Pakistan security forces on radar of new terror group
Pakistan witnessed within
two days two suicide attacks that targeted security forces.
The first attack took
place on July 18, when an explosive device went off in a troop carrier in the north-western
part of the country.
The troop carrier was
on the way to Peshawar, the capital of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province on the
border with Afghanistan.
The attack left two
people dead and eight security personnel injured.
The second attack took
place two days later, when gunmen opened fire on a police station in Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa.
They injured four
policemen, according to Pakistani media.
New movement
The new 'Pakistani Jihad
Movement' or what is widely known as 'Tehreek-e-Jihad Pakistan' claimed
responsibility for the first attack.
It came less than a
week after the same movement claimed responsibility for another attack that took
place on July 13.
This attack targeted a
Pakistani army base in the southern province of Balochistan, where gunmen fired
rockets and grenades at the base, killing 12 soldiers, according to a Pakistani
military official.
This terrorist movement
debuted on February 24 under the name 'Electronic Jihad Movement in Pakistan'.
Mullah Mohammad Qasim
was appointed as the spokesman of the movement after the first attack.
The attack took place
in Chaman District in Balochistan province in south-western Pakistan.
The sudden appearance
of this movement caused some people to speculate that it is affiliated with the
Taliban branch in Pakistan.
However, the movement
denied any links with the Taliban.
One goal
The Pakistani army
blamed the Pakistani Taliban for the attacks of Tehreek-e-Jihad Pakistan, especially
given the fact that these attacks took place in areas that were formerly
strongholds of the Taliban.
This is especially true
to Peshawar. It also applied to the mineral-rich Balochistan region which is located
on the border with Afghanistan and Iran.
This region has been
suffering from an ethnic Baloch insurgency for decades.
Observers say that the
new Pakistani movement has the same goals as the Pakistani Taliban which seeks
to overthrow the Pakistani government and establish an Islamic caliphate in the
Muslim-majority country with a population of 220 million.