Government probes possible al Qaeda link to jailbreak

06 Aug, 2013

Government is investigating possible al Qaeda involvement in a major jailbreak in the DI Khan that freed nearly 250 prisoners, security officials said Monday. Dozens of heavily-armed militants last week stormed a prison in Dera Ismail Khan, close to tribal areas on the Afghan border, in a well-co-ordinated assault that left 13 dead.
The Pakistani Taliban claimed responsibility. But on Saturday global police agency Interpol said it suspected al Qaeda was involved in the raid and in other prison breaks in eight countries, including Iraq and Libya. Al Qaeda and the Pakistani Taliban have close ties - extremists from the global terror network have hideouts in Pakistan's tribal areas - and a senior security official told AFP the link was under scrutiny in the jailbreak probe.
"Involvement of al Qaeda is one the factors that we cannot rule out at the moment," the official said on condition of anonymity. He said "such attacks are always carried out with involvement of two type of groups, one which plans and the other which executes". The Dera Ismail Khan breakout came a week after militants stormed two prisons in Iraq, freeing at least 500 inmates including senior al Qaeda leaders.
"Jailbreak is something that requires a lot of planning and is not an easy task. Now we have to determine who were the planners, facilitators and operators", said the official. The Central Prison in Dera Ismail Khan can hold up to 5,000 inmates and around 300 were being held in connection with attacks on security forces and sectarian killings.
"One thing is very clear: that all those who took part in the jailbreak were highly trained and the pattern of the attack shows they had come for the attack with proper planning," another security official said. A senior government official in Peshawar, the main city in the north-west, told AFP: "Apparently the plan was prepared in Waziristan tribal district and preliminary information suggests that al Qaeda helped in preparing the jailbreak plan." "However, we are working on it and a final report will be prepared soon". North Waziristan is one of the seven tribal districts and a major focus of militant activity.

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