Police in Pakistan's port city of Karachi are hunting down a network of women from wealthy families who are allegedly acting as fundraisers for the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) and arranging marriages for its followers
Security officials on Monday said that the search was launched after police arrested a suspect who is believed to have financed a gun attack on a bus carrying Pakistani Shias that killed 44 people in May.
The assault, which targeted members of the Shia Ismaili minority, was the first attack claimed by ISIL inside Pakistan.
Raja Umar Khattab, chief of Sindh province's counterterrorism unit, said a suspect confessed that his wife had established a religious organisation in the city called Al Zikra Academy to fund the group's activities, AFP news agency reported.
"A group of 20 women, all from well-off families, distributed USBs containing ISIL videos, and also preached in support of terror organisations ... They also arranged marriages among the group's followers," he said.
The women include the wife and mother-in-law of Saad Aziz, the main suspect in the May killings.
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. He was arrested in May.
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