No ‘joint action’ with police: Gen Raheel
All overnight raids conducted by army, paramilitary, ISI and MI personnel
ISLAMABAD:
As Army chief General Raheel Sharif ordered intelligence-based operations against terrorists in Punjab, he made it clear that these operations will not be “joint actions” as conducted in the past along with the police and provincial intelligence agencies.
The overnight operations, which the army chief is personally monitoring, were conducted by army units, paramilitary Rangers, the Inter Services Intelligence and Military Intelligence personnel.
Army chief orders counter-terror operations in Punjab
Hours after the blast in Lahore which had left 72 people dead and 370 injured, Gen Raheel had chaired a high-level meeting in Rawalpindi with chiefs of ISI and MI in attendance. During the meeting the army chief had ordered crackdowns against militants with the focus on finding linkages and perpetrators of the attack.
Subsequently the military conducted several raids in Lahore, Faisalabad, Muzaffargarh and other cities. One of the operations reportedly lasted for over five hours and yielded several arrests.
The crackdown followed weak reaction from the federal government on the arrest of former Indian navy commander and Raw agent Kulbhoshan Yadav and has rung alarm bells for the ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) leadership. The operation has also supported rumours that the relations between establishment and the government were getting tense.
The military leadership had already presented proof of the presence of terrorists and their supporters in Punjab when Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif had visited ISI headquarters in May last year. During the visit, the military leadership had presented evidence against many important people.
However, Punjab law minister and a close associate of Sharif brethren, Rana Sanaullah, had on January 30 dismissed the need for any military or Rangers operation in Punjab.
But Sunday’s blast proves that the operation which certain elements and the military leadership have been calling for was a need of the country and the nation.
The first meeting, an emergency meeting held at the GHQ and presided over by army chief just hours after the suicide attack in the Gulshan-e-Iqbal Park Lahore, was attended by chiefs of the Inter Services Intelligence, Military Intelligence, Military Operations and other military authorities.
During the meeting, the commanders reviewed the emerging situation. The Corps Commander Lahore and DG Rangers Punjab were also consulted via telephone during the meeting. At the end of the meeting, the army chief ordered a military operation to commence immediately.
It was during this meeting that Gen Raheel further instructed that there will not be any kind of collaboration with the police or any other provincial security agency nor will they cede to any pressure.
Before the Karachi airport tragedy, the government had been undecided about the operation in North Waziristan. However, the army chief consulted his corps commanders and quickly decided to launch Operation Zarb-e-Azb. It also took practical steps towards this end which ensured that the government took “ownership” of the operation within hours of its start.
After the operation was launched in Karachi, there was a strong demand for joint operations by Rangers and the provincial agencies in southern Punjab to tackle ‘nurseries’ of terrorists and their facilitators and their financial support network in the province.
Karachi's Safari Park closed following Lahore attack
The military leadership asked Nawaz and Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif to start a joint operation but the civilian leadership delayed the decision for “unavoidable” reasons while its ministers also opposed any operation in Punjab in their public statements. Some argued that the demand for an operation in Punjab was being made just to “balance” the operation in Karachi.
The federal and the provincial government also offered “unusual opposition” when National Accountability Bureau wanted to take action against corruption, terrorists and their financial supporters in Punjab.
Published in The Express Tribune, March 29th, 2016.
As Army chief General Raheel Sharif ordered intelligence-based operations against terrorists in Punjab, he made it clear that these operations will not be “joint actions” as conducted in the past along with the police and provincial intelligence agencies.
The overnight operations, which the army chief is personally monitoring, were conducted by army units, paramilitary Rangers, the Inter Services Intelligence and Military Intelligence personnel.
Army chief orders counter-terror operations in Punjab
Hours after the blast in Lahore which had left 72 people dead and 370 injured, Gen Raheel had chaired a high-level meeting in Rawalpindi with chiefs of ISI and MI in attendance. During the meeting the army chief had ordered crackdowns against militants with the focus on finding linkages and perpetrators of the attack.
Subsequently the military conducted several raids in Lahore, Faisalabad, Muzaffargarh and other cities. One of the operations reportedly lasted for over five hours and yielded several arrests.
The crackdown followed weak reaction from the federal government on the arrest of former Indian navy commander and Raw agent Kulbhoshan Yadav and has rung alarm bells for the ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) leadership. The operation has also supported rumours that the relations between establishment and the government were getting tense.
The military leadership had already presented proof of the presence of terrorists and their supporters in Punjab when Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif had visited ISI headquarters in May last year. During the visit, the military leadership had presented evidence against many important people.
However, Punjab law minister and a close associate of Sharif brethren, Rana Sanaullah, had on January 30 dismissed the need for any military or Rangers operation in Punjab.
But Sunday’s blast proves that the operation which certain elements and the military leadership have been calling for was a need of the country and the nation.
The first meeting, an emergency meeting held at the GHQ and presided over by army chief just hours after the suicide attack in the Gulshan-e-Iqbal Park Lahore, was attended by chiefs of the Inter Services Intelligence, Military Intelligence, Military Operations and other military authorities.
During the meeting, the commanders reviewed the emerging situation. The Corps Commander Lahore and DG Rangers Punjab were also consulted via telephone during the meeting. At the end of the meeting, the army chief ordered a military operation to commence immediately.
It was during this meeting that Gen Raheel further instructed that there will not be any kind of collaboration with the police or any other provincial security agency nor will they cede to any pressure.
Before the Karachi airport tragedy, the government had been undecided about the operation in North Waziristan. However, the army chief consulted his corps commanders and quickly decided to launch Operation Zarb-e-Azb. It also took practical steps towards this end which ensured that the government took “ownership” of the operation within hours of its start.
After the operation was launched in Karachi, there was a strong demand for joint operations by Rangers and the provincial agencies in southern Punjab to tackle ‘nurseries’ of terrorists and their facilitators and their financial support network in the province.
Karachi's Safari Park closed following Lahore attack
The military leadership asked Nawaz and Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif to start a joint operation but the civilian leadership delayed the decision for “unavoidable” reasons while its ministers also opposed any operation in Punjab in their public statements. Some argued that the demand for an operation in Punjab was being made just to “balance” the operation in Karachi.
The federal and the provincial government also offered “unusual opposition” when National Accountability Bureau wanted to take action against corruption, terrorists and their financial supporters in Punjab.
Published in The Express Tribune, March 29th, 2016.