Pakistan police arrests eight suspected IS militants


(MENAFN- The Peninsula)

Lahore Pakistan: Pakistani police have arrested eight suspected members of the Islamic State group for planning to establish a terrorist network and carry out attacks officials said Tuesday.

The eight suspects were arrested after anti-terror police raided their hideout in Daska central Punjab provincial Law Minister Rana Sanaullah told AFP.

"They were trying to establish their group network and had plans to carry out attacks" said Sanaullah.

"All of them are young and in their 20's. Police also recovered Daesh literature and CDs" Sanaullah added "They were taking instruction via the Internet from a person named Abu Muawiyah".

Daesh is an Arabic acronym for the Islamic State (IS) group which controls wide swathes of territory in Iraq and Syria.

Police commandos from the counter-terrorism department (CTD) raided the hideout and made the arrests on Monday according to the official.

A senior CTD official confirmed the arrests and told AFP that some of the suspected militants were former members of Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD) a charity associated with the Pakistani militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT).

LeT has been blamed for carrying out an attack on the Indian financial capital Mumbai in 2008 that killed 166 people.

The arrests in Pakistan came as a Taliban suicide bomber on a motorcycle killed 26 people after crashing into the main gate of a government office in the northwest of the country.

The blast in the town of Mardan demonstrated the Pakistani Taliban's continued ability to stage deadly attacks despite a major military offensive against its headquarters that analysts say has reduced its capacity.

Islamabad has officially denied that IS is operating in Pakistan which has been wracked by Al-Qaeda and Taliban-linked violence for more than a decade.

But authorities have expressed fears that IS could find recruits among Pakistan's myriad of Islamist militant groups.

In May the Islamic State group claimed responsibility for an attack that claimed the lives of at least 43 members of the Shiite Ismaili minority in Pakistan's southern port city of Karachi.

AFP


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