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South Punjab sees Taliban connection as stigma
By Nasir Jamal
Taliban fighters sit with their weapons on the back of a truck in Buner.—Reuter LAHORE: ‘Wrong address,’ cry out the people in south Punjab as they receive another journalist arriving to look for Taliban and terrorists in their midst ‘You may find them in Punjab, but not here,’ says Mahmood Nizami, a political activist from Taunsa, which touches the tribal areas of Dera Ismail Khan and is less than an hour’s drive from South Waziristan, to its north-west. ‘Our name is being sullied without reason.’
‘If a few people from this part of Punjab are involved in
terrorist acts, it doesn’t mean that the entire Seraiki belt is
infested with terrorists. If some people from here have links with
Taliban in the tribal areas of the NWFP or Afghanistan, it doesn’t
give you the right to brand all of us as Taliban,’ he protests,
standing in front of the shrine of Shah Suleman Taunsvi.
The alleged links of operatives of outlawed sectarian and jihadi
groups from the ‘impoverished’ south Punjab with Baitullah Mehsud’s
Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan and other militant groups in Fata and Swat
are also a cause of concern in the western capitals, as well as for
the NWFP government. The arrest on April 5 of two Seraiki-speaking men linked with the killing of 27 people in a suicide attack at the Johar Ali Imambargah in D.G. Khan, which took place exactly two months before, has led to the formation of convenient theories that the militant Taliban groups have already forged a strong alliance with outfits in the southern Punjab. Investigators believe that the local militants provide logistical support and, in certain cases, human resource, to the Taliban for carrying out their terror operations in Punjab.The police claim that both Qari Mohammad Ismaeel, who had masterminded the D.G. Khan bombing, and Ghulam Mustafa Kaisrani, who had facilitated the Pashtun bomber, belonged to SSP, now operating as Ahle Sunnat-wul-Jamaat, and had close links with TTP in South Waziristan has reinforced this belief. Even before the arrest of Ismaeel and Kaisrani, the police investigators had found evidence of close collaboration between TTP and the Punjabi militants, especially those belonging to Lashkar-i-Jhangvi, in several other terrorist incidents — the Marriott bombing in Islamabad in September last year and the attack on Sri Lankan cricketers and the siege of the Manawan police training academy in Lahore in March. Most militants involved in the terrorist acts in the recent months have been identified as being from southern Punjab.The alleged nexus between the Punjabi Taliban and Pashtun militant groups has also led to a convenient theory that the militants in the southern Punjab are regrouping to ‘take over’ some southern districts like D.G. Khan or Muzaffargarh just as they have done in Swat. DAWN: Sunday, 24 May, 2009
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