Afghanistan |
Daily Evacuation Brief October 5, 2022 |
2022-10-05 |
[AfghanDigest] LAST 24 HOURS
CONFLICT TRACKER No confirmed reports of conflict in the past 24 hours. NEXT 24 HOURS TALIBAN SECURITY IN KABUL INCREASED – Perhaps in response to the deteriorating situation, several sources across two ministries have reported that security has been increased in most Police Districts across the city. The Shiite neighborhoods in Western Kabul and Tajik neighborhoods in Northern Kabul seem to be the exceptions. A source with the Ministry of the Interior claimed they are having difficulty manning these sectors as the security forces believe they will be killed or injured if they stay at their posts. The source went on to say that intelligence agents will infiltrate Mosque worshippers over the next month for Friday prayers in an attempt to interdict potential suicide bombers. This activity is scheduled to begin this coming Friday. |
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Afghanistan |
U.S citizen missing in Afghanistan, family claims he is in Taliban custody |
2022-10-05 |
[KhaamaPress] An Afghan-American national who had travelled to Afghanistan for working purpose has gone missing in Kabul for over 8 weeks now, a family member said. Mahmood Shah Habibi, the former Afghan Aviation Authority Chief who had recently travelled to Afghanistan is missing since August 10, Ahmad Shah, Habibi’s brother told Khaama Press. "He has been working as an advisor with a telecom company in Shash-Darak of Kabul for the last 3 years and he did not have any issues being in Afghanistan after the fall of the country in the hands of Taliban ...the Pashtun equivalent of men... ", Ahmad Shah said. He used to travel between Afghanistan and the United States in the last 12 months without any problem, but the last time he travelled in August was detained by the Taliban’s forces from his home in Shairpur, Habibi’s brother said. "Not only Habibi, but 29 other employees of the same company were also arrested on the same day, many of whom were later released", Ahmad Shah said. We tried to reach out to the Taliban’s Ministry of Interior and also to the Intelligence Directorate to find out why he has been detained and when will he be released, but they did not provide us any answer, Ahmad Shah added. According to Habibi’s brother, the incident has been reported to the U.S Department of State to seek the U.S government’s help for his release. "The U.S Department of State has promised to get in touch with the Taliban and negotiate with them on Habibi’s release, but we have not received any further update from the U.S government yet", Ahmad Shah said. A U.S Department of State official speaking to Khaama Press confirmed that they are aware of US citizens being detained in Afghanistan and said they urge US citizens not travel to to Afghanistan as the risk of violence and kidnapping against the U.S citizens are high in Afghanistan. The U.S government source communicating with Khaama Press did not provide further details on Habibi’s case saying they would not comment due to privacy considerations. A close source to the Taliban’s administration who does not want to be named in Khaama Press report confirmed that on August 10, the Intelligence Department arrested Mahmood Shah Habibi, the Afghanistan’s former Aviation Authority Chief with several other employees of Asia Consultancy Group (ACG), an Afghan-American company that works in the telecom sector. The case in the connection of which Mr. Habibi and his colleagues have been arrested is relatively very serious, the source told Khaama Press, but did not provide further details. This comes as several other former Afghan officials who had returned back to Afghanistan following the statement published by the Taliban’s administration about the safe return of former officials and tribal leaders, many of those whom had returned have reportedly left the country again. Salam Rahimi, Chief of Staff for the former Afghan President, Mohammad Ashraf Ghani ![]() returned to Kabul few months ago and was warmly welcomed by the Taliban’s Foreign Minister, Amir Khan Muttaqi. A source close the the Taliban in the condition of anynomity told Khaama Press that Salam Rahimi had to flee again through Iran’s route after spending nearly two weeks in prison. |
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India-Pakistan |
Woman killed in 'indiscriminate' shelling by Indian troops across LoC |
2019-01-10 |
![]() Neelum Deputy Commissioner Raja Mahmood Shahid told Dawn that "indiscriminate" shelling by Indian troops began at about 8:50am in the morning and continued till 2pm intermittently, during which the troops targeted civilian population in district headquarters Athmuqam and its surrounding hamlets. A mortar shell landed in the courtyard of a house in Bugna village on the outskirts of the district headquarters, killing Sajida Bibi, a 35-year-old mother of six, he said. "Splinters from the shell pierced through her neck, causing huge loss of blood that led to her on the spot death," the deputy commissioner said after visiting the aggrieved family. Shahid handed over a cheque of Rs0.3 million on behalf of the AJK government to the heirs of the dear departed woman. According to the deputy commissioner, Pak forces gave a "befitting response to the unprovoked shelling by Indian forces." It’s for the second time that Indian troops have directly targeted civilian population of Athmuqam in less than two weeks. |
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India-Pakistan |
Arrests, killings betray forces’ frustration: Lashkar-e-Taiba |
2018-04-25 |
[GREATERKASHMIR] Condemning the arrest of youth across Valley particularly in south Kashmire, the Lashkar-e-Taiba![]() 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... (LeT) chief Mahmood Shah today said, "It is strange that while India on the one hand is forcing the freedom fighters to lay down their weapons, but at same moment it is arresting the Hurriyat leaders and spilling the blood of innocent youth." "This deceit will not last any longer than now. The counter-attacks by the turbans and their support by the public has frustrated the Indian forces so much that they are asking the freedom fighters to lay down their weapons, which in itself is against their code," the LeT front man Dr Abdullah Ghazanwi, in a statement to KNS, quoted Mahmood Shah as having said. He said, "In reality, India is seeking a safe exit from Jammu Kashmire. Be it the disguise of fake promises of negotiations or the use of barbaric force by Indian Forces, all are nothing but to sabotage the indigenous freedom struggle of Kashmiris. The freedom struggle of Jammu Kashmire is in its decisive stages. The public, Hurriyat leaders and the holy warrior are on the same page which is evident from the statement of Indian Army Chief." Mahmood Shah has appealed to the human rights ...which are usually entirely different from personal liberty... organizations to use diplomatic efforts to force Indian government to release Syed Asiya Andarabi, her activists and others. |
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India-Pakistan |
Eight Corpses Found in Pakistan as Jets Bomb Militant Hideouts |
2014-12-04 |
[AnNahar] The bullet-riddled bodies of eight suspected turbans have been found in Pakistain's restive northwest where the military is battling krazed killer groups, officials said on Wednesday. Troops recovered the eight corpses late Tuesday after they were spotted by local residents in the Khyber tribal district, where Taliban and Lashkar-e-Islam ...a group of Islamic bandidos infesting Khyber Agency. It's headed by a former bus driver.... fighters are based. Five bodies were recovered from one place and three from another, a senior government official in Khyber told AFP on condition of anonymity. A second official in Khyber confirmed the recovery. The army launched a fresh offensive in Khyber district this year against Death Eater group Lashkar-e-Islam, led by warlord Mangal Bagh ...a former bus driver, now head of the Deobandi bandido group Lashkar-e-Islam and the Terror of Khyber Agency ![]() who has joined hands with the homegrown Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistain (TTP). Neither the military nor rival turbans claimed the killings. But troops have in the past been accused of the extra-judicial killing of captured turbans in the region. Retired brigadier Mahmood Shah, a former security chief for the tribal areas, told AFP the deaths could also be a result of infighting among Death Eater groups. Separately, 15 turbans were killed on Wednesday as jets hit their hideouts in North ![]() An intelligence official told AFP the planes bombed a meeting place for forces of Evil in Datta Khel village, and said the dead included six Arabs and seven Uzbeks. It was not possible to independently verify the casualties. Pakistain's semi-autonomous areas have long been a hideout for Islamist turbans of all stripes -- including Al-Qaeda and the TTP as well as imported muscle. Pak jets and artillery began targeting rebel strongholds in North Waziristan in mid-June and ground forces moved in on June 30. The army says it has killed more than 1,100 turbans and lost more than 100 soldiers since then. An AFP tally based on regular updates from the military puts the Death Eater corpse count at more than 1,500, with 125 soldiers killed. Meanwhile in the southwestern city of Quetta, capital 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... province, two coppers from an elite unit were killed while patrolling on a cycle of violence by unknown gunnies. Officials said that three men riding another motorbike chased the coppers on the city's Saryab road and sprayed bullets at them. One policeman was killed at the spot while the other died in a hospital. Balochistan, Pakistain's largest but least developed and most sparsely populated province, is racked by Islamist Death Eaters, banditry, a separatist revolt and sectarian violence between Sunnis and Shiites. |
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India-Pakistan |
After jihad: Abandoned ... |
2014-08-04 |
![]() ...Tehreek-e-Nafaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi (Movement for the Enforcement of Islamic Law) is a Pak militant group whose objective is to enforce their definition of Sharia law in Pakistain whether anybody wants it or not. It was founded by Sufi Muhammad in 1992, and was banned by President Musharraf in January, 2002 after Sufi dispatched several thousand yokels to Afghanistan to fight the infidel and ended up with most of them killed or captured and held for ransom. In 2007 TNSM took over Swat, which shows how well the banningworked. TNSM is the Pony League of Islamic militancy.. ) chief Maulana Sufi Mohammad. "I often try to remember my father's face but it is difficult for me to visualise him, because I was just four years old at that time," says Bin Yameen. A resident of Barawal Bandi village in the Upper Dir district of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa ... formerly NWFP, still Terrorism Central... , Bin Yameen laments that his family was unable to stop his father from leaving for Afghanistan along with the other villagers. He was adamant about supporting the Afghan Taliban in their fight against American forces. "We are five sisters and three brothers. Four of my sisters are elder to me," says Bin Yameen. "It was difficult for my mother to meet the family's monthly expenses after my father left for the war in Afghanistan." According to locals of various districts in Malakand division, over 10,000 people aged between 30 and 55 left for Afghanistan in 2001 to fight the US forces, on the directions of Maulana Sufi Mohammad. His organization, TNSM, was banned in 2002 by former President General (retired) ![]() PervMusharraf ... former dictator of Pakistain, who was less dictatorial and corrupt than any Pak civilian government to date ... . Not many of Sufi's jihadis returned home, not many have any traceable whereabouts either. Over time, Bin Yameen's devastated family came to terms with their loss. The young mother focused all her energies on raising her children, while Bin Yameen's uncle took on the financial responsibility of providing for the family. And yet, a great burden was also placed on Bin Yameen's young shoulders. "In the mornings, I study; I am enrolled in class IX at the Government High School Chukyatan, which is some 4km away from my village. After school, I work in the vegetable market," explains Bin Yameen. When asked how he manages balancing studies and work, he says that it is difficult but he has no option. "My mother successfully arranged the marriages of four of my sisters, but I am still responsible for providing for my mother, two younger brothers and one more sister." Bin Yameen takes his younger brother, 16-year-old Ameenullah, to work as well the family supplements its income in any way they can. But unlike Bin Yameen, Ameenullah neither has a fleeting memory of his father nor has he ever seen a picture of him over the last 14 years. "I was two years old when he left," says Ameenullah. Their family attempted to search for Baligh Jan in Kabul, but all efforts came to naught. "When my uncle visited Kabul to search for my father, all he returned with was an assurance by Red Thingy officials that they will try to locate him in Afghan prisons," says Bin Yameen. "Our mother has become mentally ill because of the continuous tension." Meanwhile, ...back at the chili cook-off, Chuck and Manuel's rivalry was entering a new and more dangerous phase... Ameenullah always feels his father's absence on occasions such as Eid or "when the fair comes to our village." In Qader Kalay village of Upper Dir, 64-year-old Safia Bibi saw her son leave for Afghanistan in 2001 and her husband die soon after. She now works as domestic help in the homes of the rich. "My 30-year-old son, Badshah Zada, worked as a labourer before leaving for Afghanistan. I advised him to cancel his plans but he refused; he was enamoured by jihad," says Safia Bibi. Badshah Zada left his wife and two children in the care of his aging parents. After his father's demise, his mother assumed the role of sole breadwinner of the household. "I wish my son had refused to follow the rhetoric and directions of Sufi Mohammad," she says wistfully. Unlike blue-collar Badshah Zada, 30-year-old Mohammad Mursaleen Khan was teaching at a local seminary in his native Qader Kalay. Like Badshah Zada, he also left for jihad. His 62-year-old father, Mohammedan Khan, is forced to work as a security guard of a school in Upper Dir city to meet the family's monthly expenses. "Why would I be forced to work in this age if my son had not followed the directions of the TNSM chief?" he asks. Twenty-eight-year-old Abdullah Jan works in Soddy Arabia ...a kingdom taking up the bulk of the Arabian peninsula. Its primary economic activity involves exporting oil and soaking Islamic rubes on the annual hajj pilgrimage. The country supports a large number of princes in whatcha might call princely splendor. When the oil runs out the rest of the world is going to kick sand in the Soddy national face... as a labourer; he was forced to abandon higher education after his 50-year-old father, Barkat Jan, left their Kater village home in October 2001 also for jihad in Afghanistan. "My father was a farmer," says Abdullah Jan. "Of course, we depended on him to meet our monthly expenses. I failed to complete my higher studies due to the monetary problems of my family after he left us." In Dogdara village of Upper Dir, 38-year-old Muftahuddin's cousin, 38-year-old Javed Khan, returned home after two-and-a-half-years since leaving in September 2001. His family paid Rs400,000 to Afghan officials for his safe return from jail in Jalalabad, or so they claim. They were one of the lucky ones. But it is not just jihadis inspired and prepared by TNSM that are languishing in Afghan jails. Former Interior Minister Aftab Khan Sherpao ![]() says it is difficult for him to give an exact number of Pak prisoners in Afghanistan, but the figure could be in the hundreds. "I discussed the issue of Pak prisoners with my Afghan counterparts on behalf of the Pak government but I did not get a positive response from Afghan authorities," he says. But even Sherpao is aware of the reports that the families of many Pak prisoners paid money to Afghan landlords and jail officials to secure the release of their loved ones after 2001. Sahibzada Tariqullah, Member of the National Assembly from Upper Dir, agrees. He explains that thousands of Paks were either killed, imprisoned or went missing in Afghanistan during the war in 2001. Hundreds returned home with the support of the Red Thingy but there are reports of many more still languishing in Afghan prisons. According to an official of the ministry of Foreign Affairs, it is difficult for the Pak missions to have an update on detained Pak nationals languishing in Afghan prisons due to the law and order situation there, as well as the existence of 'private' prisons run by the National Directorate of Security (NDS) in Afghanistan. The officials claimed that over 185 Pak prisoners are currently being incarcerated in Afghan jails 106 in Pul-e-Charkhi Jail in Kabul; 46 in Sarpoza Jail in Kandahar; 26 in Jalalabad; and the remaining in Helmand ...an Afghan province populated mostly by Pashtuns, adjacent to Injun country in Pak Balochistan... , Herat ...a venerable old Persian-speaking city in western Afghanistan, populated mostly by Tadjiks, which is why it's not as blood-soaked as areas controlled by Pashtuns... and Mazar Sharif. "Back in 2001, the government did not prepare any lists of such Paks because it was trying to stop them from crossing the border in the first place," says Brigadier (retired.) Mahmood Shah, who served as the secretary of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (Fata) between 2003 and 2005. He pins the blame on Sufi Mohammad for the killings and missing of thousands of Paks while their families are compelled to survive in difficult circumstances. "Although Sufi Mohammad is responsible for the crises, but under the Geneva Convention it was the responsibility of the Afghan government to provide complete details about the POWs," argues I.A. Rehman, director of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistain (HRCP). "If Pak prisoners are still being held in Afghanistan, it is contrary to all norms of humanity as well as in direct contravention of the Geneva Convention," adds Rehman. Foreign Office Spokeswoman Tasneem Aslam meanwhile told Dawn that the Pakistain Embassy in Afghanistan is in process of securing the release of Pak prisoners. She claims that Pakistain and Afghanistan had already agreed to form a joint commission on prisoners in 2011, with Pakistain pushing for early activation of this mechanism. As long drawn and extended as governmental procedures are, equally short and swift was Sufi Mohammad's message and the speed at which it was consumed. Latifullah, a 55-year-old local school teacher of Government High School Jan Bati, Lower Dir, recalls that people from different towns and villages of Malakand division left their homes to support the Taliban regime back in 2001. Latifullah describes that most jihad volunteers belonged to the Matta area of district Swat, the Maidan area of Lower Dir, the Dir Kohistan ...a backwoods district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa distinguished by being even more rustic than is the norm among the local Pashtuns.... area of district Upper Dir, Butkhela area of Malakand district, Aman Dara area of district Shangla and Alpori area of district Buner. Then there were others from Punjab, ![]() ... Named for the Mohmand clan of the Sarban Pahstuns, a truculent, quarrelsome lot. In Pakistain, the Mohmands infest their eponymous Agency, metastasizing as far as the plains of Peshawar, Charsadda, and Mardan. Mohmands are also scattered throughout Pakistan in urban areas including Karachi, Lahore, and Quetta. In Afghanistan they are mainly found in Nangarhar and Kunar... and Bajaur Agency, aka Turban Central ...Smallest of the agencies in FATA. The Agency administration is located in Khar. Bajaur is inhabited almost exclusively by Tarkani Pashtuns, which are divided into multiple bickering subtribes. Its 52 km border border with Afghanistan's Kunar Province makes it of strategic importance to Pakistain's strategic depth... . A former member of TNSM, speaking to Dawn on condition of anonymity, narrates that Maulana Sufi Mohammad gathered all volunteers in the areas of Timergara and Bajaur for registration. "We just prepared the lists of the people by including their names and their areas; most people were farmers, labourers and unemployed. They left for the Afghan province of Kunar through the Ghakhi Pass, near the Laghari area in Bajaur Agency," he claims. Caught between the two is Bin Yameen, who has an agonising 'last wish': "I wish I can see my father in my lifetime; I am hopeful he will return one day." Will these families ever get closure? |
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India-Pakistan |
Experts Say Baradar Released, But Under Supervision |
2013-10-16 |
[TOLONEWS] A number of Pak political and military experts have said that Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, the Taliban's former second-in-command, was in fact freed from imprisonment, but remains under close supervision by Pak security forces. "Mullah Baradar has been released from the custody of government of Pakistain. Due to security issues, however, security has been provided for him so he can go to Afghanistan and talk with the leaders and elders of the Taliban," said Mahmood Shah, a retired Pak Army officer. The news comes a week after the Taliban claimed Baradar remained in Pak military custody, in contradiction to what had been promised by the Pak government in an attempt to contribute to a reconciliation deal between Kabul and the myrmidon group. "Mullah Baradar is an important person and Americans didn't wanted him to be released unconditionally," Rahimullah Yousufzai, a Pak political expert told TOLOnews. "The Americans had made it clear they didn't want him released, but even if he was to be released, steps needed to be taken so that he would be followed all the time, to prevent him from joining the Taliban again." Kabul has been pushing for Baradar's release since late August, when President Hamid Maybe I'll join the TalibanKarzai ... A former Baltimore restaurateur, now 12th and current President of Afghanistan, displacing the legitimate president Rabbani in December 2004. He was installed as the dominant political figure after the removal of the Taliban regime in late 2001 in a vain attempt to put a Pashtunface on the successor state to the Taliban. After the 2004 presidential election, he was declared president regardless of what the actual vote count was. He won a second, even more dubious, five-year-term after the 2009 presidential election. His grip on reality has been slipping steadily since around 2007, probably from heavy drug use... visited Islamabad to recruit newly elected Pak Prime Minister ![]() ... served two non-consecutive terms as prime minister, heads the Pakistain Moslem League (Nawaz). Noted for his spectacular corruption, the 1998 Pak nuclear test, border war with India, and for being tossed by General Musharraf... to help get the grinding of the peace processor with the Taliban back on track after it derailed in June. Despite U.S. anxieties about the release of Baradar and other imprisoned Death Eaters, officials in Afghanistan have been confident that freeing former Death Eaters would serve peace talks well by providing a sign of good will to the Taliban and making available key leaders who would otherwise be unable to participate in them. Since Pak government officials announced they would go ahead with the release of Baradar back in September, however, speculations about whether or not it would be done, or if so with what conditions attached, have abounded. "Our position is this: Mullah Abdul Ghani has been released and anyone member of his family can see him," Ejaz Ahmad Chaudhary, a front man for Pakistain's Foreign Ministry told TOLOnews in a phone interview. "He was released in order to facilitate the Afghan reconciliation process." Pakistain's release of Baradar, following President Karzai's trip to Islamabad, has been considered a major step toward improving relations between the estranged Kabul and Islamabad. Last week at a presser in Kabul, Karzai welcomed Pakistain's announcement about releasing the former myrmidon deputy. The precautions taken in Baradar's release that experts have discussed, however, indicate pressure from the U.S. has played a role in the way things have unfolded. American officials have justified their concerns by pointing to examples from the past of former Death Eaters being released by Afghan authorities upon the transition of power over detentions centers, like Bagram prison, to then only rejoin the Death Eater fight against coalition and Afghan forces. |
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India-Pakistan |
Rockets Fired on Peshawar Airport, Five Dead, Dozens Injured |
2012-12-16 |
![]() ...capital of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (formerly known as the North-West Frontier Province), administrative and economic hub for the Federally Administered Tribal Areas of Pakistan. Peshawar is situated near the eastern end of the Khyber Pass, convenient to the Pak-Afghan border. Peshawar has evolved into one of Pakistan's most ethnically and linguistically diverse cities, which means lots of gunfire. airport northwest of the capital, Islamabad, in a brazen assault Saturday night. Suspected Death Eaters attacked the airport in northwest Pakistain with rockets and a jacket wallah, leaving a trail of dead and injured. Local television showed what appeared to be the rockets landing near the airport, sending up plumes of fire into the night sky. The area was immediately put under high alert. Military forces surrounded and closed down the airport which services international as well as domestic flights. The picturesque provincial capital of Peshawar borders Pakistain's tribal areas where both Taliban and al-Qaeda Death Eaters operate. Local media, citing a Pakistain Air Force official, said beturbanned goons had attacked the airport, but had been prevented from entering the complex. The provincial minister for Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa ... formerly NWFP, still Terrorism Central... , Mian Iftikhar Hussain, said four cut-thoats, including one suicide bomber, were involved in a failed ground attack that followed the rocket fire. Sultan Hassan, a front man for Pakistain's national airlines, PIA, said the airport was closed and all outgoing flights had been canceled. He said incoming flights from different Pakistain cities bypassed Peshawar and went directly to their final destination. "PIA flights have been canceled," Hassan said. "There were some international flights from Islamabad via Peshawar and Sialkot via Peshawar, they have now gone directly to the Middle East." Retired Brigadier Mahmood Shah, who spoke to VOA from the scene, said the area had been secured. He said two rockets landed inside the airport, causing no damage, and three landed in a residential area near the airport. Shah said it appeared to be a daring attack by either Taliban or Lashkar-e-Islam Death Eaters who are bent on challenging the government's control of the region. |
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Afghanistan | |
Ice breaks between US, Hizb-i-Islami | |
2012-02-02 | |
[Dawn] Preliminary talks held recently by the US and the Hizb-e-Islami resistance group of Afghanistan meant ice was breaking between them and that would create opportunity for more meaningful talks in the future, said Ghairat Baheer, political adviser to the group's leader ![]() ... who used to be known in intelligence circles as The Most Evil Man in the Worldbut who now seems merely run-of-the-mill evil... here on Tuesday. "We have not received any positive response so far, but we favour meaningful dialogue with the Americans," he told a conference titled "The Afghan Issue: Regional Implications and Suggestions for Sustainable Peace". The conference was organised by the Centre for Discussions and Solution, a think-tank headed by former chief of Jamaat-e-Islami ... The Islamic Society, founded in 1941 in Lahore by Maulana Sayyid Abul Ala Maududi, aka The Great Apostosizer. The Jamaat opposed the independence of Bangladesh but has operated an independentbranch there since 1975. It close ties with international Mohammedan groups such as the Moslem Brotherhood. The Jamaat's objectives are the establishment of a pure Islamic state, governed by Sharia law. It is distinguished by its xenophobia, and its opposition to Westernization, capitalism, socialism, secularism, and liberalist socAAial mores... Qazi Hussain Ahmad. ... third president (1987--2009) of the Pak Jamaat-e-Islami. Qazi was also head of the Muttahidah Majlis-e-Amal until his ego became bigger than the organization. Qazi is what is known as a fierypreacher, which means he has lots of volume, a good delivery, and not a lot of reverence for coherence. He was the patron of Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, Rasool Sayyaf and Osama bin Laden during the war against the Soviets. He used to recommend drining camel's urine to maintain good health before his kidneys started to go... Jamaat Ulema-e-Islam ...Assembly of Islamic Clergy, or JUI, is a Pak Deobandi (Hanafi) political party. There are two main branches, one led by Maulana Fazlur Rahman, and one led by Maulana Samiul Haq. Fazl is active in Pak politix and Sami spends more time running his madrassah. Both branches sponsor branches of the Taliban, though with plausible deniability... chief , ![]() Deobandi holy man, known as Mullah Dieselduring the war against the Soviets, his sympathies for the Taliban have never been tempered by honesty ... Awami National Party provincial chief Senator Afrasiab Khattak, Qazi Hussain Ahmad, former spymasters, bureaucrats, intellectuals and journalists from Pakistain and Afghanistan attended the conference, arranged at a time when the US and Taliban started talks in Qatar. Mr Baheer said that he met CIA chief Gen (retired) David Petraeus, Afghan President Hamid Maybe I'll join the TalibanKarzai ... A former Baltimore restaurateur, now 12th and current President of Afghanistan, displacing the legitimate president Rabbani in December 2004. He was installed as the dominant political figure after the removal of the Taliban regime in late 2001 in a vain attempt to put a Pashtunface on the successor state to the Taliban. After the 2004 presidential election, he was declared president regardless of what the actual vote count was. He won a second, even more dubious, five-year-term after the 2009 presidential election. His grip on reality has been slipping steadily since around 2007, probably from heavy drug use... and NATO ...the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. It's headquartered in Belgium. That sez it all.... Commander John R. Allen on recent visit to Kabul and discussed with them the situation in war-torn Afghanistan. "We have realised that Americans have no solution for the Afghan issue.
He said that Karzai government would fall after withdrawal of NATO forces. "Let us discuss a comprehensive package for Afghanistan," he proposed and warned that the region would suffer if the US did not leave Afghanistan. He said that Afghan nation should get a fair opportunity to elect its government freely. He urged America, Russia and its allies to support grinding of the peace processor in Afghanistan. Maulana Fazl supported negotiations between America and Taliban, saying that other powers should support grinding of the peace processor. He said that flawed policies had isolated Pakistain and Taliban had been handed over to America. "Pakistain was the looser when Soviet Union was withdrawing its force from Afghanistan in 1989. Pakistain is once again at the receiving end because of widening gulf between Pakistain and its allies," he said and added that Islamabad had been trapped. He said that immediate priority should be to pull Afghans from war and then discuss other issues. The JUI chief said that his party supported peace talks between Taliban and Washington provided it brought sustainable peace to Afghanistan and urged all Afghan factions to start dialogue. Maulana Fazl also stressed the warring factions to negotiate with President Karzai. He said that Taliban had committed blunders when they captured Kabul. "I told Taliban leaders at that time that they did not form government but occupied Kabul," he remarked. Afghan intellectuals and journalists criticised the role of Pak establishment and demanded that Islamabad should stop interference and help grinding of the peace processor to end the decades old bloody game in the region. "Pak policymakers should choose for us what they like for themselves," said Mir Waiz, an Afghan journalist. He added that Pak policymakers disliked Talibanisation in their country while support the same phenomenon in Afghanistan which was unfair. Former chief of Inter Services Intelligence Gen (retired) Hameed Gul said that America bypassed Pakistain and started talks with Taliban in Qatar. He was sceptical about peace talks in Qatar. He said that Islamabad should change its US-centric policy and act upon joint resolutions of the parliament. Gen (retired) Asad Durrani, former Afghan interim prime minister Eng Ahmad Shah Ahmadzai, former chief secretary Gulzar Khan, Brig (retired) Mahmood Shah and others also spoke on the issue. A joint declaration issued on the occasion said that a durable settlement of the Afghan conflict required an 'Afghan solution'. "A solution imposed by the foreigners cannot yield long-term peace. In this pursuit of an all-Afghan solution for stability, the international community should truly commit to the principle of non-intervention in internal affairs of Afghanistan," said the declaration. It said that Afghanistan could not be allowed to remain a playground for perpetuating foreign occupation or promoting global and regional hegemonic motives. "The time has come that the international community rise to fulfil its obligations towards Afghanistan," it added. The foreign forces should withdraw and an intra-Afghan political settlement is reached through participation of all Afghans. The destiny of Afghanistan belongs to Afghans. It called for instituting a fully inclusive reconciliation process to facilitate the intra-Afghan settlement in accordance with the religious, cultural and tribal values of the Afghan society. "It is vital that the process should be Afghan-led, Afghan-owned and Afghan driven," the declaration said. | |
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India-Pakistan |
TTP must give up arms before talks: Malik |
2011-10-19 |
[Dawn] Pakistain will only hold peace talks with Taliban beturbanned goons if they lay down their arms first, Interior Minister Rehman Malik Pak politician, current Interior Minister under the Gilani administration. Malik is a former Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) intelligence officer who rose to head the FIA during Benazir Bhutto's second tenure. He later joined the Pak Peoples Party and was chief security officer to Bhutto. Malik was tossed from his FIA job in 1998 after documenting the breath-taking corruption of the Sharif family. By unhappy coincidence Näwaz Shärif became PM at just that moment and Malik moved to London one step ahead of the button men. said on Tuesday, after both sides signalled willingness to consider negotiations. "The minimum agenda is that they give up arms and come forward and then there will be talks. But if they think they will keep Kalashnikovs in their hands and also hold talks, that will not happen," he told news hounds. Both sides have indicated recently they were open to talks, but analysts are sceptical the Taliban will ultimately agree. "The government is saying accept the constitution and lay down arms. But the cut-throats have other aims. They want to take over, gain power. They think negotiations are a joke," said security analyst Mahmood Shah. "How can you talk to groups that don't even respect the concept of Pakistain, never mind laying down arms?" The Tehrik-i-Taliban, or Taliban Movement of Pakistain (TTP), have been waging a campaign of attacks including suicide kabooms across the South Asian nation since 2007 in a bid to topple the government. A series of army offensives against Pak Taliban strongholds along the rugged mountainous border with Afghanistan has failed to contain the group, which is close to al Qaeda and is the biggest security threat to Pakistain. |
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Unity among North Waziristan militant groups crumbles |
2011-04-29 |
[Dawn] Crumbling unity among forces of Evil could provide the Pakistain army an opening to conduct a limited offensive against a particularly vicious Taliban group in a strategic tribal region, according to analysts and a senior military official. The target of such an operation in North ![]() Although Mehsud has been linked to attacks in neighbouring Afghanistan, his main focus appears to be in plotting carnage elsewhere in Pakistain. And that makes him a prime target for the army. Washington has long urged the Paks to launch an operation in North Waziristan, a region overrun by an assortment of bad turban groups including al Qaeda. Most US drone strikes in Pakistain take place in North Waziristan. Already there are more than 30,000 soldiers in North Waziristan, and some analysts say the Mighty Pak Army could quickly redeploy to the area. The army has 140,000 soldiers in the tribal regions that border Afghanistan The Paks, however, are unlikely to target the Haqqani group, which the US considers its greatest enemy in Afghanistan. US Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, complained last week that Pakistain's secret service maintains links to the Haqqani network. The Haqqanis are Afghan Taliban who control parts of eastern Afghanistan and have bases in North Waziristan. If the Haqqanis and other bad turban groups in North Waziristan cooperate with a military assault against the Pak Taliban, that would give the army more options. The fissures among the forces of Evil were laid bare in February, when Mehsud released a gruesome video that confirmed the shooting death of former Pak spy Sultan Amir Tarar, better known as Col. Imam, according to a senior Pakistain army officer who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the subject. As Pakistain's consul general in Afghanistan's Kandahar province during the Taliban's rule, Imam was the conduit for money and weapons to the religious movement. A former Pak intelligence officer, Imam met regularly with Afghan Taliban's reclusive leader, Mullah Mohammed Omar. Imam was known to have kept contact with leading Taliban in hiding in Pakistain since the US-led coalition ousted them from power in Afghanistan in 2001. Mehsud's group had held Imam for 10 months. The killing confounded Pak military officials. They had long believed the Haqqanis held sway over the myriad of groups -- including forces of Evil from Uzbekistan, Chechnya and the Middle East -- operating in North Waziristan. "We always thought that the Afghan Taliban had a sway over these groups, but Col. Imam's killing shows that no one is in control of anyone there," he said. "His death was a shock for us." Taliban members who spoke to The News Agency that Dare Not be Named on condition of anonymity because they feared being tossed in the calaboose said Mullah Omar made a personal plea for Imam's life. Also requesting that Imam's life be spared was Sirajuddin Haqqani, a key leader of the Haqqani group. The senior military official said Mehsud defied Mullah Omar and Sirajuddin Haqqani and went ahead with the execution after the government and army refused his demands to free several of his imprisoned men. Not only that, Mehsud boasted on a jihadi website about the killing, according to the SITE Intelligence Group. The same website carried an Urdu language condemnation of Mehsud's organisation, calling those behind the execution "beasts" and "ignoble killers," SITE said. The divisions that Imam's death revealed among the bad turban groups could provide an opportunity for the army to hit hard at beturbanned goons in the North Waziristan town of Mir Ali, where Mehsud set up bases after fleeing last year's military assault on his headquarters in neighbouring South Waziristan, according to Mahmood Shah, a retired army brigadier and former security point-man for the government in the tribal regions. Mir Ali is about 20 miles from the town of Miramshah, where the Haqqanis are based. Tribal elders from North Waziristan, all of whom were too afraid to talk on the record, fearing retribution from bad turbans, said the landscape in their home region has undergone massive upheavals since the army operation in South Waziristan. They said Mehsud and his men were among the most troublesome of the bad turbans, largely because of their affiliation with criminal gangs. Mehsud and his followers are also among the richest, having accumulated wealth through kidnappings for ransom, thefts and extortion, said a tribal elder from Shawal district of North Waziristan. Mehsud's close affiliation with Lashkar-i-Janghvi, a ![]() US officials who did not want to be identified because of the sensitivity of the subject said the Jordanian suicide bomber who killed six CIA operatives in Afghanistan's 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... in December 2009 was trained by Lashkar-i-Janghvi's Qari Hussain, who was also a member of Mehsud's group. Hussain was killed in a drone attack but was quickly replaced by a cousin and fellow primitive of Mehsud's. Mehsud has overseen the Pak Taliban ever since his predecessor, Baitullah Mehsud, was killed in a CIA missile strike on August 5, 2009. Hakimullah Mehsud is affiliated with the Taliban's most violent factions and has survived US and Pak attempts on his life. In recent years the United States has identified Mir Ali as the site of a reconstituted al Qaeda. Also on the run in Mir Ali is Ilyas Kashmirei, a confidante of Mehsud's. The United States this month put a $5 million bounty on Kashmirei's head. |
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Suicide attack on CIA agents 'was planned by bin Laden inner circle' | |||
2010-01-07 | |||
![]() The attack was carried out by a Jordanian doctor whom the CIA believed was about to divulge the whereabouts of bin Laden's deputy, Ayman al- Zawahiri. It is one of the deadliest blows against the CIA and has increased tensions between the US and Pakistan because of Islamabad's repeated failure to target the Haqqanis. The Haqqanis control a large block of territory on both sides of the Afghan-Pakistan border near the Afghan town of Khost, a Taleban hotbed near where the CIA officials were killed on December 30. It is also where the US believes bin Laden is hiding. One former CIA officer, who did not wish to be named, told The Times that the agency had taped evidence of a Pakistani army officer tipping the Haqqanis off about a raid and a member of Pakistan's intelligence service boasting that the Haqqanis are our guys'. Pakistan has ignored US demands to target the strongholds of the Haqqanis' leader, Sirajuddin Haqqani, whose father, Jalaluddin, founded the network and was a Mujahidin commander and ally of the US during the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s. The network is said to be behind several audacious attacks, including the bombing of the Indian embassy in Kabul in July 2008. Michael Scheuer, the former head of the CIA unit tracking bin Laden, said: There is no way this operation would have occurred in Khost without the knowledge and active support of Jalaluddin Haqqani and/or his son. They and their organisation own the area and nothing occurs that would impact their tribe or its allies without their knowledge or OK. Both men, moreover, would be delighted to help bin Laden in any way they can.' Mahmood Shah, who served as security chief of Pakistan's lawless tribal region, agreed: The attack may have been planned by al-Qaeda, but it could not have been possible without the help of the Haqqani group.' What has alarmed the US is the fact that al-Qaeda and the Taleban managed, despite an intense US bombing campaign, to mount an operation that wiped out the top CIA experts involved in the hunt for bin Laden. It's a huge blow,' a former CIA officer said. If you are Osama bin Laden, your biggest enemy is the CIA. This is a big hit.'
Former CIA officials told The Times that the high number of CIA officers travelling from Kabul to meet al-Balawi reflected how desperate the agency was for information on bin Laden. That al-Balawi came via Jordanian intelligence has proved deeply embarrassing for Jordan, exposing how closely the country works with the US in sharing intelligence and operatives on the front line in the war against extremists. The Jordanian intelligence official killed in the blast was buried in Jordan on Tuesday but the Jordanian Government refused to acknowledge his role with the CIA in Afghanistan. Anti-US sentiment is high in Jordan. | |||
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