PakPulse Intel
-⚡🇵🇰/🏳️/🏴: ALERT On 10 September, at approximately 9:40 AM, in the Galju Garhi area on Shaho Road, Upper Orakzai, under the operational jurisdiction of Orakzai Scouts Wing 231, TTP militants established a checkpoint and forcibly abducted three off-duty FC…
-⚡🇵🇰/🏴/🏳️: ALERT
According to sources, the three soldiers abducted in Orakzai on 10 September by TTP commander Naghmatullah Aheel, who later handed them over to Commander Imran, alias Chamtu, of Lashkar-e-Islam in Khyber Agency, have now been recovered.
They, along with another soldier who had been abducted earlier last month by TLIP, from the Orakzai during attack on post, were recovered from the Bag,Khyber Agency and have safely returned to their headquarters.
According to sources, the three soldiers abducted in Orakzai on 10 September by TTP commander Naghmatullah Aheel, who later handed them over to Commander Imran, alias Chamtu, of Lashkar-e-Islam in Khyber Agency, have now been recovered.
They, along with another soldier who had been abducted earlier last month by TLIP, from the Orakzai during attack on post, were recovered from the Bag,Khyber Agency and have safely returned to their headquarters.
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PakPulse Intel
-⚡🇵🇰/🏴/🏳️: ALERT Security forces intercepted a group of TTP militants linked to Bara’s district chief, Commander Abu Zar Emarati, in the Meri Khel Adda area of Aka Khel, Khyber Agency. During exchange of fire, multiple militants were neutralized. Four bodies…
-⚡: CORRECTION: The killed militants were linked to Abuzar Fidaii, not Abuzar Emarati.
-⚡🇵🇰/🏴/🏳️: ALERT
In South Waziristan’s Sarwakai area, security forces bomb disposal team recovered and safely defused a prepared IED.
In South Waziristan’s Sarwakai area, security forces bomb disposal team recovered and safely defused a prepared IED.
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-⚡🇵🇰/🏴/🏳️: MONITORING
A few days ago, the Fatwa Council (Darul Ifta) of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) issued an 11-page response , signed by five members of the TTP office, to an inquiry from the group’s Leadership Council. The inquiry sought guidance on how TTP should deal with the conduct of various other militant factions operating alongside it in Pakistan.
According to the ruling, TTP identifies itself as the largest and most structured militant network in Pakistan and characterizes other factions as limited to specific tribal areas. The document notes that members of several of these smaller groups engage in activities harmful to civilians, such as extortion, targeted killings, intimidation, and other criminal acts, which, according to the inquiry, are damaging TTP’s reputation. The ruling claims some individuals were formerly part of TTP but, after facing internal disciplinary measures, left to join other militant groups while continuing the same behavior under a different name. Others, it states, were never affiliated with TTP and therefore lie outside its organizational control.
The ruling draws particular attention to issues reported in North Waziristan (associated with HGB) and Khyber (associated with TLIP). It also acknowledges that in several areas, individuals linked to TTP have been involved in similar offenses and that some local TTP commanders have shielded these individuals or shifted blame onto other factions. The document further refers to incidents of theft and banditry in regions where TTP claims significant influence, involving both current and former members.
The ruling also discusses an unnamed militant faction that portrays itself as a global, brotherhood-based movement. While TTP asserts that it has maintained a cooperative stance toward this faction, the ruling accuses the group of repeatedly spreading negative narratives about TTP, especially on social media, and alleges that its messaging resembles that of state security agencies. According to the document, this faction became largely inactive in Pakistan after 2014 but began publicly reasserting its presence around 2020, coinciding with TTP’s efforts to reorganize, while at the same time expressing increasing hostility toward TTP. (This description appears to refer to Al-Qaeda.)
The Leadership Council sought guidance on how to address both the individuals involved in such activities and the faction perceived as disruptive. In response, the Fatwa Council cites religious texts and concludes that individuals engaged in extortion, espionage, murder, violence, armed robbery, and theft fall under the category of causing "disorder". In areas where TTP claims exclusive authority, the ruling states that preventing these actions at the moment they occur falls under what it describes as internal 'defense'. However, it adds that any formal punishment must be authorized by the group’s Amir or Qazi.
In regions where another organized militant faction is active, and where the alleged offender either belongs to that faction or has defected from TTP to join it, the ruling states that responsibility for disciplinary action initially rests with that faction. If, after repeated requests, the other group fails to restrain the individual, TTP may attempt non-violent intervention under the principle of "enjoining good and forbidding wrong". The ruling states that execution or armed action in such cases is not permitted unless all non-violent measures fail and unless the conditions outlined earlier in the document are met.
Regarding the specific unnamed faction referenced in the original inquiry, the ruling advises maintaining close observation but avoiding confrontation unless the group’s actions pose a clear threat to life or property. It recommends addressing any misconduct through non-violent measures.
A few days ago, the Fatwa Council (Darul Ifta) of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) issued an 11-page response , signed by five members of the TTP office, to an inquiry from the group’s Leadership Council. The inquiry sought guidance on how TTP should deal with the conduct of various other militant factions operating alongside it in Pakistan.
According to the ruling, TTP identifies itself as the largest and most structured militant network in Pakistan and characterizes other factions as limited to specific tribal areas. The document notes that members of several of these smaller groups engage in activities harmful to civilians, such as extortion, targeted killings, intimidation, and other criminal acts, which, according to the inquiry, are damaging TTP’s reputation. The ruling claims some individuals were formerly part of TTP but, after facing internal disciplinary measures, left to join other militant groups while continuing the same behavior under a different name. Others, it states, were never affiliated with TTP and therefore lie outside its organizational control.
The ruling draws particular attention to issues reported in North Waziristan (associated with HGB) and Khyber (associated with TLIP). It also acknowledges that in several areas, individuals linked to TTP have been involved in similar offenses and that some local TTP commanders have shielded these individuals or shifted blame onto other factions. The document further refers to incidents of theft and banditry in regions where TTP claims significant influence, involving both current and former members.
The ruling also discusses an unnamed militant faction that portrays itself as a global, brotherhood-based movement. While TTP asserts that it has maintained a cooperative stance toward this faction, the ruling accuses the group of repeatedly spreading negative narratives about TTP, especially on social media, and alleges that its messaging resembles that of state security agencies. According to the document, this faction became largely inactive in Pakistan after 2014 but began publicly reasserting its presence around 2020, coinciding with TTP’s efforts to reorganize, while at the same time expressing increasing hostility toward TTP. (This description appears to refer to Al-Qaeda.)
The Leadership Council sought guidance on how to address both the individuals involved in such activities and the faction perceived as disruptive. In response, the Fatwa Council cites religious texts and concludes that individuals engaged in extortion, espionage, murder, violence, armed robbery, and theft fall under the category of causing "disorder". In areas where TTP claims exclusive authority, the ruling states that preventing these actions at the moment they occur falls under what it describes as internal 'defense'. However, it adds that any formal punishment must be authorized by the group’s Amir or Qazi.
In regions where another organized militant faction is active, and where the alleged offender either belongs to that faction or has defected from TTP to join it, the ruling states that responsibility for disciplinary action initially rests with that faction. If, after repeated requests, the other group fails to restrain the individual, TTP may attempt non-violent intervention under the principle of "enjoining good and forbidding wrong". The ruling states that execution or armed action in such cases is not permitted unless all non-violent measures fail and unless the conditions outlined earlier in the document are met.
Regarding the specific unnamed faction referenced in the original inquiry, the ruling advises maintaining close observation but avoiding confrontation unless the group’s actions pose a clear threat to life or property. It recommends addressing any misconduct through non-violent measures.
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...Only if individuals from that faction are demonstrably, according to TTP’s assessment, acting to create internal discord and all other methods fail, does the ruling categorize them as spreading corruption, thereby placing them under the same guidelines defined in earlier sections of the ruling.
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-⚡🇵🇰/🏴/🏳️: ALERT
In Orakzai Agency’s Kaach area, Ali Khel village, a suspected mortar shell hit a house, martyring two people.
In Orakzai Agency’s Kaach area, Ali Khel village, a suspected mortar shell hit a house, martyring two people.
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PakPulse Intel
-⚡🇵🇰/🏴/🏳️: ALERT In Orakzai Agency’s Kaach area, Ali Khel village, a suspected mortar shell hit a house, martyring two people.
⚡: According to sources, associates of Commander Siraj, alias Ajal Sangri, launched an attack on the Sangar FC post in Orakzai with multiple RPG rounds. One round struck a civilian residence, claiming the lives of two civilians, a child and an elderly person while another directly hit the post, injuring four soldiers.
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-⚡🇵🇰/🏴/🏳️: ALERT
A local man named Waheedullah was killed in Tejuari, Lakki Marwat, in an attack. According to TTP media, he was targeted due to the recent uprisings by the people of Lakki and Bannu against the group.
A local man named Waheedullah was killed in Tejuari, Lakki Marwat, in an attack. According to TTP media, he was targeted due to the recent uprisings by the people of Lakki and Bannu against the group.
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PakPulse Intel
-⚡🇵🇰/🇦🇫/🏴/🏳️: PROFILING In a quadcopter strike in Bajaur two days ago, two Afghan nationals affiliated with the TTP were killed. One of them has been identified as senior TTA commander Sajad, alias Abu Zar, from Pir Bagh, Central Gardez, the capital of Paktia…
Media is too big
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-⚡🇵🇰/🇦🇫/🏴/🏳️: MONITORING
Today, the Fatiha ceremony for the killed TTA commander Sajad, alias Abu Zar, was held at the Imam Abu Hanifa Grand Mosque in Pir Bagh, Central Gardez. While, the women’s Fatiha took place at Haji Muhammad’s residence in Pir Bagh.
Today, the Fatiha ceremony for the killed TTA commander Sajad, alias Abu Zar, was held at the Imam Abu Hanifa Grand Mosque in Pir Bagh, Central Gardez. While, the women’s Fatiha took place at Haji Muhammad’s residence in Pir Bagh.
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-⚡🇵🇰/🏴/🏳️: ALERT
Two unidentified assailants hurled a hand grenade at Police Check Post Shahi Chauki, located within the jurisdiction of PS City Dera Allah Yar, District Jaffarabad, Balochistan. As a result, one police constable sustained minor injuries. BRG has been active in the area in recent days.
Two unidentified assailants hurled a hand grenade at Police Check Post Shahi Chauki, located within the jurisdiction of PS City Dera Allah Yar, District Jaffarabad, Balochistan. As a result, one police constable sustained minor injuries. BRG has been active in the area in recent days.
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-⚡🇵🇰/🏴/🏳️: MONITORING
Within a week, TTP spokesperson Muhammad Khorasani announced that two militant factions from northern Balochistan had sworn allegiance to the group. On November 11, he reported that a faction led by Commander Muhammad from Muslim Bagh in Qila Saifullah had pledged loyalty to TTP chief Noor Wali. Subsequently, on November 17, he stated that Commander Muhammad Umar, son of Abdul Hamid, from Qari Qayyum village in Pishin, had likewise declared his allegiance to Noor Wali.
Within a week, TTP spokesperson Muhammad Khorasani announced that two militant factions from northern Balochistan had sworn allegiance to the group. On November 11, he reported that a faction led by Commander Muhammad from Muslim Bagh in Qila Saifullah had pledged loyalty to TTP chief Noor Wali. Subsequently, on November 17, he stated that Commander Muhammad Umar, son of Abdul Hamid, from Qari Qayyum village in Pishin, had likewise declared his allegiance to Noor Wali.
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-⚡🇵🇰/🇦🇫/🏴/🏳️: PROFILING
An Afghan national from Chaku village, Qarabagh district, Kabul province, Muhammad Bilal Abu Bakr, alias Muhajir Kochai, son of Kaka, was killed in Bajaur district during a security forces operation. He had been associated with the Saif-ul-Umr caravan and was seen in Lower Dir a few months earlier. He had been deployed to Bajaur just weeks prior to his death.
He was active on social media, regularly posting footage related to his taskheel deployments.
An Afghan national from Chaku village, Qarabagh district, Kabul province, Muhammad Bilal Abu Bakr, alias Muhajir Kochai, son of Kaka, was killed in Bajaur district during a security forces operation. He had been associated with the Saif-ul-Umr caravan and was seen in Lower Dir a few months earlier. He had been deployed to Bajaur just weeks prior to his death.
He was active on social media, regularly posting footage related to his taskheel deployments.
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-⚡🇵🇰/🏴/🏳️: MONITORING
Investigations into the 11 November suicide bombing at Islamabad Courthouse have uncovered critical developments. Authorities revealed that the attacker had attempted a prior bombing, which failed, forcing him to alter his plan.
Police sources reported that the bomber initially targeted personnel at 26 Number Chungi, but a prompt security response thwarted the attempt. Following this failure, he went into hiding in a rented house in Dhok Pracha, which police and intelligence agencies later located using CCTV footage.
A coordinated search-and-comb operation in Dhok Pracha was carried out successfully, with CCTV evidence proving instrumental in tracing the bomber’s movements from Golra to 26 Number Chungi. The 11 November attack ultimately killed 12 people and injured over two dozen.
Investigators also found that the bomber had booked a ride to the courthouse through an online motorcycle app for just 200 rupees. The rider who transported him was subsequently arrested.
Two days ago, the Intelligence Bureau (IB) and Counter-Terrorism Department (CTD) apprehended four members of the TTP cell linked to the G-11 Judicial Complex attack. During interrogation, captured handler Sajidullah alias Sheena disclosed that he received directives via Telegram from commander Saeed-ur-Rahman alias Dadullah/Dad Akbar, a Bajaur native currently in Afghanistan serving as the intelligence chief of TTP Nawagai Bajaur.
Sajidullah stated that the Islamabad attack was designed to cause maximum casualties. Dad Akbar provided photos of the suicide bomber, Usman alias Qari, instructing Sajidullah to facilitate his arrival in Pakistan. Usman belonged to the Shinwari tribe and hailed from Achin district, Nangarhar province, Afghanistan.
Authorities confirmed that raids continue to dismantle the network, while security remains on high alert in Islamabad and Rawalpindi.
Investigations into the 11 November suicide bombing at Islamabad Courthouse have uncovered critical developments. Authorities revealed that the attacker had attempted a prior bombing, which failed, forcing him to alter his plan.
Police sources reported that the bomber initially targeted personnel at 26 Number Chungi, but a prompt security response thwarted the attempt. Following this failure, he went into hiding in a rented house in Dhok Pracha, which police and intelligence agencies later located using CCTV footage.
A coordinated search-and-comb operation in Dhok Pracha was carried out successfully, with CCTV evidence proving instrumental in tracing the bomber’s movements from Golra to 26 Number Chungi. The 11 November attack ultimately killed 12 people and injured over two dozen.
Investigators also found that the bomber had booked a ride to the courthouse through an online motorcycle app for just 200 rupees. The rider who transported him was subsequently arrested.
Two days ago, the Intelligence Bureau (IB) and Counter-Terrorism Department (CTD) apprehended four members of the TTP cell linked to the G-11 Judicial Complex attack. During interrogation, captured handler Sajidullah alias Sheena disclosed that he received directives via Telegram from commander Saeed-ur-Rahman alias Dadullah/Dad Akbar, a Bajaur native currently in Afghanistan serving as the intelligence chief of TTP Nawagai Bajaur.
Sajidullah stated that the Islamabad attack was designed to cause maximum casualties. Dad Akbar provided photos of the suicide bomber, Usman alias Qari, instructing Sajidullah to facilitate his arrival in Pakistan. Usman belonged to the Shinwari tribe and hailed from Achin district, Nangarhar province, Afghanistan.
Authorities confirmed that raids continue to dismantle the network, while security remains on high alert in Islamabad and Rawalpindi.
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-⚡🇵🇰/🏴/🏳️: ALERT
In Mirali, North Waziristan:
-An IED blast targeted security forces in Ippi, injuring two soldiers. Condition is reported to be stable.
- A quadcopter-borne explosive targeted a security post in Hasu Khail. The round landed outside the post and failed to detonate, resulting in no damage.
In Mirali, North Waziristan:
-An IED blast targeted security forces in Ippi, injuring two soldiers. Condition is reported to be stable.
- A quadcopter-borne explosive targeted a security post in Hasu Khail. The round landed outside the post and failed to detonate, resulting in no damage.
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-⚡🇵🇰/🏴/🏳️: ALERT
In Turbat, Balochistan, armed assailants opened fire on Government Boys High School headmaster Liaqat Ali. He survived the attack, but one person was injured. Police say the attackers fled the scene, leaving behind a motorcycle and a weapon.
In Turbat, Balochistan, armed assailants opened fire on Government Boys High School headmaster Liaqat Ali. He survived the attack, but one person was injured. Police say the attackers fled the scene, leaving behind a motorcycle and a weapon.
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-⚡🇵🇰/🏴/🏳️: ALERT
In Lakki Marwat’s Sheri Khel, Ghazni Khel area, assailants blew up a gas pipeline using an explosive device.
In Lakki Marwat’s Sheri Khel, Ghazni Khel area, assailants blew up a gas pipeline using an explosive device.
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-⚡🇵🇰/🏴/🏳️: ALERT
Near Paile Bridge on D.I. Khan Road in Bannu, armed men shot and killed Bilal Khan, a resident of Karak.
Near Paile Bridge on D.I. Khan Road in Bannu, armed men shot and killed Bilal Khan, a resident of Karak.
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-⚡🇵🇰/🏴/🏳️: ALERT
In Pabbi Tehsil, Nowshera, a transgender individual and a young man were shot dead.
In Pabbi Tehsil, Nowshera, a transgender individual and a young man were shot dead.
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