Madrasas in North Waziristan Hub of Terror Activities: Sartaj Aziz

Top Pakistani diplomat has said that Madarsas in North Waziristan along Af-Pak border are hub of terrorism

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 Sartaj Aziz, Pakistani Foreign Affairs Advisor (Photo: Reuters)
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Sartaj Aziz, Pakistani Foreign Affairs Advisor (Photo: Reuters)
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Pakistan’s top diplomat Sartaj Aziz has open fired against the madrasas in North Waziristan region calling them a hub of terrorism.

Madrasas along the Af-Pak border and tribal areas, in particular North Waziristan, had become a hub of terrorist activities.
<b>Sartaj Aziz, Foreign Affairs Advisor to Prime Minister, Pakistan</b>

Aziz, however, blamed it on the Afghan refugees, who entered the country when the US pushed the Taliban out of power after the 9/11. These madrasas had well-oiled terror infrastructure beyond imagination, running bomb-making factories, terrorist training centres and those to train suicide bombers – all under multi-storied basement under the mosque, Pakistan Prime Minister’s Advisor on Foreign Affairs Sartaj Aziz told a group of defence writers.

In one mosque that I visited, I remember, in Miranshah, from outside we did not see anything. But under the mosque, there were a 70-room basement, three stories, in which there were four-five IED factories, four-five suicide training centers, communication network, VIP room, conference rooms, amazing infrastructure.

In North Waziristan, where the Pakistan Army had launched operation Zarb-e-Azb in June 2014, Aziz estimated there were 30-40 such mosques with similar infrastructure.

Pakistan’s tribal areas along the Af-Pak border has seven agencies and North Waziristan is one of them. Aziz, who was here to attend the 6th US-Pakistan Strategic Dialogue, said this while giving details of the steps being taken by the Pakistani army against terrorists.

According to our estimates, the IED factories in this particular agency if they had gone their way without disruption, they had enough IEDs for next 20 years for the scale of attacks that they were doing. Those have ended now. Communication infrastructure has been disrupted.

He, however, blamed the Afghan refugees for the tribal areas of Pakistan becoming a hub of terrorism.

We inherited this problem of (terrorism), 9/11 onwards when people were pushed into our side of the border and they became a threat to us because they lost their hold in their part of the world. Our tribal belt between Pakistan and Afghanistan is a very long belt and a very open territory. So they came and established themselves.

In last 14 years, Pakistan lost about 60,000 people, including 10,000 security personnel. Aziz estimated the economic losses from terror-related activities at over $100 billion. The toughest area infested with the terrorist was the North West Frontier Province, he said. Out of seven agencies that the security forces have cleared, those groups which could not survive migrated or shifted their activities to North Waziristan.

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