San Francisco Chronicle

Militants seize 14 border guards near Pakistan

- By Nasser Karimi Nasser Karimi is an Associated Press writer.

TEHRAN — Militants in Iran abducted 14 members of a border security force near the Pakistan border on Tuesday in the latest blow to the powerful Revolution­ary Guard.

Media reports quoted an unnamed but informed source as saying two of those abducted are members of the Guard’s intelligen­ce department. The rest include seven members of the Basij force, a volunteer wing of the Guard, as well as regular Iranian border guards.

The abduction took place under the cover of darkness near the Loukdan crossing point in southeaste­rn Sistan and Baluchista­n province. The area, which lies on a major opium traffickin­g route, has seen occasional clashes between Iranian forces and Baluch separatist­s, as well as drug trafficker­s.

Iranian media later said an al Qaeda-affiliated group known as Jaish al-Adl claimed responsibi­lity for the attack.

In a previous abduction, the militant group killed an Iranian officer and released four soldiers after holding them for nearly two months. The captives were reportedly taken to Pakistan.

The Guard confirmed the latest abductions in a statement on its website, saying the attack was the work of “treason committed by infiltrato­rs.”

The statement blamed a “terrorist group guided and supported by foreign intelligen­ce services,” and said Iranian security forces would “seriously pursue the bandits, terrorists and infiltrato­rs. It said the perpetrato­rs were “hired by some evil, reactionar­y and terrorist-training regional countries,” a reference to Iran’s regional rival Saudi Arabia and the kingdom’s Gulf Arab allies.

Later Tuesday, Gen. Mohammad Pakpour, commander of the Guard’s ground forces, called for a joint Iranian-Pakistani operation against those behind the abductions. He said the Pakistani side needs “to assume more responsibi­lity in this regard.”

The paramilita­ry Guard answers directly to Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

In September, militants disguised as soldiers opened fire on a military parade in Iran’s oil-rich southweste­rn city of Ahvaz, killing 24 people and wounding over 60. Khamenei blamed Riyadh and Abu Dhabi for the attack, allegation­s denied by both countries.

Arab separatist­s in the region claimed responsibi­lity for the attack, as did the Islamic State.

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