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Thursday, September 5, 2013
Nanga Parbat: 'Taliban mastermind' held over climber murders
Shortly after the attack, the Pakistani Taliban said
that the new faction had been set up to target
foreigners
Pakistani police have arrested the suspected
Taliban mastermind of the attack which killed
10 foreign climbers and their local guide in the
Himalayas earlier this year, officials say.
Officials said Qaribullah, a former local Taliban chief,
was detained with three others in Gilgit-Baltistan.
The climbers were forced to kneel and were then shot
in the head at Nanga Parbat base camp last June.
The Taliban said they were killed by a faction set up
to target foreigners.
The chief secretary of the Gilgit-Baltistan region said
that the four men were detained for suspected
involvement in various crimes, including the Nanga
Parbat killings as well as a deadly attack on police in
the town of Chilas last month.
The carefully choreographed assault was the worst
attack on foreigners in Pakistan in a decade.
Part of the Himalayan Range, Nanga Parbat, the
world's ninth highest mountain at 8,126m (26,660ft)
above sea level, is popular with trekkers and
mountaineers, especially during June and July.
Carefully choreographed
The nationalities of the foreign victims were
identified as American, Chinese, Ukrainian,
Slovakian, Lithuanian and Nepali. One Pakistani
porter also died and officials believe he may have
been targeted because he was a Shia Muslim.
Shortly after the attack, the Pakistani Taliban said
that the new faction, set up to target foreigners and
named in local media reports as Junoodul Hifsa, was
formed to take revenge for drone attacks in Pakistan.
At least 15 gunmen dressed in the uniform of local
security forces carried out the attack.
Even though it took place at base camp, this was at a
height of 4,200m (13,779 ft) and the attackers would
have had to travel for at least 18 hours by foot or by
mule.
The attackers forced two local guides to take them to
the base camp. Once they reached their destination,
they rounded up the foreign climbers and staff, took
passports and money, destroyed mobile phones,
blindfolded them and forced them to kneel.
The gunmen separated and tied up the local
Pakistani staff and told them not to attempt to raise
the alarm until morning, a local official said. The
attackers are believed to have left in the early hours
of the next morning.
The Gilgit-Baltistan region, where it is located, is
famous for its natural beauty and has been spared
most of the violence that has wracked Pakistan,
along with other parts of Pakistan's far north.
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