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TTP-BLA-Majeed Brigade nexus a threat to global peace, warns Pakistan

⏱ 4 minute read
TTP-BLA-Majeed Brigade,

Pakistan has warned the world about the dangers posed to the regional and international peace by nexus between Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) and Majeed Brigade, which, among other things, includes sharing of terrorist training camps, that has targeted strategic infrastructure, economic projects in Pakistan, and most tragically the people.

Describing the TTP as the largest UN-designated terrorist group, operating from Afghan soil, Ambassador Asim Iftikhar Ahmad, Pakistan’s Permanent Representative to the UN, said that the group’s presence close to our borders directly threatens the national security of Pakistan.

He made these remarks while delivering a statement at UN Security Council briefing today on “Threats to international peace & security caused by terrorist acts.”

While acknowledging that the Afghan interim government has been fighting ISIL-K, he said that the threat from various other terrorist groups such as Fitna Al Khawarij TTP and Baloch militant groups, which have sought refuge in ungoverned spaces in Afghanistan, remains unaddressed.

He stated that the Secretary General’s report highlights that Daesh remains a major global threat, with affiliates expanding in Africa—particularly West Africa and the Sahel—despite setbacks in the Middle East where nearly 3,000 fighters still operate in Iraq and Syria.

“The situation in Afghanistan remains precarious. With some 2,000 fighters, ISIL-K poses the most serious threat,” he said.

“And our principal adversary in the region is active in sponsoring terrorism in Pakistan. It bankrolls and supports terrorist proxies, and carries out extra territorial assassinations that have in fact gone global,” he said.

Referring to the blatant Indian aggression against Pakistan in May this year in violation of our sovereignty and international law, under the false pretext of counter-terrorism, he said that India deliberately and indiscriminately targeted civilian population and infrastructure, resulting in the martyrdom of 54 innocent Pakistani nationals, including 15 children, some of them infants, and 13 women.

He urged the Security Council not to look away when state terrorism masquerades as counter-terrorism, arguing that international peace is often the first casualty in such a situation.

The Pakistan UN Ambassador underlined the need for a holistic approach to defeat terrorism; one rooted in clarity and conviction and said that addressing the underlying drivers of terrorism is critical through a long-term vision.

He said that it is also essential to address state terrorism and oppression as part of a holistic approach. He strongly condemned collective punishment, human rights violations, demographic changes, and misuse of counter-terrorism narratives to sustain occupation in Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu & Kashmir (IIOJK) and Occupied Palestinian Territories. He stressed that occupation cannot be justified as counter-terrorism.

He said that there is also a need to differentiate between terrorism and legitimate struggles of people against foreign occupation.

He called for updating the sanctions frameworks to cover emerging threats and ending stigmatization of Islam and Muslims. He noted the manifest bias against Islam and Muslims, stating that all individuals on Security Council terrorism lists are Muslims, while non-Muslim extremists often escape scrutiny. He categorically reaffirmed that terrorism is global, and not linked to any religion or ethnicity.

“It is not understandable, and is indeed unacceptable, that every name on the Security Council’s terrorism lists is Muslim, while terrorists and violent extremists elsewhere escape scrutiny. There is no non-Muslim in the lists. This must change,” he emphasized.

Ambassador Asim Iftikhar Ahmad warned against the mutating forms of terrorism, especially one present online and driven by algorithm and financed through digital shadows.

He said that terrorist groups are experimenting in the digital space to glorify violence and exploit social media platforms for online radicalization and recruitment of youth, particularly vulnerable individuals.

He highlighted the need for effective counter-terrorism action to be firmly anchored in consensus-based principles, and embedded in the framework of international law.

He said that the world can better succeed against terrorism through unity and cooperation, stating that double standards and political agendas are themselves the oxygen for terrorism.

“We can defeat terrorism – by fighting it together and fighting it justly,” he said while concluding the statement.

Also read: Pakistan’s fight against terrorism unmatched with over 90,000 martyred: PM

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