Jundallah kills 18 Shia travelers in northern Pakistan

An al Qaeda and Taliban-linked terror group known as Jundallah claimed credit for murdering 18 Shias who were traveling on a bus in a relatively quiet area of northern Pakistan. In the past, the terror group has targeted Shia as well as members of Pakistan’s military.

Jundallah, or Soldiers of Allah, said it was behind the brutal execution today of 18 Shia travelers who were riding on four buses on the Karakoram Highway in the Kohistan district of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa.

“They were Shias and our mujahideen shot them dead,” said a Jundallah commander, who identified himself as Ahmed Marwat, according to Daily Times.

The Jundallah fighters were reported to have worn military uniforms during the attack. The gunmen opened fire on the buses, forcing them to stop, then proceeded to check the identities of passengers before executing them. Eight of the passengers, including two women and three children, were wounded during the attack.

Pakistani police officials claimed the attack was carried out to avenge the deaths of two Sunnis in Giglit, a town far away in the Northern Areas, The Express Tribune reported.

Jundallah is a Pakistani terror group that is based in Karachi and maintains close ties with both al Qaeda and the Taliban. The group is best known for its attempts to assassinate General Ahsan Saleem Hyat, commander of the Pakistani Army’s Karachi Corps, in June 2004. Shortly after the assassination attempt, Pakistani security officials arrested Jundallah’s emir, Ata-ur-Rehman, and his deputy, Shahzad Bajwa.

Jundallah also has a history of targeting Shia. The two most high-profile attacks against Shia took place in May 2004, when Jundallah killed 38 Shia worshipers in separate attacks at the Hyderi Mosque and the Jinnah Road Mosque in Karachi.

Jundallah has also established a presence in the Taliban-controlled tribal agency of South Waziristan. The terror group is known to have set up a camp in the Shakai area, which is administered by Haji Omar Khan, a senior Taliban leader in South Waziristan who has strong ties to Mullah Omar.

In March 2008, the US killed a dual-hatted Jundallah and al Qaeda operative known as Dr. Arshad Waheed in a drone airstrike in South Waziristan. Waheed, who had close links to Ata-ur-Rehman, and his brother Akmal, who is also a doctor, had been detained by Pakistani security forces in 2004 for treating Jundallah fighters involved in the assassination attempt on General Hyat. It is unclear why Pakistani security forces freed the brothers. Waheed returned to South Waziristan to serve as a military trainer for al Qaeda’s Shadow Army. After Waheed’s death, Mustafa Abu Yazid, who was al Qaeda’s overall leader in the region before he was killed, gave a eulogy for him.

And in June 2010, the US killed Hawza al Jawfi, an Egyptian who is said to have led Jundallah, during a drone strike in the village of Karikot near Wana, the main town in South Waziristan. Jawfi was sheltering in a safe house that was known to have been used by al Qaeda operatives. The Wana area is administered by Mullah Nazir, a senior Taliban leader who has openly professed his allegiance to al Qaeda.

Bill Roggio is a Senior Fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies and the Editor of FDD's Long War Journal.

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4 Comments

  • mike merlo says:

    Is this event in anyway related to the supposed not so long ago ceasefire?

  • Neonmeat says:

    Didn’t iran execute the Leader of Jundallah a while ago?
    Anyway these guys sound llike morons (no surprise there) but they just murdered a bunch of civilians, how can they call themselves Mujahideen when all they have done is shoot up a bus full of innocents and women and children.
    More woe to be heaped upon the Pakistani people. Really just how many damn Terror groups are in this forsaken country? I say this as a joke but it would be interesting to see how many pakistan has spawned compared to say Palestine or even more war torn countries like Somalia etc. Are there specific factors in play in Pakistan that make it easier to set up your own armed militia that operates with impunity. Cause everyone seems to be doing it!

  • tunde says:

    Jundallah ? Wait a minute. Jundallah and AQ are allies ? The same AQ that is sheltered by Iran which itself is attacked by Jundallah ?
    The Iranians can walk and chew gum at the same time yet completely screw up the Bangkok op.
    Methinks we make to be more of a threat than they really are.

  • Bill Roggio says:

    Wrong Jundallah, there is the Iranian one and the Pakistani one. To add to the confusion, the Iranian one sometimes operates from Pakistan and Afghanistan. And to pile the confusion on, Iranian Jundallah (which renamed itself People’s Resistance Movement of Iran) also adopted the usage of suicide attacks.
    In hindsight I should have mentioned this in the article, as I have done in the past when discussing Jundallah (either flavor).

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