Defunct Tehrik-e-Talban splits into two groups

Re: Defunct Tehrik-e-Talban splits into two groups

Pakistani Taliban try to woo back ex-comradeBy Reuters
Published: July 1, 2011

****BAGGAN: The Pakistani Taliban are trying to lure back a senior militant commander who recently quit the group because he controls strategic routes into Afghanistan and Pakistan and can block off militants’ escape paths, his supporters said on Friday.
Analysts say last week’s defection of Fazal Saeed, a Taliban leader in the Kurram region, is a serious blow to the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), blamed for many suicide bombings across the country.

Saeed’s faction controls important roads used by both Pakistani and Afghan Taliban militants based in North Waziristan’s tribal region for attacks in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Saeed has now formed a new group called the Tehrik-i-Taliban Islami (TTI), comprising some 500 militants and is said to have close ties to Sirajuddin Haqqani, leader of the most brutal faction of the Afghan Taliban.

TTP chief Hakimullah Mehsud has sought help from Haqqani for a truce with Saeed, who quit the group to protest against what he called “brutal” attacks on civilians, militant sources said.

“A six-member delegation of Afghan commanders is meeting commander Saeed at the request of Hakimullah Mehsud to ask him to rejoin the group,” a militant source close to Saeed told a group of reporters.

“They have asked him to open roads he has blocked for militant movements, which are import routes linking Pakistani tribal regions to Afghanistan,” the militant source said.

Saeed said he intends to continue to attack US troops in Afghanistan.

A Reuters’s reporter was part of a group of journalists who were to meet Saeed at his invitation, but the meeting had to be postponed because of the Mehsud delegation’s visit.

A spokesman from the TTP was unavailable for comment.

Saeed has been at odds with Mehsud for several months over militant activities in his stronghold of lower Kurram but their ties deteriorated after one of Saeed’s commanders was killed about a month and a half ago, his supporters say.

The roads Saeed controls are vitally important for Mehsud’s men to reach other tribal regions, and to use as escape routes in case of a military operation in North Waziristan.

**Kurram is one of seven tribal agencies, semi-autonomous ethnic Pashtun regions. Its roads are open to the Haqqani network, but not the TTP.
**

The United States has long demanded that Pakistan attack the North Waziristan region to eliminate the Haqqani network.

Pakistan has been reluctant to do so but it has come under increased pressure after al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden was found and killed in Abboattabad by US special forces in May.

Pakistani forces have launched many offensives in the tribal areas against militants, but have failed to weaken their resolve as insurgents continue to attack the army in the northwest.

The Taliban have vowed to avenge Bin Laden’s death and have stepped up attacks, including a bombing that killed 80 army recruits, a brazen attack on PNS Mehran naval airbase and an assault on a US consular vehicles in Peshawar.

Re: Defunct Tehrik-e-Talban splits into two groups

[http://tribune.com.pk/story/202634/isolated-hakimullah-losing-control-of-ttp/

[URL=“http://tribune.com.pk/story/202634/isolated-hakimullah-losing-control-of-ttp/”]‘Isolated Hakimullah losing control of TTP’](http://tribune.com.pk/story/202634/isolated-hakimullah-losing-control-of-ttp/)By Zia Khan
Published: July 5, 2011

ISLAMABAD:
Chief of the Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) Hakimullah Mehsud has been in isolation for more than a year and is rapidly losing control over the terror group he once led with absolute command and authority, his associates and intelligence officials said.

Insiders of the dreaded militant outfit in the country’s lawless tribal badlands and intelligence officials in Islamabad told The Express Tribune that Hakimullah might soon be faced with more rebels from within the TTP after last week’s defection by one of his top commanders.

Fazal Saeed Haqqani, who was appointed by Hakimullah for the strategic Kurram tribal region, announced to separate his group of more than 1,000 fighters from the main outfit in what appeared to be the first serious fracture for the TTP.

The defection took place within days after unknown attackers killed a spokesperson for the TTP’s Fidayeen-e-Islam group – the suicide bombing squad.

The killing of Shakirullah Shakir, a key figure of the TTP, in Mirali town of North Waziristan has raised questions over how influential Hakimullah still is in the region.

“It was like a slap on the face for him. Nobody could have imagined such things here sometime back,” a tribal source commented on the murder, which is still unsolved.

A day after Haqqani’s announcement to split, a group of the Taliban from Khyber Agency attacked their counterparts from Orakzai in what appeared to be another sign of growing friction within the TTP and lack of a centralised and coordinated leadership.

“All these incidents are just the tip of the iceberg. There may be a series of challenges for him … you will see more of his boys turning against him and this is exactly what we desired and have been working on,” claimed an official, who deals with counter-terror operations in the tribal areas, while choosing to stay anonymous. His comments were verified by some of Hakimullah’s associates.

“It looks as though he is just a figurehead now. He can hardly communicate with his commanders in other parts of the tribal areas … he is in total isolation. Only a few people within the TTP know where he is,” said one of Hakimullah’s affiliates.

Although Pakistani military officials claimed credit for Hakimullah’s isolation, tribal sources said it was more likely due to fears of being hit by drones rather than anything else.

Published in The Express Tribune, July 5th, 2011.

Re: Defunct Tehrik-e-Talban splits into two groups

I have something in Urdu . [TABLE=“align: center”]

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Re: Defunct Tehrik-e-Talban splits into two groups

Sir don’t quote this cartoon Iqbal Haider one of those who get hart attack when they heard the name of Shairah but they are not hurt when they are dancing with Indians and Kashmiris are being killed and when they are drinking alcohal and blood of Muslims is being shed in Kashmir and Gujrat they are the slaves of PPP and its corrupt system

Re: Defunct Tehrik-e-Talban splits into two groups

Sir does he need to ask permission from you before quoting someone?

Re: Defunct Tehrik-e-Talban splits into two groups

Allah has taught them a good lesson. Ye log tauba kare aur gaffara ada kare.