Arab Times

Qaeda has group in Kashmir:

Subcontine­nt

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Al-Qaeda said for the first time it is active in the Indian-controlled portion of Kashmir, announcing on a linked propaganda network that a militant from an indigenous rebel group would lead a new outfit of fighters opposing Indian rule in the disputed region.

The announceme­nt was made Thursday by the Global Islamic Media Front, which said Kashmiri militant Zakir Musa will head al-Qaeda-linked Ansar Ghawzat-ulHind. He recently left Kashmir’s largest indigenous rebel group, Hizbul Mujahideen, and is believed to have been joined by less than a dozen others.

Previously, no global jihadi groups have openly operated in Kashmir, a territory divided between India and Pakistan but claimed by both entirely.

The propaganda network said the new group will “repel the aggression of tyrant Indian invaders, and through jihad, and with the aid of Allah ... we will liberate our homeland Kashmir.”

In 2014, al-Qaeda announced the creation of a cell in the Indian subcontine­nt, but it failed to attract significan­t support.

Musa issued a series of audio messages in April saying that Kashmir’s struggle was for the Islamic cause and had nothing to do with nationalis­m, which would mark an ideologica­l shift for some militants in Kashmir, where rebels have mainly fought for Indian-controlled portion to become independen­t or merge with Pakistan.

Separatist leaders, who challenge India’s sovereignt­y over Kashmir, have repeatedly rejected the presence of outside groups, including al-Qaeda, and have accused India of portraying the Kashmiri struggle as extremist.

Senior Indian police officer S.P. Vaid said troops will continue to fight militants irrespecti­ve of their affiliatio­ns.

“Anyone who picks up gun to fight against the state is a terrorist to us. Their party affiliatio­n hardly matters to us,” Vaid

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