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Afghanistan: Islamic Movement Of Uzbekistan Fighters Active In Kundu

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  • Afghanistan: Islamic Movement Of Uzbekistan Fighters Active In Kundu

    AFGHANISTAN: ISLAMIC MOVEMENT OF UZBEKISTAN FIGHTERS ACTIVE IN KUNDUZ
    Deirdre Tynan

    Eurasia Insight
    http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/insightb/ar ticles/eav091409a.shtml
    9/14/09

    Afghan government troops and foreign forces have gone on the offensive
    against Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU) militants who are active
    in northern Afghanistan.

    On September 12, a joint Afghan-international operation began with
    a raid on a compound near the village of Torbah Kash, north-east
    of Kunduz city. The mission was seeking "Taliban facilitators and
    commanders responsible for attacks on Afghan citizens and for aiding
    the flow of money, foreign fighters and suicide bombers into the
    region."

    The joint force killed "a number of militants [?] armed with
    machine guns and rifles" and recovered weapons including "multiple
    rocket-propelled grenade systems" according to an International
    Security Assistance Force (ISAF) press statement. "Generally, those
    personnel, fighters and bombers alike, move between Afghanistan and
    its immediate neighbors, as well as [among] Afghan provinces."

    Uzbek militants are among those believed to have used Pakistan both as
    a safe haven and training base. "Fighters may come from surrounding
    countries, as well as countries beyond Afghanistan's neighbors,"
    Elizabeth Mathias, an ISAF public affairs officer, told EurasiaNet
    on September 14.

    Two militants -- including one identified as Khalid Ahmadov, a
    former resident of Uzbekistan's Ferghana Region -- were recently
    captured. In a statement issued September 14, the Afghan National
    Security Directorate said the two detainees admitted to being in
    Kunduz Province on orders from Tahir Yuldashev, the leader of the
    Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan.

    Habibullah Khan Khattak, an administrator from Pakistan's tribal areas
    bordering Afghanistan, told the Pakistani parliament on September 12
    that North and South Waziristan are havens for "not less than 5,000"
    Uzbek fighters.

    According to Muhammad Ibrahim Khan, a Pakistani senator, many Uzbek
    militants use Islamabad airport as a transit point. "[I] received
    information from North Waziristan that the Uzbek militants land at
    Islamabad airport and take a taxi to reach Mirali, where they have a
    strong presence," the daily newspaper The News quoted Khan as saying
    on September 13.

    Sources also told the paper that "many Uzbeks" living in Islamabad's
    suburbs have been arrested.

    Central Asia has seen an upsurge of IMU activity in recent months. In
    July, three suspected IMU members were detained in Tajikistan's
    autonomous region of Gorno-Badakshan. The men were reportedly involved
    in anti-government protests in Waziristan and were ordered by Yuldashev
    to launch a series of attacks, local media reports said.

    A shootout in Tashkent last month has also been linked to IMU
    militants. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. In May,
    the Islamic Jihad Union, believed to be a splinter group of the IMU,
    claimed responsibility for attacks in Khanabad and Andijan.

    Editor's Note: Deirdre Tynan is a freelance journalist who specializes
    in Central Asian affairs.
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