ISLAMABAD — Pakistani police counter-terrorism officers on Monday killed four terrorists including a commander of the banned group Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) who was involved in the 2012 attack on child rights activist and Nobel Laureate Malala Yousafzai.
All four militants were killed in a police shootout, conducted in the southern port of city of Karachi, police officials confirmed.
A man identified as Khursheed — a cousin of current TTP chief Mullah Fazalullah — was identified among the dead. He was linked to various terrorist attacks on security personnel as well as the attack on Malala.
“I am going to share good news with you that a cousin of TTP chief Mullah Fazlullah has been killed,” Senior Superintendent of Police Rao Anwar told reporters at the site of the shootout.
“Khursheed was involved in various incidents of terrorism, including attacks on education activist Malala Yousafzai as well as military and police in Karachi’s Quaidabad area,” Anwar said. “All the militants were members of the TTP Swat and were planning to carry out terrorist activities in the city.”
Malala was 15 when the brutal group attacked her in the militant-stricken Swat Valley where the group has launched its own illegal FM radio station, urged a jihad and motivated women to remain inside their homes. But Malala stood against the Taliban and challenged them to continue her education at home despite blowing up all the girls schools in the valley.
Swat residents during the brief rule of Mullah Fazalullah complained of public hangings and beatings.
Shakir Ali, a stationhouse officer in the Sachal area of Karachi, said Monday police identified Khursheed with the help of documents recovered from him. “The police are also trying to identify the remaining terrorists killed in the encounter,” he added.
Malala was attacked and shot at close range by gunmen in October 2012 as she left school in the Swat Valley.
Days after the attack, Pakistan’s Taliban described Malala as a “spy of the West.” “For this espionage, infidels gave her awards and rewards. And Islam orders killing of those who are spying for enemies,” the group said in a statement.
In June 2015, a Pakistani court in the northwestern province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa freed eight of the 10 militants charged with the shooting of Malala. That move, however, raised serious questions about the country’s criticized judicial system.
Various global leaders condemned the attack on Malala. Hillary Clinton, who was then the US secretary of state, said the girl had been “very brave” in standing up for the rights of other girls.
“The American people are shocked by this deplorable shooting of a girl who was targeted because she dared to attend school,” the White House said in 2012.
Last month, Malala announced on Twitter that she had been accepted to study politics, philosophy and economics at Oxford University.
Malala became a global symbol of defiance and won the 2014 Nobel Peace Prize. She now lives in the UK.
Fazalullah’s presence was so strong in the Swat that then-President Asif Ali Zardari in 2009, under pressure from conservatives, signed a regulation imposing Islamic Sharia law in the Swat Valley as part of a deal to end Taliban violence.
Khursheed was killed in Karachi, Pakistan’s most populous and violent port city, where various wanted militants have hidden in the past. Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the 9/11 mastermind, was arrested in Karachi in 2002. The American journalist Daniel Pearl had been kidnapped and beheaded there earlier in the same year.
Karachi has been rife with political, sectarian and ethnic tensions. A strategic operation by security forces in recent years has brought a lull in violence, but scattered attacks still unfold.
Haroon Janjua is an investigative journalist reporting on security issues, militancy, economy and human rights from Islamabad, Pakistan. Follow him on Twitter @JanjuaHaroon.