
Amir Hamza, one of the founding members of Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), was critically injured under mysterious circumstances in Lahore. Reports say he is currently being treated at a military hospital, under tight security provided by Pakistan’s ISI.
For decades, Hamza was the brain behind many of LeT’s terror strategies. His writings, speeches, and ideology helped shape one of the most dangerous terror outfits targeting India.

Now, with him injured and another senior LeT commander killed days earlier, the terror ecosystem in Pakistan seems to be cracking from within.
Two terror chiefs down in one week
Just three days before Hamza’s “accident”, Abu Saifullah, also known as Razaullah Nizamani, was shot dead by unidentified gunmen in Pakistan’s Sindh province. Saifullah was no small player—he was behind major attacks in India like the 2001 CRPF camp strike in Rampur and the 2006 attack on the RSS HQ in Nagpur.
Now, one is dead and the other is in a military hospital. Coincidence? Highly doubtful.
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ISI tight-lipped, Telegram not so much
While official statements are missing, pro-Lashkar Telegram channels have told their members to stay strong during the “crisis,” brushing the incident off as an accident. Meanwhile, conflicting reports suggest Hamza may have been shot. India Today and The Times of India have both highlighted these shadowy developments source.
Hamza’s deep roots in terror
Amir Hamza is not just a founding member. He’s a former Afghan jihad veteran, chief ideologue of LeT, and author of extremist texts like Qafila Da’wat aur Shahadat. His words radicalised thousands. In 2018, after Pakistani authorities cracked down on LeT’s charities, Hamza supposedly “distanced” himself—but that didn’t last long.
Instead, he started a splinter group—Jaish-e-Mangafa. Not surprisingly, the group continued its terror links, especially in Jammu and Kashmir.
Why would Pakistan’s own ISI keep Hamza under military protection if he had “retired”? Why do top LeT men keep dying or getting attacked inside Pakistan? The answer is simple: When you feed a monster for decades, one day it bites back.
This isn’t a security breach—it’s a collapse of the very terror infrastructure Pakistan once proudly hosted. For India, it’s poetic justice. For Pakistan, it’s a nightmare they built brick by brick.
For every terror plan Hamza helped craft, for every Indian life lost to LeT’s brutality, this moment is a reminder: you can run, you can even hide under ISI’s roof—but justice catches up. Sometimes in the form of a bullet. Sometimes, in the form of silence.
And if the ISI thinks it can clean house quietly—good luck. The world is watching.