Pak Army’s plans to use private militia against Taliban may backfire: Report

Washington, Sep.18 (ANI): The Pakistan Army’s initiative to sponsor local militias, or the lashkars, as they are commonly known, may have been working in its favour against the Taliban, however some people feel such move could back fire in future.

Backed by the Army, which had initiated an all out operation against the Taliban in Swat and Malakand Divisions in April, more than 8,000 villagers living across the region have joined these militias to try to keep the Taliban away from their villages.

Military officials are encouraging people to join hands with the troops against the extremists and carrying out special drives for forming such lashkars.

“The military is going village to village, speaking with elders and encouraging them to form their own lashkars and unite with existing ones,” said Swat military spokesman Major Mushtaq Khan.

While the Army considers that its initiative would yield positive results and prevent the Taliban’s onslaught in the region, experts have raised questions over it saying the move could have catastrophic effect in future.

“They could be temporarily used in some areas where the Taliban are weak or heavily resented, like in Swat. But at the end of the day, the villagers need to do their work; they can’t be armed every night,” The Christian Science Monitor quoted, Rahimullah Yusufzai, a well-known journalist, as saying.

“Creating these private militias may work in the short-run, but what if they later turn on each other to settle personal scores?” usufzai asked

Experts said the military should think twice before trying to extend the experimant into Pakistan’s other tribal agencies, where the Taliban still maintains a strong grip.

“It’s a very interesting experiment. But if it works in Swat, this can’t be replicated anywhere else, because the guys that they were pitted against were way too powerful, the murder of Qari Zainuddin was a case in point,” said Rifaat Hussain, an analyst at Quaid-e-Azam University in Islamabad. (ANI)

Taliban back to terror business from new stronghold near Mardan-Swat Highway

Islamabad, Sep.16 (ANI): The Taliban’s threat has still not subsided in the Swat and Malakand Divisions as the security forces have found that the extremists have created a new stronghold in the region and are planning strikes from there.

According to senior officials, the Taliban, after being forced to retreat following the military operation, have shifted their base to the rough terrains between Batkhela and Jalala on the Mardan-Swat Highway and trying to regroup.

“It is from here that they are building their arms arsenals, training camps, logistics and propaganda centres,” officials said.

Over 200 people in the region have received handwritten and typed death threats in the past fortnight which proves that the Taliban is alive and kicking here.

“We are aware of how you assist security agencies and act against Islam. You are going to face the wrath of God,” one of the letter stated.

One of such threat mail has also been received by former North West Frontier Province (NWFP) Minister, Kamal Shah, who said the extremists have taken refuge in Shergarh, Batkhela, Chakdara, Iroshah, Shakh Number Panch, Jabban Road, Palai Sherkhanai, Sakhakot, Jalala and other villages on the Highway and are waiting to strike.

Security officials said they are aware of the development and the threat mails being sent by the Taliban. They said steps are being taken to thwart any untoward incident and block the supplies of arms and ammunition to the extremists.

“We are on their heels and are making all efforts to block arms and ammunition supplies to them from the channels developed by Taliban through Mohmand Agency, the adjoining areas of Malakand like Palai Sherkhani and Jabban Iroshah Road,” The News quoted a senior official, as saying. (ANI)

US ‘hopes’ Pak would bring 26/11 perpetrators to justice

Washington, Sep.12 (ANI): The United States has said that it ‘hopes’ Pakistan would bring the Mumbai terror attacks perpetrators to book.

“We would hope that the Pakistani authorities will continue their investigation and bring the perpetrators of the attacks to justice,” The News quoted US Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs P J Crowley, as saying.

Commenting on the military offensive in the Swat and Malakand Divisions, Crowley said the Pakistan Government should pay more attention towards fighting the extremists and urged the people of the region to maintain patience during the operation.

“It is a serious and successful effort which boost the sense of protection among the people and they are now more determined,” he highlighted. (ANI)

US assures Pak of all help in counter insurgency operations

Rawalpindi, Sep.8 (ANI): The United States has said it will continue its support to Pakistan in the latter’s counter insurgency fight.

A US delegation comprising Congressman Adam Smith, Member of House Armed Services Committee Congressman Boby Bright and Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords met Chief of Army Staff (COAS), General Ashfaq Kayani at the General Headquarters and assured Pakistan of all possible help in its fight against militancy, The Nation reports.

Sources said Smith assured General Kayani that the Bill which will be tabled in the Congress Committee regarding providing latest defence equipment to the Pakistan Army will be supported ‘thick and thin.’

Sources added that the delegation lauded the Pakistan Army for its anti-militancy operation in Swat and Malakand Divisions.(ANI)

Scientists using laser light to generate underwater sound

Washington, September 6 (ANI): The United States Naval Research Laboratory is working on a new technology that uses flashes of laser light to remotely create underwater sound.

Researchers behind the project say that the new technology has the potential to expand and improve both Naval and commercial underwater acoustic applications, including undersea communications, navigation, and acoustic imaging.

Dr. Ted Jones, a physicist in the Plasma Physics Division, is leading a team of researchers from the Plasma Physics, Acoustics, and Marine Geosciences Divisions in developing this acoustic source.

The researchers used a 532 nm laser pulse for their study at the Salt Water Tank Facility.

They also used air bubblers and controlled water and air temperatures to create ocean-like conditions in the laboratory.

The research team could efficiently convert light into sound by concentrating the light sufficiently to ionize a small amount of water, which then absorbed laser energy and superheats.

They said that the result was a small explosion of steam that could generate a 220 decibel pulse of sound.

Given that the driving laser pulse has the ability to travel through both air and water, the researchers say that a compact laser on either an underwater or airborne platform can be used for remote acoustic generation.

They believe that their method would be a significant addition to traditional direct backscattering acoustic data. (ANI)

Pak Army determined to chase Taliban till the very end: Kayani

Rawalpindi, Sep.5 (ANI): The Pakistan Army is determined chase the Taliban till the very end, and would continue its offensive against the extremists until they are rooted out from the country, Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Kayani has said.

Speaking at a function after inaugurating a rehabilitation centre for young Taliban recruits, General Kayani said ‘Operation Rah-e-Rast’, being carried out in the Swat and the Malakand Divisions, has broken the back of extremists.

General Kayani, who visited the war ravaged Malkand Division on Friday, told local leaders that terrorist network has been dismantled and peace and prosperity would soon return to the valley.

“The army will chase these militants till the very end,” The Daily Times quoted General Kayani, as saying.

The rehabilitation centre named ‘Sabawoon’ (morning light) will look after the young men brainwashed and indoctrinated by Taliban for suicide attacks on security forces and other targets in Swat, an ISPR statement said.

Many such youths were nabbed by troops or found in camps in raids during search and clearance operations in the valley. (ANI)

UN official says 1.3 million IDPs have returned to Swat

Islamabad, Aug.19 (ANI): A United Nations official on Wednesday said that about 1.3 million Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) have returned to their homes in Pakistan’s North West Frontier Province, including the Swat Valley.

“The best estimate that we can make now is that approximately 1.3 million displaced people have returned home,” Pakistan’s UN humanitarian coordinator Martin Mogwanja told a press conference here.

Most of these IDPs had fled their homes in the wake of a military offensive against the Taliban rebels in the Swat and Malakand Divisions of the North West Frontier Province.

Pakistan had launched the military operation in the districts of Buner, Lower Dir and Swat after the Taliban had advanced to within 100 kilometres of Islamabad last April, violating a September 2007 peace deal.

Pakistan’s military has said that it has cleared the three districts of insurgents.

Mogwanja, however, said that the military operation is still on in some parts of Swat and Lower Dir, and added that the UN is monitoring the situation. (ANI)

Fazlullah hiding in Peochar, would be arrested soon: Malik

Islamabad, July 28 (ANI): Swat Taliban chief Mullah Fazlullah aka Radio Mullah is injured and is hiding in the terrains of Peochar along with his close aides, Interior Advisor Rehman Malik has said.

Malik claimed the security forces have surrounded Fazlullah and his accomplices, and that they would be arrested soon.

Over the past few days media reports as well as the Pakistan Army have been claiming that Fazlullah, who has a 50-million-rupee bounty on his head, has been grievously wounded in missile hit and is on his death bed.

However, neither the Pakistan government nor the Army was able to confirm the reports.

Recently, Mingora residents said they had heard Fazlullah over his illegal FM radio station, but it could not be confirmed whether the broadcast was live or a pre-recorded one.

Talking to a private television channel Malik said the military offensive against the Taliban and other extremists have been successful and nearing its end.

He also rejected reports that the Taliban fighters were hiding still hiding in the Swat and Malakand Divisions and planning to regroup themselves once military moves out.

“Now there is no danger of the terrorists regrouping,” The Daily Times quoted Malik, as saying. (ANI)

Relief, rehabilitation in Swat, Malakand to cost billions: UN

Islamabad, July 11 (ANI): The rehabilitation and reconstruction work in the war ravaged Swat and Malakand Divisions would cost billions of dollars, the United Nations (UN) has said.

Talking to media persons at a press conference here, the UN Under-Secretary General and Emergency Relief Coordinator, John Holmes, said that it would require a mammoth effort from the Pakistan government to rehabilitate over two million people who have been rendered homeless due to the military operation in the North West Frontier Province (NWFP).

“As for rehabilitation and reconstruction, costs should be in billions of dollars for a year or so,” Holmes said.

He said that the displaced people should not be forced to return to their homes in the Valley, and added that the conditions must be made favorable before asking them to return.

“We would like them to be able to return to their home as soon as possible, but the process has to be voluntary. They need to be involved in those choices, the conditions need to be right. That means the security needs to be right, the basic services need to be there,” The Daily Times quoted Holmes, as saying.

Urging the international community to donate more funds for the relief work, he said it will take time before peace and normalcy returns to the region.

“The security situation is not going to be 100 percent calm in these areas overnight and we must recognize that,” Holmes said. (ANI)

Top Taliban commanders wiped out in Swat: Malik

Islamabad, July, 7 (ANI): Pakistan Prime Minister’s advisor on Interior Affairs, Rehman Malik has said that the major Taliban leadership has been wiped out from Swat.

Talking to media persons here, Malik claimed that the military offensive being carried out in the North West Frontier Province’s (NWFP) Swat and Malakand Divisions have been successful with top commanders of the Taliban killed.

“The gallant Pakistan army carried out successful military offensive in Swat killing the major Taliban leadership and the remaining Taliban will be wiped out soon,” The Daily Times quoted Malik, as saying.

When asked about madrassas and other religious outfits supporting the extremists, Malik admitted that there are some religious elements which are helping the Taliban in the region.

“Some religious elements are backing Taliban but no madaris or mosque is involved in doing so,” said Malik.

He also expressed concerns over the intelligence reports about a possible Taliban attack in South Punjab. (ANI)

Gilani stresses on US-Mexico like fencing along Pak-Afghan border

Islamabad, July 4 (ANI): Pakistan Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani has stressed on the need of fencing the country’s border with Afghanistan on the lines of the US and Mexico border wall to stop terrorist infiltration and drug trafficking.

Talking to US Secretary for Homeland Security, Janet Napilitano, Gilani urged the United States to provide immediate military assistance to help Pakistan tackle the rampant Taliban effectively in the tribal areas.

It may be noted that Napilitano, as governor of Arizona, had initiated action to erect a boundary wall along the US-Mexico border to check the extensive drug trafficking.

Gilani also asked the Obama Administration to provide Cobra helicopters and other military hardware, as well as financial assistance to assist the Pakistan Army to establish their control over the Swat and Malakand Divisions after the offensive in the region is called-off.

Referring to the exodus of over two million people in Swat due to the military operation, Gilani said the international community should come forward and help Pakistan come out of the crises.

He said the aid received by Islamabad has proved inadequate so far, and urged the US and international donors to deliver on their pledges made in the Friends of Democratic Pakistan meeting in Tokyo, The News reports. (ANI)

War on terror cost Pak 10 billion dollars in 2008-09

Islamabad, July 3 (ANI): Pakistan has spent about 10 billion dollars in the war on terror during the financial year 2008-09, the chairman of the Panel of Economists of the Planning Commission, Hafiz Pasha has said.

Talking to media persons, after releasing the Human Development in South Asia Report 2008, Pasha said the ongoing military operation in the Swat and Malakand Divisions is likely to cost an additional 100 billion rupees.

Pasha said that military offensive in NWFP has adversely affected the economy of the country and the region particularly.

“Pakistan’s economy is facing multidimensional losses as investment and exports are declining and economic activity leading to reduced revenue,” The Daily Times quoted Pasha, as saying. (ANI)

Petition against US drone attacks filed in Pak SC

Islamabad, July 2 (ANI): A petition has been filed in the Pakistan Supreme Court asking the government to table a comprehensive report on the US led drone strikes inside the geographical boundaries of the country.

The petition has been filed by one M. Tariq Asad, who claimed that only innocent tribal people are being killed in the drone strikes.

“I have filed the petition in the Supreme Court as a protest to let the world know about the sentiments of the people of Pakistan on consecutive drone attacks which are killing scores of people,” The Dawn quoted Asad, as saying.

Asad, in his petition, has also asked the apex court to give directions to the federal government to approach the International Court of Justice or the United Nations (UN) against the United States.

The petition termed the ongoing military operation in Swat and Malakand Divisions as ‘illegal, and said that it was against the citizens, and in derogation of Article 245 (functions of the armed forces) of the Constitution.

“The war against the citizens is not permitted under the 1973 Constitution, besides the military operation against the civilians also does not fall within the purview of Article 245 of the Constitution,” the petition stated.

Incidentally, Asad is the same man who had approached the Supreme Court against the Lal Masjid operation in 2007.

Asad, who himself is a lawyer, also represented some of the families of the missing persons in that case. (ANI)

Taliban to return to carry on its fight as Pak Army’s offensive lacks credibility: NYT

New York, June 28 (ANI): The Pakistan Army has been boasting of success against the Taliban and other extremists, and claims that it has flushed the insurgents out, besides killing scores of them during its offensive in the Swat and Malakand Divisions, but a closer look at the region where the military operation purportedly resulted in death of several militants presents a different picture, casting serious questions over the Army’s claims.

While the military has been claiming being engaged in a stiff battle with the Taliban, no such signs are visible in the region, which clearly suggests that the insurgents have just melted into the local population here, only to remerge and fight another day, The New York Times reports.

Analysts also believe that amid the claims of the military of sanitizing scores of militants, it has failed to provide any proof of it, which raises serious doubts.

The military operation which has rendered over three million people homeless in the region, and has won strong support from the United States, has amazingly failed to destroy the Taliban’s leadership.

The military has also failed to kill or capture even one top Taliban commander, experts pointed out.

“It was very disappointing that none of the commanders had been eliminated,” said a senior politician of the region, Aftab Ahmed Sherpao.

Then, there are also fears that the Taliban insurgents have sneaked into the rehabilitation camps set -up for the displaced people, and would in all possibility return to the valley.

“Most of the Taliban shaved their beards, and they are living here with their families in the camps set up for those displaced by the fighting,” said the mayor of Mardan, Himayatullah Mayar.

While the military is ready to initiate a fresh offensive in South Waziristan to target the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) chief Baitullah Mehsud, the Pakistan government is yet to announce a comprehensive plan to establish peace and normalcy in the Swat Valley to facilitate the return of the displaced people.

Experts believe that the military and the civilian government lack mutual trust, which raises serious questions about whether the authorities can secure Swat and other areas and keep them from being taken back by the Taliban, the report said.

“I’ve told the president and the prime minister and the chief of the army this is the time to act. Just take basic things and implement them. This is not talking rocket science,” said General Nadeem Ahmad, the commander of the Special Support Group of the Pakistan Army.

“If you don’t deliver, it will be trouble. You will come back and do the operation again,” Ahmad warned

The displaced people also want a surety from the military that they will be safe if they return home, as they are aware of the repercussions of the past episodes of deal-making with the Taliban.

Displaced people are angry by the indiscriminate shelling in civilian areas by the military, and have also raised questions over the success of the offensive.

“We had no problem with the Taliban. We’re here because of the military shelling. I’m a trader, and the thing that affects my life is the curfew,” said Umar Ali, a poultry trader from Qambar in Swat. (ANI)

Ominous portents of Taliban’s expanding writ as it claims responsibility for POK blast

Muzaffarabad, June 27 (ANI): After purportedly being pushed out of the Swat and Malakand Divisions by the Pakistan Army, the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), in an apparent bid to expand its regime of terror, has claimed responsibility for the suicide strike in Muzaffarabad in which two security personnel were killed and three others injured here on Friday.

Claiming the responsibility for the attack, a deputy to the TTP chief Baitullah Mehsud, Hakimullah Mehsud, said the attack was in retaliation against the recent strikes carried out on its hideouts.

Mehsud said the suicide attack has proved that the Taliban is not weakened by the military’s offensive against the banned organization.

The attack, which took place in the army barracks in Shaukat Lines, was the first of its kind in Pakistan occupied Kashmir (PoK).

According to sources, the attack was carried out by a bearded man supposedly in his twenties.

The attacker entered the barracks used by non-commissioned security personnel and blew himself up around 6.30 in the morning.

“The bomber was intercepted by a soldier whom he tried to engage in a conversation presumably to attract other soldiers around for causing maximum casualties’ and then blew himself up,” The Dawn quoted an official, as saying.

The blast was so powerful that it destroyed several army vehicles parked near by.

Meanwhile, the authorities have tightened security across the region and are conducting massive search operations.

In a latest development, the Muzaffarabad police arrested more than five dozen Afghan nationals, and other people belonging to the Frontier province.

Sources said all those who have nabbed by the police lacked proper identification documents. (ANI)

Swat military offensive has no Parliament backing: JUI-F

Islamabad, June 26 (ANI): The Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam Fazal (JUI-F) president, Fazl-ur-Rehman has criticized the PPP led government, saying that the ongoing military offensive in Swat and Malakand Divisions has no backing either of the Parliament or the National Security Committee.

Speaking at a program in Jamia Qasmia here, Rehman blamed the US led allied forces for Pakistan’s present turbulent situation.

“The foreign forces have created chaotic situation in Pakistan by imposing their war on us,” The News quoted Rehman, as saying.

He did not support the Taliban’s methodology of using violent means to force the authorities to implement the ‘Sharia’, but stressed that it was the responsibility of the government to implement the Islamic law as soon as possible.

“The government should fulfill its responsibility toward enforcement of Shariah,” Rehman said. (ANI)

Afridi’s father calls son’s ICC T20 final heroics “best gift on father’s day”

Karachi, June 23 (ANI): Pakistan all-rounder Shahid Afridi’s father, Sahibzada Fazl-ur Rehman is over the moon, after his son’s stupendous all-round performance helped Pakistan win the ICC Twenty20 Championship.

Ecstatic over the team’s brilliant performance to beat the favorites Sri Lanka in the final of the tournament at Lord’s, Rehman said his son has given him the best gift on father’s day.

“I am the proudest of all the Pakistani fathers because my son has given me the best gift on father’s day,” The Dawn quoted Rehman, as saying.

Afridi took one for 20 in his quota of four overs, and later hit a swashbuckling 54 to seal Pakistan’s win by eight wickets.

Rehman said Afridi has brought back smiles on the face of thousands of people in the country, who have been forced to face adverse situations in the recent past.

“What I always tell him is that he should play for the country and for the people who adore him. I am elated that he gave the whole nation moments of happiness,” he said.

Afridi, who hails from the tribal Khyber district in the troubled North West Frontier Province (NWFP), is hugely popular in the region.

“I am really happy, Afridi played an excellent innings. I feel proud of my country,” said Abdul Jalal, who has been forced to take shelter in a refugee camp due to the ongoing military operation in Swat and Malakand Divisions of the NWFP.

Afridi struggled to score runs in the initial part of the tournament, but he continued to wreak havoc with his patent fast leg-spinners, and came good with the bat when it mattered most for the team.

With back to back half centuries in the semi-final and final match of the tournament, Afridi has once again proved that he is arguably one of the severest hitters of the cricket ball, and the ICC T20 trophy has only rejuvenated his ‘boom-boom’ style batting. (ANI)

McChrystal’s appointment as new US commander in Afghanistan, a double-edged sword

Washington, May 12 (ANI): Lt. General Stanley A. McChrystal’s appointment as the new American commander in Afghanistan represents a jarring shift for U.S. Forces in Afghanistan, which are currently transitioning commands between the 101st and 82nd Airborne Divisions.

According to reports, it is still unclear what having a Special Operations commander in charge will do the overall country strategy, just as it is unclear what two major changes of commands in a short period of time will do to the current units who are deployed there.

Lt. Gen. McChrystal has received much praise for his command of the Joint Special Operations Command, which was credited with the capture of Saddam Hussein in December of 2003, and the killing of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in 2006, but he also carries with him a dark side as well.

One unit under his command, the now-notorious Task Force 6-26, which was assigned to find HVTs, or High Value Targets in Iraq, is credited with the ultimate death of Zarqawi. The problem is, along the way they faced accusations of running a secret camp that tortured prisoners, and they were implicated in at least two detainee deaths during torture sessions.

Their camp, called Camp Nama, became something of a lightning rod after a “computer malfunction” destroyed upwards of 70 percent of their records and an investigation into their conduct stalled out.

More relevant to Afghanistan is Lt. Gen. McChrystal’s involvement in the shameful cover-up of Pat Tillman’s friendly-fire death.

While he was named among the list of high-ranking military personnel believed to have covered up the circumstances of Tillman’s death, Lt. Gen. McChrystal was “spared because he had apparently drafted a memo urging other officials to stop spreading the lie that Tillman died fighting the Taliban.

He drafted that memo, however, after signing the award for Tillman’s posthumously awarded Silver Star, the commendation for which claims, in part, that he was leading the charge against a Taliban assault.

Lt. Gen. McChrystal has never clarified why he signed an award for Tillman dying under enemy fire right before begging his colleagues and superiors to stop lying about Tillman dying under enemy fire. (ANI)

Pak soldiers prefer fighting “Hindu India” than Taliban ‘muslim friends’: Report

London, May 10 (ANI): Pakistan Government may claim that it is fighting its ‘own war’ in the North West Frontier Province’s Malakand and Swat Divisions, and is not merely taking action under the US pressure, but one thing is quite evident that the Pakistani army do not want to pump bullets into their ‘muslim friends’ rather they prefer fighting against India.

Amid all frantic calls being made by the international community, and especially by the Obama Administration that the real threat to Pakistan comes from its internal factors and not from India, majority of its security personnel still believe that India remains their primary threat, the Telegraph reports.

The report stated that eventhough the Pakistan army has made sacrifices in its fight against terrorism, soldiers trained and dedicated to the idea of fighting “Hindu India” resent the idea of killing fellow Muslims on their own soil.

“I do not like the Taliban but I do not want to fight against them.They are our Muslim brothers. I do not want to fight America’s war,” said Zulmay Khan, a soldier with Frontier Corps.

The statement perhaps clarifies all the speculations regarding Pakistan Army’s will and capability to counter the extremists.

Officers, who have been in the thick of things for long planning out strategies for the army, also believe that Pakistan’s primary concern is India despite the fact that the Taliban’s advancing writ poses an ‘existential threat’ to the nation.

The report quoted a retired Major of Pakistan Army, Major Ikram Seghal, as saying that most troops would remain on the Indian border, despite the increasingly frantic calls from Washington to concentrate on the enemy within.

The problem is that now Pakistan is battling jihadis whom it trained to fight wars in Afghanistan and Kashmir, which was directed by the country’s leadership itself.

Nobody believe that the Taliban would be flushed out of the country or the region by the Pakistan military, but fear is growing that whatever happens in the current operation, Swat will prove a self-inflicted wound that will fester for years, the report said. (ANI)

Pakistan ‘formally’ declares all-out war against Taliban

Islamabad, May 8 (ANI): Pakistan has finally declared an all-out war against the Taliban in the Swat and Malakand Divisions of the country’s North West Frontier Province (NWFP).

In a televised address to the nation on Thursday, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani announced the formal deployment of troops in the Malakand region, and vowed to flush out militants from the area at all costs.

“We will eliminate those who have tried to destroy peace of the country,” Gilani said.

In an attempt to justify the government’s move to sign the Swat peace deal with the TNSM to force the Taliban to lay down their arms, Gilani said the government accepted the demand for the enforcement of the Nizam-e-Adl in the hope that peace would be restored.

“We had faced pressure. We were criticized for such policies, but we took the decision for our national interests,” The Nation quoted Gilani, as saying.

He urged the people of the country to stand behind the security forces strongly, so that they can quell the menace permanently which has virtually held Pakistan hostage.

“We will not compromise. The nation must stand against those who have imposed their will at gunpoint. They have held the country hostage,” Gilani added.

Referring to the Swat flogging incident, in which the Taliban had publicly whipped a teenaged girl, Gilani said such ‘shameful acts’ against women in the country has not only earned a bad name for the nation, but has also put the lives of local people under perpetual threat.

He also announced a package of one billion rupees for the rehabilitation of internally displaced persons. (ANI)