No need to prove leader alive: Pak Taliban
The Pakistani Taliban said yesterday that there is no need to release proof that the group's leader is alive to refute reports that he died from injuries sustained in a US drone strike in mid-January.
The comments by Pakistani Taliban spokesman Azam Tariq a reversal from remarks the day before could fuel speculation that militant chief Hakimullah Mehsud has in fact died and that the group is stalling to give it time to determine a successor. His death would be an important victory against an al-Qaeda ally but would be unlikely to deal the organization a killer blow.
A similar situation played out in August when Mehsud's predecessor was killed in a US drone strike in Pakistan's South Waziristan tribal area near the Afghan border. The Pakistani Taliban denied his death for almost three weeks, only admitting it after Mehsud was chosen as his heir.
"We don't feel any need presently to release a video, but whenever we feel a need, we will do so," Pakistani Taliban spokesman Azam Tariq told The Associated Press by telephone from an undisclosed location.
The spokesman's comments came a day after a close aide to Mehsud told the AP that the militant group would try to provide proof in a day or two that its leader was alive. The senior Taliban commander spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of government retribution.
If the killing of Hakimullah Mehsud in a US drone attack is confirmed, it could set off a new power struggle within the Tehrik-eTaliban Pakistan, which may conclude with the naming of Qari Hussain, the chief instructor on suicide bombers, as the new Pak-Taliban chief, according to a report published in the New York Times.
"When Baitullah Mehsud, Hakimullah Mehsud's predecessor, was killed in a drone attack last August, the Pakistani Taliban were briefly roiled by a succession struggle," the report points out.
"But the group resumed its suicide bombings, initiating even more sophisticated and numerous attacks that killed more than 500 Pakistanis since October," it adds.
According to the paper, two candidates are likely to take over from him: Wali ur-Rehman, known as the chief TTP military strategist, and Qari Hussain, the chief instructor on suicide bombers.
Tariq called Sunday's Pakistani television report that first announced Mehsud's death propaganda and said the leader "is perfectly well, alive and staying at a safe location."
The state TV report was apparently based on witnesses who said they attended Mehsud's funeral last week in the Orakzai tribal area.
Tariq said Mehsud would not appear before the media to prove he is alive because it could endanger him.
"We are not going to fall prey to this trap and make our leader vulnerable to the spy network, and secondly, the leadership council has restricted the leader from speaking to the media for certain reasons," said Tariq.
Army spokesman Gen Athar Abbas said Monday that state agencies were still investigating reports of Mehsud's death, saying they were apparently linked to a missile strike on Jan. 17 in South Waziristan that was earlier reported to have killed 12 people.
The US is also likely eager to get confirmation of Mehsud's death. The militant is believed to have played a key role in a suicide attack on a CIA base in Afghanistan late last year that killed seven agency employees.
But getting accurate information from the tribal area where Mehsud is reported to have died is difficult.
The Pakistan army has a network of informants there, but many places are under effective militant control. There are few independent journalists working there.
Taliban commanders Waliur Rehman and Qari Hussain are seen as the two most likely successors to replace Mehsud. Hussain is known as the group's chief trainer of suicide bombers. Rehman was the commander in South Waziristan.
The army launched a major ground offensive against the Pakistani Taliban's main stronghold in South Waziristan in October, but many of the fighters are believed to have escaped to other areas in the northwest.
Pakistani troops killed eight Islamist militants Tuesday in the Bajur tribal area, a region where insurgents are staging a comeback after a military operation there was declared a success, a local official said.
The clashes in the Bajur region illustrate the tenacity of Islamist militants in northwest Pakistan, most of whom are allied with those waging war against US and Nato troops across the border in Afghanistan.
Bajur was declared free of militants a year ago after a military offensive, but in recent days government officials say security forces have killed dozens of insurgents there. A militant suicide attack there killed 16 people on Saturday.
The latest deaths came during overnight raids in the towns of Damadola and Sewai, local government official Abdul Malik said. He said tribesmen loyal to the government hung the corpses of two alleged militants from an electricity pole in the Inayat Kali area in Bajur, though he did not know when the insurgents were killed.
There was no independent confirmation of the fighting or the identities of the dead.
The Taliban and al-Qaeda are both present in Bajur, the northernmost segment of Pakistan's semiautonomous tribal belt. The tribal regions are a suspected hiding area of al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden, and a regular target for missiles fired by US unmanned planes.
The US is eager for Islamabad to pursue militants on Pakistani soil, where Washington says they plot assaults on American troops in Afghanistan.
Comments