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Though
he is the most powerful military commander of the Pakistani Taliban,
Baitullah Mehsud remains a shadowy figure with a larger-than-life
reputation. One reason for his being largely unknown is his refusal
to grant media interviews or be photographed. It appears he is following
in the footsteps of his leader Mullah Mohammad Omar, founder of
the Taliban movement in Afghanistan, whose refusal to be photographed,
as a matter of policy and due to Islamic reasons, has helped him
evade capture.
Mehsud
has given a few radio interviews, but that was a while ago when
his February 2005 peace agreement with the Pakistan government was
still intact and he wasn't considered such a big threat. However,
lately the Pakistani authorities have blamed him for most of the
suicide bombings taking place in the country. President General
(retd.) Pervez Musharraf and the American CIA also consider him
the mastermind behind Benazir Bhutto's assassination, even though
they don't seem to have any conclusive evidence against him. Through
his spokesman Maulvi Omar, Mehsud has repeatedly denied his involvement
in Bhutto's murder and instead blamed Musharraf and his regime for
the assassination.
Recently,
Mehsud gave his first television interview to Al Jazeera, though
he still did not reveal his face. In the interview, he made it clear
that the Taliban were not a threat to Pakistan's nuclear assets,
as is being alleged. Instead, he said, the Taliban posed a threat
to the US which had used nuclear weapons against humanity and was
violating Pakistan's sovereignty and moving into the tribal areas
along with its allies. Arguing that the Taliban's real war was with
the US following its occupation of Afghanistan, he said they were
compelled to fight against the Pakistan Army when it sent troops
to their autonomous tribal areas and committed excesses against
the people. He also said the Taliban didn't believe in borders between
Islamic countries as all Muslims were part of the Ummah.
I
met Mehsud once, in October 2004, at the home of one of his tribal
supporters in South Waziristan's Spinkai Raghzai village, which
the Pakistan Army claimed to have captured recently after fierce
battles with Mehsud's fighters. He is a short-statured, bearded
man in his mid-30s. A man of few words, Mehsud commanded allegiance
and respect from the 20 or so armed men surrounding him that night
as he was the Ameer (head) of the Taliban in the territory populated
by the Mehsud Pashtun tribe in South Waziristan. It was around this
time that a young fellow tribesman Abdullah Mehsud, after his release
from Guantanamo Bay, returned home and almost upstaged him.
Baitullah
Mehsud, however, was not bothered as he preferred calling the shots
while staying in the background. In fact, that may be the reason
for his survival. Unlike him, Abdullah Mehsud craved publicity and
was careless about his movements. He was finally killed by Pakistan's
security forces in Balochistan's Zhob town last year after hogging
the limelight for a while, particularly when he ordered the kidnapping
of two Chinese engineers working on a hydel-power project in South
Waziristan in October 2004, thereby becoming the country's most
wanted man.
Mehsud
belongs to the Shabikhel sub-tribe of the Mehsud. His village, Landi
Dhok, is located in Bannu, which is at some distance from the Mehsuds'
original habitat in South Waziristan. He studied at madrassahs in
Bannu, Pezu and Mir Ali, a town in North Waziristan. He was unable
to complete his madrassah education because he crossed over to Afghanistan
to fight alongside the Afghan mujahideen against the Soviet occupying
troops and then on the side of the Taliban. He is not called a mullah,
maulvi or maulana because he did not graduate from the madrassah.
According
to Senator Maulana Saleh Shah, who also belongs to South Waziristan
and is affiliated to Pakistan's most powerful religious politician,
the JUI-F's Maulana Fazlur Rahman, Mehsud has more than 25,000 active
fighters under his command. His estimates appear to be on the high
side, but it is a fact that Mehsud commands several thousand battle-hardened
fighters. This was the reason that all small and large Pakistani
Taliban groups operating in South Waziristan, North Waziristan,
Bajaur Agency, Mohmand Agency, Darra Adamkhel, Swat and elsewhere,
some weeks ago, agreed to make him the head of their newly-formed
umbrella organisation, Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (Movement of Pakistani
Taliban).
Such
was his influence that he forced the Pakistan government and the
military to sign a peace accord with him in February 2005 at Srarogha,
the same place where a military fort was recently captured by Mehsud's
fighters. Under the terms of the 2005 peace accord, the army pulled
out troops from Mehsud's area and agreed to deploy only paramilitary
Frontier Corps personnel, all of whom are drawn from Pashtun tribes,
at the five forts there. In fact, the peace agreement virtually
handed over control of that area to Mehsud as all roadside checkpoints
were removed and he and his fellow tribesmen were compensated for
human and material losses sustained by them as a result of the military
operations. Recently, Mehsud scrapped the peace deal after accusing
the military of launching attacks against him and redeploying regular
soldiers in his area in violation of the accord.
Though Mehsud is a Pakistani
tribesman, he has on several occasions publicly declared that the
Taliban leader Mullah Omar was his Ameerul Momineen (Commander of
the Faithful) and expressed his loyalty to him. He has strong bonds
with the Afghan Taliban and was once publicly accused by President
Musharraf of sending fighters to Afghanistan to fight the US-led
coalition forces there. Mehsud's area isn't on the border with Afghanistan,
but he has ties to other Taliban commanders operating in the border
areas and through them he has been sending fighters across the border
to fight alongside the Taliban.
He has also given refuge to the Afghan Taliban and, since last year,
to Uzbek fighters who were expelled from the Wana area by the pro-government
tribal Taliban led by Maulvi Nazeer. The Uzbeks are members of the
Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, who are headed by Tahir Yuldachev,
and had taken refuge in South Waziristan after the fall of the Taliban
regime in Afghanistan in December 2001. Exactly, how many Arab fighters
from Al-Qaeda have sought refuge in Mehsud's area is not known,
but the possibility cannot be ruled out owing to the fact that he
controls a large territory beyond the reach of the government and
could offer sanctuary to like-minded groups.
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