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Raid on Seminary in Pakistan Detains 100 Suspected Afghan Militants

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ISLAMABAD — Pakistani security forces have raided a madrassa, or Islamic seminary, in the southwestern city of Quetta and rounded up around 100 Afghan nationals for suspected links to militant groups, officials said.

Provincial government spokesman Anwar ul-Haq Kakar told VOA the detainees did not posses any identity documents. Authorities also seized "undesired literature" from the seminary, known as Madrassa Abdullah bin Zubair. The institution, he said, has been sealed after the overnight raid in the Bhoosa Mandi area and detainees are being probed for further legal action.

It is unclear what prompted Saturday’s raid but the locality is notorious for harboring extremists linked to outlawed groups, including the Afghan Taliban.

Afghan officials have long alleged the Taliban insurgency takes direction from its so-called Quetta Shura (leadership war council) based in the Pakistani city and have pressed Islamabad to evict the insurgents. Pakistani officials reject the assertions, though they admit presence of insurgent fighters among hundreds of thousands of Afghan refugees in the province.

A U.S. drone strike in May killed fugitive Taliban chief Mullah Akhtar Mansoor in a remote district of Baluchistan, of which Quetta is the capital city.


Al-Qaida, IS operatives captured


On Saturday, Baluchistan Interior Minister Sarfaraz Bugti revealed security forces captured six operatives of al-Qaida and Islamic State (IS) in the remote district of Noshki, which is located on the way to Pakistan's border with Afghanistan and Iran.

“An important Daesh commander is also among the detainees,” Bugti said, using the Arabic acronym for IS. Without sharing his identity or nationality, the minister said the detained commander was involved in “brain-washing and recruiting youth” to send to fight in Syria. He did not elaborate.

Authorities in Pakistan have also lately intensified a crackdown against Afghans living illegally in Baluchistan and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, the two provinces bordering Afghanistan, and detained and deported hundreds of them.

Separately, a spokesman for the paramilitary force called Frontier Corps (FC) said Sunday it has arrested 328 Afghan nationals from different parts of Quetta for not possessing travel documents and working without permits. “Those arrested have been handed over to the authorities at the FIA (Federal Investigation Agency) for their deportation,” a statement quoted him as saying.
 
Probably indian paid mercenaries to carry out terrorism in Baluchistan.

Pakistan must seal Baluchistan-Afghanistan border and totally prohibit all movement of afghan terrorists across this border
 
B66DBC97-9F67-491D-BA88-FE7A88D45EAC_w987_r1_s.png


ISLAMABAD — Pakistani security forces have raided a madrassa, or Islamic seminary, in the southwestern city of Quetta and rounded up around 100 Afghan nationals for suspected links to militant groups, officials said.

Provincial government spokesman Anwar ul-Haq Kakar told VOA the detainees did not posses any identity documents. Authorities also seized "undesired literature" from the seminary, known as Madrassa Abdullah bin Zubair. The institution, he said, has been sealed after the overnight raid in the Bhoosa Mandi area and detainees are being probed for further legal action.

It is unclear what prompted Saturday’s raid but the locality is notorious for harboring extremists linked to outlawed groups, including the Afghan Taliban.

Afghan officials have long alleged the Taliban insurgency takes direction from its so-called Quetta Shura (leadership war council) based in the Pakistani city and have pressed Islamabad to evict the insurgents. Pakistani officials reject the assertions, though they admit presence of insurgent fighters among hundreds of thousands of Afghan refugees in the province.

A U.S. drone strike in May killed fugitive Taliban chief Mullah Akhtar Mansoor in a remote district of Baluchistan, of which Quetta is the capital city.


Al-Qaida, IS operatives captured


On Saturday, Baluchistan Interior Minister Sarfaraz Bugti revealed security forces captured six operatives of al-Qaida and Islamic State (IS) in the remote district of Noshki, which is located on the way to Pakistan's border with Afghanistan and Iran.

“An important Daesh commander is also among the detainees,” Bugti said, using the Arabic acronym for IS. Without sharing his identity or nationality, the minister said the detained commander was involved in “brain-washing and recruiting youth” to send to fight in Syria. He did not elaborate.

Authorities in Pakistan have also lately intensified a crackdown against Afghans living illegally in Baluchistan and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, the two provinces bordering Afghanistan, and detained and deported hundreds of them.

Separately, a spokesman for the paramilitary force called Frontier Corps (FC) said Sunday it has arrested 328 Afghan nationals from different parts of Quetta for not possessing travel documents and working without permits. “Those arrested have been handed over to the authorities at the FIA (Federal Investigation Agency) for their deportation,” a statement quoted him as saying.
Probably a bad terrorists training center

Probably indian paid mercenaries to carry out terrorism in Baluchistan.

Pakistan must seal Baluchistan-Afghanistan border and totally prohibit all movement of afghan terrorists across this border
 
thats too less, ineffective, Afghanis should be sent back in trucks , full loads of trucks, deported & thrown back to the failed state border of Afghanistan
 
Afghan refugees & open borders is a serious issue which is hurting Pakistan badly.
 
Afghani terrorists are the single biggest source of terrorism, drugs, kidnapping and fraud in Pakistan. Sent these evils back and lock the border for good.
 
Despite this there were 2 blasts on the first day of eid. Despite forces doing everything terrorists still find a way. We should know who supports and finances them and those responsible for working in the background to support such groups should be held accountable. If there is an Indian link leaders should come forward and say it.
 

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