Jamaat-ul-Ahrar finds likely replacement after U.S. drone kills leader

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Fri, 20 Oct 2017 - 12:17 GMT

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Fri, 20 Oct 2017 - 12:17 GMT

A captured Taliban insurgent is presented to the media after he was arrested with car explosive devices in Kabul, Afghanistan -- REUTERS

A captured Taliban insurgent is presented to the media after he was arrested with car explosive devices in Kabul, Afghanistan -- REUTERS

PESHAWAR, Pakistan - 20 October 2017: Senior militant commander Asad Afridi has emerged as the favourite to become the new leader of a deadly Pakistani Taliban faction, militant sources said on Friday, days after a U.S. drone strike killed the group's chief.

Jamaat-ul-Ahrar (JuA), a splinter faction of the Pakistani Taliban, has killed hundreds of people in bomb attacks and is considered one of the most dangerous militant groups in the nuclear-armed South Asian nation.

The killing of JuA chief Omar Khalid Khorasani was a major boost for Pakistan's anti-militancy campaign and is likely to help ease tension with uneasy ally the United States days ahead of a visit by U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson.

Two JuA commanders told Reuters Afridi was nominated to take over during a meeting in Afghanistan by the group's shura, or leadership council.

"Asad Afridi was close to Omar Khalid, who had declared him his deputy," said one JuA commander.

A second JuA militant, who is a member of the shura, confirmed Afridi was nominated as the new chief.

Khorasani was seen as ruling the group with an iron fist.

"Our organisation used to be a one-man show. All powers were in the hands of Omar Khalid Khorasani," the second commander said.

Khorasani was killed during a series of U.S. drone attacks this week in which at least 30 people were killed on the Afghan side of the border.

His killing follows a slight thaw in relations between Islamabad and Washington, seemingly sparked by the Pakistan army last week freeing a U.S.-Canadian couple and their three children after five years in captivity. The family was held by the Haqqani network, an Afghan Taliban-allied militant group.

Warmer words from Washington have been in stark contrast to threats by U.S. officials that it would cut military aid and impose targeted sanctions if Pakistan did not stop providing a safe havens to the Afghan Taliban and Haqqani network.

Pakistan denies offering sanctuary to Afghan Taliban fighters and has asked the United States to target Pakistani Taliban militants who cross the porous border and hide in Afghanistan.

Pakistan is investing more than $500 million to fence the 2,500-km frontier.

HISTORY OF FIGHTING U.S. TROOPS

But in a sign that relations between the United States and Pakistan are still difficult, the chief of the CIA said on Thursday the U.S.-Canadian couple had been held inside Pakistan for five years, contradicting Pakistan's assertion they were held in Afghanistan.

It is not clear if Afridi would change tack if he were to be confirmed as JuA leader, but there are concerns within the group about his power base among the ethnic Pashtun tribes who live along the Afghan border.

Afridi is from the Zakha Khel area of Pakistan's Khyber region but Khorasani, and most JuA fighters, are from the Mohmand region to the north.

"The organisation was basically formed in Mohmand and the majority of the fighters and commanders are from Mohmand therefore people would have wished someone from the same area," said the first JuA commander.

He said Afridi did not have a religious or formal school education but had a history of fighting and had at one point fought U.S. troops in Afghanistan as part of the Taliban.

On Friday, a suspected U.S. drone strike killed 12 people in Afghanistan's Paktia province, according to a government official. It was the fourth day this week that drone strikes were reported on the Afghanistan-Pakistan border region.

"Twelve dead bodies have been pulled out of the area where the missiles struck," Laik Khan, an Afghan government official, told Reuters.

The JuA has emerged as the most deadly Pakistani Taliban faction over the past two years. At one point, it allied itself with Islamic State before apparently re-joining the Pakistani Taliban.

The group bombed an Easter Sunday gathering at a park in the eastern Pakistani city of Lahore last year, killing at least 70 people. In August 2016, it bombed a hospital in Quetta targeting the city's most prominent lawyers, killing 74 people.

In June this year, JuA targeted the provincial police chief of the Pakistani province of Baluchistan, killing 13 people. The attack was also claimed by Islamic State.

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