Coal mines becoming a strategic target for ISIS in Pakistan
The Islamic State group works hard to increase its influence in the Asian region, considered the geographical cradle and stronghold of al-Qaeda.
To do this, the
terrorist organization does its best to secure the necessary financial
resources by controlling main sources of income in the region.
Mines and mining areas
come at the center of ISIS attention. Eleven people were killed and dozens of
others injured on January 3, 2021, after ISIS attacked a coal mine in the
southwestern Pakistani region of Balochistan, Pakistani authorities
said.
Pakistani Prime
Minister Imran Khan said the attacks reflected the brutal nature of ISIS.
He instructed police
to work hard to arrest those carrying out the attack.
Terrorists and mines
Political and
economic motivations control the actions of terrorist groups, along with their
intellectual ideologies.
ISIS keeps its eyes
focused on targets that can bring in the necessary money for financing its
activities. This is why it always tries to control natural resources.
The attack on the
coal mine in Balochistan is a prelude to the implementation of an ISIS strategy,
one it started in other countries, especially in Mozambique where it controls
gas-rich areas.
Al-Qaeda applies the
same strategy in Somalia which contains high-quality coal mines. Al-Qaeda also
wants to control gold mines in Burkina Faso.
ISIS-Qaeda struggle
Asia acquires a great
importance for ISIS. The organization's expanding influence in the countries of
the continent poses direct threats to al-Qaeda which considers the continent
its main stronghold. ISIS also wants to be the largest terrorist organization
on the international scene.
"ISIS competes
strongly with al-Qaeda, especially in Asia," terrorism expert Ahmed Kamel
al-Beheiri told The Reference. "This is quite manifest in the repeated
attacks the organization stages in different countries in the continent."



