Afghan Taliban kill 11 Pakistani travellers – official

KABUL, July 10 (Reuters) – Suspected Afghan Taliban insurgents killed 11 Pakistanis who crossed into Afghanistan in order to detour around a dangerous part of the border area, officials said on Saturday.

Paktia governor spokesman Rohullah Samon said gunmen opened fire on a bus carrying the travellers in Samkani district, as they made their way from Kurram to Peshawar via Afghanistan.

Tribesmen frequently take the circuitous Afghan route as the direct road linking the two regions is often the scene of Pakistan Taliban attacks on travellers.

While the Pakistan and Afghan Taliban are different organisations, they have close links and draw the overwhelming bulk of their fighters from the Pashtun ethnic group which was divided by a colonial-era border known as the Durand Line.

While Pakistan has taken some steps against its own Taliban insurgency, Kabul and its allies accuse Islamabad of secretly supporting the Afghan Taliban and giving sanctuary to their leadership.

Islamabad denies the charges, but Pakistan has long seen Afghanistan as “strategic depth” in case of war with its eastern neighbour, India. (Writing by David Fox; Editing by Jeremy Laurence) (For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here)

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also highlighted that the security forces fighting against the militants in the region lacked facilities, and had outdated weapons as compared to the terrorists creating havoc in the region.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

Pakistani military prepares for South Waziristan showdown

Islamabad, May 26 (IANS) Buoyed by its successes against the Taliban in the northwest, Pakistan’s military is intensifying its fight against the militants in South Waziristan agency and is moving up tanks and heavy artillery.

Quoting sources, Dawn said Tuesday that sporadic clashes between militants and troops were continuing in South Waziristan for the fifth day.

The sources said that troops, backed by tanks, armoured personnel carriers and artillery, left their base at Umar Adda in Tank district for South Waziristan’s Jandola town ahead of a possible assault on the agency.

South Waziristan is the headquarters of Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) chief Baitullah Mehsud, who is one of the suspects in the Dec 27, 2007 assassination of former Pakistani prime minister Benazir Bhutto.

The sources said that heavy movement of troops had also been witnessed in Thall area of Hangu district, which adjoins the Kurram, North Waziristan and Orakzai regions.

Pakistani warplanes had bombed a number of militants’ positions in Orakzai on Sunday, killing a Taliban commander identified as Ehsanullah, and 12 other militants and destroying huge ammunition dumps and bunkers.

The air strike started at about 8.20 a.m. and continued for more than two hours, officials said.

The military operation in Swat, Buner and Lower Dir districts of the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) entered is second month Tuesday, with the security forces reporting significant successes.

The operations had begun April 26 after the Taliban violated a controversial peace accord with the NWFP and moved south from their Swat headquarters to occupy Buner, which is just 100 km from Islamabad.

The operations began from Lower Dir, the home district of Taliban-backed radical cleric Sufi Mohammad, who had brokered the peace deal and whose son-in-law Maulana Fazlullah heads the Swat Taliban.

The security forces subsequently moved into Swat and Buner.

The military says some 1,100 militants have so far been killed in the operations but there is no independent confirmation of this since the media has been barred from the battle zone. The security forces have lost 70 officers and soldiers.

The military operations have triggered the largest and swiftest refugee exodus anywhere in the world in recent times, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) says.

The social welfare department of the NWFP government says it has registered 1.45 million refugees at its 22 relief camps but the actual number could be as high as 2.5 million as many of the displaced persons could be staying with friends and relatives.

The UN office in Islamabad said last week $543 million would be required for the rehabilitation of the displaced people. A day earlier, Pakistan had won pledges of $244 million at a donors conference in Islamabad.

Suicide bomber kills 23 in Pakistan’s NWFP

A suicide bomber on Saturday rammed his explosive-laden vehicle into a police check post killing 23 people, most of them security personnel, in Pakistan’s troubled North West Frontier Province.

In second such attack on security forces within a week, the bomber targeted the check post located in Doaba area of Hangu district, which is surrounded by the troubled Aurakzai, Kurram and North Waziristan tribal regions.

Earlier reports had said the bomber struck a police check post in Doaba. Officials later said the suicide attacker struck when the convoy was near the check post. Several civilians were among the dead, they said.

The blast also damaged several nearby buildings. The injured, including seven civilians, were taken to hospitals in Hangu and Peshawar after police cordoned off the area.

No group claimed responsibility for the attack though officials believe it could have been the work of Taliban militants who are active in the area.

Pakistani security forces had conducted a major operation against the Taliban in Doaba last year.

‘Teenage suicide bombers don’t act out of religious fervour’

Islamabad, April 7 (IANS) The teenage suicide bomber of the kind who struck at a Shia mosque in Pakistan’s Punjab killing at least 24 people, including four children, did not act out of religious fervour ‘but under coercion or brainwashing’, an editorial in a leading English daily said Tuesday.

Another editorial welcomed the ‘change’ in that the interior minister had refrained from finger wagging at neighbouring countries and had admitted that a Pakistani was involved in Sunday’s attack in which 35 people were injured.

‘The suicide-bomber was just 17 years old and certainly did not know what he was doing. Now we know enough about this kind of terrorism to know that children who do the dirty work don’t do it out of religious fervour but under coercion or brainwashing,’ Daily Times said in an editorial.

Noting that ‘these children are business for some renegade madrassas and their clergy’, it added: ‘The going rate for a suicide-bomber is from Rs.600,000 to Rs.800,000.

The editorial also pointed out that Pakistani Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud ‘has announced that he will strike Pakistan twice a week. And he is said to have 300 children suicide-bombers in reserve’.

Daily Times also saw the Sunday attack as part of the efforts of the Taliban and Al Qaeda to drive a wedge between Shias and Sunnis.

‘Baitullah Mehsud has the Shias of Orakzai and Kurram Agencies under his heel; he has wrested control of such Shia community towns in the NWFP as Hangu and Kohat, the last one Pakistan’s major air force centre, to force the Shias to live under fear,’ the editorial noted.

As for Al Qaeda, it ‘let’ slain commander Abu Musab Al Zarqawi ‘start killing’ Shias in Iraq and, in the 1990s, had ‘tolerated sectarian violence’ by Pakistani terror group Lashkar-e Jhangvi ‘whose boys were trained in its camps in Afghanistan’, the editorial contended.

Then, Taliban chief Mullah Umar ‘always declined to hand over the killers to Pakistan as they fled into his territory.

‘Now, sectarianism also makes strategic sense for terrorist groups because its fallout plugs into the larger mayhem they have planned to unleash on Pakistan to bring the state down to its knees,’ Daily Times added.

On its part, The News termed as ‘a positive development’ the ‘admission’ by Interior Minister Rehman Malik that the Sunday bombing and other recent terrorist attacks, including that on a police check post in Islamabad that killed eight Frontier Corps personnel, ‘are the work of Pakistanis’.

‘It is not clear how, why or when this light has suddenly dawned on the man responsible for safeguarding our security, but certainly it makes a change from the past tendency to immediately point fingers in the direction of neighbouring countries,’ The News maintained.

‘This is the doing of our own people. Cover-ups and a refusal to face what is happening to our country will take us nowhere. We must hope the interior advisor’s admission can lead to action to deal with the elements who have set up base everywhere in the country and today threaten its very survival,’ the editorial contended.