Thu, Mar 12 19:00 PM EDT
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By Jibran Ahmad and Mehreen Zahra-Malik
ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Days after word leaked that the Afghan Taliban had signaled willingness to enter talks to end Afghanistan's long war, senior representatives of the militant group visited Islamabad for secret discussions on the next step forward.
They left with a blunt message from Pakistan: the Taliban must end a rift between two top leaders, or talks might never get off the ground.
The warning was a reminder of how tough it will be to get insurgents and the Afghan government around the same table, let alone agree a lasting peace, even with help from Pakistan, the Taliban's erstwhile backer that still wields influence over them.
The two senior Taliban figures in question are political leader Akhtar Mohammad Mansour, who favors negotiation, and battlefield commander Abdul Qayum Zakir, a former Guantanamo Bay detainee, who opposes talks with Kabul.
Mansour and Zakir, long-time rivals, met recently to resolve their personal differences, slaughtering sheep for a feast to mark the occasion, according to two Taliban sources.
But Mansour was unable to persuade Zakir to reverse his opposition to direct talks with Kabul, which he sees as "wasting time" because the United States holds real power in Afghanistan, the sources added.
The latest peace initiative, considered more promising than recent doomed efforts because of Pakistani and Chinese mediation, is aimed at ending an escalating conflict in which hundreds of Afghans are killed every month.
The potential breakthrough comes after foreign combat troops withdrew at the end of 2014, leaving a smaller training force of about 12,000.
SECRECY AND DENIALS
Many obstacles to peace remain. Both sides are deeply suspicious and the Taliban are expected to demand the immediate withdrawal of the remaining foreign troops, a request Afghan President Ashraf Ghani appears sure to reject.
Still, the process is at least moving, according to several Taliban sources in Afghanistan and Pakistan as well as senior Pakistani and Afghan officials.
This week, the U.S. Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, Daniel Feldman, made an unannounced visit to Islamabad to discuss the possibility of talks, the Pakistani army said.
And in late February, a delegation led by Qari Din Mohammad Hanif of the Taliban's political office in Qatar met in Islamabad with Pakistani army leaders and Chinese diplomats, according to two Taliban commanders and two senior Pakistani officials.
The Taliban's official spokesman denied the visit took place. China's foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei said reports its diplomats in Islamabad met with Taliban representatives "do not accord with reality".
A U.S. government official said Feldman was in Pakistan as part of a business delegation, adding Washington had encouraged Pakistan and China to support Ghani's reconciliation efforts.
According to two senior insurgent commanders with direct knowledge of the Taliban delegation's visit to Islamabad, the group then traveled on to Quetta, the southwestern Pakistani city where many Taliban leaders remain in hiding, to brief them on the preliminary discussions.
"They said Pakistani officials had advised them to remove our internal differences before starting formal talks with Kabul," one of the Taliban commanders said by telephone.
Because Zakir holds sway over several thousand fighters in eastern Afghanistan, it is uncertain any ceasefire could hold were he to continue opposing direct talks with Kabul.
The verdict of Mullah Mohammad Omar, the Taliban's reclusive supreme leader, could prove key, if it comes.
He has not been seen in public since the U.S.-sponsored toppling of the Taliban after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks.
SEARCHING FOR "MIDDLE GROUND"
Some experts are more hopeful of progress this time around because of a Pakistani threat to arrest or expel Taliban leaders if they do not negotiate with Kabul.
That could force the Afghan Taliban to cut ties with al Qaeda and the separate Pakistani Taliban, or TTP.
Renewed Pakistani pressure on the Afghan Taliban was galvanized by the TTP's massacre of 132 students in December at an army-run school in the Pakistani city of Peshawar.
In return for Pakistani support for talks, Afghanistan has targeted TTP strongholds in its eastern Kunar province, near the Pakistan border - an indication of improving relations under Ghani.
"It's early, but the signs are good," said Saifullah Mahsud, head of the FATA Research Centre, an Islamabad-based think-tank.
"The Afghan Taliban have their financiers, their businesses, their families here. The Afghan Taliban are smart enough to know that the Pakistani state is a better contact than the TTP."
Another new development is willingness by the Taliban to open talks without preconditions, said a senior Pakistani official with direct knowledge of the process.
However, Taliban representatives have indicated that, should talks begin, they would make demands including the immediate departure of all foreign troops.
A senior aide to Ghani said anticipated Taliban demands, which may also include re-imposing the harsh interpretation of Islamic law the movement enforced during its five-year rule, would be unacceptable.
The aide said Pakistani intermediaries were "working to find middle ground", but so far reported no change in the Taliban stance.
"If these demands are not softened," the aide said, "the first day of talks could become the last day of talks."
(Additional reporting by Hamid Shalizi in Kabul, Katharine Houreld in Islamabad, Ben Blanchard in Beijing and David Brunnstrom in Washington; Writing by Kay Johnson; Editing by Mike Collett-White and Dean Yates)
RT News
Showing posts with label CAA; Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ); Punjabi Taliban; CIA; spy operations; Chief Justice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CAA; Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ); Punjabi Taliban; CIA; spy operations; Chief Justice. Show all posts
Monday, March 16, 2015
Tuesday, September 02, 2014
Is it really a Revolutin in ISLAM-abad?
According to the prophecies of Prophet Muhammad (sawas):
“A non-stop army will rise from the land of Khorasan holding black flags of Islam in the end times!!”
This army will conquer several occupied lands of Muslims till it reaches to Jerusalem (Al Quds)!!
Then it will pledge its allegiance to Imam al Mahdi (atfs).
The black flag of Khorasan will bring an end to the rule of tyranny of the fourth and the final reich:
http://www.ummah.com/forum/showthread.php?120449-Black-flags-of-Khorasan
The first pillar of Islam, Shahadah means declaration of faith.
The Shahadah is:
“Laa Ilaha Illallah Muhammad Rasullullah”
(There is no God except Allah, and Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah)
The Prophet Mohammed (saws) said:
‘Three men will be killed at the place where your treasure is.
Each of them will be the son of a Khalifah, and none of them will get hold of the treasure.
Then black banners will come out of the east…
’If you see him, go and give him your allegiance, even if you have to crawl over ice, because he is the Khalifah of Allah, the Mahdi.’
Read more about his prophecies here please..
http://www.habibies.com/world/black-flags-from-khorasan/
Many details of what the Prophet (saws) said would happen before the last days have reached us.
These events are happening one by one in our own time, proving to be yet another miracle of the Prophet (saws).
These events, that are happening 1,400 years after the Prophet Muhammad (saws), were explained in great detail, as if he had witnessed them himself.
http://rasoulallah.net/index.php/ar/
These are the Prophet (saws)'s prophecies regarding the signs of the end times and the last day, taken from the hadiths:
The last hour will not come unless there is much bloodshed.227
Near the establishment of the hour there will be much Al-Harj, and Al-Harj means killing.228
The day of judgment will not come until people openly deny Allah.229
Great cities will be ruined, and it will be as if they had not existed the day before.230
Gains will be shared out only among the rich, with no benefit to the poor.231
People will indulge in homosexuality and lesbianism.232
There will be prevalence of open illegal intercourse.233
The hour (last day) will not be established until murders will increase.234
Pity poor Taliqan (a region in Afghanistan) that at that place are treasures of Allah, but these are not of gold and silver but consist of people who have recognised Allah as they should have.235
There is an indication in the hadith that Afghanistan will be occupied during the end times.
The Russian invasion of Afghanistan took place in 1979, or 1400 according to the Hijri calendar. In other words, it coincided with the start of the fourteenth century under the Hijri calendar.
It (Euphrates) will uncover a mountain of gold (under it).236
Soon the river "Euphrates" will disclose the treasure (the mountain) of gold, so whoever will be present at that time should not take anything of it.237
The rebuilding of the ruined places in the world, and the ruination of constructed places are signs and portents of doomsday.238
There are two signs of our Mahdi; ...and those signs are that moon will eclipse in the first night of its fixed nights of eclipse and sun will be eclipsed in the middle of the fixed days for its eclipse, during the month of Ramadan.239
There will be two eclipses of the sun in Ramadan before the Mahdi emerges.240
There will be two eclipses of the Moon in Ramadan...241
The common points emerging from the above three hadiths are:
1. There will be solar and lunar eclipses during the month of Ramadan.
2. These will be spaced about 14-15 days apart.
3. The eclipses will be repeated twice.
In line with those calculations, there was a lunar eclipse in 1981 (Hijri 1401), on the 15th day of Ramadan, and a solar eclipse on the 29th day of the month. There was a "second" lunar eclipse in 1982 (Hijri 1402) on the 14th day of Ramadan, and a solar eclipse on the 28th day of the month.
It is also particularly significant that in that particular instance, there was a full lunar eclipse in the middle of the month of Ramadan, a most striking prophecy.
Before he comes, a comet spreading light will come from the East.242
The birth of that star will follow the eclipse of the sun and moon.243
A tailed star will be born from the east and spread its light. Its daily direction will be from east to west.244
- In 1986 (Hijri 1406), in other words at the start of the 14th century, Halley's comet passed by the earth. The comet is a bright, shining star.
- It travels from east to west
This happened after the lunar and solar eclipses of 1981 and 1982 (1401-1402)
People will go on the hajj with no imam at their head. When they descend to Mina, the tribes will savage each other like dogs and there will be great wars. To such an extent that feet will be covered in a lake of blood.245
A fire will appear in the sky from the east and a redness will cover the sky for three or seven days in a row.246
A fire will enfold you. That fire is currently extinguished in the valley called Berehut. People will be enfolded in that fire with terrible suffering. That fire will burn and destroy people and belongings. For eight days it will rage over the world like wind and cloud. The heat of night will be fiercer than that of day. That fire will stretch from the heads of man to the highest heavens, and there will be a terrible noise like thunder between the earth and sky, he said.247
- The burning oil in Kuwait led to the deaths of people and animals. According to experts, half a million tons of oil went up into the atmosphere as smoke. Every day, more than 10,000 tons of soot, sulphur, carbon-dioxide and large quantities of hydrocarbons with their carcinogenic properties hang suspended over the Gulf. It is not just the Gulf, but the world itself that is burning.248
- Two wells that were set alight produced as much oil as Turkey does in one day, and the smoke from them can be seen from Saudi Arabia, 55 kilometres away.249
- Continuing news of disaster from the Gulf: hundreds of oil wells set alight in Kuwait are still burning fiercely. Experts say it will be "exceedingly difficult to put those fires out," and it is said that the fires will affect a wide area from Turkey to India for the next 10 years.
The fire and smoke coming from the wells constantly pollute the atmosphere. Daytime resembles night in Kuwait.
The brown smoke that rises together with the flames remind one of the sky as the autumn turns into winter …
It will take at least a century for Kuwait to be completely habitable again.
The smoke that rises with the flames is visible from miles away, totally blocking out the sky and making the country unfit to live in.
The wealthy are abandoning Kuwait.250
He (The Mahdi) will not come until there is a portent from the sun.251
The solar eclipse of August 11, 1999 was the last of the century. During this eclipse, the likes of which take place only every 400 years, the sun, the moon and the world align. It was the first time that so many people had been able to watch and study an eclipse for so long a duration. Below are some newspaper headlines regarding the phenomenon.
This can be interpreted as the "portent from the Sun" referred to in the hadith. (Allah knows best, of course).
Before the Hour comes, there will be a tribulation like patches of dark night...252
The word "tribulation (fitna)" implies anything that turns peoples' reason and hearts away from the true path, or war, incitement, chaos, disorder and conflict.
The tribulation in the hadith will leave smoke and dust behind it, we learn.
Furthermore, the way that tribulation is described as "darkness" in the hadith, can be seen as an indication that its origins are unclear, that it is unexpected.
Looking at it from that regard, it is probable that the hadith is referring to the world's worst terrorist attack, on the cities of New York and Washington in the United States on September 11, 2001.
The inhabitants of Egypt and Sham would kill their ruler and his commands…253
The people of Sham will take prisoner the tribes of Egypt.254
Today, the states in the region in question include Israel. That is why the hadith could be pointing to the war between the state of Israel and Egypt, and the invasion of Egyptian territory.
The Hour (Last Day) will not be established until ... earthquakes will be very frequent.255
There are two great events before the day of judgment ... and then years of earthquakes.256
Labayka Ya Husayn
Imam Husayn's final battle in Karbala, Iraq.
The battle continues.. after 1400 years..
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2eHmccDwupo&list=PLd3-F21oYOuvKvn-tAZIQXCECJMvXZKQB
Imam Husayn's battle against evil is global...
The world is changing fast... and to be the pioneers of this change, we need to change ourselves first!!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h4OeMQUL6rQ&list=PL6FAEEB4873CC46F7
Afghanistan War Khorasan Mahdi (atfs) vs. I$-RA-€£ - by Imran Hosein
Please, watch both parts...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4LMxRLcWmUs&list=PLd3-F21oYOuvKvn-tAZIQXCECJMvXZKQB
"Everyone is so afraid of death, but the real Sufis just laugh: nothing tyrannizes their hearts.
What strikes the oyster shell does not damage the pearl."
"If in thirst you drink water from a cup, you see God in it.
Those who are not in love with God will see only their own faces in it."
"He is a letter to everyone.
You open it.
It says, 'live!'"
Moulana Rumi
A Persian poet of peace
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10150471572376661&set=a.10150446678981661.392933.698671660&type=3&theater
Truth will prevail!!
Real education… for God’s sake…
Ya Imam Mahdi (as), the just leader of humanity
Mahdi, English: Guided one
It is prophesised that Isa (Jesus Christ) will return to aid Imam Mahdi in the end time.
Isa (Jesus Christ) will descend at the point of a white arcade, east of Damascus (Syria), dressed in yellow robes with his head anointed.
Together they stand against Masih ad-Dajjal, the false messiah, and his followers. (I$-RA-€£)
Isa will slay Dajjal, and unite humanity
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10152214502721661&set=a.394307616660.176314.698671660&type=1&theater
No doubt...
The Christian Orthodox Church will join Muslims to fight against Jews!!
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10152213898146661&set=a.10151733156261661.1073741827.698671660&type=1&theater
The black flags from Khorasan are not from the white house (I$-RA-€£), but from a former Persian province with Mashad as its capital!!
(which is placed in IR Iran today!!)
Q: Who is born in Mashad in 1939??
Guess four times:
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10152649961966661&set=a.394307616660.176314.698671660&type=1&theater
Prepare yourselves...
And get ready to rumble!!
Sayyed Mustafa, the father of Imam Khomeini (ra)
Quotes, biography, etc.:
"We were silent when we had to speak.
We had Khans (Cossack) rule over us.
Imam Ali said: “I hate oppressors and those who accept them.”
How will future generations judge us?"
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10152003392106661&set=a.394307616660.176314.698671660&type=1&theater
Masha'Allah ♡
Sayyed Mustafa, the father of Imam Khomeini (ra) ♡
Quotes, biography, movie, and more:
"We were silent when we had to speak.
We had Khans (Cossack) rule over us.
Imam Ali said: “I hate oppressors and those who accept them.”
How will future generations judge us?"
The following movie is based on the life of Sayyed Mustafa (ra), the father of the founder of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Ayatullah Ruhullah Khomeini (ra).
"Earth and sunshine"
Farsi sub English:
http://www.shiatv.net/view_video.php?viewkey=e13942f6ac9577a738af&page&viewtype&category
or watch on Jew-tube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K9JqprPP5E0&list=PL6FAEEB4873CC46F7
This series highlights plight of the people of Iran before the revolution and also the character of Sayyed Mustafa, which was also inherited by Imam Khomeini. i.e
"raising against oppression"
Brief biography of Sayyed Mustafa:
Sayyed Mustafa father of Imam Khomeini (ra) began his religious education in Isfahan with Mir Muhammad Taqi Mudarrisi before continuing his studies in Najaf and Samarra under the guidance of Mirza Hasan Shirazi (d.1894), the principal authority of the age in Shi'i jurisprudence.
This corresponded to a pattern of preliminary study in Iran followed by advanced study in the 'atabat, the shrine cities of Iraq, which for long remained normative;
Imam Khomeini (ra) was in fact the first religious leader of prominence whose formation took place entirely in Iran.
In Dhu 'l-Hijja 1320/ March 1903, some five months after the Imam's birth, Sayyed Mustafa was attacked and martyred while travelling on the road between Khumain and the neighbouring city of Arak.
The identity of the assassin immediately became known; it was Ja'far-quli Khan, the cousin of a certain Bahram Khan, one of the richest landowners of the region.
The cause of the assassination is, however, difficult to establish with certainty.
According to an account that became standard after the triumph of the Islamic Revolution, Sayyed Mustafa had aroused the anger of the local landowners because of his defence of the impoverished peasantry.
However, Sayyed Mustafa himself, in addition to the religious functions he fulfilled, was also a farmer of moderate prosperity, and it is possible that he fell victim to one of the disputes over irrigation rights that were common at the time.
The attempts of Sahiba, Sayyed Mustafa's sister, to have the killer punished in Khumayn proved fruitless, so his widow, Hajar, went to Tehran to appeal for justice, according to one account carrying the infant Ruhullah in her arms.
She was followed there by her two elder sons, Murtaza and Nur al-Din, and finally, in Rabi' al-Awwal 1323, May 1925, Ja'far-quli Khan was publicly executed in Tehran on the orders of 'Ayn al-Dawla, the prime minister of the day.
Source:
http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLAB3513EDAF42F4CE
Grand Ayatollah Khomeini (ra) ♡
Persian: آيتالله āyatollāh from Arabic: آية الله, āyatu l-Lāh "Sign of God" ♡
The man who changed the world:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FfrJ2rBobGs&list=PL6FAEEB4873CC46F7
Ruhollah ♡
Documentary on the life of Imam Khomeini (ra) the father of the Islamic revolution in Iran.
Produced by Al Manar, remastered by AIM Islam [Arabic]:
http://www.shiatv.net/view_video.php?viewkey=4bf8ce0ff2ec19b37151
or on Jew-tube [Eng Sub]:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KuGgerT0Xao&list=PL6FAEEB4873CC46F7
Live like Muhammad (saws) ♡
Fight like Ali (as) ♡
And die like Husayn (as) ♡
Just be strong!!
Allah (swt) is the greatest planner of them all ♡
Insha'Allah
"Sayyed" for males and "Sayyeda" for females are names/titles, which are very well known in the Islamic world ♡
The black turban and the title “Sayyed” are an indication for those who are directly descended from Prophet Mohammed صل الله عليه وسلم through the lineage of Ali رضي الله عنه and Fatimah عليها السلام ♡
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10152003624261661&set=pb.698671660.-2207520000.1385428210.&type=3&theater
The true essence of Islam (submission to God) ♡
https://www.facebook.com/maryam.mad/media_set?set=a.10151733156261661.1073741827.698671660&type=1
Alhamdolellah
Ya ALi ♡
==========
September 2, 2014
Special Dispatch No.5831
Pakistani Army Accused Of Plotting Protests In Islamabad To Oust Elected Government; UAE's Regional Spy Chief Reportedly Involved In Engineering Pakistani Protests
PTI leader Imran Khan seeking to oust the elected government (image: NDTV.com)
Coordinated anti-government protests in Islamabad since August 14 by cricketer-turned-politician Imran Khan of the Pakistan Tahreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party and Islamic cleric Maulana Tahirul Qadri of Pakistan Awami Tahreek (PAT) are being controlled by the Pakistani military and its intelligence agencies, according to reports appearing in the Pakistani media. On September 1, PTI President Javed Hashmi, who is seen as a democrat and a voice of conscience in Pakistani politics, lashed out at his party leader Imran Khan for working with the Pakistani army to overthrow the elected government of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. Hashmi, who was fired by Khan, reminded that he remains party president since Khan did not follow procedures to sack him.
Immediately after Hashmi's statement, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) department of the Pakistani military denied any role in engineering the protests. In a statement, it said: "ISPR has categorically rejected the assertions that Army and ISI were backing PTI/PAT in any way in the current political standoff. Army is an apolitical institution and has expressed its unequivocal support for democracy at numerous occasions. It is unfortunate that Army is dragged into such controversies. Integrity and unity of the Army is its strength, which it upholds with pride."[1] Independent analysts are skeptical of the statement, since the military's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) has been known for ousting and installing governments in the past. Pakistan's ISI, which is by any account the most powerful institution in Pakistan, is known for dictating the country's foreign policies with regard to the US, Afghanistan and India. It is also known for using former ISI chiefs such as Lt.-Gen. Hamid Gul and Lt.-Gen. Shuja Pasha (who now works for the UAE government but has been deeply involved in plotting the current protests).
Over the past few days, editorials in liberal Pakistani newspapers have accused the Pakistani military and the powerful ISI of engineering a soft coup in Pakistan through the use of protests by PTI and PAT, the latter of which is more like a religious organization with no track record of winning elections and is led by Tahirul Qadri, a Barelvi cleric who recently returned from Canada with the sole purpose of overthrowing the elected government through a Tahrir Square-like mass uprising in Islamabad. The protesters have increased pressure on the government of Nawaz Sharif, who - much to the displeasure of the Pakistani military - has sought to build friendly relations with India and has pursued a hands-off approach on Afghanistan.
In January 2013, the Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI) released a detailed report on the ideology and politics of Maulana Tahirul Qadri, the Canada-returned Islamic cleric who is seeking to capture power in Islamabad through unconstitutional means by mobilizing his devout supporters from the Barelvi school of Islam.[2] MEMRI also released a detailed report on the ideology and politics of Imran Khan, the PTI leader who unlike Tahirul Qadri has some stake in Pakistani politics and can chart a political career in years ahead. As detailed in the MEMRI report, Imran Khan has justified the Taliban's "jihad in Afghanistan" against U.S. forces and has accused the so-called Jewish/Israeli lobby of attacking Pakistan's nuclear program.[3]
Pakistan's best-known human rights campaigner Asma Jahangir also accused the Pakistani military of seeking to thwart the established democratic process in the country, warning: "If the army took over this time, the stint of its rule would be a minimum of 10 years."[4] The Sharif government's efforts for a negotiated exit from the crisis have so far failed, as the protest leaders have stuck to the demand that the prime minister step down to facilitate new elections.
Javed Hashmi On Coup Plot: "Imran Had Told The [PTI] Core Committee That The New Set-Up Would Not Be Called A Martial Law; We Will File A Petition In The Supreme Court And Get A Judge Of Our Choice … [To] Endorse [A Caretaker Government]"
The following are excerpts from a report on Hashmi's statement:[5]
"In a media talk outside the Parliament House, Hashmi said that Imran came to Islamabad with a scripted plan. 'Imran told us, they [the Pakistani military and ISI] asked him to move forward [in tandem with] with Tahirul Qadri,' charged Hashmi. He hastened to add that Imran said, 'We could not move forward without the army.' 'Imran had claimed that all matters had been settled [as part of a conspiracy to overthrow the elected government] and the general election would be held either in late August or in early September as per the plan. Imran is here with a plan; who is the planner? I do not know,' remarked Hashmi… "'When Imran Khan shared his plan with us, he said that a judge of our choice was coming as the chief justice of the Supreme Court,' Hashmi went on to reveal. He said that Imran Khan had maligned the Supreme Court by saying that the Supreme Court would de-seat Nawaz Sharif and [his brother and chief minister of Punjab province] Shahbaz Sharif. Hashmi implicated the current Chief Justice of Pakistan Nasirul Mulk, by claiming that Imran told us, 'We have a friendly chief justice now [who would approve a replacement government as it had happened in the past military coups].' While he did not name Nasirul Mulk, he confirmed that he was referring to the 'current' chief justice." "Hashmi contended that the PTI chief [Imran Khan] wanted to move forward along with Dr. Qadri. 'I told him that we were being hijacked by someone else,' said Hashmi, and claimed Imran had come to Islamabad with an agenda." "'Imran had told the [PTI] core committee that the new set-up would not be called a martial law. We will file a petition in the Supreme Court and get a judge of our choice in September and he will endorse it. That chief justice will validate the actions that will be taken eventually…' he said, quoting Imran. 'Today, I have heard that the chief justice has called all judges [for a meeting to discuss the protests],' he said. "With regards to Imran's repeated pledge of upholding the Constitution and ensuring the rule of law, Hashmi said that Imran did not care about the Constitution and said that the PTI chief acted as the king of his party. 'Imran accepts the Constitution only where it works in his favor. When it is otherwise, he abandons it,' Hashmi charged."MEMRI Report: "Living In Pakistan For The Past Few Days … [UAE's Regional Spy Chief Shuja Pasha] Has Been Deciding All The Programs Of Both The Movements [Led By Imran Khan And Maulana Qadri]" On August 20, the Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI) released a report translated from a leading Urdu-language daily in Pakistan, revealing how Lt.-Gen. Shuja Pasha (the former chief of Pakistan's ISI who now serves as the Regional Chief of the UAE's intelligence agency) has been planning the details of the protest rallies led by Imran Khan and Tahirul Qadri. Pasha was appointed by the UAE as Regional Chief of its intelligence agency sometime in late-2013, according to a Pakistani daily.[6] Following are excerpts from the MEMRI dispatch:[7] "Extremely reliable sources have confirmed that the entire planning of the recent movements of Imran Khan and Maulana Qadri has been drawn up by Shuja Pasha, the former chief of the secret agency [Inter-Services Intelligence of the Pakistani Army]. And over the past few days he arrived in Pakistan, having left Dubai. After having retired as the chief of the secret agency, Ahmed Shuja Pasha was serving in Dubai for the American secret agency [e.g. CIA]. "Living in Pakistan for the past few days, he has been deciding all the programs of both the movements [led by Imran Khan and Maulana Qadri separately to lead a people's march on Islamabad, on August 14, the Independence Day of Pakistan]. Two days ago [August 4 or 5], Shuja Pasha was present at the home of Shafqat Mahmood, the leader of [Pakistan] Tahreek-e-Insaf where Tahreek chief Imran Khan held a detailed meeting and listened to his advice attentively. "Before his retirement [as head of ISI], Shuja Pasha was desirous of an extension in his tenure, but the then-prime minister Yousuf Raza Gilani had clearly refused to give him an extension, as the then-opposition leader Nawaz Sharif had publicly opposed any extension for him. It is said that the People's Party government [led by Gilani] also had been opposed to an extension for him but was unable to decide, but when Nawaz Sharif opposed it at a public platform, it became easy for it [the Gilani government] to decide [against the extension]. "After that, General Pasha, who had already been disliked by Nawaz Sharif, became a personal enemy of Nawaz Sharif. Sources say that the big rally organized by Imran Khan at Minara-e-Pakistan in Lahore in October 2011 also was a show [at the behest] of General Pasha for which he used unlimited resources. These days General Pasha is engaged in efforts for uniting Imran Khan and Maulana Qadri [at a single platform], which is not succeeding due to Imran Khan's fear that in such an event Imran's public acceptance will be affected [adversely] because in the public, Maulana Qadri's popularity is not so good…" Editorial In Pakistani Daily 'Dawn': "The Carefully Constructed Veneer Of Neutrality That The Army Leadership Had Constructed Through Much Of The National Political Crisis … Has Been Torn Apart" Following are excerpts from a September 2 editorial:[8] "The carefully constructed veneer of neutrality that the army leadership had constructed through much of the national political crisis instigated by Imran Khan and Tahirul Qadri has been torn apart. First came the army's statement on Sunday [August 31], the third in a series of statements in recent days on the political crisis, which quite astonishingly elevated the legitimacy and credibility of the demands of Imran Khan, Tahirul Qadri, and their violent protesters above that of the choices and actions of an elected government dealing with a political crisis. "Consider the sequence of events so far. When the army first publicly waded into the political crisis, it counselled restraint on all sides - as though it were the government that fundamentally still had some questions hanging over its legitimacy simply because Imran Khan and Tahirul Qadri alleged so. Next, the army crept towards the Khan/Qadri camp by urging the government to facilitate negotiations - as though it was the government that was being unreasonable, and not Mr. Khan and Mr. Qadri. "Now, staggeringly, the army has 'advised' the government not to use force against violent protesters and essentially told it to make whatever concessions necessary to placate Mr. Khan and Mr. Qadri. It is simply extraordinary that it is the PAT and PTI supporters who want to break into and occupy state buildings, but it is the government that has been rebuked. It's as if the army is unaware - rather, unwilling - to acknowledge the constitutional scheme of things: it is the government that is supposed to give orders to the army, not the other way around. "The government has already issued its order: invoking Article 245 [empowering the army to ensure law and order in the city]. On Saturday, as violent thugs attacked parliament, it was surely the army’s duty to repel them. But the soldiers stationed there did nothing and the army leadership the next day warned the government instead of the protesters - which largely explains why the protesters were able to continue their pitched battles with the police and attacked the PTV headquarters yesterday [September 1]. If that were not enough, yesterday also brought another thunderbolt: this time from within the PTI with party president Javed Hashmi indicating that Mr. Khan is essentially doing what he has been asked and encouraged to do by the army leadership. It took the ISPR a few hours to respond with the inevitable denial, but a mere denial is inadequate at this point. The functioning of the state stands paralyzed because a few thousand protesters and their leaders have laid siege to state institutions. Where is the army condemnation of that?" Islamic cleric Tahirul Qadri (image: NDTV.com) 'Daily Times' Editorial: "A 'Soft' Coup, Which Involves The Surrender Of Policy Space By The Civilian Elected Government To The Military … May Be The Price Nawaz Sharif Has To Pay To Stay In Power" The following are excerpts from a Daily Times editorial dated August 31:[9] "The concern on the part of the 11 [political] parties who have been standing with the government in this situation is understandable in light of our history. Pakistan has had more than its share of direct and indirect military interventions, coups, and manipulation behind the scenes. Perhaps the real change we are witnessing is that Pakistani society today may be less tolerant of any attempt at a 'hard' coup (a military takeover), the judiciary may not be complicit in legitimizing it as in the past, the media would probably make life hard for any such adventure, and international opinion and the western powers would look askance. "The difficulties of running Pakistan today are also immense. Without legitimacy or popular support, it may be difficult for any dispensation [military or civilian], irrespective of the manner of its ascent to power, to manage the country when it is beset with enormous problems of terrorism and the economy's slide, amongst others. However, a 'soft' coup, which involves the surrender of policy space by the civilian elected government to the military, as is being speculated may be the price Nawaz Sharif has to pay to stay in power, is something the forces that support democracy and constitutionalism may not even become aware of before it is too late to reverse. "Two areas of security, defense, and foreign policy that seem up for grabs are the stance on Afghanistan as it nears endgame, and relations with India. The former involves reversing this government's 'hands off' stance to allow an Afghan-owned, Afghan-led political process find resolution of that unfortunate country's future after the Western forces leave. The latter conditions improvement in relations with New Delhi and economic cooperation on progress in the Kashmir dispute. In addition, a troubled area in the civil-military relationship is the issue of [former Pakistan Army chief General Pervez] Musharraf's trial for treason. "On all three, the military is today placed in a position to demand concessions from the government. Nawaz Sharif may decide to concede these areas in order to live to fight another day. But such a denouement would once again immeasurably weaken the hoped-for-continuation of democracy and serve as a reminder that the more things appear to change, the more they remain the same in Pakistan." 'Daily Times' Editorial: "A Motley Crowd Of Rowdy Supporters Should Not Be Allowed To Overthrow An Elected Government" Following are excerpts from a Daily Times editorial dated September 2:[10] "[The Corp Commanders' meeting] has still not entirely allayed the fear of the government's weakening opening the door to the army's carving out for itself a larger chunk of control in the arena of security and foreign policy, especially involving India and Afghanistan. The army's formulation to support the democratic system does not automatically mean it supports the incumbent government too. That is still a grey area so far. "To consolidate its political support further, the government in the meantime has called a joint session of parliament… It has also decided that parliament will remain in session so long as the sit-in continues. This parliament versus street confrontation seems destined to settle parliament's sovereign status. In any case, a motley crowd of rowdy supporters should not be allowed to overthrow an elected government. The PM's reiteration of his resolve not to resign at gunpoint will save the country from setting a wrong precedent, and is therefore a welcome step. "Amidst this cacophony, the role of the electronic media in broadcasting unsubstantiated rumors is irresponsible and deplorable. If the attack on journalists by the police was wrong and condemnable, the media's role in jumping to the (wrong) conclusions is as bad." Endnotes: [1] Ispr.gov.pk (Pakistan), September 1, 2014. [2] http://www.memri.org/report/en/print6933.htm, January 15, 2013. [3] http://www.memri.org/report/en/0/0/0/0/0/51/6781.htm, October 26, 2012. [4] The News (Pakistan), September 2, 2014. [5] The News (Pakistan), September 2, 2014. [6] http://www.memrijttm.org/urdu-daily-names-former-pakistani-intelligence-officials-recruited-by-uae-qatar.html, December 2, 2013. [7] http://www.memrijttm.org/urdu-daily-former-pakistani-intelligence-chief-lt-gen-shuja-pasha-planned-tahrir-square-like-marches-planned-by-pakistani-leaders-for-august-14.html, August 20, 2014. [8] Dawn (Pakistan), September 2, 2014. [9] Daily Times (Pakistan), August 31, 2014. [10] Daily Times (Pakistan), September 2, 2014. ============== After Syria and Iraq, Islamic State makes inroads in South Asia Sun, Sep 07 03:01 AM EDT image By Hameedullah Khan and Saud Mehsud PESHAWAR/DERA ISMAIL KHAN Pakistan (Reuters) - Islamic State pamphlets and flags have appeared in parts of Pakistan and India, alongside signs that the ultra-radical group is inspiring militants even in the strongholds of the Taliban and al Qaeda. A splinter group of Pakistan's Taliban insurgents, Jamat-ul Ahrar, has already declared its support for the well-funded and ruthless Islamic State fighters, who have captured large swathes of territory in Iraq and Syria in a drive to set up a self-declared caliphate. "IS (Islamic State) is an Islamic Jihadi organization working for the implementation of the Islamic system and creation of the Caliphate," Jamat-ul Ahrar's leader and a prominent Taliban figure, Ehsanullah Ehsan, told Reuters by telephone. "We respect them. If they ask us for help, we will look into it and decide." Islamist militants of various hues already hold sway across restive and impoverished areas of South Asia, but Islamic State, with its rapid capture of territory, beheadings and mass executions, is starting to draw a measure of support among younger fighters in the region. Al Qaeda's ageing leaders, mostly holed up in the lawless region along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border, are increasingly seen as stale, tired and ineffectual on hardcore jihadi social media forums and Twitter accounts that incubate potential militant recruits. [ID:nL6N0PU0EA] Security experts say Islamic State's increasing lure may have prompted al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahri to announce the establishment of an Indian franchise to raise the flag of jihad across South Asia, home to more than 400 million Muslims. [ID:nL3N0R51YH] PAMPHLETS, CAR STICKERS Seeking to boost its influence in the Afghanistan-Pakistan region, a local cell with allegiance to Islamic State has been distributing pamphlets in the Pakistani city of Peshawar and eastern Afghanistan in the past few weeks, residents said. The 12-page booklet called "Fatah" (Victory), published in the Pashto and Dari languages of Afghanistan, was being mainly distributed in Afghan refugee camps on the outskirts of Peshawar. The pamphlet’s logo features an AK-47 assault rifle and calls on local residents to support the militant group. Cars with IS stickers have also been spotted around Peshawar. Sameeulah Hanifi, a prayer leader in a Peshawar neighborhood populated mainly by Afghans, said the pamphlets were being distributed by a little-known local group called Islami Khalifat, an outspoken Islamic State supporter. "I know some people who received copies of this material either from friends or were given at mosques by unidentified IS workers," he told Reuters. A Pakistani security official said the pamphlets came from Afghanistan’s neighboring Kunar province where a group of Taliban fighters was spotted distributing them. "We came across them 22 days ago and we are aware of their presence here," said the official. "Pakistani security agencies are working on the Pakistan-Afghan border and have arrested a number of Taliban fighters and recovered CDs, maps, literature in Persian, Pashto and Dari." "We will not permit them to work in our country and anyone who is involved in this will be crushed by the government." RECRUITMENT IN INDIA Signs of Islamic State's influence are also being seen in Kashmir, the region claimed by both India and Pakistan and the scene of a decades-long battle by militants against Indian rule. Security officials in Indian-held Kashmir say they have been trying to find out the level of support for the Arab group after IS flags and banners appeared in the summer. Intelligence and police sources in New Delhi and Kashmir said the flags were first seen on June 27 in a part of the state capital Srinagar, and then in July when India's only Muslim-majority region was marking Islam's most holy day, Eid al-Fitr. Some IS graffiti also appeared on walls of buildings in Srinagar. A police officer said youngsters carrying Islamic State flags at anti-India rallies had been identified but no arrests had been made. Another officer who questions people detained in protests against Indian rule, many of them teenagers, said most were only focused on winning independence from India. "The majority of them have no religious bent of mind," he said. "Some of them, less than 1 percent, of course are religious and radicalized and end up joining militant ranks. They are influenced by al Qaeda, Taliban, Islamic State." Islamic State is also trying to lure Muslims in mainland India, who make up the world's third-biggest Islamic population but who have largely stayed away from foreign battlefields despite repeated calls from al Qaeda. In mid-July, an IS recruitment video surfaced online with subtitles in the Indian languages of Hindi, Tamil and Urdu in which a self-declared Canadian fighter, dressed in war fatigues and flanked by a gun and a black flag, urged Muslims to enlist in global jihad. That came out just weeks after four families in a Mumbai suburb reported to the police that their sons had gone missing, with one leaving behind a note about fighting to defend Islam. It soon turned out that the men had joined a pilgrimage to Baghdad. They later broke off from the tour group and never returned. Indian intelligence believe the men ended up in Mosul, the Iraqi city captured by Islamic State in June, and that one of them may have died in a bomb blast. Last week, the Times of India newspaper said four young men, including two engineering college students, were arrested in the eastern city of Calcutta as they tried to make their way to neighboring Bangladesh to join a recruiter for Islamic State based there. "It's not just these four, but our investigations have found that there could be more youngsters who are in touch with IS handlers and this is a bit of a scary proportion," the newspaper quoted a senior officer as saying. A top official at India's Intelligence Bureau in New Delhi told Reuters: "The problem is we know so little about this network or who is acting on their behalf here. "We know roughly where the Lashkar-e-Taiba, the Indian Mujahideen (organizations backed by Pakistan) support groups are, where they make contacts. But this is a different challenge. Youth getting radicalized in their homes on the Internet, in chatrooms and through Facebook are not easy to track." (Reporting by Asim Tanveer, Hameed Ullah, Saud Mehsud and Maria Golovnina,; Additional reporting by Fayaz Bukhari in SRINAGAR, Writing and additional reporting by Sanjeev Miglani in KABUL and NEW DELHI; Editing by Maria Golovnina and Raju Gopalakrishnan) =====
Monday, June 09, 2014
LIVE: Firing, blasts heard at Karachi airport once again: Karachi airport attack signals tactical shift by Taliban
Thu, Jun 12 06:39 AM EDT
By Syed Raza Hassan
KARACHI (Reuters) - It was the shoes that betrayed Corporal Faiz Mohammad's would-be killers.
When 10 Taliban militants attacked Pakistan's busiest airport on Sunday night, sparking a five-hour gun battle that killed at least 34 people, Mohammad and his fellow officers from the Airports Security Force (ASF) were the first line of defense.
"There was a moment of confusion because the militants had the same ASF uniforms as us," said Mohammad, 30. "But then we saw their shoes." ASF officers wear black leather shoes, but the men who stormed Jinnah International Airport in Karachi, Pakistan's chaotic commercial capital, wore white-soled sneakers.
All 10 militants were dead by dawn, shot down by the security forces or blown up by their own suicide vests. That the Taliban failed in its main objective - to hijack an aircraft and hold its passengers hostage - should bring no comfort to embattled Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, since the attack signals an alarming shift in tactics by an increasingly formidable foe.
The strike at the airport in Karachi, home to 18 million people, deals a blow to Sharif's bid to attract foreign investors to revive the economy. It has also destroyed prospects for peace talks with the Taliban and made an all-out military offensive against militant strongholds along the Afghan border a near-certainty.
Government air strikes on the strongholds in the North Waziristan region triggered the tactical shift, said sources at Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), as the Pakistani Taliban is formally known. Angered by the raids and anticipating a ground assault, the militants are targeting Pakistan's heartland.
A top Taliban commander confirmed to Reuters that attacks involving aircraft were part of a new strategy to counter the government's preparations for a full-scale operation against them in North Waziristan.
"We decided to change our strategy and hit their main economic centers," he said. "They will kill innocent people by their bombs and we will hit their nerve-centers in major cities."
Tariq Azeem, a senior official in Sharif’s administration, said a full-scale military operation was imminent in North Waziristan, and seemed resigned to it sparking terror attacks elsewhere in Pakistan. "Everybody knows there is going to be blowback," he said.
PATTERN OF MUMBAI, WESTGATE MALL
The Taliban is most likely to rely on small militant teams, emulating the protracted, high-impact operations like those in Mumbai in 2008 and Nairobi's Westgate mall last year.
"In Mumbai, and in Kenya, you will find a lot of similarities," said Muhammad Amir Rana, director of the Islamabad-based think tank Pak Institute for Peace Studies. "They (the Taliban) are adopting this as their prime strategy."
The similarities between the Karachi and Mumbai incidents are startling and instructive.
The attack on Mumbai, India's largest city, was carried out by a Pakistan-based anti-India group called Lashkar-e-Taiba, or Army of the Pure. It lasted three days, killed 166 people and transfixed the world.
As with Karachi, it was meticulously planned and involved well-trained and heavily armed militants. In both cases, a 10-man team quickly split into pairs and carried provision-stuffed knapsacks in preparation for a long siege. In Mumbai, militants used mobile phones to coordinate with handlers in Pakistan and with each other in the heat of battle. Their Karachi counterparts were also seen using mobile phones during the assault.
Lashkar-e-Taiba has said it has no connection with any attacks on Pakistani soil and there is no evidence that it works with the Taliban. India accuses elements in Pakistan's large army and its pervasive Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) spy agency of shielding or working with the group.
But neither the military nor the ISI could forestall the havoc caused by 10 men who got out of a minivan near Karachi's cargo terminal on Sunday night.
The attack began at 11.05 p.m., with five of the militants breaching the Fokker Gate with assault rifles and grenades. Minutes later, as the ASF fought back, a second five-strong squad attacked the nearby Cargo Gate. Both gates granted access to the cargo area in the airport's west.
Azeem, the administration official, praised the ASF while admitting how hard it was to protect the sprawling airport.
"You need almost two brigades to cover . . . every inch of it," he said. "Any entrance will have two, three, four people who are fully armed, but one burst of machinegun (fire) will kill all four of them and you can enter."
When Faiz Mohammed ran across the tarmac, shouldering his AK-47, to reinforce his fellow ASF officers, four were already dead. "Our men were fighting relentlessly," he said.
Mohammad was shot in the thigh and, like other wounded ASF, waited hours until it was safe for ambulances to evacuate him.
"The ASF put up very stiff resistance and that apparently sowed panic among the attackers, who then split up and were eventually taken out by security forces," said a senior Pakistani security official, speaking on condition of anonymity.
The militants' dispersal added to the mayhem and drew in more security forces.
By 11.30 p.m., a contingent of police and paramilitary Rangers had arrived at the airport, followed 30 minutes later by an army unit. They formed what Azeem called "the second or the third layer" of airport security which stopped the militant advance on the main passenger terminal further east.
"I WAS TERRIFIED"
The gunfire was now punctuated by the boom of militants firing rocket-propelled grenades (RPGs). They had come prepared for a long fight.
Their knapsacks contained water, medicine and food. Some were spotted using cellphones during the attack, said a security official involved in the investigation, although it was unclear who they were talking to - each other, or distant commanders.
Phimraphat Wisetsoem could see and hear explosions from her seat on a Thai International Airways aircraft. It was trapped near the runway along with an Emirates jet and contained hundreds of passengers. Phimraphat suspected that hijackers in disguise had already boarded her plane.
"I was terrified," she told reporters as she arrived back in Bangkok. "I sat still and didn’t dare move around." Passengers on both planes were later safely evacuated.
Just after midnight, as all outbound flights were suspended and inbound flights diverted to other airports, there was a large explosion near Fokker Gate: the first militant had detonated his suicide vest.
By now, dead and wounded were being ferried to the nearby Jinnah Hospital. Their numbers rose steadily through the night - by morning, the hospital would report 16 dead and dozens injured - as security forces intensified their counter-attack.
As the fighting raged outside, seven employees from a cargo company took refuge in a warehouse - as it turned out, a fateful decision. They burned to death.
Elsewhere, Hamid Khan, 22, a junior technician, hid with eight other men in the washroom of an aircraft maintenance company. A hand-grenade blew off part of the roof and bullets peppered a nearby container. "If anyone is inside, come out now!" shouted someone - friend or foe, Hamid couldn't tell.
He and his colleagues kept silent and stayed put. "I was so afraid that I started reading my last prayers," he said, his voice still shaking with emotion days later.
Two more militants would blow themselves up. By 4 a.m., all 10 were dead, their shattered bodies sprawled in pairs across the tarmac. It had taken 150 security personnel to counter them.
The Rangers identified them as ethnic Uzbeks. Pakistani officials often accuse foreign militants of staging attacks alongside the Pakistani Taliban. "We admit we carried out this attack with the help of our other brotherly mujahideen groups," the senior member of the Pakistani Taliban told Reuters.
A SECOND ATTACK
In daylight, Pakistan's busiest airport resembled a war zone. Smoke billowed from gutted buildings. Rescue workers retrieved the seven cargo company employees, their corpses charred beyond recognition, and raised the death toll to 34.
Junior technician Hamid Khan and the other eight emerged unscathed from their washroom refuge. "I felt as if God had heard our prayers," he said.
At least three passenger aircraft, all unoccupied, were damaged during the battle, a senior Pakistani security official told Reuters. A satellite photo on Google Earth showed a fourth aircraft in the cargo area completely destroyed, its broken wings lying amid the blackened remains of its fuselage.
However, officials have not confirmed the destruction of any aircraft.
Even as flights resumed and the clean-up began, the Taliban struck the airport again. On Tuesday evening, gunmen on motorbikes opened fire on an ASF academy, although there were no casualties. There would be "many more such attacks" in future, Pakistani Taliban spokesman Shahidullah Shahid told Reuters.
Adil Najam, dean of Boston University's Pardee School of Global Studies, agreed. Karachi was "not just another terrorist attack," he said. "It is among the latest skirmishes in what is now an actual war between the Pakistan Army and the Taliban. The war is on - and expect escalation."
(Writing by Andrew R.C. Marshall; Additional reporting by Maria Golovnina in Islamabad, Jibran Ahmed in Peshawar and Kaweewit Kaewjinda in Bangkok; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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KARACHI: Around three to four gunmen have mounted a fresh attack on a security check post outside the airport a day after 37 people were killed after an all-night battle on Monday with militants who besieged Karachi airport’s old terminal, Express News reported.
At present, gunmen are exchanging fire with Airport Security Force (ASF) personnel at the check post guarding the airport. A faction of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) has already claimed responsibility for the attack.
At least 37 people, including 10 terrorists, were reported dead in what is the first large-scale terrorist attack at the country’s largest airport in years.
According to reports, 12 ASF personnel, one each of the police, Rangers and Shaheen Air International are among the deceased. The dead also include eight people who were trapped inside a private company’s cargo office and found dead 28 hours after rescue operations had started. Twenty-six others were also injured in the first assault.
June 10, 2:17pm
It was not a major incident, terrorists only opened aerial fire: Sindh Information Minister Sharjeel Memon.
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June 10, 2:05pm
According to ASF spokesperson Colonel Tahir Ali, the attackers that managed to flee were on motorcycles.
He adds that they started firing at an ASF ladies hostel first, after which they proceeded to the ASF camp.
The spokesperson also says that police and Rangers reached the site soon after they were informed.
Ali also reveals that the attackers were carrying small weapons but the exact kind could not be ascertained as yet.
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June 10, 1:57pm
There have been contradictory reports coming in about the number of attackers.
According to ASF spokesperson Colonel Tahir Ali, there were two attackers who managed to get away.
Earlier reports had suggested that the total number of attackers is nine.
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June 10, 1:55pm
No casualties were reported in the attack, CAA spokesperson says.
Security has been beefed up at Islamabad and Peshawar airport. and a shoot-on-sight order has been issued at Islamabad airport against suspicious individuals.
Chaudhry Nisar contacts DG Rangers to inquire about the situation.
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June 10, 1:50pm
According to Express News, DG Rangers says the terrorists have managed to flee. The area has been surrounded by security forces and a search operation is underway.
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June 10, 1:46pm
DG Rangers says situation is under control and the operation is complete.
ASF personnel take position on runway, say CAA sources.
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June 10, 1:41pm
Express News now reports that flight operations have resumed.
Because of the security situation, routes to the airport have also been sealed.
June 10, 1:32pm
According to ISPR, security forces have surrounded the attackers.
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June 10, 1:30pm
The Rawalpindi airport has been put on red alert following the attack on the ASF camp.
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June 10, 1:28pm
Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) faction claim they have launched another attack on the Airport Security Force Academy in Karachi.
“We again came to the Karachi ASF’s academy. God is Great. God is Great. God is Great.” spokeperson for a TTP faction, Omar Khorasani writes on his Twitter page.
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June 10, 1:24pm
CAA has asked people to remain calm, assuring that the airport is not under attack.
Flight operations at #Jinnah International Airport are SUSPENDED.
— CAA Pakistan (@AirportPakistan) June 10, 2014
#Jinnah Airport is safe, #ASF academy is under attack. Please remain calm and patient, will be updating you accordingly.
— CAA Pakistan (@AirportPakistan) June 10, 2014
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June 10, 1:23pm
Paramilitary vehicles and ambulances racing to the scene of the latest attack @BBCUrdu http://t.co/3FkjzLJH5f
— Haroon Rashid (@TheHaroonRashid) June 10, 2014
I am in the plane to fly to dub for meeting with my co chairman.our plane has been stopped to fly b/o the attack on ASF camp /next Ap
— Rehman Malik (@SenRehmanMalik) June 10, 2014
Army troops moved to reinforce security forces to counter terrorists attack on ASF
— Haroon Rashid (@TheHaroonRashid) June 10, 2014
Lets appreciate courage of ASF boys as what seem from tv footage,they are confident2fight back terrorists.They are not cowards like RULERS
— Rauf Klasra (@KlasraRauf) June 10, 2014
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June 10, 1:18pm
Three police officers have been injured, Express News reports.
A search operation has started as police officers and Rangers personnel enter Pehlwan Goth. A helicopters is also being used for surveillance.
Flights to Karachi have been diverted to Nawabshah according to Express News.
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June 10, 1:15pm
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif is being constantly updated about the situation in Karachi and the fresh attack near the airport.
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June 10, 1:10pm
Express News now reports that the attackers have fled the scene.
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has ordered that they be eliminated.
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June 10, 1:08pm
Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar was informed about the incident while he was briefing the National Assembly about the previous attack.
The security forces are trying to find the place where the militants are hiding, they are reportedly hiding in the houses near the camp.
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June 10, 1:01pm
There were earlier reports that ASF personnel brought the situation under control, however, firing is still going on.
The security forces are trying to find the place where the militants are hiding.
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June 10, 12:56pm
ASF personnel have brought the situation under control.
The attackers reportedly tried to destroy planes and flee towards Gulistan-e-Johar.
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June 10, 12:54pm
An exchange of fire is going on between the assailants and the ASF personnel. Gunshots could be heard as Express News correspondent reported the encounter between the attackers and the security forces.
There are at least five militants, according to ASF sources.
Security has been enhanced at the airport as well as nearby areas and flights were diverted to other cities, according to sources in the CAA.
A high contingent of Rangers personnel has also reached the site of the attack.
IG Sindh Iqbal Mehmood says that 1000 police officers have been sent to the site.
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June 10, 12:52pm
An exchange of fire is going on between the assailants and the ASF personnel
Security has been enhanced at the airport as well as nearby areas.
The number of militants is five, according to ASF sources.
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June 10, 12:44pm
The militants attacked the camp from the Pehlwan Goth side. An exchange of fire is going on between the assailants and the ASF personnel.
Express News screengrab of the side from where the militants mounted a fresh attack near Karachi airport.
According to sources, the flight schedule has been suspended.
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June 10, 12:41pm
Rangers and the police have been summoned to the location.
ASF sources say the attackers arrived at the scene in a car.
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June 10, 12:36pm
Express News is now reporting that militants have attacked the ASF camp, which is located half a kilometer away from the first attack site.
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June 10, 12:24pm
Director General of Civil Aviation Authority tells Express News that eight bodies were found from the cargo office of a private company.
He confirms that they were not found from the cold storage.
He also states that seven of them were workers of the company while one of them was an ASF official.
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UPDATE 8-Pakistani Taliban attack airport in Karachi, 27 dead
Mon, Jun 09 06:43 AM EDT
(Adds sectarian attack, paragraph 14)
By Syed Raza Hassan
ISLAMABAD, June 9 (Reuters) - Taliban militants disguised as security forces stormed Pakistan's busiest airport on Sunday and at least 27 people were killed in a night-long battle at one of the country's most high-profile targets.
The assault on Jinnah International Airport in Karachi, Pakistan's sprawling commercial hub of 18 million people, all but destroys prospects for peace talks between the Pakistani Taliban and the government of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.
It also deals a heavy blow to Sharif's efforts to attract foreign investors to revive economic growth and raises questions about security at the country's main installations.
The attack began just before midnight when 10 gunmen wearing military uniforms and armed with automatic rifles and rocket-propelled grenades shot their way into the airport's old terminal, which is used mainly for charter and executive flights.
Gun battles raged through the night until security forces regained control of the airport at dawn. Passengers were evacuated and all flights were diverted.
Director general of the military's media wing, Asim Bajwa, said the airport had been cleared and would soon resume operations. The government said security was being stepped up at all airports.
"We need to keep extremely vigilant," Shujaat Azeem, special assistant to Sharif on aviation, said in a statement.
The Pakistani Taliban, an alliance of insurgent groups fighting to topple the government and set up a sharia state, said they carried out the attack in response to air strikes on their strongholds near the Afghan border and suggested their mission was to hijack a passenger plane.
"It is a message to the Pakistan government that we are still alive to react over the killings of innocent people in bomb attacks on their villages," said Shahidullah Shahid, a Taliban spokesman.
"The main goal of this attack was to damage the government, including by hijacking planes and destroying state installations."Pakistan's paramilitary force said that the attackers were ethnic Uzbeks. Pakistani officials often blame foreign militants holed up in lawless areas on the Afghan border for staging attacks alongside the Pakistani Taliban around the country. "Three militants blew themselves up and seven were killed by security forces," Rizwan Akhtar, the regional head of the paramilitary Rangers, said in televised remarks. "The militants appear to be Uzbek." The death toll included airport security guards and workers with Pakistan International Airlines. In a separate unrelated attack, at least 22 Shi'ite pilgrims were killed in a suicide attack near Pakistan's border with Iran, a local official said. A radical Sunni group claimed responsibility for the attack. GUN BATTLE Sharif came to power last year promising to find a negotiated solution to years of violence but after the latest attack on the airport the resumption of the peace process looked unlikely. Karachi is Pakistan's biggest city and commercial hub, home to a vibrant stock exchange, the central bank and the country's main port. But it is also a violent and chaotic place where Taliban militants and criminal gangs operate freely underground. At the airport, gun battles went on for five hours and television pictures showed fire raging as ambulances ferried casualties away. At least three loud explosions were heard as militants wearing suicide vests blew themselves up. By dawn on Monday, the army said the airport had been secured but heavy smoke rose above the building. "Ten militants aged between 20 and 25 have been killed by security forces," said a spokesman for the Rangers. "A large cache of arms and ammunition has been recovered from the militants. "A sweep operation is being carried out at the airport which is expected to be completed by midday (0700 GMT)." Officials said no aircraft had been damaged. Peace talks between the government and the Pakistani Taliban had failed in recent months, already dampening hopes of reaching a negotiated settlement with the insurgents, who continue attacks against government and security targets. Pakistan's Taliban are allied with but separate from the Afghan Taliban. (Writing by Maria Golovnina; Additional reporting by Gul Yousufzai; Editing by Robert Birsel)
https://m.facebook.com/syedzaidzamanhamid?refid=52&_ft_=qid.6022917075275413295%3Amf_story_key.-6257478416966407880&__tn__=C Why do I say that MQM is also heavily involved in the attack ?? We must keep this in mind that both MQM and TTP are controlled by RAW. Both orgs may appear to be enemies of each other in words etc, but in reality are collaborators, allies and assets of each other. MQM has NEVER really harmed TTP. TTP has NEVER ever attacked MQM rallies. When it comes to battle against Pakistan, MQM would provide logistics, support, weapons and protection to the TTP/RAW assets to wage urban war. Indian weapons have been found from MQM offices and from the airport as well. MQM senior members are known to be Indian citizens. MQM offered the British MI6 to act as their local spies for espionage if British govt can dismantle ISI !! These are documented facts. Given the scenario, I am sure that MQM is heavily involved in the attack, even if there is an involvement of TTP factions. TTP’s claim of the attack remains meaningless as they remain bloody liars all the way, claiming and disowning as they please. They had even claimed times square bombing in 2010 Watch the pics of dead terrorists. Compare them with Gorkhas. An ordinary Pakistani cannot tell the difference between Uzbeks or Gorkhas. My take is that these are Indian Gurkhas or Uzbeks from Dostum who were protected by MQM in Karachi and then launched. In Karachi, in the last 10 years, nearly 100,000 Pakistanis have been killed or wounded and TTP has not done that. MQM has !! Now both MQM and TTP would work together to wage the urban 5th GW. Denying this will not change the facts.=========================================== Emirates passengers were guided to safety by military during airport siege Nadeem Hanif June 9, 2014 Updated: June 9, 2014 14:52:00 DUBAI // Flights between the UAE and Karachi were grounded on Sunday night after the airport in Pakistan was closed in the aftermath of an attack by gunmen. ■ Flydubai Karachi flights on hold, staff safe after terrorist attack Video Video: Karachi airport under attack Photos In pictures: Karachi airport siege Topic Emirates Airline, Airports, Etihad Airways At least 28 people are reported to have died when heavily armed militants attacked the Jinnah International Airport. An Emirates Airline spokesman said passengers on flight EK603 were helped to safety by the Pakistan Military during the siege. “Due to the closure of Jinnah International Airport in Karachi on Sunday 8th June, EK603, the Karachi to Dubai service, was cancelled,” the spokesman said. “Under the guidance of the Pakistan Military the passengers and crew disembarked the aircraft and were taken to a secure area of the terminal. “When the airport reopens all passengers will be rebooked on to alternate Emirates flights to continue their journey.” The Pakistani Army regained control following a five-hour battle, but flight operations remained suspended. Other flights affecting UAE carriers were diverted or grounded. “Due to the closure of Jinnah International Airport in Karachi, Etihad Airways has delayed its flight EY221 from Abu Dhabi to Karachi on Sunday 8 June, and flight EY222 from Karachi to Abu Dhabi on Monday 9 June,” said a spokesman for Etihad Airways. Flight EY221 from Abu Dhabi to Karachi will now depart on Monday at 5.05pm. Flight EY222 from Karachi to Abu Dhabi scheduled for Monday, will depart at 8.30pm. “We will continue to monitor the security situation in Karachi. All affected Etihad Airways’ passengers are being kept fully informed about the situation,” the spokesman said. Passengers in transit at Abu Dhabi are being provided hotel accommodation and lounge access. “We apologise for the delay, however, the safety of passengers and airline staff is of paramount importance to Etihad Airways.” Both airlines are urging passengers to regularly check their flight status at www.emirates.com or www.etihad.com nhanif@thenational.ae Read more: http://www.thenational.ae/uae/emirates-passengers-were-guided-to-safety-by-military-during-airport-siege#ixzz348nurnGW Follow us: @TheNationalUAE on Twitter | thenational.ae on Facebook ================================== June 9, 3:54pm Sindh Chief Minister Qaim Ali Shah has announced that each of the injured will receive Rs0.1 million. The families of the Rangers personal who were killed in the attack will be given Rs2 million and the families of the deceased ASF personnel will receive Rs1 million. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 3:46pm Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif directs Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan to reach Karachi. The premier tells the interior minister to meet the high ups of Rangers, police, ASF as well as CAA. Nawaz also asked Nisar to submit a report on how to stop terrorist attacks. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 3:27pm Quoting DG ASF Azam Tiwana Express News reports that the attackers were foreign nationals. He adds that security has been enhanced at airports. Funeral of the martyred ASF personnel has been held. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 2:35pm Flights to Lahore and Dubai are ready for departure. Flights from other cities can land in Karachi Airport. ==================================== #KarachiAirport LIVE: Firing, blasts heard at Karachi airport once again By Faraz Khan / Web Desk / Sohail Khattak / Saad Hassan Published: June 8, 2014 Share this article Print this page Email. Security forces have cordoned off the area. PHOTO: EXPRESS NEWS SCREENGRAB Smoke rises after militants launched an early morning assault at Jinnah International Airport in Karachi on June 9, 2014. PHOTO: AFP PHOTO: AFP PHOTO: EXPRESS SCREENGRAB Fire and smoke can be seen rising from a part of the airport. PHOTO: Express Screengrab PHOTO: EXPRESS/MOHAMMAD NOMAN Smoke can be seen rising form the Airport in the background. PHOTO: EXPRESS/MOHAMMAD NOMAN A view of the airport. Smoke can be seen rising from the airport. PHOTO: EXPRESS SCREENGRAB Security forces have cordoned off the area. PHOTO: EXPRESS NEWS SCREENGRAB . KARACHI: A brazen terrorist assault on Karachi airport’s old terminal came to an end early Monday morning, five hours after militants took siege of the airport, the military announced. However, firing was heard from inside the airport hours after the announcement. At least 28 people, including 10 terrorists, were reported dead in what is the first large-scale terrorist attack at the country’s largest airport in years. According to reports, eight ASF personnel, two Rangers officials, one police officer and three PIA officials are among the deceased. Large plumes of smoke were seen rising from the runway area of the old airport (also known as the Hajj Terminal), as the airport shut down, passengers were evacuated and the flight schedule was suspended. Pakistan Army troops have been called in to take control of the situation. “A precautionary search operation will take place after daylight and the airport will be cleared for operations, handed back to the Civil Aviation Authority/ Airport Security by mid day,” said DG ISPR Asim Bajwa. ====================== LIVE: TTP claims responsibility for Karachi airport attack By Faraz Khan / Web Desk / Sohail Khattak / Saad Hassan / Tahir Khan Published: June 8, 2014 Share this article Print this page Email. Smoke rises after militants launched an early morning assault at Jinnah International Airport in Karachi on June 9, 2014. PHOTO: AFP Smoke rises after militants launched an early morning assault at Jinnah International Airport in Karachi on June 9, 2014. PHOTO: AFP PHOTO: AFP PHOTO: EXPRESS SCREENGRAB Fire and smoke can be seen rising from a part of the airport. PHOTO: Express Screengrab PHOTO: EXPRESS/MOHAMMAD NOMAN Smoke can be seen rising form the Airport in the background. PHOTO: EXPRESS/MOHAMMAD NOMAN A view of the airport. Smoke can be seen rising from the airport. PHOTO: EXPRESS SCREENGRAB Security forces have cordoned off the area. PHOTO: EXPRESS NEWS SCREENGRAB . KARACHI: Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) claimed responsibility for a brazen terrorist assault on Karachi airport’s old terminal. At least 28 people, including 12 terrorists, were reported dead in what is the first large-scale terrorist attack at the country’s largest airport in years. According to reports, eight ASF personnel, two Rangers officials, one police officer and three PIA officials are among the deceased. Twenty-four people have been injured in the attack so far as well. The military had announced that the attack had come to an end early Monday morning, five hours after militants took siege of the airport. However, firing and blasts were heard from inside the airport hours after the announcement. Large plumes of smoke were seen rising from the runway area of the old airport (also known as the Hajj Terminal), as the airport shut down, passengers were evacuated and the flight schedule was suspended. Pakistan Army troops have been called in to take control of the situation. “A precautionary search operation will take place after daylight and the airport will be cleared for operations, handed back to the Civil Aviation Authority/ Airport Security by mid day,” said DG ISPR Asim Bajwa. June 9, 12:30pm The Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) has announced that the airport will be made operational at 4pm. CAA advises passengers to contact the relevant airlines two hours prior to their flight time. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 12:17pm Rangers spokesperson says that the search operation is complete. The airport has been cleared and declared as safe. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 12:07pm Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif says the Karachi airport will be made operational soon. Necessary arrangements will be made to facilitate the passengers, he adds. No flight has arrived at the airport for the last 13 hours. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 12:03pm Express News reports that the terrorists entered the airport in two groups wearing ASF uniforms. ================================ 11:38am The attackers used factor VIII injections, which aid blood clotting and reduce bleeding, Express News reports. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 11: 29am TTP spokesperson evades comments when asked about Sindh Rangers DG Major General Rizwan Akhtar claim that the attackers looked like Uzbek militants. “We do not make a distinction in Muslims whether they are Pakistanis, Uzbeks, Arabs or Chechans. They all are Mujahideen,” Shahidullah Shahid told The Express Tribune by phone. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 11:21am Umar Media, the official media wing of the TTP, claims on their Facebook page that just six militants had attacked the airport. “The biggest reason for attacking Karachi airport is because it serves as the biggest air logistics centre supplying goods for the Crusaders’ war in Afghanistan and Pakistan,” a statement on their Facebook page claims. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 11:18am Security forces continue to sweep the airport as a security measure while sources say that all attackers have been killed. The airport is expected to be cleared and handed back to the Civil Aviation Authority by 12pm today. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 11:07am TTP spokesperson Shahidullah Shahid promises more attacks in the future. “It’s just the beginning, we have taken revenge for one (Hakimullah Mehsud), we have to take revenge for hundreds,” he says. “We have yet to take revenge for the deaths of hundreds of innocent tribal women and children in Pakistani air strikes,” the spokesperson states. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 10:56am Rangers spokesperson says Karachi airport has been cleared of militants. ===== June 9, 10:49am Exchange of fire comes to a stop at the airport, Express News reports. Meanwhile, aerial firing from security forces still continues. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 10:44am TTP spokesperson Shahidullah Shahid says “this attack was the revenge of martyrdom our leader Shaheed Hakimullah Mehsud and brutal killings of the TTP’s prisoners in jails.” ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 10:35am Awami Muslim League chief Sheikh Rasheed Ahmad, while speaking to Express News, says attacks like the one at Karachi airport are carried out to destroy the image of the country. “This country is facing an internal threat and we need to save this country,” he adds. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 10:18am Politicians on twitter express their viewpoints on the airport attack: ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 10:14am TTP claims responsibility for the Karachi airport attack, reports AFP. “We carried out the attack on Karachi airport to avenge the death of Hakimullah Mehsud,” TTP spokesperson Shahidullah Shahid tells AFP, while dismissing the government’s recent offer of peace talks as a “tool of war”. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 10:10am Sources say that the militants who blew themselves up this morning were between 18 and 19 years of age. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 10:07am Search operation by security forces continues. The two militants that blew themselves up earlier this morning detonated the explosives when they were cornered by the security officials at the Isphani Hanger. Sources tell Express News that more suicide jackets, petrol bombs and other ammunition were recovered from the airport this morning. Policemen show seized weapons after militants attacked Jinnah International Airport in Karachi on June 9, 2014. PHOTO: AFP ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 10:03am People including journalists said on twitter: ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 9:45am Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan has asked for a report on the attack. Employees leave the Jinnah International Airport after militants attack in Karachi on June 9, 2014. PHOTO: AFP An airport official tells Express News that militants had entered the airport from the ICG gate and killed four ASF officials at the spot. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 9:36am Three blasts heard at Karachi airport at the old terminal. According to sources, two of the militants blew themselves up. Politician Ijazul Haq tweeted: Express News screengrab of the explosions. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 9:25am Blasts also heard at the airport, Express News reports. Express News screengrab. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 9:16am At least 28 people have been killed so far in the attack. Ten militants, eight ASF personnel, two Rangers officials, one police officer and three PIA officials are among the deceased. It is reported that 24 people have been injured in the attack so far. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 9:13am 6 to 7 tanks have proceeded to Isphani Hangar after the firing. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 8:49am Sources say three militants are present at Karachi airport. A high contingent of the Pak Army has reached the site of the firing. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 8:40am Express News reports that some militants are still present at the airport. The number of militants is not known as of yet. Express News screengrab of security officials at Karachi airport. Emergency has been declared once again. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 8:28am Firing heard at Karachi airport near Isphani Hangar, which is the aircraft overhaul facility of the airport, Express News reports. One person injured in the firing. The injured, identified as a technician, is taken to a local hospital for medical treatment. Express News screengrab of Karachi airport. “We have relaunched the operation and called in additional troops,” says Sibtain Rizvi, spokesperson for the Rangers paramilitary force. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 8:20am Islamabad and Lahore airports have been put on high alert. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 4:35am ISPR claims that all terrorist have been killed. DG ISPR claimed that remaining 4 terrorists have also been killed, bringing the total number of terrorists killed to 10. He further claimed that terrorists were confined to two areas. Weapons including rockets and RPGs were recovered from the terrorists. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 4:20am SSG commandos have reached Karachi to take part in the ongoing operation. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 3:55am Six terrorists have been killed so far during the army operation at the airport, said ISPR. The death toll has now risen to 18. Nine ASF men, one Rangers official and two PIA officials were also killed in the incident. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 3:30am Security forces have cleared the cargo terminal, Express News is reporting. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 3:25am According to Express News the bomb disposal squad has defused two suicide vests and 20 bombs recovered from slain terrorists thus far. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 3:10am Express News is reporting that two more loud blasts were heard. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 2:52am There’s another update on the death toll – which has gone up drastically. Now being reported: Some 7 ASF, 2 Rangers personnel as well as 1 policeman and one airline employee have lost their lives. Three terrorists are reported dead. Four hours have lapsed since the attack, and about half a dozen terrorists remain active, but contained. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 2:42am Express News is reporting that the death toll has increased to nine now. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 2:33am ISPR says that all passengers in the airport have been successfully evacuated. Says that the operation is in its “final stages” and Jinnah Terminal has been completely secured. The terrorists are still active, but contained to a specific area. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 2:20am Firing erupts once again following more loud explosions around the Airport. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 2:15am Express News is reporting that terrorists are holed up in one place. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 2:10am The flames inside the airport premises have increased in magnitude. People are also still stuck inside Jinnah Terminal. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 2:06am Express News is now reporting that three terrorists have been killed. Seven terrorists are still alive and at the airport and surrounded by security forces. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 1:28am More shots heard. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 1:21am Rangers’ officials are claiming that four terrorists have been surrounded. Two have already been killed. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 1:10am Express News is reporting that DG Rangers has arrived at the site to monitor the operation. The chief minister of Sindh is also reported to be in the vicinity. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 12:54am The spokesperson of the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) has confirmed that the Army has taken over the operation. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 12:52am The chief minister of Sindh is in touch with the Karachi Corps Commander and the Director-General of Sindh Rangers over the operation to clear the airport. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 12:50am Express News is reporting that two terrorists have been reported killed along with five security officials. Some of the injured and dead have been taken to Jinnah Hospital. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 12:45am Officials are telling The Express Tribune that the terrorists entered the airport from the Isphani Hangar, the aircraft overhaul facility of the airport. The hangar is located right in front of the PIA head office. It is improbable that there were too many employees there when attack occurred. The intensity of the gunfight and bomb explosions shook the entire neighbourhood around the old terminal. The terminal is considered as high security zone as VIPs including the prime minister and president frequently use it. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 12:35am CAA spokesperson Abid Qaimkhani has said he is not able to confirm the extent of the damage to the airport facilities or how many people have been injured or killed in the attack. “All I can say is that a few ASF and CAA officials have been injured.” ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 12:25am The Sindh government has declared red alert in the city and emergency has also been imposed in the hospitals of the city. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 12:20am Flights to Karachi have been diverted to other airports of the country. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 9, 12:10am The Army has been called in to back up security officials. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… June 8, 11:45pm According to details at least four ASF personnel were killed when terrorist hurled crackers and opened firing near Haj Terminal of Karachi Airport. Terrorist were trying to enter the runway area. Back-up contingents of security forces have been called in. Police and Rangers have cordoned off the area and flight schedule have also been put on hold. =========================================
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