammad Saeed or the JuD. In a bid to shield Saeed, JuD spokesman Abdullah Muntazir told the Times of India on January 9, 2008: "In any case, Lakhvi and Zarar, the two men India is talking about, were never associated with the JuD, which has always been into charity work only." It had been conveyed by Hafiz Saeed himself in the wake of the Mumbai terror strikes, the spokesman said, adding there were elements in the Pakistan government that wanted to target religious organisations. Circles close to Hafiz Saeed say there was nothing new in the JuD spokesman's stance as its leadership had repeatedly denied any link with them. But a former LT office-bearer -- now a part of the JuD -- confirmed on condition of anonymity that Lakhvi was extremely upset over the U-turn taken by his former close associates and complains they had abandoned him at a time when he desperately needed their backing. Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, alias Abu Waheed Irshad Ahmad, comes from the Okara district of the Punjab province. Ajmal Amir Kasab, the lone Mumbai attacker caught alive by the Indian authorities, belongs to the same area. Born on December 30, 1960 to the lower middle class family of Hafiz Azizur Rehman in Chak No. 18 of Rinala Khurd in Okara, Lakhvi is considered to be a close associate of Hafiz Saeed and has been named by Ajmal Kasab as his trainer as well as the planner of the Mumbai carnage. While Pakistan has already turned down an Indian demand for Lakhvi's extradition despite American pressure, the JuD has deemed it fit to disown him. In 1988, Abu Abdur Rahman Sareehi, a Saudi national and allegedly a close associate of Osama bin Laden, founded in Afghanistan's eastern province of Kunar an organisation which recruited Afghan youths and Pakistanis from the Bajaur Agency to fight Soviet occupation troops in the Central Asian country. Sareehi, the brother-in-law of Zaki Lakhvi, is believed to have contributed a hefty amount of Rs10 million to the construction of the Muridke headquarters of the Lashkar-i-Taiba, called the Markaz Daawa Wal Irshad, way back in 1988. The organisation flourished in Kunar and Bajaur areas as thousands of youths from Pakistan belonging to the Deobandi Salafi school of thought instantly joined its camps set up in Afghan provinces of Kunar and Paktia, both of which had a sizable number of Ahle Hadith (Wahabi) followers of Islam, besides hundreds of Saudis and Afghans. International media reports say Zaki Lakhvi was one of the main trainers at the Kunar camp of anti-Soviet militants. As the Lashkar had joined the Afghan jihad at a time it was winding down, the group did not play a major part in the fight against the Soviet forces, which pulled out in 1989. However, the participation of the Lashkar cadres in the Afghan jihad helped its leaders, particularly Hafiz Saeed and Zaki Lakhvi, win the trust of the Pakistani establishment. The insurgency in Jammu and Kashmir, beginning in 1989, came at an appropriate time to provide an active battleground for the Lashkar fighters when its leadership was made to divert its attention from Afghanistan and devote itself to the jihad in Kashmir, where it gained fame. As Lakhvi was subsequently made the supreme commander of the military operations in Jammu and Kashmir, his prime responsibility was to identify young men and indoctrinate them in jihad. In an April 1999 interview to an English daily from Muzzaffarabad, Lakhvi said: "We are extending our Mujahideen networks across India and preparing the Muslims of India against India. When they are ready, it will be the start of the break-up of India." A few months later, at the three-day annual congregation of the LT held at its Muridke headquarters, 30 kilometres from Lahore, Lakhvi justified the launching of fidayeen missions in Jammu and Kashmir. He continued: "Following Pakistani withdrawal from the Kargil heights and the Nawaz-Clinton statement in Washington, it was important to boost the morale of the Kashmiri people... These fidayeen missions have been initiated to teach India a lesson as they were celebrating Pakistani withdrawal from Kargil. And let me tell you very clearly that our next target would be New Delhi." Incidentally, the Indian parliament was attacked later on December 13, 2001. Subsequently, the US State Department declared the Lashkar a terrorist outfit, followed by a similar decision by the Musharraf regime. The LT later renamed itself as Jamaat-ud-Daawa (JuD) in a bid to separate its military actions in Kashmir from its religious undertakings in Pakistan. While stepping down as the Lashkar ameer at a press conference in Lahore on December 23, 2001, Hafiz Saeed appointed Maulana Abdul Wahid Kashmiri as his successor. But Lakhvi was retained as the supreme operational commander of the LT. However, differences soon erupted between Saeed and Lakhvi over distribution of the organisation's assets, prompting the latter to revolt against Saeed and launch his own splinter group with the name of Khairun Naas (KuN). Their animosity grew to the extent that some of the Zaki-led rebel group members -- largely consisting of LT fighters -- reportedly took oath to assassinate Hafiz Saeed. According to Saeed's aides, he first came under fire from Zaki when he decided to launch JuD and separated the LT infrastructure from the Jamaat. Lakhvi, being the chief operational commander of the LT, disapproved of the decision, saying it was meant to put the JuD in control of all the funds collected locally and abroad. He was of the view that as heavy donations were being collected in the name of the Kashmir jihad from all over Pakistan as well as abroad, the JuD leadership had no right to the money because it was only a preaching organisation. Sources close to Lakhvi revealed many of the dissident aides to Saeed were basically annoyed at his second marriage with a fallen mujahid's 28-year-old widow. Saeed was 58 at the time of his marriage and had justified his act by saying the wedding was only meant to provide shelter to the widow of the fighter, who had lost his life in Jammu and Kashmir and had left behind two kids. However, a year later, Saeed and Lakhvi were made to mend fences and the two were the best of friends at the time of the 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks. But Zaki Lakhvi had already moved the LT headquarters from Muridke to Muzaffarabad by then. In July 2006, the Indian authorities alleged that Azam Cheema, a LT operative accused of being the ring leader in the 2006 bombing of the Mumbai rail network [that killed over 200 people] was trained and sent to the Indian port city by Lakhvi. The Mumbai police commissioner then claimed that an arrested militant, Abu Anas, has confessed to being the bodyguard of Lakhvi. In May 2008, the US Treasury Department announced freezing the assets of four LT leaders including Lakhvi. In October, 2007, Lakhvi's 20-year-old son Mohammad Qasim was reportedly killed in an encounter with the security forces at the Gamaroo village in Jammu and Kashmir's Bandipora area. In the aftermath of the Mumbai attacks, the Indian authorities alleged Zaki Lakhvi, usually based in Muzaffarabad, had moved to Karachi in August 2008, the port city from where LT militants set off, so he could direct operations. The sole survivor of the Mumbai attacks, Ajmal Kasab, apparently told police Lakhvi had helped indoctrinate all the attackers. On December 3, 2008, India finally named him as one of four major planners behind the Mumbai terror attacks. And that he had allegedly offered to pay the Kasab family Rs150,000 for his participation in the assaults. On December 7, 2008, the Pakistani security forces arrested Lakhvi after raiding the JuD headquarters in Muzaffarabad. The Indian dossier handed over to Pakistan on January 5 includes transcription of intercepted telephonic conversation between the Mumbai attackers and Lakhvi. However, circles close to the arrested LT chief operational commander reject the Indian dossier as a pack of lies and insist Lakhvi has nothing to do with the Mumbai strikes. |
Link |
India-Pakistan |
Lashkar-e-Tayyaba linked to Mumbai attacks? |
2008-12-01 |
Lashkar-e-Tayyaba (LT) -- the group suspected of training the Mumbai attackers -- was established to fight Indian rule in Kashmir and has past links to Pakistani intelligence and Al Qaeda. The group is on the US watch-list of terrorist organisations and is banned in the UK and several other countries. Founded by Hafiz Mohammad Saeed in 1989 as the military wing of the Islamic centre Markaz Dawa-wal Irshad, it is headquartered in Muridke near Lahore. Saeed is known to have received funds from Saudi donors and Pakistani intelligence to launch his group, which subsequently acquired land in Muridke to organise militant cells and training. An LT spokesman in Srinagar denied the group was involved in the Mumbai attacks, but it has been named in several other attacks in India. When LT was blamed for the 2001 attacks on Indian parliament, it brought India and Pakistan to the brink of war. The group denied any involvement, but Pakistani authorities outlawed it in 2002, shortly before which Saeed left LT to set up a charity. Now run by Qari Abdul Wahid Kashmiri, the group currently maintains a low profile in Pakistan and focuses its activities in IHK. |
Link |
India-Pakistan |
Police kills Lashkar's Ops chief |
2008-07-07 |
Inspector General of Police, Kashmir Zone, S. M. Sahai told press persons at a news conference that police acting on specific information about the presence of two 'dreaded Lashkar-e-Taiba militants' in Naina Batapora Sangam area of south Kashmir launched an operation there. He said a Police party from Anantnag in association with CRPF and troops of 55 RR conducted the operation jointly this morning. Sahai said that when the area was being searched the security forces came under militant fire and grenade attack. The forces retaliated and in the ensuing encounter two militants of Lashkar-e-Taiba were killed, he said. The slain militants have been identified as Abu Atif alias Sadak, resident of Gujranwala, Pakistan and Syed Moin another Pakistani national. Large quantity of arms and ammunition including two AK rifles and magazine were recovered from the slain militants. According to police the slain militant Atif was active in the area for the last ten years and presently was operational chief of Let outfit not only for valley but for planning attacks in different parts of the country. He was instrumental in attack on CRPF personnel at Rampur, and at Science Congress in Bangalore by supplying arms to the militants who attacked it. Besides killing of Station House Officer Police Station Pampore, Inspector Manzoor Ahmad in the year 2006 and killing of a computer operator Qazi at Pampore. He was also responsible for killing of at least fifty civilians and security force personnel in South Kashmir Range, Sahai claimed. IGP further said that Atif was also responsible for grenade attack on tourists in Shalimar and Charsoo Sangam. Another militant killed was his body guard. Meanwhile according to NAK, Lashkar's chief spokesman Dr Abdullah Gaznavi in a telephonic statement, said that chief of his organization Qari Abdul Wahid Kashmiri has paid tributes to the slain commanders who were killed during a day long gun battle with the Indian forces. He said that the slain commanders were among the experts of the organization and LeT will never forget their services they rendered for the cause. He said the commanders would be remembered in the history of Kashmir struggle and claimed that the sacrifices given by the militants for the 'just Kashmir cause' will not go waste. (NAK) |
Link |
Afghanistan-Pak-India |
LeT shares cadres, ammo, and cash with al-Qaeda |
2005-10-31 |
Lashkar-e-Taiba, which is the primary suspect in the serial bomb blasts in New Delhi, has close links with the global terrorist outfit Al-Qaida, besides Palestinian terrorist outfit Hamas. "We have strong inputs that the cadres, ammunition and funds are shared by al-Qaeda with LeT," a top intelligence officer told TOI. According to a senior state police officer, Lashkar is a sister or an ally of al-Qaeda because ideologically and nature wise they are alike. Both seek rule of Nizam-e-Mustafa in the world. Lashkar, according to the intelligence sources was born out of the forces that fought in Afghanistan against Russians in 1980s. The success in Afghanistan gave the confidence to Pakistan that it had the expertise to create terrorists and it was in 1983 alone that Markaz-e-Dawa-ul-Irshad set up its terrorist wing Lashkar-e-Taiba to establish pan-Islamic rule in the world. "Since then Lashkar has closely worked and sought assistance from Al-Qaida," an intelligence officer said. LeT set up its base in J&K in early 1990s and has succeeded in establishing its modules in all Indian states which have substantial population of Muslims. These modules comprise well educated and computer literate Sunni Muslim boys between 20-30 years of age, as per sources in Intelligence Bureau (IB). Only Sunnis are recruited because the group propagates Sunni Wahabism, the pan-Islamic doctrine. The Indian Muslim members of Lashkar are never promoted as top commanders in the organisation. The first and the second rung leadership level is always held by Pakistan nationals. Lashkar is headed by Hafiz Mohammad Sayeed based at Lahore, Pakistan. After being banned, LeT has been reorganised into two supposedly exclusive bodies, one devoted to preaching of Islam under Hafiz Muhammad Saeed and the other to carry on its violent campaign under the leadership of Kashmiri scholar Maulana Abdul Wahid Kashmiri. It has also taken up its new name as Al-Mansurian in Jammu and Kashmir. It has further divided the leadership into two wings for carrying out violent activities with an agenda to enforce Nizam-e-Mustafa, the Muslim rule in India. One head looks after operations in J&K and the other commander deals with terrorist activities in India. |
Link |
Terror Networks |
Pak freezes Lashkar assets |
2001-12-24 |
Of course Lashkar's not a Pakistani organization. It's... It's... Slovenian, that's it. Damn those Slovenes! |
Link |
India-Pakistan |
New Lashkar head is a Pak, too |
2002-01-06 |
Fits in with my expectation that the leadership would remain where it's safe and warm and cozy, while the cannon fodder went across the border to shoot people and get killed. As my sainted father used to say, "Tough guys always end up working for smart guys." And the smart guys consider themselves too important to let themselves be killed in action. |
Link |