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Would-be suicide bomber sheds light on suspected Pakistani militant web

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Saad Sayeed and Syed Raza Hassan

SHIKARPUR, Pakistan - The confession of a Pakistani teenager who was captured moments before carrying out a suicide attack has given police a rare glimpse into a militant network they say is behind the recent surge in sectarian violence.

Usman's testimony, a copy of which has been seen by Reuters, describes a web of radical seminaries and training and bomb making facilities stretching from eastern Afghanistan, where the young man was recruited, to Pakistan's southern Sindh province.

Hundreds of people have been killed in attacks on Pakistan's small Shi'ite community, heightening fears in the Sunni-dominated country of an escalation in sectarian bloodshed that has been a persistent threat for decades.

Pakistani police believe the network, which Usman says aided him on his 2,000 km journey, has also helped Islamic State spread its extremist agenda in South Asia, even without proven operational links with its core in the Middle East.

The Pakistani network brings together several known jihadists belonging to extremist groups that have targeted religious minorities for decades, police said, providing fertile ground for Islamic State's ideology to spread.

Usman's confession does not name Islamic State directly, but police say they believe the network that recruited and trained him was behind five deadly sectarian bombings in Pakistan, four of which have been claimed by the group based in Syria and Iraq.

"ISIS (Islamic State) has no formal structure (in Pakistan). It works on a franchise system and that is the model that is being used in Pakistan," senior Counter Terrorism Department (CTD) officer Raja Umer Khattab told Reuters.

By that he said he meant Islamic State could claim attacks as its own, even if it had no direct role in coordinating them.

Usman, 18 at the time of the thwarted attack, is currently on death row in the town of Shikarpur, where he was caught.

Reuters was unable to contact him for this story, but Usman's court-appointed lawyer said the family had shown no interest in the case.

"I am not sure if an appeal has been filed against the sentence, since no one from his family ever turned up to even meet Usman," advocate Deedar Brohi told Reuters, adding that his client had been sentenced by an anti-terrorism court in March.

Police say the network emerged relatively recently - the main suspects became known to police over the last two years - but it is not clear whether it is acting alone or on the orders of other groups like Islamic State.


"YOU SHOULD JOIN JIHAD"

Under interrogation, Usman, arrested last September, described his recruitment in the eastern Afghan province of Nangarhar, where U.S. and Afghan forces have been fighting a local offshoot of Islamic State estimated to number a few hundred fighters.

Originally from the Pakistani valley of Swat, his family fled to Nangarhar after his father, a member of the Pakistani Taliban, was killed in a drone strike.

Usman told investigators he came home one day to find his brother sitting with an older man.

"My brother said that you should join jihad ... you should become a suicide bomber," Usman said in the confession.

He left that day and travelled with the older man by bus to the Afghan province of Kandahar, where they crossed into Pakistan's Baluchistan province.

From there, they rode a motorcycle to the remote desert town of Wadh in southern Baluchistan, where Usman began his training and stayed at the home of a man called Maaz.

"In our room, Maaz took out explosives from a bag and prepared two suicide jackets," Usman told investigators.

Police suspect Wadh is where several militant movements, including al Qaeda, the Pakistani Taliban and other local banned groups, have been active.

The media wing of Pakistan's military did not respond to requests for comment for this article, including how militants could use Wadh as hub.

An intelligence official, who declined to be named because he was not authorised to speak to the press, denied Wadh was part of a militant network.

"No training camp in Wadh or safe (haven) for militants now," the official said in a Whatsapp message.

After about a month in Wadh, Usman said he travelled by motorcycle with an escort on dusty back roads to Shikarpur. A few days later, he was dispatched with his explosives vest to attack a prayer meeting attended by Shi'ite Muslims.

The attack failed when one worshipper spoke to Usman in the local Sindhi language, which he could not understand. A crowd gathered and grabbed him before he could reach his detonator.


CENTRAL SUSPECT

Police investigators, who spoke about the case on condition of anonymity, said Usman's confession helped them identify several key militants including a suicide vest maker and the man who oversees the network - a former Pakistani intelligence services asset named Shafiq Mengal.

"Our intelligence shows that he has 500-1,000 militants working under him and is living in the mountains," said a senior police official.

Reuters was unable to contact Mengal or independently confirm the assertions of the police official. But his father, a prominent Baluch politician during the military regime of General Zia ul Haq in the 1980s, said his son had no links with militant networks.

"Shafiq has not given shelter to any terrorist outfit and their activities," former Baluchistan chief minister Naseer Mengal told Reuters.

However, the older Mengal added that his son had been active in supporting Pakistani security forces in battling Baluch separatist groups.


"Shafiq fought against those elements who challenged the writ of State and were involved in target killings of innocent people and security forces," he said.

An internal police profile of Mengal seen by Reuters said he attended an elite school in the eastern city of Lahore before completing his education at a madrassa.

According to the document, prepared by a Baluchistan police official, Mengal "was set up by the intelligence agencies to counter separatist Baloch militants" that fight the government in Baluchistan.

The report said that, more recently, it appeared Mengal shifted his efforts to helping jihadists.

The intelligence official said Mengal no longer had any association with the military.

The armed forces have launched several major offensives against groups including al Qaeda and the Taliban in recent years, but they have also been accused of using militants as proxy fighters in Kashmir and Baluchistan - a charge they deny.


"HATE-FILLED SERMONS"

Police said another important suspect in the network was Hafeez Brohi, already on Pakistan's wanted terrorist list. He comes from Shikarpur, and it was at Brohi's residence that they said the teenager stayed before the failed attack.

Usman did not name Brohi directly but said a man named Umer Hafiz, who police officials say was actually Brohi, took him from Wadh to Shikarpur by motorbike.

Usman's police case file also identifies Brohi as one of the main suspects in the failed bombing. Case files seen by Reuters on several other sectarian attacks in Shikarpur also single him out.

The town itself, some 250 km east of Wadh but several times that distance by road, is seen as an increasingly important centre of sectarian extremism, according to officials from the counter terrorism department.

Two local Shi'ite mosques were targeted by attacks in 2015.

Several new madrassas have been built in the area in recent years, and members of the Shi'ite minority suspect that they are used by Sunni hardliners to spread religious intolerance.

"The madrassas are concentrated in remote villages," said Syed Atta Hussain Shah, the imam of the Shi'ite mosque in Shikarpur. "Preachers show up from elsewhere and stay in these madrassas and deliver hate-filled sermons."

Police officials said they suspected Brohi was the point man for the network in southern Sindh province and was involved in the bombing at Sehwan Sharif shrine that killed 90 people - the most deadly attack in Pakistan claimed by Islamic State.

Brohi has been in hiding for the last three or four years, according to CTD officials.

Usman was sentenced to death in March along with 10 militants in absentia, including Brohi.

Additional reporting by Gul Yousafzai in Quetta; Editing by Mike Collett-White


http://in.reuters.com/article/pakistan-militants-network-idINKBN1AN097


@anant_s @nair @scorpionx @Nilgiri @Robinhood Pandey @Grevion @Itachi @MilSpec @Lord Of Gondor @mustang
 
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helped Islamic State spread its extremist agenda in South Asia, even without proven operational links with its core in the Middle East

Its a chilling account of how regions of East Afghanistan and NWFP which have little or no government control and wrangled in war for years have become nursery for spreading hatred and ulterior radical religious agenda.
& as i understand, there is apparently no shortage of guys like Usman who are disowned by their families and they become easiest targets by unknown masterminds to forward their plans.
History tells a great deal about mujahideens in Afghanistan, which became a huge problem to contain after red army withdrew and subsequently haven't been contained fully even to date.
Now a similar menace to security is again growing and unless it is contained right now, these outsourced terrorism will be a major security problem in very near future.
 
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nearly 90% NWFP is under Pakistani control
i would say 100%.
but point is from law enforcement agencies point of view, it is a nightmare of a region with kind of tribal federal structure of society and administrative setup.
The OP mentions how ISIS has been able to extend its influence by brainwashing youth towards an ideology of hatred and convincing them to take up violent ways to further its own agenda.
Here i really want to ask whether government is able to reverse that (by use of whatever means it has) or is all this going unchecked?
Also i don't mean to undermine efforts of Pakistani government and security agencies but such a region would be a trouble for any government in the world. & i'm sure unless the region develops economically and integrated with rest of country, i don't see situation changing very much. The same is true for Afghanistan part of the region and somehow it seems that world hasn't been able to think beyond military action for eradication of this menace in the region.
thansk to Indian R&AW for financing them
I don't agree with this part, but perhaps bigger (& truer) problem is funding of terrorists from sympathizers in Saudi. & disappointingly enough nobody is raising voice against that.
@Levina @nair
 
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I don't agree with this part, but perhaps bigger (& truer) problem is funding of terrorists from sympathizers in Saudi. & disappointingly enough nobody is raising voice against that.
@Levina @nair
Don't bother.... All of them believes that every terrorist attacks Pakistan is a RAW agent..... They have repeated it so much that now this has become the truth.... It helps them to hide their shortcomings
 
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Don't bother.... All of them believes that every terrorist attacks Pakistan is a RAW agent..... They have repeated it so much that now this has become the truth.... It helps them to hide their shortcomings
Same like ISI behind every crime in India, even if a train derail Indian politician blame ISI.
 
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Note how these terrorist usman mentioned how easily he crossed from pakistan to Afghanistan and then to balochistan province . This is only one example of how terrorists easily pass these borders cause we have a very poor security on borders . If we can't save our borders then all our operations will be a failure and nothing can be done for this country .

Once you close the border with Afghanistan and get a tight security , half of our problems are solved but I don't know what's stopping our agencies to close the border .
 
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Also i don't mean to undermine efforts of Pakistani government and security agencies but such a region would be a trouble for any government in the world. & i'm sure unless the region develops economically and integrated with rest of country, i don't see situation changing very much. The same is true for Afghanistan part of the region and somehow it seems that world hasn't been able to think beyond military action for eradication of this menace in the region.


Actually this is the most unfortunate reality that has crippled the entire war on terror episode. Billions of dollars have been poured in Afghanistan since 9/11 but Afghanistan and its adjacent regions in Pakistan stays abysmally low in human development index chart. The most successful nation building effort in modern history is perhaps the Marshall plan, but this was executed in two war torn countries which were already two biggest industrial powerhouses in 20th century. Such plan could not succeed in Yugoslavia, East Timor, Somalia and least in Iraq and Afghanistan where the West not only had to fight with poverty, illiteracy, unemployment but ethnic strife, corruption, degree of religious extremism the world have hardly ever seen. Condoleezza Rice once admitted the fact that the Americans did not have the right skills, the right capacity to deal with the reconstruction effort in Iraq and Afghanistan.

US defence secretary after 16 long years of war on terror has to acknowledge that they are still not winning and it sounds really horrible because despite the immense fire power and technological superiority NATO and US forces have they are still losing the war they hoped to finish within one year. Taliban has repeatedly targeted aid workers, school teachers, NGOs and construction workers, but NATO has simply been apathetic to this problem. That is why tactical battle successes have been culminated in greater strategic failure. Just few days ago, sixteen ANA soldiers lost their lives by US air strike in Helmand. Such losses produce enormous moral defeat among afghan forces which is still a militarily weak institution in its premature state. You can also see Karzai and his successor’s failure or reluctance to introduce a parliamentary democracy system in Afghanistan. The lack of public representatives system, its conviction to present local problems before a centralized law making body, poorly trained civilian police force have created a corrupt, inefficient system of governance in Afghanistan. The election is due in next year, but the electoral mechanism still has plenty of loopholes which open up possibilities of rigging and subsequent constitutional roadblock.

The US still fails to undo the post 9/11 monumental blunders that Republican Neo-Conservatives have made one after the other. They have repeatedly ignored the Taliban sanctuaries in FATA despite repeated consternations and complaints by NATO forces because of their traditional flawed policy of selective choosing of friends and foes (a cold war baggage, you can say) and least has been thought to eradicate the opium industry in Southern Afghanistan which provides vital economic assistance to Taliban warlords. Due this lack of long term military oversights, nation building process in Afghanistan is in shatters which leaves Pakistan’s Western regions in extremely vulnerable position before the threat of Taliban and now Islamic State’s franchise groups, which does not need safe sanctuaries in Waziristan at all because it is following a completely different strategy that Pakistan Taliban had conventionally followed so far.
 
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Actually this is the most unfortunate reality that has crippled the entire war on terror episode. Billions of dollars have been poured in Afghanistan since 9/11 but Afghanistan and its adjacent regions in Pakistan stays abysmally low in human development index chart. The most successful nation building effort in modern history is perhaps the Marshall plan, but this was executed in two war torn countries which were already two biggest industrial powerhouses in 20th century. Such plan could not succeed in Yugoslavia, East Timor, Somalia and least in Iraq and Afghanistan where the West not only had to fight with poverty, illiteracy, unemployment but ethnic strife, corruption, degree of religious extremism the world have hardly ever seen. Condoleezza Rice once admitted the fact that the Americans did not have the right skills, the right capacity to deal with the reconstruction effort in Iraq and Afghanistan.

US defence secretary after 16 long years of war on terror has to acknowledge that they are still not winning and it sounds really horrible because despite the immense fire power and technological superiority NATO and US forces have they are still losing the war they hoped to finish within one year. Taliban has repeatedly targeted aid workers, school teachers, NGOs and construction workers, but NATO has simply been apathetic to this problem. That is why tactical battle successes have been culminated in greater strategic failure. Just few days ago, sixteen ANA soldiers lost their lives by US air strike in Helmand. Such losses produce enormous moral defeat among afghan forces which is still a militarily weak institution in its premature state. You can also see Karzai and his successor’s failure or reluctance to introduce a parliamentary democracy system in Afghanistan. The lack of public representatives system, its conviction to present local problems before a centralized law making body, poorly trained civilian police force have created a corrupt, inefficient system of governance in Afghanistan. The election is due in next year, but the electoral mechanism still has plenty of loopholes which open up possibilities of rigging and subsequent constitutional roadblock.

The US still fails to undo the post 9/11 monumental blunders that Republican Neo-Conservatives have made one after the other. They have repeatedly ignored the Taliban sanctuaries in FATA despite repeated consternations and complaints by NATO forces because of their traditional flawed policy of selective choosing of friends and foes (a cold war baggage, you can say) and least has been thought to eradicate the opium industry in Southern Afghanistan which provides vital economic assistance to Taliban warlords. Due this lack of long term military oversights, nation building process in Afghanistan is in shatters which leaves Pakistan’s Western regions in extremely vulnerable position before the threat of Taliban and now Islamic State’s franchise groups, which does not need safe sanctuaries in Waziristan at all because it is following a completely different strategy that Pakistan Taliban had conventionally followed so far.
Amazing insight :tup:
Marshall plan indeed succeeded because George Catlet Marshal had a foresight that European economies should and must stand on their foot and devote resources on development. This coupled with NATO taking care of defence needs of member countries led to an unprecedented era of growth post WWII in western Europe.
It is therefore indeed tragic that USA, which champions democracy could not repeat Marshal plan ever. It has perhaps focused too much on military aspects of conflict resolution.
Imho, one point that world community had either missed or not focused enough is that after Soviet forces left country in tatters, nobody thought of Afghanistan as country. Too much focus on Mujahideen and then Taliban, pushed agenda of rebuilding society to background.
Even US foreign policy never discouraged Saudi financial help to Taliban and this essentially led to spending billions of dollar in name of war on terror. Much better results could've achieved for much less cost, simply by focusing on strengthening democratic institutes and economy.
& in this context Indian help in improving infrastructure, local security, skill development and also electoral setup is going to of far more value than faux concern shown by several countries on world forum.
But let Afghanistan remain an example on how not to handle terrorism!
 
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i would say 100%.
but point is from law enforcement agencies point of view, it is a nightmare of a region with kind of tribal federal structure of society and administrative setup.
The OP mentions how ISIS has been able to extend its influence by brainwashing youth towards an ideology of hatred and convincing them to take up violent ways to further its own agenda.
Here i really want to ask whether government is able to reverse that (by use of whatever means it has) or is all this going unchecked?
Also i don't mean to undermine efforts of Pakistani government and security agencies but such a region would be a trouble for any government in the world. & i'm sure unless the region develops economically and integrated with rest of country, i don't see situation changing very much. The same is true for Afghanistan part of the region and somehow it seems that world hasn't been able to think beyond military action for eradication of this menace in the region.

It doesn't need to be lawless or out of government control. These terrorist networks spread easily using preachers ,mosques and Madrasas. Many such Mosques and Madrasas are unofficial and can exist anywhere and no one is going to close them down, even legal Mosques and Madrasas can have radical preachers and these happen right under government noses.
 
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I don't agree with this part, but perhaps bigger (& truer) problem is funding of terrorists from sympathizers in Saudi. & disappointingly enough nobody is raising voice against that.
@Levina @nair

Not happening.
The way Saudis have moved to cash based economy to digitized and recorded economy is commendable.
Yes, the Gulf states had a problem, but it is now 100% controlled. The collection of funds, distribution of literature
, and any association of persons is strictly controlled and regulated.

What is not happening is clamping on the Hawala business, which Indian, Pakistani politicians and businessmen use
to launder ill gotten money.
The terrorists know it is there, as do the politicians; both tolerate each other.
 
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Actually this is the most unfortunate reality that has crippled the entire war on terror episode. Billions of dollars have been poured in Afghanistan since 9/11 but Afghanistan and its adjacent regions in Pakistan stays abysmally low in human development index chart.

KP has the fastest growing HDI in Pakistan right now and is above Punjab in alot of Social Indicators thanks to reforms by PTI in last 3 years . Our Police and Tourism reforms are unrivalled throughout Pakistan . FATA was Neglected for long but is getting developed by Army with Initiatives like KP merger , Sports Complexes and cadet Colleges .

Its not only the HDI though if that were the case , Nagaland , Kashmir , Assam would be peaceful places . Bihar is the poorest Place in all of South Asia but is still peaceful compared to North east States
 
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