Nek Muhammad Wazir

"He was later admitted to a college run by the Awami National Party (ANP) but did not complete his studies, choosing instead to start a shop in the main bazaar of Wana.

[2] He rose rapidly in the ranks, becoming a sub-commander of a Waziri Taliban unit, and fighting in battles against the Northern Alliance forces of Ahmad Shah Massoud in Bagram, Bamyan and Panjshir.

[2] During this period, he reportedly met al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden at the Rash Khor training camp south of Kabul.

This group allegedly ran training camps in South Waziristan for the Taliban and Al-Qaeda and produced anti-Western literature and videos for indoctrination purposes.

Jundullah members Attaur Rehman and Abu Musab al-Balochi (al-Baloshi) would later be implicated in the attempted assassination of a senior military official in Karachi.

[7][8] Only a day after the famous Shakai agreement with Pakistan's military in April 2004, in a long interview with the Voice of America Pashto Correspondent Mukhtar Ahmad, Nek Mohammad disclosed that he would never abandon his jihad against the US and other allied forces in Afghanistan.

The Pakistani army stated that it was responsible for Muhammad's death, but PBS Frontline reported in 2006 that he had been killed along with four other suspected militants and two children by a missile from an American Predator UAV,[3] allegedly as they sat eating dinner.

[9] According to Asad Durrani, a retired 3-star rank general and former director-general of the Pakistan Army's Military Intelligence, Mohammad was killed by an American drone.