Pakistan army cracks down on militants post Sehwan shrine attack, kills ‘100 terrorists
Pakistani security forces killed
dozens of suspected militants on Friday, a day after Islamic State claimed a
suicide bombing that killed more than 80 worshippers at a Sufi shrine, the
biggest in a spate of attacks this week across the country. The bombing at the
famed Lal Shahbaz Qalandar shrine in southern Sindh province was Pakistan’s
deadliest attack for two years, killing at least 83 people and highlighting the
threat of militant groups such as the Pakistani Taliban and Islamic State. The
security response was swift. “Over 100 terrorists have been killed since last
night and sizeable apprehensions also made,” the military said in an operations
update on Friday evening. “Terrorists will be targeted ruthlessly,
indiscriminately, anywhere and everywhere. No let up,” an armed forces
spokesman added in a tweet.
With authorities facing angry
criticism for failing to tighten security before the shrine bomber struck,
analysts warned that the wave of violence pointed to a major escalation in
Islamist militants’ attempts to destabilise the region. “This is a virtual
declaration of war against the state of Pakistan,” said Imtiaz Gul, head of the
independent Centre for Research and Security Studies in Islamabad. With
pressure growing for action, Pakistan demanded that neighbouring Afghanistan
hand over 76 “terrorists” it said were sheltering over the border.
The bombings over five days have
hit all four of Pakistan’s provinces and two major cities, shaking a nascent
sense that the worst of the country’s militant violence may be in the past. A
series of military operations against insurgent groups operating in Pakistan
had encouraged hopes that their leaders were scattered.
“But this has led to a degree of
complacency within our civil-military leadership that perhaps they have
completely destroyed these elements, or broken their back,” Gul said. If so,
that impression has been shattered in recent days.
At Lal Shahbaz Qalandar, the
white marble floor was still stained with blood on Friday, and a pile of shoes
and slippers was heaped in the courtyard, many of them belonging to the dead.
Outside, protesters shouted slogans at police, who they said had failed to
protect the shrine. “I wish I could have been here and died in the blast last
night,” a devastated Ali Hussain told Reuters, sitting on the floor of the
shrine.
He said that local Sufis had
asked for more security after a separate bombing this week killed 13 people in
the eastern city of Lahore, but said: “No one bothered to secure this place.”
Anwer Ali, 25, rushed to the shrine after he heard the explosion, and described
seeing dead bodies and chaos as people fled the scene. “There were threats to
the shrine. The Taliban had warned that they will attack here, but authorities
didn’t take it seriously,” Ali said. Sindh police chief A.D. Khawaja said on
Friday that the death toll had reached 83 people with scores more wounded.
The attacks have once again
raised questions over the influence of Islamic State in Pakistan, a
nuclear-armed nation of 190 million people that has tense relations with its
neighbours India and Afghanistan. In the past two years, Islamic State has
worked to build its “Khorasan province” encompassing Afghanistan and Pakistan,
often helped by local radicals.
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s
foreign policy adviser Sartaj Aziz blamed Jamaat-ur-Ahrar (JuA), a Pakistani
Taliban faction that has been linked to Islamic State, for the attack. Most of
the other recent attacks have been claimed by factions of the Pakistani
Taliban, which is waging its own fight against the government but whose ranks
have also cooperated with and sometimes defected to Islamic State.
That has led some observers to
question whether the growing prominence of Islamic State actually represents a
new threat – since its fighters were already operating under different names to
attack government, army and minority faith targets, among others. However, the
increasing number of attacks claimed by Islamic State has raised pressure on
authorities to show they are capable of containing the renewed violence.
Islamic State also said it was
behind another shrine attack, in southwestern Baluchistan province, that killed
at least 52 people last November. In October, it said it carried out an assault
on a police training college, killing 59. The shrine attack has heightened
tensions with Afghanistan, after Pakistani officials said some militant leaders
took shelter over the border. The accusation echoes similar criticism from
Kabul aimed at Islamabad.
In a telephone call with
Afghanistan’s national security adviser, Aziz expressed concern that JuA was
operating from Afghanistan and that Kabul had failed to act against them,
according to a statement from his office. On Friday, border crossings were closed
and Afghan diplomats were summoned to military headquarters in Islamabad and
given a list of 76 “most-wanted terrorists” that Pakistan demanded be captured
and handed over, the army said.
Afghan President Ashraf Ghani on
Friday condemned the shrine attack on Twitter, calling Islamic State “a common
enemy of Afghanistan & Pakistan”.
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