Lt. Gen. Asim Bajwa, the military’s top spokesman speaks at a news conference in Rawalpindi, Pakistan

Pakistan’s military on Thursday admitted for the first time that the Daesh group had a presence in the country but said it had apprehended hundreds of its militants and prevented them from carrying out major attacks.
The army’s spokesman Lt. Gen. Asim Bajwa said forces had foiled planned attacks by Daesh on foreign embassies and Islamabad airport, but denied the group was behind last month’s suicide blast on a hospital that killed 73, as it had claimed.
Daesh gained its first toe-hold in the country in January 2015 when six Pakistani Taliban leaders switched their allegiance over from Al-Qaeda, but has since struggled for traction in the face of competition from well-established groups.
Pakistan has been battling an Islamist insurgency since shortly after it decided to ally with the US following its invasion of Afghanistan in 2001. In 2007, Pakistani jihadists formed their own Taliban faction that has deep ties to Al-Qaeda, Daesh group’s main rival.
“Daesh tried to make an ingress into Pakistan, but the core of its group have now been apprehended,” army spokesman Lt. Gen. Asim Bajwa told a press conference.
Bajwa added that a total of 309 militants — from both its planning wing (Kutaiba Haris) and fighter wing (Kutaiba Mubashir), including its “mastermind” Hafiz Umar and top commander Ali Rehman had been held and the group had been contained.
The group’s leader in Pakistan and Afghanistan was killed in a US drone strike in Afghanistan last month.
The spokesman said Daesh had carried out several small-scale attacks including the killing of human rights activist Sabeen Mahmud in Karachi in 2015, clashed with and killed security personal, as well as committing several grenade attacks on TV channels that had injured journalists.
But he denied it had been behind an attack on a hospital in the southwestern city of Quetta last month that killed 73 people, including most of the city’s senior lawyers, in the second deadliest attack of the year. The suicide bombing was also claimed by Taliban faction Jamaat-ul-Ahrar.
“We haven’t gotten any evidence of any linkage with Daesh — (the claim) was an attempt to glorify themselves.”

Source: Arab News