Iran Suspects
Violence in Zahidan is Planned in Pakistan
By B.
Raman
The
Iranian authorities reportedly suspect that the May 28
explosion in the second biggest Shia mosque in Zahidan,
capital of Sistan-Balochistan, the Sunni majority Baloch
province of Iran, was planned by the Jundullah, a Sunni
extremist organisation, from its sanctuary in Pakistan's
Balochistan province. They claim that the three members
of the Jundullah, who were executed in public after the
suicide explosion, confessed during their interrogation
that they brought the explosive device from Pakistan and
gave it to the suicide bomber.
2. While
the Iranian authorities accuse the Jundullah of acting
at the behest of the US and Israel, other reports
indicate that the Jundullah cadres are trained by the
Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LEJ), a Sunni extremist organisation
of Pakistan, in its training camps in South Waziristan
in the Federally-Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) of
Pakistan. The LEJ, whose involvement along with Al
Qaeda was suspected in the huge explosion in the
Marriott Hotel of Islamabad in September last year, has
been operating jointly with the Tehrik-e-Taliban
Pakistan (TTP) headed by Baitullah Mehsud of South
Waziristan.
3. The
Iranian authorities, who have officially taken up with
the Pakistani authorities their information about the
terrorist infrastructure of the Jundullah in Pakistani
territory, allege that Abdulmalek Rigi, whom they accuse
of being the Amir of the Jundullah, operates from
Pakistani territory.
4.
Citing the Fars News Agency of Iran, the "Dawn" of
Karachi reported on June 1, 2009, as follows: ' The
chief of the Iranian armed forces, General Hassan
Firouzabadi, said Iran had located the base of the group
and informed the Pakistani Government of Abdulmalek
Rigi’s position.....So far Jundullah has claimed
responsibility for a dozen terrorist operations in Iran,
however according to the FNA, they have managed to
escape punishment by crossing into Pakistan. Tehran has
warned Islamabad that it has the power and military
means to trace and hunt down terrorist groups in
Pakistan if such activity is not stopped by Pakistan.
Since the suicide attack, Iran has closed down its
border with Pakistan." The Pakistan Foreign Office has
denied the "Dawn" report about the closing of the
border.
5. The "
News" of June 1, 2009, carried the following report by
its well-informed correspondent Amir Mir: "The rising
terrorist activities of the Pakistan-based militant
organisation, Jundullah (Soldiers of God) threatens not
only the Pak-Iran diplomatic ties but also the future of
the Iran-Pakistan gas pipeline project, which was signed
on May 22 by President Asif Zardari and President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in Tehran.
According to well-placed diplomatic sources in
Islamabad, Tehran has lodged a strong protest with
Islamabad over the failure of its law enforcement
agencies to dismantle the Jundullah network in Pakistan,
which has claimed responsibility for the May 28 deadly
suicide attack inside the Ameer al-Momenin mosque in
Zahedan that killed 25 people and wounded 125 others.
The sources said Iranian officials had expressed their
deep concern over the failure of the Pakistani
authorities to proceed against the Jundullah network in
Pakistan despite having been given specific
intelligence. The Pakistani Ambassador was told that the
Zahedan suicide attack could have been averted had
Islamabad acted in time on the Iranian intelligence
information.The Iranian authorities had reportedly told
the Pakistani Ambassador that the three terrorists (Haji
Noti Zehi, Gholam Rasoul Shahi Zehi and Zabihollah
Naroui), hanged publicly on May 30 in Zahedan for their
alleged participation in the mosque bombing, had
confessed to illegally bringing explosives from Pakistan
into Iran and giving them to the main person behind the
suicide attack. Diplomatic circles in Islamabad say
Tehran's concern over the growing terrorist activities
of Jundullah, across the border in Iran, could be gauged
from the fact that its Ambassador to Pakistan Mashallah
Shakeri had addressed an unusual press conference in
Islamabad on March 20, accusing Pakistan of allowing its
soil to be used against Iran and demanding concrete
steps to contain its activities. While claiming that the
Jundullah network was located inside the Balochistan
province, Shakeri had asked Islamabad to curb its
anti-Iran activities by taking a decisive action against
its leadership. The Iranian Ambassador had given broad
hints at that time that an Iranian diplomat, who had
disappeared in Peshawar in 2008, could also have been
kidnapped by Jundullah. In his reaction the same day, a
Pakistani Foreign Office spokesman had stated that
Islamabad was determined that the Pakistani soil would
not be allowed to be used by Jundullah in any manner to
destabilise the Iranian government. However, the
diplomatic circles in Islamabad say the Iranian
authorities had warned the Pakistani Ambassador to
Tehran on May 30 that Islamabad's failure to act against
the Jundullah network in Balochistan could also
jeopardise the future of the recently-signed
Iran-Pakistan gas pipeline project. They pointed out
that the Pakistani and the Iranian Presidents had only
signed the initial agreement after 14 years of delayed
negotiations and the most crucial gas sales and purchase
agreement had not yet been finalised."
6. In
the meanwhile, the Jundullah of Iran has disseminated
the following statement: "Ayatollah Khamenaei, the
supreme leader of Iran, officially interpreted the
natural death of Fatema, the daughter of the holy
Prophet, as martyrdom, thus justifying the actions of
those who have organised Omar Denunciation Ceremonies.
The ceremonies began about two months ago in Baluchistan
where the majority of the people are Sunnis and resulted
in widespread conflicts between Baluch Sunnis and
Iranian security forces. The tension mounted when the
People's Resistance Movement of Iran, Jondollah,
initiated a bomb blast in a mosque that was dominated by
the security forces and Iranian militia. The fanatics
supported by the militia and security forces published
huge posters in the streets and began denunciation
speeches with mobile speakers in moving cars in
different streets of Zahedan. Jondollah warned these
groups to halt their offending ceremonies to one billion
Moslems throughout the world but they ignored the
warnings and continued displaying posters in their
street gatherings. Other Baluch and Sunni leaders
requested the Iranian authorities to prevent these
provocative ceremonies but they did not stop. The
Jondollah bombed the mosque that has become the centre
of various provocations and the headquarters of these
ceremonies after all other peaceful requests were
exhausted. Ayatollah Khamenaei said a few weeks ago in
Kurdistan that any action that may create divisions
between Shias and Sunnis is treason, but now it is
certain that he was behind all the offences that have
been officially made against the second Caliph."
(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd),
Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New Delhi, and,
presently, Director, Institute For Topical Studies,
Chennai. E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com)