ATTACKS ON UZBEKS IN SOUTH WAZIRISTAN -
INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM MONITOR---PAPER NO. 208
By B. Raman
The Azam Warsak area of South Waziristan in the
Federally-Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) of Pakistan
has been the scene of violent attacks by sections of the
local tribals on the Uzbeks living in the area following
the alleged murder of a local tribal personality by an
Uzbek resident of the area. The attacks started on March
19, 2007. The Uzbeks retaliated and in the ensuing
clashes nearly 100 persons have been killed----about 70
Uzbeks and the remaining locals mainly belonging to the Darikhel
and the Tojikhel sub-tribes. The Yargulkhel sub-tribe
led by Noor Islam and his brother Haji Omar, two
important pro-Taliban military commanders who had once
fought in Afghanistan, have been supporting the Uzbeks
in their fight against the Darikhels and the Tojkhels.
Some Yargulkhels have also been killed. The Interior
Minister Aftab Sherpao has claimed that 84 Uzbek
militants and 30 local tribesmen, including nine
civilians, have been killed so far and another 83
Uzbeks captured, but there is no confirmation of his
figures.
2. This is the second time the Uzbeks, supported by
the Yargulkhels, have recently clashed with the
Darikhels and the Tojhkhels. In the previous clash on
March 6, 2007, 19 persons were killed---Uzbeks as well
as Darikhels. Among the Darikhels killed were the son
and two brothers of Malik Saidullah Khan, a respected
elder of the Darikhel tribe. Since then, the Darikhel
tribe, supported by the Tojhkhels, has been looking for
an opportunity to avenge the death of the son and two
brothers of Saidullah Khan.
3. The intervention of the Jamiat-ul-Ulema-e-Islam
of Maulana Fazlur Rehman, Sirajuddin Haqqani, son of
Jallaluddin Haqqani, a senior military commander of the
Neo Taliban, Mulla Dadullah Akhund, another senior
commander of the Neo Taliban, and Baitullah Mehsud, the
leader of the local Taliban in the South Waziristan
area, has not succeeded in bringing about a ceasefire.
The fighting between the Uzbeks and the local tribal
groups suits the Pakistan Army, which has been facing
pressure from the US, China and Iran to act against the
Uzbeks, Chechens and Uighurs active in this area. It
has, therefore, not intervened to stop the killing,
despite the fact that many pro-Government tribals have
also been killed. Lt. Gen. (Retd) Hamid Gul, Lt.
Gen.(retd) Javed Nasir and Lt. Gen. (retd) Mahmood
Ahmed, all the three former Directors-General of the
Inter-Services Intelligence, have been unsuccessfully
trying to stop the fighting. Despite their intervention,
sporadic clashes are continuing.
4. A large number of Uzbeks----from Afghanistan as
well as Uzbekistan--- have settled down in the South
Waziristan area for many years. Many of them have
married local women. The Afghan Uzbeks are largely
former supporters of Rashid Dostum, the Uzbek leader of
Afghanistan. They used to serve in the Afghan Army of
Najibullah in Southern and Eastern Afghanistan. When
Dostum, instigated by the US' Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA),deserted Najibullah in 1991 and joined
hands with the the CIA-trained Mujahideen, these Uzbek
soldiers deserted from Najibullah's army and settled
down in the South Waziristan area.
5. This area also has many Uzbeks from Uzbekistan
belonging to the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU),
which is a member of Osama bin Laden's International
Islamic Front (IIF).As reported by me in my paper of
August 2, 2004, at
http://www.saag.org/papers11/paper1075.html,
in December 1991, some unemployed Muslim youth seized
the Communist Party headquarters in the eastern Uzbek
city of Namangan, to protest against the refusal of the
local Mayor to permit the construction of a mosque. The
protest was organised by Tohir Abdouhalilovitch
Yuldeshev, a 24-year-old college drop-out, who had
become a Mulla, and Jumaboi Ahmadzhanovitch Khojaev, a
former Soviet paratrooper who had served in Afghanistan
and returned from there totally converted to Wahabism.
6. Yuldeshev and Khojaev, who later adopted the alias
Juma Namangani, after his hometown, became members of
the Uzbekistan branch of the Islamic Renaissance Party (IRP).
Following the IRP's reported refusal to support their
demand for the establishment of an Islamic State in
Uzbekistan, they formed their own party called the
Adolat (Justice) Party, which was banned by President
Islam Karimov. They then fled to Tajikistan. While
Namangani fought in the local civil war, Yuldeshev went
to Chechnya to participate in the jihad there. In 1995,
he went to Pakistan, where the jihadi organisations gave
him shelter in Peshawar. From there, he re-named the
Adolat Party as the IMU and was allegedly in receipt of
funds from the intelligence agencies of Pakistan, Saudi
Arabia and Turkey. After Osama bin Laden shifted to
Jalalabad from Khartoum in Sudan in 1996, he crossed
over into Afghanistan.
7. After the end of the civil war in Tajikistan, Namangani
settled down for a while as a road transport operator.
He was also allegedly involved in heroin smuggling from
Afghanistan. Subsequently, he too crossed over into
Afghanistan and joined the IMU and became its leader.
The IMU allegedly earns a major part of its revenue from
heroin smuggling.
8. After the Taliban captured Kabul in September,
1996, Namangani and Yuldeshev held a press conference
at Kabul at which they announced the formation of the
IMU with Namangani as the Amir and Yuldeshev as its
military commander. In 1998, the IMU joined the IIF. Bin
Laden was reportedly greatly interested in the IMU
because he was hoping to use it for getting nuclear
material and know-how from Russia and other constituent
States of the erstwhile USSR.
9. The IMU's initial goal was described as the
overthrow of Uzbek President Islam Karimov and the
establishment of an Islamic State in Uzbekistan.It
reportedly changed its name to the Islamic Party of
Turkestan (IPT) in June 2001, and called for the
establishment of an Islamic Caliphate in Central Asia
consisting of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan,
Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and China's Xinxiang province.
It has been recruiting members from all these areas,
including Uighurs from Xinjiang. Initially, its recruits
were trained by the Arab instructors of Al Qaeda in the
training camps in Afghan territory and after 9/11 by
Chechen and Pashtun instructors of the Taliban in the
South Waziristan area of Pakistan. Despite its 2001
change of name as the IPT, it continues to be known in
Uzbekistan as the IMU. The name IPT is not widely
known.
10. After the reported death of Namangani in a US
air strike in Afghanistan post-9/11, Yuldeshev took over
the leadership of the IMU and crossed over with the
surviving members of the IMU into South Waziristan where
he and his Uzbek/Chechen instructors were reported to
have set up a training camp for training jihadi
terrorists. Among those reportedly trained in this camp
were the members of the Jundullah (Army of Allah), a
newly-formed Pakistani jihadi organisation.
11. In an operation launched by the Pakistani
security forces in South Waziristan in March-April,
2004, to smoke out the members of the Al Qaeda,
Yuldeshev was reported to have been injured, but he
managed to escape. There are no reliable reports of the
number of Uzbeks, Chechens and Uighurs in South
Waziristan. Some Pakistani journalists, who had visited
the South Waziristan area in March-April,2004, had
estimated the total number of foreigners, who had been
given shelter there by the local tribals , as about 600,
about 200 of them Uzbeks and the remaining Chechens,
Uighurs, Arabs and others. Other reports place the
number of Uighurs as about 100. The presence of Uzbeks,
Chechens and Uighurs in the Taliban and in Gulbuddin
Heckmatyar's Hizbe Islami now operating in Afghanistan
has also been reported. Their number is not known.
Latest reports about the current fighting estimate the
total number of Uzbeks in South Waziristan as between
1000 and 2000. This appears to be an over-estimate.
12. The Uighurs trained by the IMU were suspected of
involvement in the explosion in Gwadar in Balochistan in
the beginning of 2004 in which some Chinese engineers
were killed and in the explosions on July 31, 2004, at
the same town in which no casualties were reported.
Following an unsuccessful attempt to kill Lt-Gen Ahsan
Saleem Hyat, who was then the Karachi Corps
Commander, on June 10, 2004, the Pakistani authorities
arrested eight persons for their involvement in the
attack. They claimed that they belonged to a new
organisation called the Jundullah (the Army of God),
which had been trained in the IMU training camp in South
Waziristan. While the Pakistani Interior
Minister described the eight arrested persons, including
their leader, Ata-ur-Rehman as of Central Asian origin,
the Karachi Police described them as Pakistanis
belonging to Karachi.
13. Interestingly, after the arrests in Karachi, the
Pakistani authorities announced the end of the joint
operations by the Army and the Air Force against the
members of Al Qaeda and the IIF in the South Waziristan
area with effect from June 14, 2004. According to
official accounts, the operations, which started on June
8, had resulted in the death of 55 suspected terrorists
and 19 members of the security forces. The Pakistani
officials projected those killed and captured as of
Central Asian origin. Other reports of the intense
fighting in the area also spoke of the involvement of
Uighurs from the Xinjiang province of China in the
fighting against the Army. According to Police sources,
about 50 to 100 Uighurs from the Xinjiang province
trained by Uzbek and Chechen elements of the IIF have
joined hands with the Uzbeks and Chechens in their fight
against the Pakistan Army.
14. Two Chinese engineers working in a hydel project
in the South Waziristan area were kidnapped in October,
2004, allegedly by some Pakistani members of the
Jundullah, three Uzbeks of the IMU and some tribal
followers of Abdullah Mehsud, who was released by the US
authorities from detention in their Guantanamo Bay
detention camp in March, 2004. The kidnappers demanded
the release of some Jundullah members in custody. One of
the Chinese engineers was killed during a rescue
operation mounted by the Pakistan army. The other was
rescued.
15. The involvement of the Jundullah was also
suspected in a suicide car bomb explosion near the US
Consulate in Karachi on March 2, 2006, in which a US
diplomat was killed. This explosion took place on the
eve of the visit of President George Bush to
Pakistan.Maitur Rehman, a 29-year-old Pakistani, from
Multan in Punjab, was then reported to be the Amir
of the Jundullah. He had previously served in the
Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LEJ), an anti-Shia terrorist
organisation, and the Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami (HUJI)
16. On February 15, 2007, the Karachi Police raided a
house and arrested three suspected suicide bombers
identified as Muhammad Shahid alias Kashif, Muhammad
Farhan alias Nasir and Ghani Subhan alias Rashid. The
police also seized three hand grenades, two pistols, one
AK-47 assault rifle and a suicide jacket from them. The
Police said that the three suspects belonged to a group
headed by Al Qaeda leader Qari Zafar and they had been
especially sent to Karachi from South Waziristan to
carry out suicide attacks. According to the Police,
Shahid and Farhan belonged to Hyderabad in Sindh while
Ghani Subhan was from South Waziristan. The police
subsequently arrested 10 others with suspected links to
the IMU. They said that the arrested persons named
Maulvi Abbas, Commander Javed and Qari Zafar as
operators of their group and said that their
headquarters were located in South Waziristan. All of
them were trained in a training camp in South Waziristan
where the instructors were Pakistanis, Uzbeks and East
Africans.
18. The "Daily Times" of Lahore reported as follows
on these arrests: " Investigations into the three
alleged Al Qaeda suspects who were arrested in Karachi
Friday have revealed that the influence of Uzbek
extremists has grown on Al Qaeda in Wana. “An
unspecified number of Uzbek mujahideen are still present
in Wana. They are conceiving and planning most of the
terrorist activities,” a senior Crime Investigation
Department (CID) police officer told Daily Times,
requesting anonymity. “We have found that compared to
Arab-origin extremists, the Uzbeks are more anti-state
and hence more anti-Pakistan.” Shahid (alias Kashif
alias Mohammad) joined the anti-Shia Sipah-e-Sahaba in
1993. Following this, he went to Khost, Afghanistan,
where he trained at the Khalid bin Waleed camp. He met
the Al Qaeda’s Qari Zafar there. After fighting in
Afghanistan, Shahid went to Indian-held Kashmir where he
spent four months in 2003 at a camp of the Harkatul
Mujahideen, one of the militant groups fighting Indian
rule in Kashmir. From Kashmir he went to Wana (in South
Waziristan) where he learnt how to make explosives. More
than 15 terrorist cells are working in different cities
across Pakistan and all of them are linked in some way
or another to Qari Zafar in Wana, the police believe."
19. There has recently been a number of terrorist
incidents in the Iranian Baloch territory by an
organisation, which also calls itself the Jundullah.
Initially, the Iranian authorities had alleged that
these attacks were part of the USA's destabilisation
operations and that the perpetrators were trained by the
US in Pakistani territory. Now, they seem to believe
that they were actually trained by the IMU in its
training camps in South Waziristan. Thus, there has been
pressure on Pakistan to act against the Uzbeks. This
pressure has come from Uzbekistan, China, Iran and the
US. The Pakistani authorities themselves have been
showing signs of concern, over the involvement of Uzbeks
in terrorism in Pakistani territory outside FATA. The
ISI and the Pakistan Army have been encouraging the
anti-Uzbek tribals to keep up their attacks on the
Uzbeks, without the Pakistan Army itself getting
involved.
(The writer is Additional
Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India,
New Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute For
Topical Studies, Chennai. E-mail:
itschen36@gmail.com)