Two court attack militant brothers arrested | AH part of web including
Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, Harkat-ul-Mujahideen, Jaish-e-Mohammed,
Jundallah
ISLAMABAD - The law enforcement agencies (LEAs) on Wednesday claimed to
have arrested two terror suspects belonging to a militant outfit
involved in the deadly attack at Islamabad district courts on Monday
that left at least 11 people dead.
The reported arrests were made
following a police encounter in the suburbs of Attock on Tuesday night,
highly placed security official told this correspondent. The reported
terrorists are said to have direct linkages with Ahrar-ul-Hind, which,
the source said, is a split faction of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP).
According
to a reliable source in the Joint Investigation Team (JIT) probing the
Islamabad incident, two terror suspects involved in the deadly attack
looked like Uzbek militants associated with the TTP and it is, he said,
under investigation how they managed to break into the highly secured
and posh sectors of Islamabad.
“Both the militants are Punjabi
Taliban and real brothers, and they founded Ahrar-ul-Hind,” the official
shared, adding they have a direct hand in the attack that took place in
Islamabad.
One of the main targets of the militants, the source
further shared, was the Anti-Terrorism Court (ATC) Judge Atiq-ur-Rehman
who narrowly escaped the attack due to the reason that his court room
was shifted from the place following an intelligence agency’s report
just a few days before.
“Ahrar-ul-Hind is funded from across the
border. Certain groups of Taliban had trained the militants of this
outfit outside Pakistan to carry out gorilla attacks in Pakistan’s urban
areas,” the officials said.
Ahrar-ul-Hind was formed when TTP activists were divided after the death of Hakimullah Mehsud.
A
commander of banned militant outfit shared with this correspondent that
the newly formed group derived its name from “Ahrar” because the
Ahraris were against the formation of Pakistan and they believed that
the entire subcontinent was their motherland. They plan to expand the
fight to “the remaining part of subcontinent, India and Occupied
Kashmir,” the commander explained the AH manifesto.
Apart from the
TTP, Ahrar-ul-Hind has reported ties with the Islamic Movement of
Uzbekistan, Harkat-ul-Mujahideen, Jaish-e-Mohammed and Jundallah.
A
neighbouring country, sources believe, has been involved in training the
Ahrar-ul-Hind militants, who have fought alongside the TTP against the
Pakistan army and LEAs.
“Practically, Ahrar-ul-Hind and TTP are the
two facets of the same coin even though they have apparently parted
ways. The militants of both the terrorist outfits always stick together.
In most of the cases, they even sleep and eat together under one roof,
besides receiving militant training together to fight against Pakistan’s
Armed Forces.”
However, surprising was a statement, reported by a
section of the media quoting Maulana Sami-ul-Haq that the Taliban
themselves did not know “who the hell” Ahrar-ul-Hind is (Ahrar-ul-Hind
kis bala ka naam hai). The Maulana was also quoted as saying that the
TTP was trying to track the AH and rather they had tracked them using
Facebook.
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