Meet Haji Omar of the Pak Taliban...

I dont know what to make of this guy.. He turns everything on its head. For one he says they never ordered anyone to wear a beard?!?
He says the Jihad is against America and Pakistan, but in another interview just yesterday, he said that he has no beef with the Pak govt because it is under pressure from the Americans…
Still the man seems a lot like the typical Terrorist/freedom fighter/ Jihadist crowd we have come to be used too… Relatively soft spoken and rather commanding in presence from what the reporter says.
Also, have to hand it to the reporter here, he is gotten a story that a lot of journalists will be envious off. Plus he puts himself in a lot of danger…
Meeting Pakistan’s Taleban chief

By Aamer Ahmed Khan
BBC News, South Waziristan, Pakistan

Haji Omar: ‘We treat all American allies as enemy’
Not many outside Pakistan’s troubled tribal zone of Waziristan along the country’s north-western border with Afghanistan will be familiar with the name of Haji Omar.

But in Waziristan, it is a name that is commanding increasing respect and awe with every passing day.

Haji Omar is the amir (chief) of the Pakistani Taleban that have risen over the last year to take control of large parts of Waziristan.

His writ runs virtually unchallenged in South Waziristan and he seems confident that his commanders will soon establish Taleban control in North Waziristan as well.

‘Al-Qaeda ally’

Meeting him in Wana, South Waziristan’s largest town, was not exactly what I had expected when I sought an appointment with him through an intermediary in Peshawar.

Don’t listen to anyone who says we have ordered people to grow beards

Taleban leader Haji Omar

He was, after all, a supposed al-Qaeda ally, a man on the run from Pakistani authorities who claim to be in control of South Waziristan.

Thus far, he has also successfully dodged the extensive American aerial and human intelligence network in the area.

I asked my escort where we were headed as we left Dera Ismail Khan - the second largest city in Pakistan’s North West Frontier Province - at sunrise to meet Haji Omar.

“Wana, where else?” he grinned.

“We will send him a message when we get to Wana and he will come and meet us,” the guide told me.

That was exactly how it happened.

Haji Omar drove up to the compound where I was in a simple pick up truck, the kind that one sees in the use of traders and merchants in Waziristan.

There seemed to be nothing remarkable about him - barring the formidable posse of Taleban guarding him.

This impression, however, was quickly dispelled as he started talking.

“Don’t listen to anyone who says we have ordered people to grow beards,” he laughed.

It was an easy, friendly kind of laughter.

“You don’t have a beard and yet here we are sitting as friends, no?” he laughed some more.

Mullah Omar lieutenant

Haji Omar is 55 but appears much younger, his looks belying the fact that he has spent half his life fighting on various fronts in Afghanistan.

We do not waste our bullets on them… We slaughter them

Taleban leader Haji Omar

Born in the village of Kalushah some 10km (six miles) from Wana, Haji Omar spent several years fighting the Soviets in Bagram and Kabul.

He was injured several times but disengaged from the war only when the Soviets withdrew.

Not wanting to be a part of the fratricidal war between various Mujahideen factions, he left for Dubai in the late 1980s.

Haji Omar returned to Waziristan and then went to live across the border in Kandahar when the Taleban took control of Afghanistan.

He remained there, serving as one of the many lieutenants of Taleban leader Mullah Omar, until the fall of the Taleban in November 2001.

Since returning to Wana in late 2001, he has been organising the Pakistani Taleban in Waziristan.

Haji Omar has two wives - one in Wana, and one he married later in Kandahar.

Islamabad ‘scared’

Tall and well built, he speaks halting, uncertain Urdu being more proficient in Pashto and Arabic.

Pakistan has sent thousands of troops to Waziristan

There is nothing uncertain about his views though.

“Your government is very happy with us because we have established peace in South Waziristan,” he says.

“It is only scared that we may enforce the Sharia [Islamic moral code] here.”

Perhaps that is not the government’s primary worry at this stage.

Intelligence officials dealing with the tribal areas had earlier told me that their real worries stemmed from the composition of the group calling itself the Pakistani Taleban.

One senior official had alleged that a large number of criminals had entered the Taleban ranks in order to make money from the Arab and Central Asian fighters seeking refuge in Waziristan.

“What do I need money for?” Haji Omar seemed genuinely surprised at the intelligence analysis.

“The government has destroyed my house. If I was getting money from the Arabs, I would have rebuilt my house by now. But I and my people are living in caves and tents,” he said.

“Jihad is never for money. If I take money from anyone, I will suffer even in death,” he added.

Traitors

Irrespective of whether money is involved or not, foreign militants are the crux of the problem, aren’t they? I asked him.

“The issue is the government’s poor understanding of the issue,” Haji Omar says.

"Afghanistan was an Islamic country with an Islamic system. It has now descended into anarchy.

“The only way for us to put an end to the anarchy there is to wage a jihad against the Americans and anyone who supports them.”

That includes Pakistan, the key American ally in the region.

“Yes, we treat all American allies as enemy. We have caught many people who were trying to help the Americans, either directly or through Pakistan,” he said.

What happens when they catch such people?

“We do not waste our bullets on them,” Haji Omar said with a smile.

“We slaughter them.”

Re: Meet Haji Omar of the Pak Taliban...

they should shoot this ba$tardo

Re: Meet Haji Omar of the Pak Taliban…

For what?

His predecessor, Naik Mohammed, committed treason for he ordered his men to fight the government, after government forces occupied his part of the country when he failed to comply with his agreement to turn over foreigners.

If Haji Omar does not use violence against Pakistan, Pakistan should not use violence against him.

If, however, his forces should turn violent against any Pakistani military forces searching through to arrest people suspected of using Pakistan as a base to attack the government in Kabul now recognised by Pakistan, then that is a different matter.

But certainly, Pakistan should not be killing any Pakistanis who are not taking direct action against Pakistan. I don’t care how many attacks into Afghanistan he leads, that would only warrant arrest and trial.

If he tries to fight the government though… well, his predecessor tried that. he fought the law and the law won.

Re: Meet Haji Omar of the Pak Taliban...

What law in pakistan? You are joking right, if before they were heroes for fighting in kashmir, they later on became terrorists.

Re: Meet Haji Omar of the Pak Taliban...

Who has been fighting Pakistani soldeirs in Waziristan? Dick Cheney?

Re: Meet Haji Omar of the Pak Taliban...

In Kashmir their guns were facing the other way. So it was accepted.

Now they are pointing their AK-47 in the wrong direction. So it is not kosher anymore. Is it too hard to understand for you?

Re: Meet Haji Omar of the Pak Taliban...

Oh not at all, its just the way you go about makes the pak gov't seem so righteous. Funny wouldn't you say?

Re: Meet Haji Omar of the Pak Taliban...

No it ain't funny when Afridi men of Frontier Constabulary are getting hurt by the $stupid actions of Waziris.

Re: Meet Haji Omar of the Pak Taliban…

Truly geat people change. Mustafa Kemal Ataturk was a hero of the Khilafat, the most capable general the Khalifat ever had in the 20th century. The extents that he went through and the feats that he achieved during his guerrilla war against Italy in Libya, as he sought to preserve the Khalifat and its territory, as a young man are amazing.

And yet he fell so far as to be the person who ended all that.

Just because you do some great deeds in the past does not make you immune to becoming a force of evil.

Re: Meet Haji Omar of the Pak Taliban...

No it doesn't, but the same institution that supported, used and abused it, now turned the other cheek. Maybe if they took a better more sensible approach, maybe they wouldn't be in this problem they brought themselves into.

Re: Meet Haji Omar of the Pak Taliban...

Like what "sensible approach".

Pak authorities gave 2 long years to Waziris. They didn't quit. Finally and sadly the army had to go in.

Re: Meet Haji Omar of the Pak Taliban...

we all know how that turned out.

Re: Meet Haji Omar of the Pak Taliban...

Yeap! And the Neku got a missile in his @r$$e. Same thing will hapen to this new tribal Mullah (unless he get some sense).

Re: Meet Haji Omar of the Pak Taliban...

Yeh like that has worked, I mean come on what good has come from it? It has backfired royally.

Re: Meet Haji Omar of the Pak Taliban...

Agreed! When the missile hit Neku, the fire did come out of his royal Talib back.

Re: Meet Haji Omar of the Pak Taliban...

Awww Antiobl using his 'amazing' literary technique. Burrrrrrr it backfired, and Nek mohammad was arespected person, proven by his funeral.

Re: Meet Haji Omar of the Pak Taliban...

Only a talib would considerr Neku a respected person.

Re: Meet Haji Omar of the Pak Taliban...

Maybe so, but wait I thought I was a kabuli commie, have I been promoted? Tell me when do I get to be an arabob, or wait a Bhindian?

Re: Meet Haji Omar of the Pak Taliban...

Nothing personal!

Talbanic Mullahs attended Neku last rites. That doesn't make him a martyr or a respected person. Neku was responsible for killing innocent Afridi soldiers. Glad to see him explode with a missile in his @rse. This Haji Omar will get nailed the same way.

Re: Meet Haji Omar of the Pak Taliban...

We will see what happens. However, they were (the afridi soldiers) were serving the pak army, so they got killed by nek muhammad. Plus, 5000 people attending a funeral says something about the man.