Terrorist groups expanding operations in PoK: report
Terrorist groups expanding operations in PoK: report
A detailed report was submitted by police to the PoK cabinet on March 25.

Islamabad: Terrorist groups banned by Pakistan, including the Lashker-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed, are expanding operations and recruitment in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir, according to a secret government report.

The detailed report, submitted by regional police to the PoK cabinet on March 25, states that three banned groups Harkat-ul-Mujahideen, Jaish e-Mohammad and Lashker-e-Taiba are active in PoK capital Muzaffarabad, the BBC reported on Tuesday.

Harkat-ul-Mujahideen and JeM are said to be planning to open madrassas or seminaries in Muzaffarabad, where LeT is already operating a madrassa.

"No officials are allowed to enter these premises to gather any sort of information...We fear these madrassas may be a cover for furthering militant activities," the BBC quoted the report as saying.

The report elaborated how militant groups are growing in size and number across PoK. It especially mentioned Neelum district, where the groups are said to be the most powerful.

The report states the militants are involved in the logging of trees, one of the most lucrative trades in the region.

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The militants have also set up offices at Kandal Shahi market in Neelum, where they have become a major law and order headache, the report said. It mentioned an incident which led to the killing of some locals and a resulting stand-off with the militants.

"The situation was only resolved by the intervention of the local administrator and senior army officials," the report said.

The report also said that authorities should take up the matter with the "intelligence agency responsible for the militants".

It said officials from that agency should relocate the militants to some area near the border as otherwise clashes with local residents could take place.

Last week, two Pakistani soldiers were killed and three more injured in the first suicide attack in PoK. The suicide bomber, aged about 18 years, detonated his explosives in a residential area for military personnel in Muzaffarabad on Friday. About 150 suspects were rounded up by authorities after the attack.

Local residents confirmed to the BBC that there "has been a great increase in militant activity" in parts of PoK.

Raja Faisal Majeed, a lawyer living in a village near where some of the militant groups have set up base said, "These people are being protected here. Sometimes they operate under the guise of a charity, sometimes as a school. We have protested against them to no avail."

Jamaat-ud-Dawah deputy chief Abdurehman Makki told BBC that his group had not purchased any properties in PoK or been involved in any altercations with locals.

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