Pakistan frets over burqa bombers

Burqa-clad women suicide bombers in Pakistan have posed a potent threat to the country as it grapples to deal with the Taliban.

This has been vindicated by two recent attacks on the security forces that appear to have rudely awakened the authorities to the new Taliban tactic.

Thursday's attack on a security checkpost in Peshawar by women suicide bombers was the second such attack in less than two months. The previous attack was in Bajaur on June 26.

The Bajaur attack too targeted a checkpost. The bombing by the husband-wife duo left 46 people dead and over 80 injured.

The involvement of women suicide bombers has posed a major security challenge in Pakistan with the Eid shopping in full swing. As shopping is primarily done by women, security agencies are yet to devise ways to identify burqa-clad bombers in the crowd, said a report in Daily Times on Friday.

A senior police official overseeing the security measures in Lahore for Ramazan, said the government should get a decree from ulema to ask women to remove their burqas as a security measure before

entering shopping malls meant for them, he said requesting anonymity.

He said it was required because there are few women police officers available, particularly during Eid when shopping malls are thronged by women, the Daily Times report said.

Traditionally, security forces in Pakistan are reluctant to search women due to cultural sensitivities, which may have helped the Taliban to use them in their operations.

The Peshawar attackers seem to have had no hurdle in getting close to the target, although a police cordon was put in place after another blast same day near the checkpost claimed the lives of five policemen.

In Bajaur, the attackers managed to get pass the security because of one them was a woman.

Another police official contended that Peshawar attack presented a new challenge for the security forces as male officers doesn't search women.

“The attack does pose serious problems for security personnel, who will have to find ingenious ways to avert such bombings. We need to improve intelligence and gadgetry,” he said on condition of anonymity.

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After girls school, now Taliban destroys two boys school in Bajaur

Khar, May 3 (ANI): After having destroyed scores of girls’ schools across the North West Frontier Province, the Taliban blew up two more boys’ schools in the Khar tehsil of Bajaur Agency, increasing the number of schools so far destroyed in the area to 82.

Recently, unidentified men had blown up a boys’ primary school in the Zirgiray area of Nawagai tehsil in Bajaur.

This was reportedly the first such incident after the peace deal there. According to reports, such attacks have affected the education of around 50,000 children in the region.

Last year, the Taliban had targeted female teachers, with two of them being gunned down in an ambush in Khar region of Bajaur Agency.

Shazia Begum and Shamim Bibi, teachers at the Communal Girls School, were travelling in a van when extremists opened fire at the vehicle killing the two on the spot besides injuring two others. (ANI)

Army to stay in Swat, Bajaur till all militants eliminated: Kayani

Islamabad, Apr.22 (ANI): Pakistan Army Chief General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani has said that security forces would remain in the Swat Valley and Bajaur agency until each and every militant in the region is eliminated and sustainable peace is established.

Addressing a small gathering of people during his visit to the Valley, he said that the military has gained ‘unprecedented’ success in Swat by flushing out militants, and added that it was made possible because of the support of the people of the region.

“Terrorists had challenged the government’s writ and tried to establish a parallel government, but our brave forces, along with the local people, destroyed their nefarious designs,” The Daily Times quoted Kayani, as saying.

He said that the extremists, who were nabbed during the military’s offensive, would be tried in courts in accordance with the country’s law.

During his visit to the war-ravaged region, Kayani was also briefed over latest security situation and relief work being carried out in the area by the army. (ANI)

Pakistani forces kill 23 militants in Orakzai

HANGU, Pakistan, April 11 (Reuters) – Pakistani soldiers backed by jets and helicopters clashed with Taliban in the northwestern Orakzai region on Sunday, killing more than 20 militants, government officials said.

The fighting came a day after fighter jets bombed a militant stronghold in the neighbouring Khyber region on the Afghan border, killing 45 people, according to militant sources.

“Three Taliban hideouts have been destroyed and 12 militants have been killed in Orakzai,” Khaista Gul, a regional government official, told Reuters.

Hours later, security forces clashed with militants near Kalaya, the main town of Orakzai, and killed 11 militants.

“The government forces have captured some important Taliban positions in the area,” government official Sajjad Khan said.

Orakzai and Khyber are two of Pakistan’s seven semi-autonomous ethnic Pashtun tribal regions, where militants and their al Qaeda allies fighting both the Afghan and Pakistani governments entrenched themselves after U.S.-led forces ousted the Taliban in Afghanistan in late 2001.

Security forces have stepped up assaults in the northwest over the past year, largely clearing militants from the Swat valley, northwest of Islamabad, and the South Waziristan and Bajaur regions on the Afghan border.

Security forces are now focusing on other areas, in particular Orakzai and Khyber, where militants who fled the earlier sweeps have taken refuge. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

For full coverage of Pakistan click on [ID:nAFPAK] ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

The security forces’ successes have eased fears that nuclear-armed Pakistan, a vital ally for the United States as it struggles to stabilise Afghanistan, was sliding into chaos. [ID:nSGE6380CQ]

OPTIMISM

Similarly, hopes for an easing of destabilising political wrangling were raised last week when the National Assembly unanimously passed a set of constitutional reforms curbing the powers of unpopular President Asif Ali Zardari. [ID:nSGE6370E9]

Optimism has been reflected in Pakistan’s stock market, where the main index is at levels not seen since 2008, supported by foreign buying.

Net foreign portfolio inflows were $113 million in March, the the second highest monthly inflow ever.

But the militants have shown they are still capable of striking at high profile targets in heavily guarded areas.

Militants attacked the U.S. consulate in the northwestern city of Peshawar on Monday last week, killing five people, hours after a suicide bomber killed 48 people at political rally in a nearby district.

A militant commander said on Saturday that civilians were also among 45 people killed in attacks in a border area between Orakzai and Khyber but military officials denied it.

A senior military official said the jets attacked militants as they were trying to sneak into Orakzai from Khyber to attack a security checkpost.

The main route for Western forces’ supplies trucked from Karachi port to landlocked Afghanistan winds through the Khyber Pass and militants have frequently attacked convoys there.

Orakzai is a stronghold of Hakimullah Mehsud, the Pakistani Taliban chief who is widely believed to have been killed in a missile strike by pilotless U.S. drone aircraft in South Waziristan in January. (Additional reporting and writing by Zeeshan Haider; Editing by Alex Richardson and Elizabeth Fullerton) (For full coverage of Pakistan and Afghanistan, click on [ID:nAFPAK] (For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here)

Pakistani forces kill 23 militants in Orakzai

HANGU, Pakistan, April 11 (Reuters) – Pakistani soldiers backed by jets and helicopters clashed with Taliban in the northwestern Orakzai region on Sunday, killing more than 20 militants, government officials said.

The fighting came a day after fighter jets bombed a militant stronghold in the neighbouring Khyber region on the Afghan border, killing 45 people, according to militant sources.

“Three Taliban hideouts have been destroyed and 12 militants have been killed in Orakzai,” Khaista Gul, a regional government official, told Reuters.

Hours later, security forces clashed with militants near Kalaya, the main town of Orakzai, and killed 11 militants.

“The government forces have captured some important Taliban positions in the area,” government official Sajjad Khan said.

Orakzai and Khyber are two of Pakistan’s seven semi-autonomous ethnic Pashtun tribal regions, where militants and their al Qaeda allies fighting both the Afghan and Pakistani governments entrenched themselves after U.S.-led forces ousted the Taliban in Afghanistan in late 2001.

Security forces have stepped up assaults in the northwest over the past year, largely clearing militants from the Swat valley, northwest of Islamabad, and the South Waziristan and Bajaur regions on the Afghan border.

Security forces are now focusing on other areas, in particular Orakzai and Khyber, where militants who fled the earlier sweeps have taken refuge. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

For full coverage of Pakistan click on [ID:nAFPAK] ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

The security forces’ successes have eased fears that nuclear-armed Pakistan, a vital ally for the United States as it struggles to stabilise Afghanistan, was sliding into chaos. [ID:nSGE6380CQ]

OPTIMISM

Similarly, hopes for an easing of destabilising political wrangling were raised last week when the National Assembly unanimously passed a set of constitutional reforms curbing the powers of unpopular President Asif Ali Zardari. [ID:nSGE6370E9]

Optimism has been reflected in Pakistan’s stock market, where the main index is at levels not seen since 2008, supported by foreign buying.

Net foreign portfolio inflows were $113 million in March, the the second highest monthly inflow ever.

But the militants have shown they are still capable of striking at high profile targets in heavily guarded areas.

Militants attacked the U.S. consulate in the northwestern city of Peshawar on Monday last week, killing five people, hours after a suicide bomber killed 48 people at political rally in a nearby district.

A militant commander said on Saturday that civilians were also among 45 people killed in attacks in a border area between Orakzai and Khyber but military officials denied it.

A senior military official said the jets attacked militants as they were trying to sneak into Orakzai from Khyber to attack a security checkpost.

The main route for Western forces supplies trucked from Karachi port to landlocked Afghanistan winds through the Khyber Pass and militants have frequently attacked convoys there.

Orakzai is a stronghold of Hakimullah Mehsud, the Pakistani Taliban chief who is widely believed to have been killed in a missile strike by pilotless U.S. drone aircraft in South Waziristan in January. (Additional reporting and writing by Zeeshan Haider; Editing by Robert Birsel and Alex Richardson) (For full coverage of Pakistan and Afghanistan, click on [ID:nAFPAK] (For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here)

Seven terrorists killed by Pak security forces in Malakand

Rawalpindi, Sep 9 (ANI): The Pakistani security forces continued on Wednesday the search and clearance operations in Swat and Malakand during in which seven terrorists were killed.

According to a press release issued by Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR), the security forces conducted search operation in Charai near Malam Jabba and during exchange of fire with terrorists a soldier died and two others were injured. Also, seven terrorists were killed.

At least 11 terrorists voluntarily surrendered to security forces in Sarsanai, shadhand Banda and Bar Shaur, The News reported.

Local Jirga handed over a terrorist to security forces in Bar Kabulgram near Martung.

In Bajaur Agency, the security forces conducted search operation in Nawaga Bazaar and apprehended local terrorists commander along with five accomplices.

A wanted terrorist Kalam Khan voluntarily surrendered in Khar.

The security forces continued the relief activities, as at least 10 trucks of mix rations have been distributed amongst the IDPs of Bajaur. Also, as many as 294,841 cash cards have been distributed amongst the IDPs of Malakand. (ANI)

Over 3000 civilians killed so far in extremist violence in Pak’s tribal areas: Report

Peshawar, July 1 (ANI): More than 3000 people have been killed in extremist violence in Pakistan’s tribal areas so far, a report released by the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) secretariat has revealed.

The report, which lays out the monetary and human losses due to terrorism, also revealed that over two billion dollars have been lost in the tribal areas due to extremist activities.

The maximum number of human casualties were witnessed in Bajaur Agency, where 600 people have been killed, the 21-page report stated.

Over 500 people have lost their lives in Kurram Agency, South and North Waziristan, it added.

The report also highlighted that the security forces fighting against the militants in the region lacked facilities, and had outdated weapons as compared to the terrorists creating havoc in the region.

It said that the personnel of Khasadar and Levies received only 3500 rupees as monthly salary, while militants get 10,000 to 15,000 rupees per month.

The report blamed this inequality as the main reason behind the unrest in these regions. (ANI)

Taliban bombs girls’ school in South Waziristan

Peshawar, June 25 (ANI): In what may be seen as a show of defiance against the military which has launched a major offensive against the Tehreek-e-Taliban chief Baitullah Mehsud in the region, the Taliban has blown up a girls’ school in South Waziristan.

The incident took place in Shin Warsak town situated about 13 kilometres away from Wana, the capital of South Waziristan, The Nation reports.

Sources said the blast was so powerful that is destroyed the school building completely.

“A girls’ high school was blown up in Shin Warsak town, 13 kilometres west of Wana, the main town in South Waziristan’s tribal region,” said local government official, Allah Bagh Khan.

Khan confirmed that there was no casualty in the incident.

This was the third such attack on a school building in less than a week. The extremists had destroyed two other schools, one in Peshawar and other in Bajaur earlier this week.

The Taliban has destroyed over 200 girls’ schools in the Swat Valley, and bombed at least 100 in the troubled northwest tribal region of the country. (ANI)

‘Slack visa policies may help foreign Taliban operatives to sneak into Pak’

Rawalpindi, May 23 (ANI): Slack visa policies and lack of watchfulness by the concerned Pakistan authorities may be utilized by the pro-Taliban elements to enter the country, Pakistan High Commissioner to Britain, Wajid Shamsul Hasan has warned.

According to the Dawn, Hasan has already informed the concerned authorities in Islamabad that the on-going military offensive in the Swat Valley may see the foreign based Taliban operatives sneak into Pakistan to offer help to their counterparts.

The High Commissioner said that Pakistan immigration and security agencies must ask persons seeking visa to enter the country to verify the information provided by them and their sponsors in Pakistan.

However, senior FIA officials claimed that a proper checking and verification system at different airports of the country was already on.

Meanwhile, a top US general stationed in eastern Afghanistan has said that he has witnessed “some very interesting movement” of insurgents across the border into Pakistan.

Major General Jeffrey Schloesser said that there is a possibility that some of the insurgents may have crossed over to Pakistan to join the Taliban fighting against the Pakistan military.

“I would suppose that some of that movement is fighters going back to help their insurgent groups that are involved in fighting, for example in Bajaur or the fighting that is occurring in Buner or in the Dir area or potentially even in Swat,” Major General Schloesser said. (ANI)

Pak Army can clear Taliban held areas once but not hold them for long: Expert

Washington, May 20 (ANI): The Swat military offensive may well see Pakistan recapturing the regions upon which the Taliban has established its control in the Valley, but the real question is that for how long it would be able to sustain the areas within its control.

Experts fear that the Pakistan Army may not be able to hold the region under its grip for long.

“The Army can clear if by clearing it means utter devastation, but it certainly doesn’t seem able to hold,” an analyst with RAND Corporation, Christine Fair said.

According to Fair, the basic problem with the Pakistan Army is that it is not trained for counterinsurgency, and is basically a conventional unit formed to fight against traditional rivals.

“Partly they have a doctrinal problem. They don’t have a lot of institutions you’d expect them to have, because they are not a counterinsurgency military,” the Christian Science Monitor quoted Fair, as saying.

The fears about Pakistan Army not being able to hold back a particular region for long is not without a reason, as the military has a poor track record of holding cleared territory.

There are several more reasons which would make the military’s task more daunting.

First the security forces would have to establish their complete control over the Valley, then they would have to ensure complete peace in the region together with law and order and local administration, so that the thousands of displaced people may return to their homes.

All this would not be such an easy task, as the morale of the local administration is low.

Several internally displaced persons (IDPs) are angry with the Army for carrying out the offensive which has resulted in the massive exodus.

Generally it appears that the operation has a broad support across Pakistan, but that could wear down quickly, as long as the IDPs suffer in the camps.

Three months ago the Army had claimed that it has entirely cleared the tribal area of Bajaur, but the situation is still simmering in the region, with reports of the Taliban targeting the tribal elders despite a peace accord in place. (ANI)

Militants in Swat, Bajaur and other areas forced people to relocate: Zardari

Washington, May 8 (ANI): Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari has denounced militancy, saying that it has forced hundreds of thousands of people to migrate to safer places from tribal areas of the country.

In his message on the occasion of World Red Crescent Day, Zardari said it is the responsibility of the government to provide relief to affected people and to ensure their respectable return home.

“The militants in Swat, Bajaur and other areas have forced the people having differing views with the Taliban to relocate,” he pointed out, adding “the children have been forced to quit education.”

The News quoted Zardari as saying that those who have been affected the most by the militancy are patients, injured and women.

He urged Red Crescent Society Pakistan to enhance its efforts in the backdrop of the existing situation in the country.

As many as 600,000 to 800,000 Pakistani refugees are streaming from the mountains and valleys of the greater Swat region, leaving the Pakistan Government with the gigantic task of rehabilitating them, the Central Science Monitor reports.

Pakistan Government has a make or break chance to win the public acceptance.

Much depends on how these refugees are treated, on how quickly and definitively the Pakistani Army moves to defeat the Taliban insurgents in the region, and – if the Army is successful – on what the refugees encounter once they return home, the report says.

Horrified refugees confirm reports of public flogging, brutal killings, and the burning of schools and police headquarters. And the Taliban did not lay down arms, but rather moved aggressively toward Islamabad, coming within 60 miles of the capital. (ANI)

US will not support a military coup in Pakistan, says Holbrooke

Washington, May 6 (ANI): The United States on Tuesday quashed all speculations of a military takeover in Pakistan, saying that it would be terrible if it happened.

S special envoy for Afghanistan and Pakistan Richard Holbrooke touched on a number of sensitive issues in his testimony before the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

“Our goal must be unambiguously to support and help stabilise a democratic Pakistan headed by its elected president, Asif Ali Zardari. We have the highest strategic interests in supporting this government,” he said.

Asked how Washington would react if the military toppled an elected government in Pakistan, The Dawn quoted Holbrooke as saying: “We are strongly opposed to that … it will be terrible.”

He revealed that Pakistan had used F-16s for bombing extremist targets in Bajaur and Swat.

He opposed linking US aid to allowing access to Dr A.Q. Khan and indicated that the US might be working on a program with Pakistan to block FM radio broadcasts by pro-Taliban clerics.

Holbrooke also used his testimony to convey a message of support for Pakistan, its government and the military.

“Pakistan’s of such immense importance to the United States, strategically and politically. We do not think Pakistan is a failed state,” he said.

The US envoy insisted it was important for the US lawmakers also to understand that while Pakistan was under ‘tremendous social, political and economic stress’, and it was wrong to describe it as a failed state.

On the issue of nuclear proliferation, Holbrooke refused to browbeat Pakistan.

When a lawmaker suggested that the US aid to Pakistan should be linked to allowing American lawmakers to question Dr Khan, Mr Holbrooke said it would be a mistake to do so.

“I have raised this issue with the government of Pakistan and they told me that it happened during the previous government,” he said.

Holbrooke said that while he supported seeking further assurances from Pakistan on this issue, “linking it to US aid will not help”. (ANI)

Taliban ban political parties in FATA

Islamabad, Apr.21 (ANI): The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and Tehreek-e-Nifaz-e-Shariat-e-Muhammadi (TNSM) have now banned political parties in the Bajaur region of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA).

Both the separatist organizations have also issued a jirga banning meeting of more than three persons at a same place.

According to the Daily Times, the decision was taken after four persons were killed in a clash between the activists of these two groups.

The latest ban adds to the long list of activities that the Taliban has prohibited in the region.

The outlawed outfit had also barred women from venturing out of their house alone. Sale and purchase of music cd’s and film videos have also been banned.

Growing beard and wearing turban has been made mandatory for men in the region. (ANI)

Now, Pak religious party threatens to hit NATO supplies if drone strikes continue

Landikotal, Apr. 20 (ANI): The Jamaat-e-Islami has threatened to disrupt supplies to the NATO forces stationed in Afghanistan, if the United States continues with drone attacks in Pakistan’s Tribal Areas.

The warning was issued at a JeI public meeting, during which the participants took out a rally against drone strikes, the military operation in FATA, and the country’s cooperation with the US in its war on terror.

JeI’s FATA Deputy Secretary General Zarnoor Afridi argued that drone attacks in the FATA were violation of the Geneva Convention and basic human rights of the Tribal Area inhabitants, the Daily Times reports.

He said halting NATO supplies inside Pakistan would help press the US for stopping the drone attacks.

Criticizing the Pakistan Government for failing to protect public life and property in FATA, he urged the nation to protest against the drone strikes.

JeI’s Bajaur chief, Amir Sardar Khan, said it was shameful that the government had agreed to the killing of its people to please the US.

“Security forces have demolished villages and killed innocent people in Bajaur and other agencies to protect the US interest in the region. Drone strikes and military operation in Tribal Areas have compelled thousands of locals to migrate from troubled region,” he said.

The participants later unanimously passed a resolution threatening to disrupt NATO supplies inside Pakistan if drone attacks continued in FATA.

The resolution also demanded compensation for the people hit by strife in the Tribal Areas. (ANI)

Taliban asks tribal elders to seek clemency in FATA

Islamabad, Apr.18 (ANI): The Taliban in the Bajaur region of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) has asked the tribal elders, who had opposed their activities, to seek pardon and give undertakings that they would speak against Taliban’s act in future.

“Those elders who approach Taliban will be granted clemency. And those who do not approach, they will not be pardoned,” Taliban’s Bajaur chapter spokesman Maulvi Omar said.

Talking to reporters over telephone, Omar asked the government to implement the acts of the peace deal, which was signed in February, as soon as possible.

He also warned the government of severe consequences if it takes action against Taliban in any part of Bajaur.

Omar also asked the government to open offices and education institutions in the region.

He added that the insurgents would not hinder in government’s work and would not harm government employees. (ANI)

Pak Taliban declares economic support under BISP to women as ‘haram’

Khar, Apr 6 (ANI): The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) in Bajaur Agency has declared that the money provided by the Benazir Income Support Programme (BISP) to women as “haram and un-Islamic”.

The TTP also warned the women against getting the BISP support money or having Computerised National Identity Cards (CNICs) made.

In a broadcast on the Taliban’s illegal radio channel, Bajaur TTP chief Faqir Mohammad asked the people to stop women in their families from getting their CNICs made as during the process, the women had to come in contact with men, which was considered ‘obscenity’.

The Daily Times quoted him as saying that women did not need CNICs and the TTP would not allow them to get the cards.

The PPP-led Government had introduced Benazir Income Support Programme that would benefit 3.4 million families who will get subsistence allowance as well as resources to start their own earning.

Under the programme, Rs 1,000 per month is given to each of 3.4 million families, covering about 14 to 15 per cent of the population in the lowest income bracket. (ANI)

Plight of people to worsen in Pak, Afghanistan: Red Cross

Peshawar, Mar. 31 (ANI): The International Committee of the Red Cross has said that the plight of people in Pakistan and Afghanistan will continue to worsen in the coming months.

The armed conflict in Afghanistan was intensifying and affecting more areas of the country, while fighting and a volatile security situation is causing severe hardship to civilians in the northwest of Pakistan.

“In both Afghanistan and Pakistan, it is expected that the political and military dynamics of the conflict will further endanger the lives and livelihood of civilians in the short term,” The Dawn quotes ICRC’s head of South Asian operations Jacques de Maio, as saying.

“In recent months, the armed conflict in the north of Pakistan’s North West Frontier Province has forced many people to flee their homes. We have also seen a steady influx of weapon-wounded patients as a result of the armed conflict and volatile security conditions in tribal areas,” de Maio added.

The ICRC has stepped up its operations in order to help civilians and the injured, and has more than doubled its current budget for Pakistan, from 24.1 million Swiss francs to 52.6 million.

In Dir, on the Pakistani side of the border, the ICRC is currently delivering aid to over 40,000 internally displaced people (IDPs) who do not yet feel safe returning to their home communities.

In Peshawar, the ICRC has set up a 60-bed tented hospital to perform emergency surgery on a growing number of injured civilians and fighters.

Since the Bajaur crisis in August 2008, the number of weapon-wounded patients has increased significantly, most of them with shrapnel, bullet and blast injuries.

The ICRC is coordinating its operations on both sides of the Pakistan-Afghanistan border.

“Their safety and welfare will depend on enhanced respect for international humanitarian law, including for provisions protecting detainees, and on a stronger neutral and independent humanitarian response,” de Maio concluded. (ANI)

Pentagon expresses concern over Pak’s efforts in war on terror

Washington, Mar. 18 (ANI): The US has expressed concerns over the Pakistani military’s efforts to combat Al Queda and Taliban activities on its border along with Afghanistan, but has vowed to help Pakistan in its anti-terrorism fight.

“There is a concerted effort underway by the Pakistani military, particularly in Bajaur, to combat that threat. There are other tactics used, which historically have not borne much fruit. But perhaps will play out differently this time,” the Daily Times quoted Pentagon Press Secretary Geoff Morrell, as saying.

On Pentagon’s assistance to the Pakistani Military, Morrell said: “And we are determined to help them in any means that they are comfortable with. And we are looking for creative ways to do so. That is where our focus is right now.”

Morrell said Pakistanis took the “right decisions” to resolve the political crisis over the judges’ reinstatement issue.

“I don’t know anybody who has characterized what were largely violence-free demonstrations,” he said.

Meanwhile, the State Department spokesman Robert Wood said that top US diplomats had asked Pakistanis to resolve the situation prior to the planned lawyer’s Long March.

“But in the end, it was the Pakistanis who took the right decisions and put a very positive step forward and they need to continue down the path of true reconciliation,” he said.

Wood also said US Special Representative for Pakistan and Afghanistan Richard Holbrooke would travel to the region soon. (ANI)

Pyrrhic victory for Pak forces against Taliban in Bajaur?

New York , Mar.9 (ANI): Amidst the rubble of houses and heaps of dust the Pakistan Army may proudly claim that Bajaur is under their grip as they have defeated the Taliban and rooted the outlawed organization from the region, but it is almost certain that the Taliban will bounce back.

The Taliban, which the Pak security forces claim has lost the war, is waiting to return as soon the military retracts from the region.

Several military experts and locals have expressed fears that the majority of the Taliban operatives have recoiled in to the nearby terrains, waiting to return.

Now that the terror infrastructure has been broken, as its is being claimed, the Pakistan Government must ensure a safe return of thousands of people who had migrated from the region in the recent past due to the rising extremism followed by the military operation.

“If the government doesn’t build and attract tribesmen back quickly, and do things to put money in their pockets, there is every likelihood of a reversion to the militants,” The New York Times quoted former chief secretary of the North-West Frontier Province, Khalid Aziz, as saying.

The United States has already planned a new civilian volunteer force, backed by the paramilitary Frontier Corps, to ensure that the extremist group does not regroup and re-enter the region, a US official said, but it is not easy to convince people who have lost their all to comeback.

Many obstacles must be overcome, including convincing disaffected tribal elders who have been singled out by the Taliban and abandoned by the government that it is in their interest to return.

The Pak administration may urge people to return to their native place, but the displaced population has put their own conditions for it.

They want accountability from both the government and the Taliban, and despite assurances, many still feel that it is not safe to return.

“When we returned in November they shelled us. We don’t want to repeat that,” a local resident said.

The Inspector General of the Frontier Corps (FC), Major General Tariq Khan has claimed that 1,600 militants were killed in the six-month campaign, but people here do not believe the figures.

They said many of the Taliban operatives have taken refuge in the mountain ranges and are waiting to hit back at a right time.

According to the report, even if Bajaur and Mohmand successfully sees the return of displaced people and establishment of peace, the real challenge for the Pakistani Army will be to thwart the Taliban and Qaeda forces from their ingrained areas in South and North Waziristan. (ANI)

Three Taliban groups form new outfit in Waziristan

WANA (Pakistan), Feb. 23 (ANI): Three Waziristan based factions of the Pakistani Taliban have announced the formation of a new outfit-Shura Ittehad-ul-Mujahideen (SIM).

The decision came after heads of three Taliban factions met at a remote destination in Waziristan. The meeting included representatives of the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan from South Waziristan, the Hafiz Gul Bahadur Group in North Waziristan and the Mulla Nazir Group in South Waziristan.

The meeting lasted for three days and after that, the participants agreed to form the ‘Shura Ittehad-ul-Mujahiden’, an announcement said.

The declaration described Mulla Omar and Osama bin Laden as their leaders, but it was unclear whether the Tehrik-e-Taliban was finished in the region.

The new outfit has vowed to continue its jihad.

Other Taliban leaders belonging to Bajaur, Swat and Mohmand Agency were not invited. (ANI)