DERA ISMAIL KHAN, Pakistan: The elusive new chief of the Pakistani Taleban, Mullah Fazlullah, has returned to his homeland from a secret mountain hideout in neighboring Afghanistan to lead the insurgency, militant and intelligence sources said on Tuesday.
Fazlullah, known for his hard-line beliefs and rejection of peace talks with the Pakistani government, was named the leader after Hakimullah Mehsud, his predecessor, was killed in a US drone strike on Nov. 1.
Hakimullah’s death set off a power struggle within the already deeply fractured insurgency, with Fazlullah’s extended absence fueling infighting among the Taleban.
On Monday, two Pakistani intelligence sources said Fazlullah had crossed the mountains into Pakistan a day earlier.
“We have information that ... Fazlullah has entered the Pakistani tribal area along with 15 or 20 guards,” said one source. Taleban sources confirmed he had reached tribal areas.
Fazlullah would be keen to end squabbling among the Taleban leadership and streamline what is essentially a chaotic organization with weak central command.
Another Pakistani intelligence source said that his escort included three high-profile Taleban commanders, Azam Waziristan, Mufti Abdul Rashid and Muftah Udin.
Nicknamed “Radio Mullah” for his fiery broadcasts in Pakistan’s Swat valley, Fazlullah is best known for ordering the assassination of teenage female education activist Malala Yousafzai.
Malala survived the shooting and now lives in Britain.
The Pakistani Taleban are fighting to topple the government and impose Islamist rule in the nuclear-armed nation.
Under Hakimullah, the insurgency appeared open to the idea of peace talks. Fazlullah ruled out any negotiations from the day of his appointment and promised a new campaign of shootings and bombings.
Born in 1976, Fazlullah gained prominence in 2004 when he set up an underground FM radio station in Swat to promote fundamentalist and anti-Western ideas.
He and his fighters took over the valley in 2009 and imposed strict Islamic rule. Fazlullah opposes polio vaccinations, which he has described as a Jewish and Christian conspiracy to harm Muslims, and ordered the closure of girls’ schools.
He fled to Afghanistan when the Pakistani army took over the valley in an offensive in 2009.
Fazlullah returns to Pakistan homeland
Fazlullah returns to Pakistan homeland
