An attempt to divert attention from nexus of Daesh-Police-Deobandis
It seems that grenade attack on Shia seminary in Karachi is an attempt to divert the public attention from the nexus of pro-takfiri police cops, Deobandi terrorists of banned outfits and Wahhabi takfiri terrorist group Daesh (ISIS). The reason behind this is arrest of the Deobandi bomber who perpetrated suicide bombing in Mastung leaving Siraj Raisani and scores of others other dead. He studied at Karachi Deobandi seminary and worked with a former policeman.
The father of Hafeez Abbasi told the CTD that Abbasi was working with Haji Daud there.
A CTD official said, on the condition of anonymity, said that Haji Daud, also known as Daud Policewala, was a policeman in Karachi till mid-2000. He was also appointed as the city chief of the banned Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) by now slain Mullah Fazlullah.
The official said they got reports that Haji Daud had developed differences with Mullah Fazlullah as he joined the militant Daesh (ISIS) group. He was also reportedly injured in a clash with Deobandi TTP militants there.
The sources said that the CTD officials got the mobile phone number of Hafeez from his father and by using latest technology they came to know that he had arrived in Chaman from Afghanistan on June 29.
He was also in touch with at least nine persons, including three belonging to Sindh, they added.
The Deobandi bomber was later moved to Qila Abdullah and subsequently to Mastung, where he had carried out the suicide attack on Siraj Raisani’s election rally.
The CTD-Sindh informed their counterparts in Balochistan about Abbasi’s alleged handler in Qila Abdullah and his local facilitator in Mastung.
The interesting point is the fact that Deobandi takfiris are engaged in internal fighting and Raisani killing in suicide bombing was result of that infighting. So, pro-takfiri cops are trying to divert the public attention from these facts by opening a new Pandora box under which they are trying to implicate Shia victims of terrorism for blast in their seminary.













