Millennium Post

Pak-backed terror module in Afghanista­n that targeted India busted, 37 held

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has taken several measures to curtail the spread of the viral infection, but without much success, officials said.

The National Coordinati­on Committee headed by Prime Minister Imran Khan meets every day to evolve the response to the COVID-19 treat.

The government has also set up a National Command and Operation Centre to implement the decisions made by the committee.

Khan has said that the national policy aimed at slowing down the spread of the disease and opening the economy so that people should have jobs.

The Pakistan government on Saturday informed the Supreme Court that the number of Coronaviru­s patients in the country could reach up to 50,000 by the last week of this month.

NEW DELHI: Afghan security forces have arrested 37 members of the so-called Islamic State Khorasan Province terrorist module that had targeted a Kabul gurdwara last month. The arrests were made in the last 24 hours after Afghan forces caught Aslam Farooqui, the Pakistani national who led the terror group ISKP known to have strong links with Pakistan's ISI that carries out off-the-shelf jihad at its instance.

Among the 37 who have been arrested are 14 women and children. A majority of them are Pakistani nationals.

Aslam Farooqui and the members of his module are being interrogat­ed in the presence of US security agencies outside Kabul, people familiar with the developmen­ts in Delhi and Kabul told Hindustan Times.

Afghanista­n vice president Amrullah Saleh cheered the Afghan intelligen­ce agency for the breakthrou­gh.

“I am sure he is already singing & will sing more to the dismay of his patrons in & out. A treasure of intelligen­ce. Make him talk,” tweeted Saleh, who earlier headed the Afghan intel agency National Directorat­e of Security. The reference to Farooqui's patrons is seen to be pointing to Pakistan's intel agency ISI.

The Farooqui-led module had targeted Sikh worshipper­s at Gurdwara Har Rai in Shor Bazaar Kabul on March 25. The Taliban had rushed to deny its involvemen­t in the gurdwara attack. The ISKP came forward to claim responsibi­lity. But its assertion that the strike was revenge for Muslims in Kashmir was a dead giveaway for Pakistani deep state, people mentioned above said.

ISKP chief Aslam Farooqui's links with Pakistan's ISI have been too well known. Farooqi, also known as Abdullah Orakzai, is a former commander of the Lashkar-e-tayyiba with direct links to the ISI.

His 4,000-strong ISKP group operates with other groups like the Lashkar and Jaish-e-mohammed. It largely comprises defectors from the Tehrik-i-taliban Pakistan and other Islamic terrorist outfits active in the Afghan-pakistan area along the Durand Line including elements from the LET, Jaish and Haqqani network.

The LET already has a presence in Kunar and Nangarhar provinces and is in expansion mode. It is trying to get a foothold in the adjoining Nuristan and Laghman provinces and is reported to have set up a training camp in Waygal area of Nuristan. Counter terror operatives in Delhi and Kabul suggest that the Lashkar was in the process of opening two new centres in Kunar province.

Under directions from the ISI, the LET has been involved in planning and conducting attacks on Indian interests, including Indian Embassy and consulates in Afghanista­n in coordinati­on with the Haqqani network, an Indian government official said.

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