ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s interior minister Rana Sanaullah said on Wednesday the total number of fighters belonging to a proscribed militant network, Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), was less than 10,000 while discussing the recent resumption of religious militancy in the country.
The TTP has stepped up attacks on security forces in recent weeks after its top leaders decided to end a months-long cease-fire with the government in November.
Earlier this month, the country witnessed a hostage crisis in the northwestern city of Bannu after TTP detainees overpowered guards at a counterterrorism center and seized control of the facility.
More recently, the network claimed responsibility for a suicide blast in the federal capital after one of its fighters blew himself up during the snap checking of his vehicle.
“According to information obtained from various sources, the total number of TTP fighters is somewhere between seven to ten thousand,” Sanaullah told Dawn News TV during an interview. “They also have their families with them in a much greater number.”
He denied that recent negotiations held with the TTP leadership in Afghanistan had helped its fighters regroup and resume attacks.
“The TTP had never been fully disrupted,” he continued while indirectly criticizing the administration in Kabul for providing its top leaders and operatives sanctuary in Afghanistan.
The minister informed that Pakistan’s parliament had given approval to the country’s security and intelligence setup to negotiate with the proscribed network after being briefed on the situation last year.
He said some TTP factions were willing to hold peace talks with the state and wanted to return to the country after pledging allegiance to its constitution.
However, he acknowledged that some of these individuals had resumed criminal activities – such as extortion – after returning to Pakistan.
“Our security forces and law enforcement agencies are fully capable of dealing with the threat of terrorism and prevent it from turning into a bigger danger,” Sanaullah told the news channel.