Splintered militants rejoin Pakistani Taliban, vow holy war

A militant faction in Pakistan that split years ago
from the Pakistani Taliban has returned and rejoined the insurgents, a Taliban
spokesman said Monday.
In a statement, spokesman Mohammad Khurasani, says
top leaders and fighters from the splinter faction — which later evolved into
two separate militant groups — were welcomed at a recent ceremony after they
decided to “merge back” with the Taliban.
The Pakistani Taliban, also known as
Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, or TTP, are separate from the Afghan Taliban.
One of the militant groups, Jamaat-ul-Ahrar, was
formed in 2014 by Umar Khalid Khurasani when it split from the TTP. The other
group, Hizbul Ahrar, was first established in Afghanistan's eastern Nangarhar
province.
The merger of the two militant groups, which have
been blamed for several deadly attacks in Pakistan, was seen as a boost for the
Pakistani Taliban.
The development comes after a recently released U.N.
report suggested that more than 6,000 Pakistani insurgents were hiding in neighboring
Afghanistan — most of them belonging to militant groups behind attacks on
Pakistani military and civilian targets.
The Pakistani Taliban claimed responsibility for one
of the most horrific attacks in the country — the 2014 attack on a military
school in the city of Peshawar when 140 people were killed, mostly students at
the school — some as young as 5.