Pak Army & Air Force Go After Uzbeks,
Chechens & Uighurs - International Terrorism Monitor--Paper
No. 286
By B. Raman
About 200 members of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan
(IMU) , the Islamic Jihad Group, another Uzbek jihadi group
allied to Al Qaeda, and the Pashtun tribal group led by
Baitullah Mehsud and about a hundred members of the
Pakistani Security Forces---mostly para-military
personnel--- have been killed in violent clashes between
pro-Al Qaeda jihadis and the security forces in and around
the Mir Ali area of North Waziristan since October 6, 2007.
The clashes started after the terrorists ambushed a convoy
of the security forces in North Waziristan, inflicting an
undisclosed number of fatalities and capturing some
Pakistani personnel of the security forces.
2. The dead bodies of the some of the security forces
personnel were later found abandoned with their throats
slit. A Jirga of leading North Waziristan clerics led by
former Member of the National Assembly from North Waziristan,
Maulana Nek Zaman Haqqani, after daylong negotiations,
received 30 bodies of the slain soldiers from the jihadis in
Khaisur and handed them over to military officials in Mir
Ali. The "News", a well-informed daily newspaper, quoted an
unidentified jirga member as claiming on October 8,
2007, that the jirga members had recovered 73 bodies of
soldiers, majority of which were burnt or badly mutilated,
from the Mir Ali villages that they had visited. Malik Sher
Khan, a local tribal elder, said 45 bodies of soldiers had
been handed over to military officials in Mir Ali. Quoting a
local Government official, the "News" reported as follows:
Very few of the over 200 soldiers besieged by militants on
Sunday (October 7) seem to have survived after the deadliest
ever attack on them. Following the discovery of over a
dozen mutilated dead bodies, either beheaded or with their
throats slit, of para-military personnel captured earlier by
the men of Baitullah Mehsud, the para-military forces ran
amok. Some surrendered to the terrorists, others discarded
their uniforms and took shelter in the homes of the
residents of the area and some others went on a killing
spree, indiscriminately killing the local villagers and the
Uzbeks, Chechens and Uighurs living in Mir Ali.
3. The Pakistani security forces retaliated initially
with ground troops and helicopter gunships. Subsequently,
unable to prevail over the jihadi forces, they called for an
air strike. Maj-Gen Waheed Arshad, an Army spokesman,
claimed in a TV interview that the aircraft of the Pakistan
Air Force targeted militant hideouts and struck one or two
places near Mir Ali. The local villagers said that PAF
aircraft also bombed a village near Mir Ali called Hader
Khel. There was a large number of fatalities of innocent
civilians on October 9, 2007, when some bombs fell on a
crowded village market. At the time of the recording of this
note, clashes continue in the area.
4. Till March, 2007, Mir Ali used to be the headquarters
of the Islamic Jihad Group, a break-away group of the IMU.
It is also known as the Islamic Jihad Union. It ran a
number of training camps there where jihadis from many
Western countries, including Germany, China's Xinjiang, and
Pakistan itself were trained by Uzbek and Chechen
instructors. The IMU's headquarters used to be in the Azam
Warsak area of South Waziristan. This area became the scene
of violent attacks by sections of the local tribals on the
Uzbeks living in the area following the alleged murder of a
local tribal personality by an Uzbek resident of the area in
the third week of March, 2007. In the ensuing clashes,
nearly 100 persons were killed----about 70 Uzbeks and the
remaining locals mainly belonging to the Darikhel and the
Tojikhel sub-tribes of the Pashtuns. The Yargulkhel
sub-tribe led by Noor Islam and his brother Haji Omar, two
important pro-Taliban military commanders who had once
fought in Afghanistan, supported the Uzbeks in their fight
against the Darikhels and the Tojkhels. Some Yargulkhels
were also killed. Ultimately, the IMU was forced to
evacuate South Waziristan and shift to Mir Ali.
5. Following this, I had reported as follows in my
article titled "Mir Ali In North Waziristan- : Under Uzbek
Control ", which is available at
http://www.saag.org/papers24/paper2317.html
: Quote According to well-informed sources in the Police of
the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP), the Mir Ali area
of North Waziristan in the Federally-Administered Tribal
Areas (FATA) of Pakistan is under the effective control of
the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU) headed by Qari
Tahir Yaldeshev. Small groups of Chechens and Uighurs are
also present in the area. They work under the over-all
command of Qari Tahir. They were being helped by Maulana
Sadiq Noor, a local tribal leader close to the Neo Taliban.
The IMU, with the help of Chechen instructors, has set up
training camps in the area for training the recruits of the
Neo Taliban, the jihadi terrorist organisations of Pakistan
and individual jihadis from abroad-particularly from the
Pakistani diaspora abroad. In a report on the ground
situation in the North Waziristan area, the "Dawn" of
Karachi stated as follows on July 29, 2007: "The problem now
is that the situation in Miranshah has worsened to an
unusual extent. In a letter to the government, that sounded
more like a lamentation, a political agent stated that the
khasadars (tribal police) had abandoned their duty without
seeking his permission. All those appointed for 599 posts of
the levies force had renounced their responsibilities and
officers of the line departments had left their offices at
the mercy of watchmen. Little wonder then that a line
department office and a check-post are blown up every day.
Junior tribal officers and moharrirs (clerks) have not
reported for work and tribal elders remain too scared to
meet the political administration for fear of reprisal
attacks from militants." Independent sources say that there
is a total administrative collapse in the area, with very
little governance. This chaos and anarchy have been
spreading to the adjoining Bannu and other areas of the NWFP.
The Pakistan Army, despite the claims of Gen. Pervez
Musharraf, is not in a position to restore its authority in
the area. At the same time, it is reluctant to let the US
forces in nearby Afghan territory mount covert actions
against these elements lest it further aggravate the jihadi
anger against Musharraf in the tribal and non-tribal areas.
Instead of making too many statements on the options
available to the US, which are proving counter-productive,
the US should authorise its commanders on the ground in the
Afghan territory to mount any covert action in Pakistani
territory in the North Waziristan area within a certain
depth, if such action is warranted by intelligence of
terrorist operations under preparation."
6. After the Pakistani commando raid in the Lal Masjid of
Islamabad between July 10 and `13, 2007, the Mehsuds of
Baitullah joined hands with the IMU and the Islamic Jihad
Group and they started instigating suicide terrorist attacks
not only in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA)
and the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP), but also
outside the tribal belt---even in places like Islamabad and
Rawalpindi. Coinciding with the commando raid, the
Government of Pervez Musharraf sent reinforcements of
security forces to North Waziristan. This was interpreted by
sections of the local tribals as a violation of the peace
agreement signed with them by the Pakistan Army in
September, 2006, and as a prelude to attacks on the
headquarters of the IMU and the Islamic Jihad Group. They
kidnapped nearly 300 members of the para-military forces and
threatened to kill them at the rate of three a day if their
followers in Government custody were not released and the
reinforcements were not withdrawn.
7. Following the arrest in Germany in September of three
German Muslims trained in the camps of the Islamic Jihad
Group in the Mir Ali area, who were allegedly planning to
attack a US military base in Germany, the Musharraf
Government came inder increased pressure from the US to act
against the pro-Al Qaeda jihadis in the Mir Ali area. There
was similar pressure from the Chinese, who were concerned
over the attacks on Chinese nationals working in Pakistan
after the Lal Masjid raid. Even apart from these pressures,
the worsening security situation in the tribal belt forced
the Pakistani Security Forces to act against the Uzbeks,
Chechens and Uighurs and their local tribal supporters.
Reports from the NATO forces in Afghanistan of the presence
of increasing numbers of Uzbeks, Chechens and Uighurs with
the Neo Taliban forces operating in Afghan territory added
to the pressure for action. Responding to these pressures,
the Pakistani Government started sending further
reinforcements to the area. It was a jihadi attack on one of
the convoys carrying these reinforcements which triggered
off the latest round of deadly clashes.
8. This may please be read in continuation of my
following articles:
(a)."ATTACKS ON UZBEKS IN SOUTH WAZIRISTAN" -
INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM MONITOR---PAPER NO. 208
http://www.saag.org/papers22/paper2180.html
(b). "Mir Ali In North Waziristan-
: Under Uzbeck Control"-Internatioonal Terrorism Monitor-
Paper No. 262
http://www.saag.org/papers24/paper2317.html
(c). "Global Jihad: Uzbeks to the Fore" - International
Terrorism Monitor---Paper No. 273
http://www.saag.org/papers24/paper2360.html
(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet
Secretariat, Govt. of India, New Delhi, and, presently,
Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai. He is also
associated with the Chennai Centre For China Studies.
E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com)