Islamabad's claim of not aiding terror falls flat after Pak ID cards seized from terrorists in Afghanistan

By ANI | Published: July 23, 2020 05:49 AM2020-07-23T05:49:23+5:302020-07-23T06:05:02+5:30

Pakistani ID cards were recovered from the bodies of terrorists killed in Afghanistan's Kandahar, Khaama news agency reported.

Islamabad's claim of not aiding terror falls flat after Pak ID cards seized from terrorists in Afghanistan | Islamabad's claim of not aiding terror falls flat after Pak ID cards seized from terrorists in Afghanistan

Islamabad's claim of not aiding terror falls flat after Pak ID cards seized from terrorists in Afghanistan

Pakist ID cards were recovered from the bodies of terrorists killed in Afghstan's Kandahar, Khaama news agency reported.

The development highlights Pakistan's complicity in aiding Taliban to create unrest in Afghstan.

Security forces killed five terrorists in Maroof and nine others in Arghistan districts of the province, said Kandahar's police chief Gen Tadin Khan Achakzai, according to Khaama news agency.

Some ID cards read names in Urdu, identifying the dead terrorists as Abdul Gh, Abdul Ghaffar, Sanaullah, Naqibullah, Obaidullah, Abdul Malik among others.

In another attack, 25 Taliban terrorists, including 12 Pakists, were killed in an airstrike by NATO Rescue Support in the Takht-e-Pol town of Afghstan's Kandahar province.

The arrest of Abdullah Orakzai alias Aslam Farooqi, a key leader of the Islamic State in Khorasan Province (ISKP) earlier this year brought the terror group's Pakist connections into sharp focus, according to European Foundation For South Asian Studies (EFSAS), a think-tank based in Amsterdam.

The UN Analytical Support and Sanctions Monitoring Team to the 1988 Sanctions Committee, which oversees sanctions on the Taliban, in its 2019 report had acknowledged that nearly 5,000 terrorists belonging to Lashkar-e-Tayyiba, which is based in Pakistan, were active in Kunar and Nangarhar provinces of Afghstan alone.

The Pakistan government and its intelligence service, ISI, have long claimed that it is not aiding terrorists in Afghstan by sending Pakist youth to create unrest in the war-torn nation. However, the recent operation has again exposed Islamabad's false claims.

( With inputs from ANI )

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