Abu ‘Umayr ‘Abd al-Hasib al-Logari | |
Office: | 2nd Wali of ISIS – Khorasan Province |
Native Name: | ابو عمیر عبد الحسیب اللوگړی |
Native Name Lang: | ps |
Death Date: | 27 April 2017 |
Birth Place: | Kurram Agency |
Death Place: | Mohmand Valley, Afghanistan |
Battles: | |
Predecessor: | Hafiz Saeed Khan |
Successor: | Abdul Rahman Ghaleb |
Term Start: | 27 July 2016 |
Term End: | 26 April 2017 |
Office1: | Deputy to ISIS–K Wali |
Termend1: | 26 July 2016 |
Allegiance: | Afghan Taliban ISIS– Khorasan Province (2016–2017) |
Termstart1: | Unknown |
Width: | 200 |
Alma Mater: | Jamia Imam Bukhari |
Abu ‘Umayr ‘Abd al-Hasib al-Logari or Abdul Haseeb Logari was a Pakistani Islamic militant who led the Islamic State – Khorasan Province from July 2016 until his death on 27 April 2017.[1] [2]
Logari was born in Kurram Agency (today Kurram District), in Pakistan's Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA, later incorporated into Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Province) and was believed to be in his mid-thirties at the time of his death in 2017.
Logari studied in seminaries in Peshawar, Pakistan controlled by the Salafist jihadist group Jamaat al Dawa al Quran (JDQ) including eight years at the Jamia Imam Bukhari in Sargodha City, Punjab Province, Pakistan. Jamia Imam Bukhari, named after the famous hadith scholar Muhammad al-Bukhari, was run by Haji Inyat ur Rehman, son of JDQ founder, Jamil al-Rahman. Later, Logari studied for four years at Ganj madrassa, in Peshawar, headed by Abu Mohammad Aminullah Peshawari. Both Jamia Imam Bukhari and the Ganj madrassa are sanctioned by the United States for their connection to numerous Islamic terrorist groups including al-Qaeda, Lashkar-e Taiba, and the Afghan Taliban. The U.S. Department of the Treasury described Ganj madrassa in 2013 as "a school in Peshawar that serves as a training center and facilitates funding for al-Qa’ida, Lashkar-e Tayyiba, and the Taliban. The activities of the Ganj Madrassa exemplify how terrorist groups, such as al-Qa’ida, Lashkar-e Tayyiba, and the Taliban, subvert seemingly legitimate institutions, such as religious schools, to divert charitable donations meant for education to support violent acts."[3]
Logari was reportedly fluent in Arabic, Dari, and English in addition to his native Pashto and Urdu.
After his studies, Logari left Pakistan for Afghanistan and spent two years as a member of the Afghan Taliban teaching Islamic law, before joining the Islamic State's Khorasan Province (ISIS–K). Logari served as a deputy to ISIS–K's wali, Hafiz Saeed Khan before being appointed as the group's second wali in July 2016 after a US drone strike killed Hafiz Saeed Khan.[4] [5] During Logari's tenure as wali of the Islamic State – Khorasan Province, the group carried out a number of high-profile terrorist attacks. Days before Saeed's death and Logari's succession, the group had orchestrated the deadly bombing of a Hazara (Shia) protest in Kabul, killing 97 and injuring 260, in Kabul's then-deadliest attack since 2001.
Pakistan | 8 August 2016 | August 2016 Quetta attacks | Quetta, Balochistan | Multiple attackers carried out a suicide bombing and shooting at a government hospital where lawyers were gathered. (Also claimed by Jamaat-ul-Ahrar)[6] | 94 | 130+ | |
Pakistan | 24 October 2016 | Charsadda, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa | An intelligence officer was shot dead. The attack was later claimed by ISIS-K in a statement posted on Amaq.[7] | 1 | 0 | ||
Pakistan | 24 October 2016 | October 2016 Quetta attacks | Quetta, Balochistan | Three armed individuals carried out mass shooting at police cadets at the Quetta Police Training College while they were asleep. One attacker killed during operation while other two blew themselves up, killing 61 cadets. (Also claimed by Lashkar-e-Jhangvi)[8] [9] [10] | 61 | 160+ | |
Afghanistan | 26 October 2016 | Ghor | Fighters killed at least 30 civilians after abducting them in the Afghan province of Ghor.[11] | 30 | 0 | ||
Afghanistan | 26 October 2016 | Jalalabad, Nangarhar | An ISIS-K suicide bomber killed a number of Afghan tribal elders.[12] | 4–15 | 25 | ||
Afghanistan | 4 November 2016 | Ghor | ISIS-K executed 31 civilians in Ghor Province.[13] | 31 | 0 | ||
Afghanistan | 5 November 2016 | Ghor | ISIS-K abducted at least 6 civilians in Ghor province. | 0 | 6 kidnapped | ||
Pakistan | 12 November 2016 | 2016 Khuzdar bombing | Khuzdar, Balochistan | At least 55 people including women and children were killed when a suicide bomber went off in the crowded Shah Noorani Shrine in Hub town, Lasbela District, Balochistan.[14] | 55 (+1) | 102+ | |
Afghanistan | 16 November 2016 | Kabul | A suicide bomber blew himself up in a convoy with members of the Afghan National Security Forces, near the Defense ministry.[15] | 6 (+1) | 15 | ||
Afghanistan | 21 November 2016 | Kabul | A suicide bombing at a Kabul Shia mosque "Baqir-ul-Olum."[16] | 30 (+1) | 15 | ||
Afghanistan | 25 November 2016 | Jalalabad, Nangarhar | Multiple bombs exploded in Jalalabad city.[17] | 6 | 27 | ||
Pakistan | 10 December 2016 | Peshawar, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa | ISIS-K has claimed responsibility for killing a counterterrorism police officer and wounding his son in the northwestern Pakistani city of Peshawar.[18] | 1 | 1 | ||
Afghanistan | 7 February 2017 | Kabul | A suicide blast at Afghanistan's Supreme Court in Kabul.[19] ISIS-K claimed responsibility.[20] | 22 | 41 | ||
Afghanistan | 8 February 2017 | Qush Tepa, Jowzjan | ISIS-K killed six local employees of the International Committee of the Red Cross in the Qush Tepa district in Afghanistan. The assailants also took another two workers with them. | 6 | 2 kidnapped | ||
Pakistan | 16 February 2017 | 2017 Sehwan suicide bombing | Sehwan, Sindh | A suicide bombing at a shrine in southern Pakistan.[21] | 90 (+1) | 250 | |
Afghanistan | 8 March 2017 | March 2017 Kabul attack | Kabul | A group of gunmen dressed in white hospital robes attacked the Sardar Daud Khan Hospital.[22] | 49 | 63 | |
Afghanistan | 12 April 2017 | Kabul | A suicide bomber attacked near government offices in Kabul. ISIS-K claimed responsibility for the attack.[23] | 5 (+1) | 10 |
See main article: Mohmand Valley raid. On 26 April 2017, 50 American special forces from the 3rd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment (United States) and 40 Afghan commandos launched a raid in Mohmand valley, Achin District, Nangarhar Province in an attempt to capture Haseeb at his compound in the area. The firefight lasted three hours, during which two US Rangers were killed, Sgt. Joshua Rodgers, 22, of Bloomington, Illinois, and Sgt. Cameron Thomas, 23 of Kettering, Ohio. A third Ranger was lightly injured.
The US claimed 35 IS fighters were killed along with several high-level leaders, suspected to include Logari, but did not confirm that Logarihad in fact been killed. IS claimed that 100 civilians were killed and injured due to US airstrikes during and after the raid.[24] [25]
On 8 May 2017, the US affirmed Logari had been killed in the raid.[26]