TTP, other terror groups providing weapons to Daesh: UN report

Daesh has created Industry Committee to explore new avenues for advancement in weaponry.

UNITED NATIONS: The outlawed Tehreek-i-Tali­ban Pakistan (TTP) and other gro­ups affiliated with the Taliban and Al Qaeda are providing Nato-calibre weapons to the militant Islamic State (IS) gro­up, acc­ording to a UN report discussed at a Security Council meeting in New York.

Two UN counter-terrorism officials told the Secu­rity Council on Friday that IS and its affiliates, such as TTP, now armed with Nato-calibre wea­pons, continue to pose a serious threat in conflict zones and neighbouring countries.

While the banned TTP has a history of attacking targets inside Pakistan, the militant Islamic State-Khor­asan (IS-K) group has also carried out attacks inside Pakistan recently, including on a JUI-F convention in July that killed 40 people and injured more than 100.

Zabihullah Mujahid, a spokesman for Afghanistan’s Taliban rulers, however, rejected such claims as ‘unfounded.’ In a response posted on his X (formerly Twitter) account, he claimed that since the Taliban takeover, “activities of the Daesh group in Afghanistan have been reduced to zero”.

He said that those who were “spreading such undocumented and negative propaganda” about terrorist activities in Afghanistan “either lack information or want to use this propaganda to give a moral boost to Daesh and its cause”.

Vladimir Voronkov, head of the UN Counter-Terrorism Office (UNOCT), and Natalia Ghe­rman, executive director of the Counter-Terrorism Com­m­i­ttee, briefed the 15-member UN Security Council, after presenting the 17th report of the secretary general on the threat posed by Daesh to international peace and security.

The report claimed that Nato-calibre weapons, typically associated with the former Afghan National Def­ence and Security Forces, were “being transferred to IS-K by groups affiliated with the Taliban and Al Qaeda, such as TTP and the Eastern Turkistan Islamic Movement (ETIM).

“With the Taliban takeover in Afghanistan, (UN) member states expressed concern over the proliferation of large quantities of weapons and other military equipment within Afghanistan and into neighbouring States,” the report added.

“Daesh has [also] created a so-called Industry Committee within its structures to explore new avenues for advancement in weaponry, such as improvised explosive devices and increased payloads for drones.”

Mr Voronkov told the council that the situation in Afghanistan was growing increasingly complex, as fears of weapons and ammunition falling in the hands of terrorists were now materializing.

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