$5M US bounty for Pak Taleban chief
washington — The United States on Thursday said it was offering a $5-million reward for information on Mullah Fazlullah, the chief of the Pakistani Taleban militant group that has waged a decadelong insurgency in the South Asian nation.
The offer came amid worsening US-Pakistan relations, and coincided with a visit to Washington by Pakistan’s foreign secretary for talks expected to focus on boosting counter-terrorism cooperation and the US war strategy in Afghanistan.
Although Pakistani Taleban militants still unleash attacks, the group has lost control of all territory in Pakistan since its December 2014 attack on an army school that killed 132 children. The US State Department also offered rewards of $3 million each for information on Abdul Wali, the head of a Pakistani Taleban affiliate, and Mangal Bagh, the leader of an allied Pakistani militant group accused of attacking Nato convoys.
“Each of these individuals is believed to have committed, or to pose a significant risk of committing, acts of terrorism that threaten the security of the United States and its nationals,” the department said in a statement. Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The three militants pose threats to Pakistan, as well as US-led coalition troops in Afghanistan, the State Department said in its statement. —
washington — The United States on Thursday said it was offering a $5-million reward for information on Mullah Fazlullah, the chief of the outlawed Pakistani Taleban militant group that has unleashed a decade-long campaign of terror in the South Asian nation.
The offer came amid worsening US-Pakistan relations, and coincided with a visit to Washington by Pakistan’s foreign secretary for talks expected to focus on boosting counter-terrorism cooperation and the US war strategy in Afghanistan.
Although Pakistani Taleban militants still unleash attacks, the group has lost control of all territory in Pakistan since its December 2014 attack on an army school that killed 132 children.
The US State Department also offered rewards of $3 million each for information on Abdul Wali, the head of a Pakistani Taleban affiliate, and Mangal Bagh, the leader of an allied Pakistani militant group accused of attacking Nato convoys.
“Each of these individuals is believed to have committed, or to pose a significant risk of committing, acts of terrorism that threaten the security of the United States and its nationals,” the department said in a statement.
Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Washington and Kabul accuse Pakistan of harbouring Afghan Taleban and fighters of the allied Haqqani network, which Islamabad denies. Islamabad says the Pakistani Taleban maintain sanctuaries in neighbouring Afghanistan. In January, US President Donald Trump suspended security assistance of around $2 billion to Pakistan, alleging it had failed to crack down on the Afghan Taleban and Haqqani network.
The three militant leaders pose threats to Pakistan, as well as USled coalition troops in Afghanistan, the State Department said in its statement.
The Pakistani Taleban, known as Tehrik-e-Taleban Pakistan, or TTP, has also threatened attacks against the US homeland, it said. The group claimed responsibility for a failed May 2010 bomb attack in New York City’s Times Square.
In October 2012, its fighters also shot Malala Yousafzai, then an 11-year-old who advocated education for girls. She received the Nobel peace prize in 2014.
Wali leads a TTP affiliate called Jamaat ul-Ahrar, which has attacked civilians, religious minorities, military and law enforcement officials and killed two local employees of the US consulate in Peshawar in March 2016, the State Department said.
Mangal Bagh leads Lashkar-iIslam, a TTP ally involved in drug trafficking, smuggling and extorting “taxes” on trade between Pakistan and Afghanistan, the department added.
The group has also attacked Nato supply convoys between Afghanistan and Pakistan’s southern port of Karachi, it said.
On Wednesday, a suspected US drone strike on a training camp in a remote part of Afghanistan killed more than 20 Pakistani Taleban militants preparing to launch suicide attacks in Pakistan. —