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IS recruiting thousands in Pakistan, govt warned in 'secret' report

What is new in this? Already Existing militant factions announce their support for one who is hot in the news. Their threat doesn't increase or decrease with changing name. It is of same quantity unless IS's C&C with their leadership come to Pakistan.
 
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MQM is the biggest terrorist group it self

MQM is labelled terrorist because they kill scum bag jihadi , sectarian mulah dogs who are poisoning the minds of young and vulnerable ... these mofos have killed thousands in Pakistan & if the state is unwilling to take action some one some where has to do the dirty work and IF this is what MQM do than Pakistanis should support this terrorism , some one has to kill the snake and its off springs
 
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The IS threat
Editorial
Updated about 4 hours ago
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. —White Star/File
A report prepared by the Balochistan home department and sent by theprovincial government to the security agencies has claimed a significant increase in activity by the self-styled Islamic State inside Pakistan.

Since the report became public, the Balochistan government has tried to downplay its contents and senior officials have suggested that there is no real IS problem in Pakistan, at least in Balochistan.

Yet, at the same time as officially denying the existence of IS in Balochistan, the chiefminister and home secretary accepted that groups with similar agendas to the IS do exist in the province. And therein lies the problem: IS or no IS, the country’s militancy problem is complex and continuing.

Moreover, while IS may not yet have a substantial presence in Pakistan, the militant landscape here is favourable to its goals in several ways. Many of the key players in the militant groups today have an agenda and set of targets that easily fits within the IS framework. And the IS brand is international, giving a boost to local outfits in their quest for relevance and importance in the crowded world of militancy.

In at least one regard, what the Pakistani state should do is fairly clear: be forthright about the IS threat and the extent of the group’s activity in Pakistan.

Ultimately, the point of militant groups is to be visible, so major ingress by IS, were it to happen, would be known once attacks start occurring and the group began to take responsibility for them. Far better than that would be to have the threat explained beforehand – because tracking the threat would also mean having a strategy to deal with it if and when it explodes in a big way. Yet, the Pakistani state appears to be stuck in an old pattern of confronting the militant threat: do nothing, or very, very little, until the threat grows so big that it is impossible to ignore – and infinitely more difficult to fight back against.

Much the same had happened with Al Qaeda when it began to seek local partners and shape the jihad discourse among militants, giving it an international context and flavour that is significantly more dangerous than localised variants.

Were IS to gain more than a toehold in Pakistan, the perils are fairly obvious: IS could go far beyond what Al Qaeda, Lashkar-i-Jhangvi or even the TTP have achieved here. Which would mean a terrible and even higher price that the Pakistani state and society would have to pay for IS’s existence here. With its overt and ferocious sectarian agenda, an IS in the ascendant could unleash forces within society that are too frightening to even contemplate.

Miss the warning signs now or fail to deny it space within Pakistan now and it may not be long before IS becomes the mother of all militant problems.

Published in Dawn, November 10th, 2014
 
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IS flags in Taxila?
Mohammad Asghar
Updated about 4 hours ago
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Some unknown persons have started pasting stickers and posters of terrorist organisation ISIS h in various cities across the country. - INP
RAWALPINDI: Law enforcement agencies have confiscated four flags of the militant outfit known as the Islamic State fighting in Iraq and Syria (ISIS or IS).

The flags of the group, also known locally by its Arabic acronym ‘Daish’, were fixed to electricity poles in a closely guarded part of Taxila, near the Pakistan Ordinance Factories (POF), and an investigation has been initiated to root out any sympathisers of the terrorist organisation from areas near the federal capital.

Read: IS recruiting thousands in Pakistan, govt warned in 'secret' report

A senior Intelligence officer told Dawn that a few flags, bearing the IS monogram, were found flying near the main entrance to the POF complex, while others were spotted on nearby electricity poles.

So far, police and intelligence agencies do not know who put up the flags in the heavily-protected area. No suspects have been detained yet in connection with this matter.

Also read: Police begin probe into graffiti about IS

“Investigators are looking at footage from surveillance cameras to try and identify those who put up the flags in this area,” he said, adding that some locals who were in theprinting business had been questioned by police in a bid to identify suspects.

According to the intelligence officer, the images obtained from CCTV footage were unclear and law enforcement agencies had so far failed to obtain a positive match.

“The footage shows a number of individuals installing the flags, but investigators have not yet been able to obtain a clean image of their faces that can be matched to Nadra records,” he said.

Also read: Islamic State fears grow in Pakistan and Afghanistan

When reached for comment, Regional Police Officer Akhtar Umar Hayat Laleka cautiously indicated that there had been reports of the presence of one such flag in the area and a team had been dispatched to investigate. “While the team verified the incident, the flag turned out to be that of ‘some organization’,” he said, refraining from specifically naming the IS group.

Published in Dawn, November 13th , 2014


NOW IN TAXILA .. its just getting great
 
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Which part? I was thinking more along the lines of the great caliphate of Atlantis which was lost due to floods created by a space-time vortex unleashed by Zionists in the 25th century.

Did you know that Alexander the great was actually a muslim named Sikandar, but since jews edit the history all the time, they made him a kaafir. Shakespeare was also a british muslim called Sheikh Zubair, but the media and literature is controlled by zionists.

Just kidding. Don't ban me.
 
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