The Counter-Terrorism Department (CTD) on Monday announced the arrest of a “trained militant” linked to the banned Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) for spreading fear through graffiti near Quaid-i-Azam Mohammed Ali Jinnah’s mausoleum, hinting at the group’s arrival in Karachi.

CTD Senior Official Raja Umer Khattab, in a statement issued to Dawn.com, said, “The suspect belonged to the TTP’s Noor Wali group and was arrested near the Taj Complex.”

He added that a weapon was recovered from the suspect’s possession and described him as an “important member of the group.”

According to the officer, the suspect, during the interrogation, said that he received training from Afghanistan before coming to Karachi and worked at different restaurants.

He later joined a security company and guarded houses in the upscale Defence Housing Authority (DHA). In his free time, he used to engage in graffiti writing in Karachi about the TTP.

The police official added that the suspect had carried out the graffiti near the mausoleum of Quaid-i-Azam Mohammed Ali Jinnah in December 2024 under the orders of TTP commander Misbah.

“The suspect stated that he had also recorded several videos of different areas in Karachi and sent them to Afghanistan,” Khattab said, adding that the group has also posted warnings of “we are coming to Karachi” through a social media account.

The official added that the suspect was involved in TTP-related graffiti writing in DHA and was arrested through the use of technology.

According to the Global Terrorism Index 2025, the banned TTP emerged as the fastest-growing terrorist group, with a 90 per cent increase in attributed deaths. The TTP remains the deadliest terrorist organisation in Pakistan for the second year. It was responsible for 52pc of deaths in Pakistan in 2024.

The country has lately witnessed a sharp uptick in the number of attacks targeting security forces, other law enforcement agencies, and security checkpoints, particularly in Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

Attacks escalated after the TTP broke a fragile ceasefire agreement with the government in 2022 and vowed to target security forces.

Opinion

Online foot soldiers

Online foot soldiers

Political legitimacy in India is generated not through tangible material gain but through right-wing communalism, nationalism,

Editorial

The way forward
12 May, 2025

The way forward

THOUGH there were initial reports of violations, the ceasefire between Pakistan and India, brokered by the US and...
AI opportunity
12 May, 2025

AI opportunity

TIME is running out. According to the latest Human Development Report, published by the UNDP this past Tuesday,...
Ace mountaineer
12 May, 2025

Ace mountaineer

NINE summits, five to go. Sajid Ali Sadpara’s quest to fulfil his late father’s dream and elevate Pakistan’s...
Hostilities cease, at last
Updated 11 May, 2025

Hostilities cease, at last

It is Islamabad and New Delhi that will have to do the heavy lifting thesmselves to secure peace.
Second IMF tranche
11 May, 2025

Second IMF tranche

THE IMF board’s approval of the second tranche of its ongoing $7bn funding arrangement and a new climate ...
War and lies
Updated 10 May, 2025

War and lies

Media on this side of the border is also not above blame.