Hindustan Times (Patiala)

‘LeT, JeM have hundreds of fighters, 11 camps in Af’

- Rezaul H Laskar letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Pakistan-based Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) and Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) still have hundreds of fighters in Afghanista­n and both groups maintain at least 11 terrorist training camps in Kunar and Nangarhar provinces, according to a new UN report.

The Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), blamed for a string of attacks in northwest Pakistan in recent months, accounts for the largest component of foreign terrorist fighters in Afghanista­n, with their number estimated at “several thousand”, says the latest report from the team monitoring the UN Security Council’s sanctions on the Taliban.

The is the first report from the monitoring team, which assists the UN Security Council’s 1988 Sanctions Committee, since the Taliban takeover of Kabul in August last year.

Though JeM and LeT are estimated to have a few hundred fighters each in Afghanista­n, JeM maintains eight training camps in Nangarhar province, three of them directly under Taliban control, according to the report. There were no details on the location of these camps or the number of fighters in each of them.

LeT, which was formed in Afghanista­n in 1990, has three training camps in Kunar and Nangarhar provinces, and the group has maintained its close ties with the Afghan Taliban leadership. LeT leader Mawlawi Assadullah met the Taliban’s deputy interior minister Noor Jalil in October 2021, the report states.

A Taliban delegation visited a training camp used by LeT in Haska Mena district of Nangarhar province in January this year.

Within Afghanista­n, LeT is led by Mawlawi Yousuf. Past LeT members have included Aslam Farooqi and Ejaz Ahmad Ahangar alias Abu Usman al-Kashmiri, both of whom joined the Khorasan chapter of the Islamic State.

Farooqi was blamed for the March 2020 attack on a Sikh place of worship in Kabul that killed more than 25 people. Farooqi was subsequent­ly captured by Afghan special forces but escaped from prison during the Taliban takeover of Kabul last year.

Some reports have suggested he was killed in a gun battle in Afghanista­n in January.

The report said JeM, a Deobandi group led by Masood Azhar, is “ideologica­lly closer to the Taliban”.

Qari Ramazan is the newly appointed head of the group in Afghanista­n. JeM was formed in early 2000 by Azhar after he was freed along with two more terrorists in exchange for passengers on an Indian Airlines flight that was hijacked by Pakistani terrorists from Kathmandu to Kandahar.

Despite the Taliban setup’s claims of not allowing Afghan soil to be used by foreign fighters, the UN report said several other foreign terrorist groups were still active in Afghanista­n, including the Eastern Turkistan Islamic Movement (ETIM), Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan and Jamaat Ansarullah. Each of these groups has a few hundred fighters in the wartorn country.

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