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Karachi’s political turbulence fuels militancy

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Karachi’s political turbulence fuels militancy

Reuters


KARACHI: Pakistan’s financial capital Karachi faces a growing menace from some of the world’s most dangerous militant groups because political and ethnic rivalries destabilising the city are making it easier for them to operate.

Provincial coalition politicians have become so consumed by rivalries they are hindering the war on militancy in Karachi, which officials say contributes 68 per cent of the government’s total revenue and 25 per cent of gross domestic product.

“All these parties have to be on board and they have to trust each other if they want any kind of plan to be effective on the ground,” said Sharifuddin Memon, a consultant for the Home Affairs Department of the provincial government of Sindh, of which Karachi is the capital.

Intertwined organisations like al Qaeda and Pakistan’s Taliban are already well established in Karachi, a major transit point for supplies to Afghanistan for the US- and Nato-led anti-insurgency effort.

They enjoy safe havens and benefit from funding networks in the sprawling metropolis, where hardline religious seminaries churn out young men eager for holy war.

Tackling militants is made more difficult by Karachi’s complex ethnic politics. Animosities between political parties — that go back decades — still trigger bloodshed today.

Karachi’s so-called targeted killings, often blamed on the supporters of political groups, mainly the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) and the Awami National Party (ANP), have risen to 1,132 this year, the highest level since 1995, says the Citizens-Police Liaison Committee.

Rising numbers of drive-by shootings, drug wars, extortion rackets and land grabbing are deepening chaos in Karachi, giving militants even more opportunities to find hideouts, generate cash, gain recruits and plan and stage attacks.

Most of these activities allegedly occur in badlands on the edge of Pakistan’s biggest city, like Sohrab Goth.

ANP flags hang from street lamps, a reminder of political turf wars that have been heating up over the past few months.

“They will hit back”

Taliban militants, allegedly present in the city, blend in easily among fellow Pashtuns who live in grimy apartment blocks that run for kilometres.


“If the police launch an operation against militants here they will hit back hard. They have plenty of weapons,” said MQM official Khawaja Izhar Hassan, driving through enemy territory during a quiet period.

While maintaining that politicians must work together to tackle militancy, he accused the ANP and the ruling Pakistan People’s Party of foot-dragging on militancy and crime.

As political parties trade accusations, a far more subtle but equally troubling security threat looms in Karachi, home to the central bank, stock exchange, main port and offices of most foreign companies investing in Pakistan.

Pakistan Institute for Peace Studies Director Mohammad Amir Rana says security agencies are overlooking creeping Talibanisation for some areas.

“People may not notice if someone comes in the street during prayer time and says, ‘OK, shut down your shops’. And if someone comes at night and says ‘throw out your television set’ and cuts down the cables,” he said.

Things have been relatively calm over the past two years as militants have focused on cities in the north and across the northwest. But risks of major attacks will grow as long as political paralysis gives militants breathing space.

A suicide car bombing on November 11, claimed by the Pakistan Taliban, brought the fight to the doorstep of elite counterterrorism police in Karachi. The blast demolished the headquarters of an investigation department where militants were interrogated. At least 18 people were killed.

Containing the threat will require pouring resources into law enforcement agencies so they can improve intelligence gathering and disrupt kidnappings and extortion, which fund militants.

“The authorities really need to invest heavily in the security agencies, build their capacity, and sensitize them to the new levels of threat,” said security analyst Imtiaz Gul. “This is an imperative.”

But far from investing big, even the basics are lacking. There isn’t a single police security camera in Karachi, home to about 18 million, according to Memon, who launched a hotline for complaints about crime, and police abuses.

Generating cash to boost the fight against militancy is unlikely soon. Pakistan is being kept afloat by an $11 billion International Monetary Fund loan agreed in 2008.

Meanwhile, the government’s failure to ease poverty and create jobs is driving disgruntled young men to join the militants.

At Karachi’s Jamia Binoria madrassah, young boys rock back and forth as they memorise the Quran. Spokesman Saifullah Rabbani says students are taught Islam is a religion of peace.

But he is quick to predict what will happen if they don’t find opportunities after graduation.

“If there is poverty and unemployment, these people will not join the MQM. They will not join the ANP. They will not join the Pakistan People’s Party. They will certainly go toward the Taliban,” he said.'
 
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another alarming article about khi as how twisted the situation is the city is now a heaven for al qaida and taliban
 
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Conspiracy to destabilize Karachi

Posted on 14 August 2010.


By Ali K Chishti
Daily Times has learned of a massive conspiracy to destabilize Karachi, Pakistan’s only economic hub by none other than various jihadi groups which only recently decided to regroup and reorganize themselves courtesy of Qari Zafar of the TTP to launch a series of high-profile killings and bomb blasts.
Previously, Daily Times was the first publication in Pakistan to break the story that the assassination of an MQM legislator, Raza Haider, was the work of Qari Zafar of the TTP which resulted in killing of more than 95 people in various targeted killings and organized attacks in Karachi.
“But bigger players have just joined in Karachi,” a Western intelligence source stationed abroad confirmed.
Daily Times could confirm al Qaeda presence in Karachi, which is understandably very upset with the counter-terrorism moves by the government, which is yielding results and significantly, denting al Qaeda’s leadership and operational capabilities inside Pakistan.


Only recently, a drone attack killed one of their top commanders and number three, Mustafa Abu al-Yazid aka al-Masri, and this is not their only concern.
Interestingly, for a precision attack on a certain target anywhere, a sim-like chip has to be fixed at the spot for the missile from the drone to hit the target, which could only be possible if someone fixed that chip. So human intelligence is something the CIA operational panel rallies up which leads to the conclusion that ISI who already has a vast network of operatives and assets inside FATA is closely working with its American counterpart to “hound and destroy” at least, al Qaeda in Pakistan.
Daily Times could confirm that the “Quetta Shura” which consists of the top leadership of the Afghan Taliban, headed by Mulla Omar, from an unknown place in Pakistan and whose at least nine out of 18 leaders had been arrested to this date, has cut ties with al Qaeda, leaving al Qaeda and Arab militants inside Pakistan no choice other than to join the TTP. The “Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan is milking money from al Qaeda too for providing safe-havens and working as sub-contractors too,” another Western diplomat stationed in Afghanistan confirmed.
According to various counter-terrorism officials who spoke to Daily Times confirmed that “there’s a plan which was revealed by the recently-captured terrorists to launch a 26/11 Mumbai style fidayeen attack similar to ones happening in Lahore inside Karachi”.
Another plan which is being discussed is to target the second-tier leadership of the MQM, the ANP, the Sunni Tehreek and the PPP at the same time to create “fitna” which is so much embedded in al Qaeda’s ideology to provoke sentiments. The whole idea of course is to somehow engage the Pakistan Army in various cities and especially in Karachi and the plan, “almost succeeded” said one source. (Daily Times)
 
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Is this serious?

I think anyone from Karachi (including me) can tell you that such presence is un-noticeable. The violence is politically provoked, often MQM vs XYZ party...
 
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Is this serious?

I think anyone from Karachi (including me) can tell you that such presence is un-noticeable. The violence is politically provoked, often MQM vs XYZ party...

do you live in khi i hve noticed a dubai flag shwing u resident of middleast !
 
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I come from Karachi... I have family there, I often go there.

I am going there in 2 weeks again and I'll give you an update :P

you visit there ! try and understand there is a difference btw a resident and visitor ...
 
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Karachi is the Taliban's holiday destination
The arrest of a Taliban commander in Pakistan highlights the concentration of militants in Karachi, where crime bankrolls Islamist violence and the teeming metropolis is a hiding place.

Traffic jam at Sadder, one of the busiest commercial areas in Karachi. Photo: EPA/AKHTAR SOOMRO
By Hasan Mansoor, in Karachi for AFP 10:50AM GMT 18 Feb 2010
Comment
Karachi, home to 16 million people and one of the biggest Muslim cities in the world, has two sea ports which are a gateway to the world and transit hub for Nato supplies heading to the war effort in neighbouring Afghanistan.
For decades Karachi has been connected with the criminal underworld and since the September 11 2001 attacks, with extreme Islamist networks too.
US journalist Daniel Pearl was kidnapped in the city and beheaded in 2002. In 2007, more than 136 people were killed at the homecoming parade of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto in Karachi, Pakistan's deadliest ever bomb attack.
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While officials refuse to confirm details of how, when and where Taliban number two Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar was arrested, American media reported that US and Pakistani spies captured him in Karachi.
"The arrest of a top Afghan Taliban commander proves the premise that some Afghan Taliban are present in Pakistan," said Hasan Askari, a security analyst.
"Karachi has become the most attractive hideout for militants because it is a massive city and there are all kinds of ethnic and linguistic groups, where Pakistani and Afghan Taliban can disappear," he added.
Around 2.5 million Pashtuns from the north-west are estimated to live in Karachi, a migration that began in the 1950s but accelerates with each successive offensive against Pakistani Islamists in the region.
One self-professed militant said that he comes to Karachi to take a break from the battlefield in Pakistan's tribal belt on the Afghan border where al-Qaeda and the Taliban are hunkered down and targeted by US missiles.
"We come here to relax," said the man calling himself Aqeel Ahmed over the telephone, saying that he fought against the Soviet occupation in Afghanistan and is now affiliated to the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) faction.
"We do jobs as labourers or other menial work in Karachi when we are permitted to leave the battle. And we go back to the battlefield when we receive a call from the top," he said.
Tensions between Pashtuns and the local population have provoked riots, while bomb attacks have targeted Shia Muslims, killing 76 people in the last two months.
"We have arrested a couple of dozen militants associated with the outlawed Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan and seized large quantities of explosives and weapons including explosive-filled suicide jackets," a police official said.
Karachi, with its moneyed residents and big business, has proved fertile ground for financing Pakistani Islamist activities. Security officials acknowledge, but have less intelligence on, the presence of Afghan Taliban.
"Taliban do come here... They send money to their mentors in the north-west and even some deals with the families of kidnapping victims (in Karachi) were finalised in Waziristan," said the police official.
Money is wired to north-west Pakistan through the traditional but illegal method of "hundi". Groups can also demand ransom payments in the tribal areas, which include the militant bastions of North and South Waziristan.
"They (militants) have safe havens on the outskirts where they run their operations," said Sharfuddin Memon, head of the Citizen-Police Liaison Committee, a state-run watchdog organisation.
"They generate funds through kidnappings and robberies and also militants plan attacks in Karachi, most of which our police foiled," he said.
The Muttahida Qaumi movement - which represents Muslims who migrated from India - sits in government and is a bitter rival of Pashtun political parties. It also believes there is a heavy militant presence in the city.
But Mufti Mohammad Naeem, the head of Karachi's Jamia Binoria madrassa, one of the largest among thousands of religious schools in the city, says there is a conspiracy against the religious political parties and groups.
"Our rulers are falsely accusing our madrassas of being involved in terrorism or having links with the Taliban. Rulers are doing this to appease their Western masters who pay them with loads of dollars," he said.
 
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Interesting and at the same time alarming article.

I am curious to know more. How does the political and police machinery respond to such a threat in Karachi? Do they take sides? I am assuming the police would be predominantly Mohajir as they are the dominant community in Karachi? Or do they manage to stay neutral? And what about the civil/local govt. machinery in Karachi?
 
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Interesting and at the same time alarming article.

I am curious to know more. How does the political and police machinery respond to such a threat in Karachi? Do they take sides? I am assuming the police would be predominantly Mohajir as they are the dominant community in Karachi? Or do they manage to stay neutral? And what about the civil/local govt. machinery in Karachi?
yes unfortunatly that the most ironic part i will quote an official

Pakistan Institute for Peace Studies Director Mohammad Amir Rana says security agencies are overlooking creeping Talibanisation for some areas.
 
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you visit there ! try and understand there is a difference btw a resident and visitor ...

Well, I ask my family there who are residents!

Everything is fine, don't worry...

Sure, there is violence, but no apparent existence of any of these groups in the region.
 
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The whole of karachi menance is a blessing of three political parties. MQM, ANP and JI and all of them like to please the Taliban and troublesome element to get free weapons.
 
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here is what is the invisible enemy thought , Taliban can easily hide in pushtun areas (ANP stronghold) this is a fact and several arrests have been made from pushtoon areas khi does have a history of ethinic riots btw mohajirs (who are majority MQM voters) and pushtoons , therefore if they kill an MQM guy and than kill few pushtoons both parties will go peanuts and tensions wil raise ... trust is lost ... both pushtoons and MQM will fight each other .. which is a win win situation for the enemy and they have a free hand , this also keep GOP as wel as the army occupied !
clearly the enemy is deep within us and slowly and steadily they are ruining karachi ...
 
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Well, I ask my family there who are residents!

Everything is fine, don't worry...

Sure, there is violence, but no apparent existence of any of these groups in the region.

try reading the newspaper buddy or google may help and this might help you find that just this year how many of top al qaida and taliban leaders are caught in karachi
 
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welcome to democracy, in India our political parties have riots between religious communities in Pakistan they are making you fight for your ethnicity.Votes Zindabad.
 
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