Pakistani intelligence have busted a gang of Islamic militants supplying suicide bombers and explosive devices to Taliban fighters in neighbouring Afghanistan, police said yesterday.
The eight-member gang led by former fighters of the banned Jaish-e-Mohammad militant group was based in Quetta, the capital of southwestern Baluchistan Province, a senior police official said.
They used to collect materials and volunteers from the central province of Punjab, the official said, requesting anonymity. The suspects were arrested in Punjab over the past few days.
"During the interrogation they confessed to having carried out a series of suicide bombings and bomb blasts against foreign forces in Afghanistan over the past several years," he said.
veteran
He identified the gang leaders as Mufti Saghir Ahmed, a veteran of the 1980s war against invading Soviet troops in Afghanistan, and wanted militant Mohammad Safeer. Both are members of the Jaish group, he said.
Safeer was wanted over an attack on a church in the Pakistani town of Taxila in 2003.
"The suspects were preparing remote-controlled devices for the Taliban in Afghanistan," the official said.
`breakthrough'
"It's a major breakthrough in the fight against terrorism and reflects Pakistan's strong commitment to fight militancy," a senior security official said.
The network was supplementing Taliban fighters based in southern Afghanistan, he said. They had "links" with former mujahidin leader Jalaluddin Haqqani and his pro-Taliban son Siraj Haqqani, he added.
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