Uzbek al Qaeda affiliate claims responsibility for Karachi airport siege

Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan claims death of 10 of their fighters during this week's assault in a statement.

An Express News screengrab of a Taliban-linked webpage, showing pictures of those allegedly involved in Karachi airport attack.

ISLAMABAD:
Uzbek fighters were involved in the all-night siege of Karachi airport that killed 37, insurgent sources said on Wednesday.

The Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), an al Qaeda affiliate that has been mainly based in the tribal belt since the US-led invasion of Afghanistan in 2001, claimed the death of 10 of their fighters during this week's assault in a statement posted on various Taliban-linked websites.

The attack raised questions about how the Taliban were able to penetrate the airport serving the country's economic hub.

"At midnight of Monday, 10 brave martyrdom-seeking mujaahids of Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan wearing their explosive-filled vests attacked a very special section of Karachi International Airport of Pakistan," the English-language statement attributed to IMU said.

The page included photographs of 10 black-turbaned fighters wearing green tunics and white trainers while carrying assault rifles, in what appeared to be a snowy mountainous region.

"This martyrdom operation was carried out as the revenge to the latest full-scale bombardments and night attacks with fighter jets by (the) Pakistan Army," the statement added.


The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan's (TTP) main spokesperson confirmed that Uzbek fighters were involved in the attack but did not say how many.

Shahidullah Shahid, the TTP spokesperson, told AFP: "Yes, the attack on the Karachi airport was a joint operation of TTP and Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan.

"The foreigners are also our Muslim brethren and we all are Muslim Mujahideen. So, we can't elaborate on how many Uzbeks and how many Pakistanis participated in this action," he added.

An intelligence official in Islamabad added that Karachi-based investigators also suspected the attackers included Uzbeks.

Ten heavily armed militants laid siege to Karachi airport throughout Sunday night and the early hours of Monday morning in one of the most brazen attacks on a key installation in recent years.

Security analyst Imtiaz Gul said IMU fighters had migrated to Pakistan's tribal areas after being forced to flee from Afghanistan following the US-led invasion.

"They have been under the protection of the TTP for some time. The Uzbeks are dependent on them for shelter and survival and are used as their footsoldiers in operations," he said.
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