Police in Pakistan's port city of Karachi said on Monday they were
hunting a network of women from well-off families acting as fundraisers
for the Islamic State group, highlighting the outfit's growing appeal
among the country's middle-classes.
Raja Umar Khattab, chief of
the Counter Terrorism Department of Sindh province said the hunt was
launched after police arrested the suspected financier of a gun attack
on a bus that left 44 people dead in May.
The attack on the bus,
which was carrying members of the city's Shi'ite Ismaili minority, was
the first inside Pakistan officially claimed by the Islamic State group,
which has proclaimed a "Caliphate" over territory it has seized in Iraq
and Syria and is seeking to expand its global reach.
Khattab said
the suspect, who was arrested last week, confessed to police that his
wife had established a religious organisation in the city called "Al
Zikra Academy".
"The academy has no organisational structure or offices," Khattab told AFP. "A
group of 20 women, all from well-off families, distributed USBs
[computer memory sticks] containing Islamic State videos, and also
preached in support of terror organisations. They also arranged
marriages among the group's followers," he added.
He said the group collected funds for terrorists in the name of Islamic charity which were later handed over to the accused. "The wife and mother-in-law of the main suspect of the carnage, Saad Aziz, were also part of the network," he added.
Aziz,
a graduate of one of the country's top business schools, was blamed by
police for both the massacre and the shooting of peace activist Sabeen
Mahmud in April. Khattab added that efforts were being made to track and arrest the women.
For
over a decade Pakistan has been waging a war against homegrown Islamist
fighters that has claimed the lives of tens of thousands of civilians. The
fighting has been led mainly by al-Qaeda, the Pakistani Taliban and its
affiliates, though there are signs that the appeal of ISIS is growing
among affluent and educated classes who are motivated more by the idea
of global jihad than local causes.
Islamabad denies ISIS is a
major threat, though the police chief of Sindh province, of which
Karachi is the capital, told a parliamentary standing committee in
October that ISIS was behind the bus attack and that 14 people had been
arrested over their alleged links to ISIS.

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