Pakistani Taliban leader denies cease-fire breakdown, hints at continued talks with government

In this photo taken on December 19, 2022, police stand guard along a road they blocked after Taliban militants seized a police station in Bannu. (Photo courtesy: AFP/File)
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Updated 08 January 2023
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Pakistani Taliban leader denies cease-fire breakdown, hints at continued talks with government

  • Mufti Noor Wali Mehsud says his faction launched ‘retaliatory strikes’ after cease-fire violations by Pakistani forces
  • The TTP leader issued his message after his radical network unilaterally announced to call off cease-fire in November

ISLAMABAD: A top leader of a proscribed militant network targeting Pakistani civilians and security forces has hinted at the possibility of continued talks with the government in a video message addressed to religious scholars of the country.

Mufti Noor Wali Mehsud is a senior leader of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), a conglomerate of various armed factions, which has taken responsibility of recent militant attacks in different Pakistani cities.

Pakistan witnessed a surge in extremist violence since TTP leaders decided to unilaterally call off a fragile cease-fire with the government in November, though Mehsud denied in his video clip that the truce had broken down.

“We continued to negotiate with Pakistan for about a year in talks that were mediated by the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan and we are still open to cease-fire today,” he said. “Due to the cease-fire violations of Pakistani security forces, however, we allowed our mujahideen [freedom fighters] to launch retaliatory strikes.”

The TTP leadership is said to be based in Afghanistan, making Pakistani authorities remind the administration in Kabul in recent weeks it was their responsibility not to allow the Afghan territory to be used against neighboring states.

The country’s civilian and political leaders decided in a recent security meeting they would only negotiate with the Afghan interim administration, instead of TTP leadership, to address the problem of growing militant violence.

Mehsud also assured Pakistani religious scholars in the video that his group would listen to their advice if they thought its members had committed excesses while waging its armed struggle.


Pakistan arrests two suspected human smugglers amid ongoing crackdown

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Pakistan arrests two suspected human smugglers amid ongoing crackdown

  • Islamabad has intensified crackdown on human trafficking after multiple boat tragedies involving Pakistani migrants in recent years
  • This week, crew members of humanitarian rescue ship Ocean Viking rescued several Pakistanis among 44 migrants off the coast of Libya

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) has arrested two human smugglers from the eastern province of Punjab, the agency said on Sunday, as part of an ongoing nationwide crackdown to dismantle trafficking networks and curb illegal migration.

Islamabad has intensified its crackdown on human trafficking networks after multiple boat tragedies resulted in its citizens getting killed in recent years. This week, crew members of humanitarian rescue ship Ocean Viking rescued Pakistanis among 44 migrants off Libya’s coast.

The FIA said it had conducted raids in Punjab’s Okara and Mianwali districts and arrested two suspects involved in visa fraud and human smuggling, who had swindled a few individuals out of Rs1.15 million ($4,142) on pretext of sending them to Oman.

“The suspects had gone into hiding after receiving money from citizens,” the agency said in a statement. “An investigation has been launched after the arrest of the suspects.”

Several Pakistanis attempt the dangerous and illegal journey each year in a bid to escape surging inflation and opt for a better life as the cash-strapped country navigates a tricky path to economic recovery from a macroeconomic crisis.

In 2023, hundreds of migrants, including 262 Pakistanis, drowned when an overcrowded vessel sank in international waters off the southwestern Greek town of Pylos, marking one of the deadliest boat disasters ever recorded in the Mediterranean Sea.

Other incidents have also seen Pakistani migrants perish in shipwrecks off Italy, Tunisia and Libya, highlighting the persistent risks faced by people attempting irregular sea crossings to Europe.

Pakistani authorities have repeatedly urged citizens not to undertake such perilous journeys, while international agencies warn that smugglers continue to exploit economic hardship and conflict to lure migrants onto unsafe boats.