
Masood Azhar, JeM Founder: Is His Brother Dead or Alive?
Masood Azhar, the founder of Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM), is once again in the spotlight amid speculations surrounding his brother. Reports are doing the rounds that his brother Abdul Rauf Asghar has been killed — but are these reports true? Read to find out.
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Is Abdul Rauf Asghar, the brother of JeM Founder Masood Azhar dead or alive?
Ever since India’s Operation Sindoor, a precision airstrike targeting nine terrorist camps in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK) on May 7, 2025, speculation has swirled around the fate of Abdul Rauf Asghar, a key figure in the Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) terrorist organisation. The Indian media has been rife with conflicting reports, some claiming Asghar was killed in the strikes, others asserting he remains alive. This frenzy of misinformation has clouded the truth, leaving a critical question unanswered: Is Abdul Rauf Asghar dead or alive?
The Persistent Threat of the Brothers: A Lethal Duo
Abdul Rauf Asghar, often described as the operational mastermind of JeM, is equally dangerous. Asghar has been instrumental in planning cross-border attacks, coordinating logistics, and smuggling weapons into Jammu & Kashmir. His role in the 2016 Pathankot airbase attack and other terrorist operations points towards his strategic importance to JeM’s anti-India agenda.
The Pahalgam Strikes: Where Is Asghar’s Name?
His Name Doesn’t Figure
The question persists: Is Abdul Rauf Asghar dead or alive? The truth remains elusive, with no official confirmation from Indian authorities. Around 1:30 p.m. on May 10, 2025, Indian media outlets, citing government sources, began reporting the names of terrorists killed in the Pahalgam strikes, part of Operation Sindoor. Notably, Abdul Rauf Asghar’s name was absent from the list. The reported casualties included:
- Mudassar Khadian Khas @ Mudassar @ Abu Jundal, a Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) terrorist whose funeral was attended by senior Pakistani officials, including a serving Lieutenant General and the Inspector General of Punjab Police.
- Hafiz Muhammed Jameel, a Jaish-e-Mohammed terrorist and elder brother-in-law of Masood Azhar.
- Mohammad Yusuf Azhar, another JeM terrorist, brother-in-law of Masood Azhar, and wanted in the IC-814 hijacking case.
- Khalid @ Abu Akasha, an LeT operative involved in weapons smuggling and attacks in Jammu & Kashmir, with his funeral attended by Pakistani Army officials.
- Mohammad Hassan Khan, a JeM terrorist and son of Mufti Asghar Khan Kashmiri, who coordinated attacks in Jammu & Kashmir.
The absence of Asghar’s name in these reports has fueled further uncertainty, as the Indian media’s reliance on unofficial sources has done little to clarify the situation.
Masood Azhar’s Alleged Statement and the Missing Name
Even Here, His Name Doesn’t Figure
Adding to the mystery, BBC Urdu reported that Masood Azhar, the JeM chief, issued a statement claiming that India’s Operation Sindoor airstrikes killed 10 members of his family and four close aides. According to the report, Azhar named his elder sister and her husband, a nephew and his wife, a niece, five children from his extended family, a close associate and his mother, and two other companions among the deceased. This statement, if authentic, is significant, yet it conspicuously omits Abdul Rauf Asghar’s name. The lack of independent verification of Azhar’s claims further muddies the waters.
China’s Role in Shielding Terrorists: The Dragon’s Shadow
China’s support extends beyond the UN. Pakistan has faced scrutiny from the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) for its weak measures against terror groups like JeM, yet China has worked to shield Islamabad from harsher penalties, helping it avoid the FATF’s scrutiny. This protection enables Pakistan to maintain its status as a safe haven for terrorists, with figures like Asghar operating freely. China’s actions reveal a troubling willingness to prioritise geopolitical interests over global security, effectively abetting terrorism emanating from Pakistani soil.
The Fog of Disinformation
Masood Azhar, the founder of Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM), is once again in the spotlight amid speculations surrounding his brother. Reports are doing the rounds that his brother Abdul Rauf Asghar has been killed — but are these reports true? Read to find out.
Prema Sridevi is an Indian investigative journalist and Editor in Chief of The Probe. In a career spanning 20 years, Sridevi has worked with some of the top news brands in India and she specialises in stories related to accountability, transparency, corruption, misuse of public office, terrorism, internal security to name a few.

