The Punjabi Taliban - International
Terrorism Monitor--Paper No. 566
By B. Raman
The interrogation
of Muhammed Aquil alias Dr.Usman, the only
surviving member of the group of nine
terrorists, which launched a commando-style
attack on the Pakistan Army's General
Headquarters (GHQ) at Rawalpindi on October
10, 2009, which lasted a little over 20
hours, has not yet started. He is reported
to have been seriously injured, when he
tried to blow himself up inside the GHQ to
avoid being captured. He is presently under
treatment in a military hospital, where army
doctors are desperately trying to save his
life. The Pakistani authorities now believe
that he was the leader of the commando
group, which attacked the Sri Lankan cricket
team in Lahore in March last and the GHQ on
October 10-11.
2. On the basis
of a record check, Pakistani investigators
say that he is a Punjabi from the Kahuta
Tehsil of the Rawalpindi District. He had
served as a sepoy in the Army Medical Corps.
He resigned from the Army after some years
and joined the anti-Shia Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LEJ).
When the Pashtun-dominated Tehrik-e-Taliban
Pakistan (TTP) came into existence after the
Pakistani Army commando raid in the Lal
Masjiid of Islamabad in July,2007, some of
the Punjabi members of the LEJ , including
Aquil, floated a new organisation called the
Tehrik-e-Taliban Punjab. Its leader's name
is given as Farooq. Not much is known about
him.
3. In the 1990s,
the Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan (SSP), which
came into existence with the encouragement
of the late Zia-ul-Haq, floated the LEJ. The
SSP and the LEJ projected themselves as
different organisations with no links, but
Pakistani police officials believed that the
SSP was the political wing of the
clandestine LEJ. They further believe that
the Tehrik-e-Taliban Punjab is a
newly-created united front of the LEJ, which
seeks to bring together the various anti-Shia
and pro-Al Qaeda groups of Punjab to act
against the Army as well as the Shias. While
the Jaish-e-Mohammad (JEM) is part of this
united front, the Laashkar-e-Toiba (LET) is
not.
4. The Tehrik-e-Taliban
Pakistan (TTP), now headed by Hakimullah
Mehsud, and the Tehrik-e-Taliban Punjab
share a Wahabist ideology and a common
objective of fighting against the Pakistan
Army's co-operation with the US. The two
organisations share each other's training
facilities and sanctuaries. They keep using
each other's trained and motivated cadres
for their operations. However, the
operations of the Tehrik-e-Taliban Punjab
are largely confined to the non-tribal belt.
The LEJ sometimes acts as the fighting arm
of the Tehrik-e-Taliban Punjab and sometimes
independently. Al Qaeda acts as the mentor
and motivator of all these organisations.
5. Police sources
say that Aquil's name had earlier figured in
the investigations into the assassination of
the Surgeon General of the Pakistan Army
Hafiz Mirza Muhammad Mushtaq Baig last year,
the firing of a rocket at a plane carrying
Perevez Musharraf in July, 2007, and the
attack on the SL cricket team in Lahore in
March last.
6. Both the
Lashkar-e-Toiba (LET) and the LEJ are
members of Osama bin Laden's International
Islamic Front (IIF) for Jihad Against the
Crusaders and the Jewish People. Both are
strongly Wahabi organisations, but whereas
the LEJ is strongly anti-US, anti-Israel,
anti-India, anti-Iran and anti-Shia, the LET
is only anti-US, anti-Israel and anti-India,
but not anti-Iran or anti-Shia.
7. There is no
confirmed instance of the LET indulging in
planned anti-Shia violence in Pakistan or
Afghanistan, but the LEJ has been
responsible for most of the targeted attacks
on Shias and their places of worship in
Pakistan and on the Hazaras---who are Shias---in
Pakistan and Afghanistan.
8. The
Harkat-ul-Mujahideen (HUM), the
Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami (HUJI) and the
Jaish-e-Mohammad (JEM), which are also
members of the IIF, strongly share the anti-Shia
feelings of the LEJ, but they do not indulge
in targeted attacks on Shias and their
places of worship. Many of the leaders of
these organisations, including Maulana
Masood Azhar, the Amir of the JEM, started
their jihadi career in the SSP, but later
drifted away from it since they felt
uncomfortable with its targeted attacks on
Shias and their places of worship. Despite
being separate now, they do co-operate with
the LEJ in its operations directed against
US interests and the Pakistani armed forces.
The LET prefers to operate independently
without getting involved with the SSP or the
LEJ. The LET avoids attacks on Pakistani
security forces.
9. The strong
action taken by the international community
against known and suspected Arab members of
Al Qaeda created difficulties for them in
travelling freely and in carrying out
operations in non-Muslim countries.
Consequently, it started depending
increasingly on the Pakistani members of the
LET for its operations. Post-9/11, the
LET opened its sleeper cells in countries
such as Australia, Singapore, the UK, France
and the US to help Al Qaeda in its
operations by collecting information,
motivating the members of the Pakistani
diaspora and other means.
10. The discovery
of LET sleeper cells in the Western
countries post-2002 brought increased focus
on the LET in the West.Next to the Arab
members of Al Qaeda, suspected Pakistani
members of the LET were placed under close
surveillance in many countries. This created
difficulties in the movement and activities
of the LET. The LET is no longer able to
operate outside the Indian sub-continent and
the Gulf countries as freely as it used to
do in the past.
11. Moreover,
the LET started feeling uncomfortable over
the anti-Shia violence unleashed by Al Qaeda
and its surrogates in Iraq. While continuing
to be a member of the IIF, it tried to avoid
being associated with Al Qaeda's anti-Shia
and anti-Saudi policies. Saudi charity
organisations have been one of the main
funders of the LET, which has an active
branch in Saudi Arabia to recruit members
from the Indian Muslim diaspora in the Gulf
countries.
12. In view of
these developments, Al Qaeda has started
increasingly using the LEJ for its
operations in Pakistan itself as well as in
the non-Muslim countries. The LEJ was
actively involved in supporting the students
of the two madrasas of the Lal Masjid of
Islamabad before they were raided by
Pakistani military commandoes in July, 2007.
Many of the women, who were targeted by the
girl students for allegedly running a call
girl racket, were reportedly Shias. It has
been actively backing the tribals, who have
taken to arms against the Pakistani security
forces in North and South Waziristan and in
the Swat Valley in the
Provincially-Administered Tribal Areas (PATA)
of the North-West Frontier Province. Under
the influence of the LEJ, the tribals have
been beheading or otherwise killing only the
Shias among the security forces personnel
captured by them. Well-informed Police
sources say that all the para-military
personnel beheaded so far by the tribals
were Shias. According to them, there has not
been a single instance of the beheading of a
Sunni member of the security forces though
many Sunnis have been killed in explosions.
13. The JEM is
also actively involved in supporting the
Tehrik-e-Nifaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi (TNSM)
in its fight against the security forces in
the Swat Valley. There have been targeted
attacks on members of the local Shia
community. The anti-Shia dimension of the
current violence in the tribal areas was
also corroborated by the well-informed
"Daily Times" of Lahore in an editorial
titled "Two Oppressions" carried by it on
November 10, 2007. The editorial said: ' The
latest news from Waziristan is that a
well-known Shia personality has been gunned
down. This is a part of the sectarian
violence that Al Qaeda commits in the
territories it captures. Earlier, Shias
among the captured Pakistani troops were
casually beheaded while the Sunnis were
returned. In the Shia-majority Parachinar in
the Kurram Agency, suicide-bombers have been
killing indiscriminately."
14.Al Qaeda's use
of the LEJ is not confined to Pakistani
territory. Police sources say that in view
of the difficulties now faced by suspected
LET members in Western countries and in
South-east Asia, Al Qaeda is encouraging the
SSP and the LEJ to gradually take over the
role of the LET as the motivators and
mobilisers of members of the overseas
Pakistani diaspora for assisting Al Qaeda in
its operations. They claim that some sleeper
cells of the SSP and the LEJ have already
come up in the US, the UK, Spain, Portugal,
France, Singapore and Australia. Since the
foreign intelligence agencies do not have
much information about the SSP and the LEJ,
they are able to operate without creating
suspicions about them.
(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)