The
disclosure by the Pakistani police that members of a banned
Islamic group Lashkar-e-Jhangvi are the prime suspects in
two of the recent bombing incidents in Karachi has given a
new twist to the militant politics in the country.
Never before had an Islamic or any other militant group been
singled out for targeting foreigners.
Photographs of 10 suspected
militants, issued by Pakistani police, were published in leading
newspapers in the country on Saturday.
They have been accused of involvement
in two cases of bomb explosions in Karachi in which foreigners
or foreign installations were the prime target. On
8 May an apparent suicide bomber rammed his explosive-laden
car into a Pakistani Navy bus, killing 14 people, including
11 French technicians.
And on 14 June a car bomb targeted
the American consulate, in which 12 people were killed, all
of them Pakistanis.
The two incidents have led
to an exodus of foreign nationals from the country.
Shia targets
Police now say they have reasons
to believe that members of Lashkar-e-Jhangvi were behind both
these incidents. Their names, photographs and other details
have been released, along with an offer of a substantial reward
money ($320,000) for providing assistance that could lead
to their arrest.
The name Lashkar-e-Jhangvi is
not new to militant politics in the country. But until now it
was identified as an extremist Sunni Muslim group, whose only
target was the minority Shia Muslims. It
is true the group also killed several Iranian nationals, including
a couple of diplomats, but this was also because they belonged
to the Shia faith.
The group wants Pakistan to
be declared as a Sunni State, where the rights of Shia should
be drastically curtailed, and they should be made to live
as a religious minority.
Last year the government officially
banned Lashkar-e-Jhangvi along with an extremist Shia group,
Sipah-e-Mohammed. But the move had little impact on the activities
of the group as it had all along worked as an underground
organisation.
Leader killed
Nevertheless, the government's
decision was taken by the group as a declaration of war, and
it vowed to continue with its activities.
Perhaps the biggest blow to Lashkar-e-Jhangvi came last month
when its founder leader, Riaz Basra, was killed in a controversial
police encounter in the Punjab province. He was the most wanted
man in the country, with the biggest prize money on his head.
Following his violent death,
Basra's family accused the authorities of killing him in a
fake encounter after keeping him in detention for several
months.
Several of the people whose
photos have now been released by the authorities as suspects
in the Karachi bombing incidents are known members of the
group.
One of them, Akram Lahori is
believed to be the new head of the organisation, and Asif
Ramzi his second-in-command. They already have huge prize
money on their heads.
Reasons sought
Though the authorities have
made only the preliminary investigations public, it will be
interesting to find out how and why the group decided to turn
its guns on foreigners, particularly Westerners.
Perhaps one reason could be
its association with the Taleban, and the way its members
in the past were provided sanctuary in Afghanistan by Mullah
Omar.
In fact, even before Pakistan
announced its support for the US-led military operation in
Afghanistan, Islamabad's relations with the Taleban had been
strained because of Mullah Omar's refusal to hand over several
wanted members of Lashkar-e-Jhangvi.
So, if Lashkar-e-Jhangvi is
really behind the two bombing incidents in Karachi - something
that still remains unclear - it means the organisation has
decided to go for a greater role in Islamic militant politics.
It also suggests that when
its members were taking arms training in Afghanistan or were
hiding there, they had established close links with Osama
Bin Laden's al-Qaeda. And in a way, the group can be described
as the Pakistani wing of al-Qaeda.
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