Lashkar-e-Jhangvi: Sectarian Violence in Pakistan and Ties to International
Terrorism

By  <http://jamestown.org/terrorism/analysts.php?authorid=243> Animesh Roul
http://jamestown.org/terrorism/news/article.php?articleid=2369713

The following article is the second and final part of a series on sectarian
organizations in Pakistan linked with international terrorism. The first
part, Sipah-e-Sahaba: Fomenting Sectarian Violence in Pakistan, appeared in
Terrorism Monitor Volume 3, Issue 2.

In the dizzyingly diverse universe of Pakistani Islamic militancy, one
organization stands out for its secrecy, lethality and unrelenting pursuit
of its core objectives: namely the eradication of Pakistan's Shi'a community
and the eventual transformation of the country into a Taliban style Islamic
state. Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ - Jhangvi's Army), firmly allied to the
Taliban and the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU) and with loose links to
al-Qaeda, is undoubtedly the most prolific and callous terrorist
organization in Pakistan. 

The suicide bomb attack at the Bari Imam shrine near the diplomatic quarter
of the Pakistani capital, on May 27 which resulted in the deaths of at least
20 Shi'a worshippers (most likely carried out by a LeJ suicide bomber)
underscores the intractable intensity and lethality of Pakistan's sectarian
conflict. While focused primarily on Shi'a s, the LeJ often targets western
interests in Pakistan and moreover its activities are part of a much broader
constellation of Islamic militant agitation in the country which in the mid-
to long-term threatens to overturn Pakistan's military dominated and
ostensibly pro-western political system.

Origins

Ostensibly a break-away faction of Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan (SSP), LeJ was
founded in 1996 by an extremist triumvirate within SSP - namely Riaz Basra,
Akram Lahori and Malik Ishaque. Inspired by the ideals of SSP's founding
leader Maulana Haq Nawaz Jhangvi, Basra and his followers accused the SSP
leadership of not following the ideals of its slain leader. Another
plausible reason for the emergence of LeJ was the rising violence of
Sipah-e-Mohammed Pakistan (SMP), a Shi'a organization formed in 1994,
ostensibly to target the leaders of SSP. Many top leaders of the SSP,
including Israr-ul-Haq Qasmi and Zia ur-Rahman Farooqi were assassinated by
SMP extremists in the following years. However it is widely believed that
the split of 1996 was manufactured to protect the political integrity of SSP
and enable the so-called breakaway faction to transform itself into a purely
paramilitary-terrorist organization. In any case, events since 1996 have
proved beyond doubt that the LeJ constitutes the armed wing of the SSP and
is ultimately controlled by the leaders of that powerful and Saudi-backed
sectarian organization.

In the years since 1996, LeJ has developed into a formidable terrorist
organization; according to one estimate, until 2001 LeJ had been involved in
at least 350 violent incidents. [1] However the organization has had to
contend with severe setbacks. In 2002, more than 30 Lashkar-e-Jhangvi
militants were killed in numerous shootouts that resulted in the deaths of
senior leaders. These included Riaz Basra, who was killed along with three
associates near Mailsi in Multan on May 14, and LeJ chief Asif Ramzi, who
was slain with six accomplices near Allahwala Town in Karachi. The slayings
of Basra and Ramzi dealt a severe blow to the foundation of LeJ and its
mother organization, Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan.

A visible crack in the ranks of the organization developed during the
Majlis-e-Shura (Supreme Council) held in its former HQ near Kabul,
Afghanistan on December 27, 2000. The divisions revolved around the personal
ambitions of Qari Abdul Hai, a senior LeJ leader (and a commander of
training camps in Sarobi, Afghanistan) who accused Riaz Basra of financial
misappropriation. [2] However, the situation normalized with the
interference of the Taliban regime and involvement of Jaish-e-Muhammad, but
the operational differences remained until the killing of Basra in May 2002.
[3] Presently the LeJ is led by its Saalar-i-Aala (Commander-in-Chief),
Akram Lahori, one of the founding leaders of the armed group and erstwhile
bodyguard of Maulana Haq Nawaz Jhangvi. Lahori was sentenced to death along
with his two associates on three counts of sectarian murders by an
anti-terrorism court in Karachi in April 2003, but was later acquitted in
one of the cases. The court gave him the benefit of the doubt in the murder
case of the Pakistan State Oil Managing Director Shaukat Raza Mirza, who was
killed on July 26, 2001. Lahori admitted his involvement in some 38 cases of
sectarian killings in Sindh including the June 14, 2002 car bomb blast
outside the US Consulate in Karachi, and remains in police custody.

Operational Distinctions

The LeJ differs from many of the other Islamic militant organizations in
Pakistan insofar as it shuns media exposure and tries to operate as covertly
as possible. Its only outlet to the outside world is occasional faxed
messages accepting responsibility for terrorist outrages and through its
publication Intiqam-i-Haq. [4] Lashkar-e-Jhangvi has focused most of its
attention on Pakistan's Shi'a minority and Iranian interests.

Some of the more prominent recent attacks on Shi'a s include a July 2003
suicide attack on a Shi'a mosque in Quetta, which resulted in the deaths of
over 40 worshippers. A letter issued by the LeJ claimed responsibility for
the carnage, indicating that the attack was a protest against Iran,
Pakistani Shi'a s, President Pervez Musharraf and the United States. Eight
months later, in March 2004, LeJ terrorists bombed another Shi'a mosque,
this time slaughtering 47 worshippers. In similar attacks on the Hyderi
mosque in May 7, and the Ali Raza mosque on May 31, suspected LeJ suicide
bombers killed more than 40 worshipers.

Since the late 1980s a secret war has been taking place in major Pakistani
cities, pitting the SSP/LeJ against the Iranian intelligence services and
their local Pakistani agents, both Shi'a and Sunni. [5] This war intensified
in February 1990 with the assassination of the SSP's most influential
founding leader, Maulana Haq Nawaz Jhangvi, allegedly carried out by Iranian
intelligence agents. This assassination had many repercussions, the most
important of which was the creation of LeJ in 1996. 

In June 1994, as part of its campaign of revenge for the assassination of
Jhangvi, SSP militants took this secret war into Iranian territory for the
first time by bombing the Imam Reza shrine in Mashhad, killing 26 Iranian
Shi'a worshipers. The Iranian authorities reflexively blamed the main
Iranian opposition group, the Iraqi-based and formerly armed
Mojahedin-e-Khalq for the atrocity, but the Iranian intelligence services
drew their own conclusions and in subsequent years assassinated several
leading members of SSP/LeJ. There is no indication as of yet that the
intensity of this secret war between agents of a foreign power and Pakistani
religious fanatics is diminishing. Indeed, in early 2005, a Pakistani
Intelligence agency report submitted to the Interior Ministry indicated that
LeJ cadres have bought weapons from arms smugglers in the North West
Frontier Province (NWFP) and may be preparing suicide missions against
Iranian and Shi'a targets in various cities of Pakistan.

Aside from attacks on Pakistani Shi'a s and Iranians, LeJ is also known to
have targeted leaders of the Pakistani establishment and western interests.
The three most high profile targets of LeJ have been President Pervez
Musharraf and two former Prime Ministers of Pakistan- Nawaz Sharif and Mir
Zafarullah Khan Jamali. Since 1998, LeJ has been trying to assassinate
Sharif without any success; the closest they got was in January 1999 when
LeJ militants attempted to blow the bridge on the Lahore-Raiwand road while
Sharif was passing. Eid Muhammad, the explosive expert of LeJ, was alleged
to have rigged Chaklala Bridge, Rawalpindi, with explosives in an attempt to
assassinate President Pervez Musharraf on December 14, 2003. An attack on
another former premier, Mir Zafarullah Khan Jamali, was also foiled with the
arrest of an LeJ cadre on April 1 2004.

LeJ began to target Western interests in Pakistan after the United States
toppled the Taliban regime in Afghanistan in late 2001. The Taliban was a
firm ally of SSP/LeJ and allowed the latter to establish training bases on
is territory. Indeed LeJ is believed to have been headquartered near Kabul
until the collapse of the Taliban. LeJ militants are believed to have been
involved in the kidnapping and subsequent murder of U.S. journalist Daniel
Pearl in early 2002. The LeJ was also behind the bomb attack on May 8, 2002
in Karachi which killed 16 persons, including 12 French nationals. In
another attack, near the U.S. Consulate in Karachi on June 14 of that year,
12 persons were killed. At least five of the 10 terrorists identified by the
Pakistani government are believed to be LeJ cadres. While there have been
reports that al-Qaeda has used LeJ to attack western interests in Pakistan
(particularly the ones listed above), there is little reliable evidence
pointing to a contemporaneous relationship between the hardcore of al-Qaeda
and SSP/LeJ. It seems that al-Qaeda's access to LeJ was severed after the
slaying of Riaz Basra in May 2002. Basra allegedly maintained contact with
al-Qaeda commanders through Harakat Ul Ansar (yet another Pakistani Islamic
militant organization).

Interestingly the LeJ has forged a strong operational relationship with the
Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU). These links were forged in Afghanistan
when both organizations were fighting the Northern Alliance on behalf of the
Taliban. Further and more recent evidence pointing to a strong relationship
emerged form investigations into LeJ's endeavors to train female suicide
bombers to attack the female quarters of Shi'a mosques. Pakistani
intelligence reports have allegedly revealed that Aziza, a woman cadre of
IMU has been imparting fidayeen training. [6]

According to Pakistani law enforcement agencies, the LeJ organization is
made up of small cells that do not exceed seven members. A majority of LeJ's
cadres are drawn from the Sunni madrasas in Pakistan. Almost the entire
leadership of LeJ is composed of veterans of the Afghan Jihad. Moreover,
prior to the collapse of the Taliban, the outfit imparted training in the
hard terrains of Afghanistan and later deployed its militants all over
Pakistan. LeJ training camps in Afghanistan was located near the Sarobi Dam,
Kabul. Organizationally, LeJ is widely dispersed with cells and units all
over the country, particularly in Punjab. 

Notwithstanding its proscription in August 2001, LeJ remains as active as
ever; last week's suicide bombing at the Bari Imam shrine underscores the
organization's lethality and callous disregard for the national unity of
Pakistan. There is no doubt that there is widespread revulsion in Pakistan
for the type of mindless sectarian violence that LeJ inflicts on fellow
Pakistanis. For instance former ISI chief General Javed Ashraf Qazi once
dismissed LeJ and similar outfits as "zombies that kill their fellow Muslim
brothers". [7] But despite this popular revulsion, the Pakistani authorities
are unlikely to be able to contain LeJ unless they decisively move against
its mother organization; Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan (now ostensibly named
Milt-e-Islamia Pakistan). This is unlikely, given that the latter is a large
and powerful organization that benefits from the patronage of the Saudi
Arabian establishment. Furthermore sectarian violence is likely to increase
as Islamization deepens in Pakistan and the country's establishment
continues to atrophy. 

Notes:

1. Mohammad Amir Rana, Gateway to Terrorism, New Millennium Publication,
London, 2003, p. 190.

2. Ibid. pp.190-191.

3. Riaz Basra is believed to have been involved in more than 300 sectarian
attacks; it is also believed that he personally directed all attacks on
Iranian interests in Pakistan. Before his elevation to the commanding
heights of LeJ's leadership, Basra was the commander of the Khalid bin Walid
unit of the Afghan Mujahideen in Afghanistan. .

4. The name of the publication can mean either "Revenge of Truth" or
"Revenge of Haq" (Nawaz Jhangvi).

5. For a list of past high profile attacks on Iranian installations,
government agents and civilians by SSP/LeJ, refer to "Sipah-E-Sahaba:
Fomenting Sectarian Violence in Pakistan", Terrorism Monitor, Vol.III (2),
January 27, 2005.

6. Amir Mir, The True face of Jihadis, Mashal Books, Lahore, 2004, p. 179.

7. http://www.infopak.gov.pk/news/pidnews/pidnews2004/pid_mar06_2004.htm

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