Militants in new âRed Mosqueâ threaten suicide attacks
PAKISTAN: Pro-Taliban militants who seized a shrine and named
it after Pakistanâs radical Red Mosque said Monday they would
retaliatate with suicide bombings if troops tried to flush them out.
Around 150 armed masked men late Saturday took control of Turangzai
Sahib Mosque in a village in lawless Mohmand tribal district, some 60
kilometres (37 miles) northwest of Peshawar.
The militants renamed it the Red Mosque, referring to the radical
mosque in the Pakistan capital where more than 100 people died in
clashes between security forces and militants early this month.
A group of journalists who visited the tribal districtâs Lakaro
village saw some 50 masked men wearing camouflage jackets and armed with
rocket launchers and assault rifles occupying the mosqueâs ground floor.
More militants were holed up on the first floor of the building.
âWe are ready to sacrifice our lives for the mission of Abdur Rashid
Ghaziâ, a militant leader, who identified himself as Umar Khalid, told
reporters.
He was referring to the Red Mosqueâs firebrand cleric who died when
troops launched their assault this month.
Khalid claimed he had the support of some 3,000 tribesmen from
Mohmand district which borders Afghanistanâs volatile Kunar and
Ningarhar provinces.
âLocal tribesmen are financing our program to implement Sharia in the
region,â he said, adding that he and his men were ready to wage jihad
(holy war) against the United States and its allies.
Asked what he would do if Pakistani troops launched an operation to
take back the mosque, he said: âOur people will resist, they will
consider every option, including suicide bombings.â
He said militants seized the mosque because it was adjacent to the
shrine of Haji Turangzai Sahib, a known Pashtun warrior who fought
against British rulers in the early 1900s.
Following heavy fighting between troops and militants at Islamabadâs
Red Mosque earlier this month, the badly-damaged building was repaired
and the adjoining girlsâ religious school called Jamia Hafsa demolished.
It was formally reopened for traditional prayers on Friday, but
protests and a nearby suicide bombing that killed 14 people soon forced
its closure.
The government originally cracked down on the Red Mosque after it led
a Taliban-style vigilante campaign for Sharia law that climaxed with the
abduction in Islamabad of seven Chinese nationals.
Pro-Taliban militants still hold sway in the rugged Pakistani tribal
areas bordering Afghanistan despite the deployment of more than 90,000
troops.
Local officials convened a meeting of tribal elders to discuss the
seizure of the mosque but have failed so far to resolve the issue.
Lakaro, Tuesday, AFP |