Fraser leads, Els in contention at curtailed Ballantine’s

Marcus Fraser will take a one-stroke lead into Sunday’s third-round shootout at the Ballantine’s Championship with Ernie Els just two shots off the pace after the second round was completed on Saturday.

The $2.9 million European and Asian Tour event was reduced to 56 holes after six hours of play were lost to heavy fog on Jeju island on Thursday.

Leader by the same margin after the first round, Australian Fraser shot a steady two-under-par 70 on Saturday to add to his superb seven birdie opening 65 and move to nine-under for the tournament.

That kept him a shot ahead of Thailand’s defending champion Thongchai Jaidee and Argentine Tano Goya, who both played almost two full rounds on Friday at the Pinx Golf Club, as well as Briton Gareth Maybin, who shot a 68 on Saturday.

Three-times major winner Els scattered four birdies and a bogey across his round to card a 69 and the South African shares fifth with South Korean Ted Oh and Australian Brett Rumford.

World number 17 Henrik Stenson of Sweden and Singapore’s Mardan Mammat both eagled the par-five fourth and 10th holes on a day of otherwise high scoring, but ended up with 70s for a share of 10th and eighth respectively.

Korean-American Anthony Kim, playing in his first tournament since finishing third at the U.S. Masters, had a day to forget when he blew up spectacularly after a promising start.

The world number 10 opened with four birdies in his first six holes but a run of bogey/double bogey/double bogey before the turn sent him plummeting down the leaderboard and he will go into the final round seven shots off the pace.

U.S. PGA Championship winner Yang Yong-eun must have been resigned to missing the cut after 35 holes of golf on his home island on Friday left him at six-over-par.

The early departure of Asia’s first major winner and the champion at the China Open last week was confirmed on Saturday when the cut was set at one-over.

(Writing by Nick Mulvenney in Beijing; Editing by John O’Brien; To comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

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)

South Asia Media Commission condemns TV journalists’ killing in Pak

Lahore, Aug. 28 (ANI): The South Asia Media Commission (SAMC) has strongly condemned the recent killings of two TV journalists by alleged Taliban militants in the North Western Frontier Province.

Peshawar bureau chief for Afghanistan’s Shamshad Television, Janullah Hashimzada, was shot dead in the Khyber Pass, near the town of Jamrud in Khyber Agency.

He was known for his critical reporting of the Taliban.

His colleague, Ali Khan, was seriously injured in the attack. Both were Afghan nationals.

Also, a private TV channel’s correspondent, Sadiq Bacha Khan, was shot dead in Mardan on August 17.

“These were purely targeted killings for being critical of the Taliban. The killings highlight the perils of reporting from such a dangerous part of the world,” the Daily Times quoted SAMC President N Ram and Secretary General Najam Sethi, as saying in a statement.

“The Pakistan government should transparently investigate the murders and bring the perpetrators to justice so that the killers understand they cannot operate with impunity,” commission’s regional coordinator Hussain Naqi stated. (ANI)

80,000 people affected, 450 houses destroyed in Swabi flood: OCHA

Islamabad, Aug 18(ANI): The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) has said that at least 70,000 to 80,000 people have been affected in Swabi by the floods and about 450 houses have been destroyed apart from the major losses to crops and livestock

In a statement issued in Islamabad, it said that stored grains had been swept away by the floods, which might lead to food insecurity in the flood-affected regions of Ismaila, Kalu Khan and Adina, The Dawn reports.

“Majority of the deaths occurred due to the collapse of roofs in mud houses. Concrete houses were mostly unaffected. Valuables in homes were completely swept away,” the statement said.

It also stated that traffic between Swabi and Mardan had been completely cut off, as several bridges were washed. Communication system has been damaged in Mardan district.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) has also set up three medical camps in Mardan, while the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) would send 500 tents for distribution in flood affected areas. (ANI)

Action to continue till last Taliban militant is finished from Swat: Hoti

Peshawar, July 14 (ANI): NWFP Chief Minister Ameer Haider Hoti has said that the Taliban will not be allowed to disrupt peace in the scenic Swat valley again.

The Chief Minister said the war against those involved in “destruction and blood shed” would continue until the last of the terrorists had been eliminated.

He said that administrative changes in Malakand division had been introduced for the implementation of sharia and the security of the population.

Addressing a gathering at Government College Palosa (Charsadda), Hoti said the Nizam-e-Adl Regulation was approved “purely on the demand and aspirations of the people of Malakand … not under any sort of pressure.”

“We wanted to resolve the problems of Swat through dialogue right from day one … we tried it till the last moment, but unfortunately, the Taliban chose the path of destruction instead of negotiations,” the Daily Times quoted Hoti, as saying.

He assured those who went home to Swat on Monday that their return “doesn’t mean that government support and assistance will stop … the government will help you start life anew.”

Hoti praised the role of the president, the prime minister, the federal government, international agencies, NGOs, provincial governments, political parties and particularly the people of Swabi, Mardan, Charsadda, Nowshera and Peshawar for facilitating relief activities.

“The provincial government was only able to fulfil its responsibility because of their spirit. Their role is an exact example of Pukhtunwali,” said Hoti.

“The terrorists are the enemy of Islam, humanity, Pukhtuns, peace and stability and our future. We will fight them along the army and triumph.”

Hoti said that Swat was “an injured part of our body, and no stone will be left unturned to put it right”.

He assured the armed forces that they had the backing of the political leadership, the federal and provincial governments, the civil society and the public. (ANI)

Swat refugees selling Pak Government rations to survive

Peshawar, June 29 (ANI): Pakistani people diaplaced due to ongoing offensive of the Army against the Taliban in the Swat Valley are selling relief goods to pay for their routine expenses.

Each of the displaced families having, seven members, has been receiving 40kg wheat flour, 5kg sugar, 10kg rice, 5kg pulses, 5kg ghee, four soaps and 1kg dry milk per month from the government since May 13.

According to the UN estimates, 87 per cent of the internally displaced persons live with host communities in schools, hospitals and houses and, so, were being provided food by their hosts. Therefore, they receive relief goods, but sell the same in local markets to pay for other expenses.

“We sell the relief items because my mother is suffering from diabetes and she needs regular medication. We are not getting medicines from anyone,” said Gul Rahim, 38, a labour from Saidu Sharif now living in a school in Par Hoti, Mardan, along with his wife, three children and mother.

The Dawn quoted him as saying that he was selling the relief goods to local shopkeepers at throwaway prices, but said he had to purchase medicines for his ailing mother for which he had no other option.

“I receive the stuff every month and make Rs.3,000 from its sale. This month, I bought a pedestal fan and a gas cylinder for cooking,” said 21-year-old Javed Ali from Ambela in Buner.

Mohammad Idrees Khan, nazim of the Rustam Union Council where an estimated 30,000 IDPs from Buner and Swat have taken refuge, said that the displaced people had been getting a lot of relief goods at the start of the conflict, but now they were entirely dependent on the aid given by the government.

Jamil Rehman of Kabal, Swat, said he purchased books and notebooks for his two children from the money he received from the sale of wheat and ghee last month. “Next month, I will buy clothes and some other things for my wife and children,” he added. (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)

Freed of Taliban terror, displaced girl resumes study in a tent school

Mardan (NWFP, Pakistan), May 25 (ANI): Sixtenn-year-old Aleema has restarted her education after it was stopped due to life threats from Taliban bombing of a girls’ schools in Swat valley.

“I was a student of Class 9 at Girls’ Higher Secondary School at Kabal. Taliban first issued threatening letters to our school and then blown it up on September 2008,” Aleema told Daily Times.

Aleema said that she has now come to a tent school set up by Society for Awareness and Relief (STAR), a Swabi-based non-government organisation providing high school level education in relief camps.

“I and thousands of other girls of the valley could not think of completing education under the Taliban rule in the area,” a fully veiled Aleema said.

The brave girl expressed satisfaction with the way of teaching in the tent school but said it was the government responsibility to provide better education to Internally Displaced Persons girls and boys, as hundreds of them wanted to continue their education.

She said more female students would come to tent schools if government and non-government organisations created awareness of education in relief camps.

Three non-government organisations including Muslim Hands, Philanthropist and STAR are providing education to IDPs in Sheikh Yaseen camp. (ANI)

Mumbai attack implicated JuD resurfaces under new ‘humanitarian’ veil in NWFP

London, May 14 (ANI): The banned terrorist outfit, Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD), has resurfaced in the North West Frontier Province’s Mardan region with a difference and is now carrying out charity work for displaced people there, a leading British daily reports.

According to The Guardian, the JuD, which is accused of plotting and carrying out the November 2008 Mumbai terror attacks, has renamed it self the Falah-i Insaniat Foundation (FIF) and is offering food, medical care and transport to villagers fleeing into Mardan district, from the neighbouring Swat Valley.

The Jamaat-ud-Dawa is considered to be the public face of the militant Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT).

According to the report, the FIF is running several relief camps in the region, one of which is located outside Sher Gur in Mardan, just a few hundred metres from the Malakand border.

The former head of Jamaat-ud-Dawa’s welfare wing, Hafiz Abdur Rauf, is heading the FIF’s relief work in the region.

Rauf claims the FIF is extending humanitarian support to thousands of people displaced by the Swat military offensive.

“People are very afraid and worried about what’s going on. They are terrified by the shelling and the bombardment, especially the children,” Rauf said.

Rauf told the newspaper that the group’s 24-hour kitchens had fed 53,000 people in roadside camps and in schools where people were living, adding that a fleet of 23 minibuses had transported victims from the battle zone and seven ambulances took the injured to hospital

He evaded questions on connection of JuD with the FIF, saying both the organizations were ‘different’.

“We have no political aims or agenda,” Rauf added.

Few metres away from the relief camp, a 34-year-old trader named Amjad Ali claimed to be FIF’s spokesman, confirmed that the organization certainly has links with the JuD.

“The old name was Jamaat-ud-Dawa; this is the new one.Most of my colleagues are from Jamaat-ud-Dawa,”Ali said. (ANI)

HRW asks Pak military to follow war laws

Lahore/Islamabad, May 13 (ANI): The Human Rights Watch has asked Pakistani military to avoid civilian casualties at any cost during its offensive against the Taliban.

“Beheadings and use of human shields by Taliban forces are not a blank cheque for the Pakistan Army. Winning the war, but also the peace, in Swat can only be achieved by minimizing civilian suffering,” the daily Times quoted HRW’s Asia director Brad Adams, as saying.

People fleeing the Swat valley into Mardan also confirmed the reports of the destruction of property in the military’s aerial bombardment. Local journalists have left the area, and the army is not permitting other reporters to enter. The area is under indefinite curfew.

IDPs told the HRV that the Taliban have mined parts of the valley, and were preventing residents from leaving Mingora.

The HRW also learnt that on May 10, the Taliban shot and killed Maulana Zahid Khan, prayer leader of the Nishat Chowk mosque, for objecting to the use of landmines and stockpiling of arms.

“The Taliban have perpetrated and continue to inflict heinous abuses upon the people of Swat and need to be held accountable. It is absolutely essential that this barbarism is halted and the rule of law re-established,” said Adams.

Power and telephone links to the rest of the country have been severed since April 28. The displaced people have also reported food shortages.

The agency asked the international agencies to provide immediate financial and logistical support to address the humanitarian crisis caused by the fighting.

The HRW also urged the US to ask Pakistan to follow the war rules.

“The United States has urged Pakistan to find a military solution to the Taliban. It must also send the message that the laws of war must be followed and civilians protected,” Adams said.

About half a million people in the NWFP had been displaced before the recent fighting began. This number is expected to double. (ANI)

1.3 million refugees flee northwestern Pakistan to escape fighting

Mardan, May 12 (ANI): The number of refugees fleeing from the Sawt Valley in northwestern Pakistan lifted to 1.3 million people after the Pakistani Army dropped commandos behind Taliban lines to end their resistance.

The army offensive has also unleashed a tide of refugees, whose plight could sap public support for the kind of sustained action against an increasingly interlinked array of Islamist extremists that the cash-strapped Pakistan’s Western backers want to see.

Including some half-million who fled fighting in the Bajur border region last year, an army officer said on Tuesday that the total number displaced in the northwest had risen to 1.3 million, The News reported.

The UN has registered 360,000 refugees from the latest fighting. About 30,000 are living in hot, tented camps established just south of the war zone.

Choppers inserted troops into the remote Peochar area in the upper reaches of the Swat Valley, a Pakistani Army statement said.

Officials identified it as the rear-base of an estimated 4,000 Taliban militants also entrenched in Swat’s main towns. It is seen as possible hiding place of Swat Taliban chief Maulana Fazlullah.

A military spokesman declined to give details of the Peochar assault, but a senior government official expressed optimism that the battle for Swat might prove short.

“The way they (militants) are being beaten, the way their recruits are fleeing, and the way the Pakistan army is using its strategy, God willing the operation will be completed very soon,” Interior Minister Rehman Malik said.

Pakistani authorities launched a full-scale assault on Swat and surrounding districts last week after the Taliban pushed out from the valley on the back of a now-defunct peace deal and extended their control to areas just 60 miles (100 kilometers) from the capital, Islamabad.

The military response has won praise from American officials, who insist Islamabad must eliminate safe havens used by militants to undermine the pro-Western governments in both Afghanistan and Pakistan. (ANI)

Sharif says Taliban militants do not deserve sympathy

Mardan (Pakistan), May 12 (ANI): Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz chief Nawaz Sharif has said the Taliban insurgent, who are responsible for the displacement of thousands from the war-torn Swat region, do not deserve any sympathy.

Urging everyone to come forward and support internally displaced persons (IDPs), Sharif stated that a handful elements could not destabilize Swat.

During his visit to the IDPs camps in Mardan, including Sheikh Yasin Town, Sheikh Shehzad Town and others, Sharif warned that the situation could become worse soon.

The Nation quoted the former Pakistan Prime Minister as saying that his party was committed to provide all possible assistance to the displaced people, and said the PML-N had already sent relief goods to for the displaced brethren from Buner, Dir and Swat.

During his stay, PML-N chief met migrant persons and inquired about their miseries. Local officials also briefed him about the facilities being provided in the camps.

He asked the federal government to announce funds for the dislocated people and also appealed to overseas Pakistanis to come forward for tackling the crisis.

Terming the Swat peace deal as a dead issue, Sharif declined to comment on it.

Addressing the press, his wife Kulsoom Nawaz said it was a high time for the whole nation to join hands in compensating the displaced families, adding that it was moral duty of the people to utilize their energies for the betterment of their brethren Muslims.

Replying to a question she expressed the view that some enemies of Pakistan were involved in the chaos and said the elements fighting and killing the Muslims were maligning the image of Islam. (ANI)

Pak Cabinet endorses operation against Taliban in Swat

Islamabad, May 9 (ANI): The Pakistan Cabinet on Saturday endorsed the ongoing military operation against the Taliban and other militants in the Malakand division of the country’s North West Frontier Province (NWFP).

In a media briefing following the cabinet meeting, Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani said the cabinet has decided to set up a PM fund for the affectees of military operation with a sum of Rs.200 million deposited.

Gilani said the directives had been issued to all Pakistani missions abroad to step up efforts for global assistance for Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs).

He also announced that the Benazir Income Support Program (BISP) and the ministry of health have been directed to take care of the IDPs.

He said a parliamentary delegation will be sent to variouis capital to project Pakistan’s viewpoint on prevailing situation.

The Prime Minister’s announcement came as the Pakistani Army continues to press ahead with a vigorous offensive against the Taliban militants who have taken control of a broad swath of territory northwest of the capital, sending tens of thousands of Pakistanis fleeing the fighting.

According to the New York Times, the exodus – by truck, car, foot and horse cart – has reached close to 200,000 people, forcing relief workers to erect new rows of tents in camps along the clotted road running south from the Swat Valley.

Relief officials said as many as 300,000 people were moving or preparing to flee.

The unfolding humanitarian crisis has prompted the Pakistani Army to move with caution against over 4000 Taliban militants in Swat, the epicenter of a power struggle over months between government forces and the militants.

Army officers said they were confronting the militants, as they have taken advantage of a peace agreement to seize control of much of the district and its government buildings.

At the military’s headquarters in Rawalpindi, Major General Athar Abbas made few claims of territorial progress on Friday. He said that helicopters strafed militants in Swat over the previous 24 hours, and that 140 militants and 7 Pakistani soldiers had been killed.

“They are on the run and trying to block the exodus of innocent civilians by preventing their departure through coercion,” Major General Abbas said.

Militant resistance in neighboring Buner, just 60 miles from Islamabad, has decreased considerably, Major General Abbas said. He said the military had lifted a curfew in Buner to allow civilians to escape toward Mardan and other areas. (ANI)

‘Taliban are like a balloon, you squeeze them over here and they pop up over there’

New Delhi , May 8 (ANI): Pakistan may have declared an all out war against the Taliban in the Swat and Malakand Division of the North West Frontier Province (NWFP), but many believe that it is almost impossible to contain the advancing militia, which they liken to a balloon that can not be stopped from popping up in different directions when subjected to pressure.

With Swat and Malakand already under the Taliban’s grip, fears are rife that it is almost a matter of time when Mardan, situated just 30 miles away from Swat, would cave in to the extremists.

Thousands of people have started fleeing Mardan, situated along the strategic Islamabad-Peshawar highway, fearing a probable siege by the Taliban.

“People are so nervous, they’re filled with great fear,” head of a local humanitarian group, Mardan Foundation, Yasir Ali Bacha said.

When informed that the Army has declared a war against the extremist and has vowed to flush them out of the region, Bacha said it was very difficult, a task next to impossible to suppress the insurgents.

“The Taliban are like a balloon. You squeeze them over here and they pop up over there,” the Los Angeles Times quoted Bacha, as saying.

Furthermore, as history suggests, even if the army is successful in quelling the insurgency in the region, they will soon leave and the Taliban will be back. (ANI)

22000 refugees stream into strife-hit NWFP hospital

Mardan (NWFP, Pakistan), May 7 (ANI): Over 22,000 refugees have asked for help in the Mardan area of Pakistan’s strife-hit North West Frontier Province alone, and most of them in the past 10 days.

Thousands of people are reported to have queued up outside a hospital in Mardan, reports the New York Times.

They piled into the hospital courtyard, then into the hospital itself, moving down the hallways, sitting on the floors. It was mostly men who came but women did, too, nearly all of them lost and bewildered and wondering what fate awaited them next.

Most of these refugees are fleeing battles that are now unfolding across a 50-mile arc northwest of Islamabad, even as the army, following months of indecision, has begun waging offensives against Taliban militants.

Government officials here say that about 40,000 people have already left and that a half million might ultimately be forced to run.

Refugees besieged the Mardan Tuberculosis Hospital, built by Danish missionaries in 1907, on Wednesday when government officials declared it a place where refugees could sign up for food and other help. By the end of the day, over 2,000 people had entered the premises.

Most of the refugees wear the gazes of men who longer control their own lives

One refugee said that Muslims don’t have much problem with the Taliban enforcing Islam, but are angered when the militants cut the throats of policemen.

No one is ready to criticize the Taliban directly. There is a palpable sense of fear that pervades among the refugees.

Some of the refugees milling about the tuberculosis hospital have raised doubts about the agenda of the Pakistani Army. Some echo the view that the Pakistani Army, or at least elements of it, had not merely failed to combat the militants, but had colluded to make them stronger. (ANI)

Tom Jones to make £1M by singing for less than an hour

London, May 7 (ANI): Tom Jones is all set to pocket a whopping 1million pounds by singing for less than an hour at the opening of Europe’s most expensive resort.

The 68-year-old star, along with Mariah Carey, 39, will get the mega sum to open Turkey’s 1billion pounds Mardan Palace in Antalya.

Owned by a Russian tycoon, the hotel has 560 rooms, including a 13,000 pounds-a-night suite.

Adorned with gold leaf and crystals, the hotel has a beach made from 9,000 tons of Egyptian sand.

Other stars who have been invited for the May 23 bash include Sharon Stone and Sir Paul McCartney. (ANI)

Taliban abduct 10 Pak soldiers in Malakand

Peshawar, May. 1 (ANI): Taliban militants have kidnapped 10 Pakistani soldiers from their local headquarters in Dir town, which borders the troubled Swat valley.

The abduction took place in the Upper Dir district of Malakand, where an ongoing military offensive is taking place against the Taliban.

The Dawn quoted Dir police chief Ijaz Ahmed as saying, that 60 Taliban militants stormed the local paramilitary headquarters and snatched 10 personnel around noon.

There were only a few personnel at the headquarters, because most were deployed in the field, Ahmed added.

Atiq-ur-Rehman, head of the district administration in Upper Dir, confirmed that more than 50 armed militants attacked the local Dir Levies paramilitary headquarters and abducted 10 personnel.

On Thursday, militants blew up a camp of the Frontier Constabulary and looted a huge cache of weapons as Pakistani Military continued bombing Taliban hideouts in Buner District.

Taliban militants also made two FC platoons surrender before allowing them to leave. This was the same platoon which had been besieged at the Jawar Camp on Wednesday night.

According to the sources, the militants took away an APC, besides a large haul of weapons before destroying the camp and a checkpoint. In a related incident, a police station was set on fire in Pir Baba town.

So far, the Taliban has taken control of Ambela Chowk, Pacha, Nawagai, Jungai, Swarai, Gagera, Dewana Baba, Pir Baba and Sultanwas, local residents said.

Security forces stepped up air strikes, and ground forces, backed by tanks and heavy artillery positioned in Rustam area of the Mardan district, attacked targets in Buner.

Planes bombed Karaker, Dermai pass, Darazai pass and Ambela. Militants have blown up two bridges near Ambela in a bid to block the movement of ground forces.

Hundreds of families, which include Afghan refugees, have been affected due to the latest offensive, and have left their homes.

In Daggar, people were facing shortage of food and other essentials items because of curfew. Troops had arrived in the town by helicopters on Wednesday.

Meanwhile, two children were injured in shelling by helicopters in Gul Abad as security forces continued their operation in parts of Lower Dir district. (ANI)

‘If you lose tribal areas, you lose Pakistan’

Lahore, Apr.26 (ANI): Former Pakistan High Commissioner to Britain Akbar Ahmad has said that it is very important for Islamabad to safeguard the tribal regions along the Afghan border because once this territory caves in to the hands of the extremists, the task to prevent the whole country from being toppled over by the insurgents would become much more difficult.

“If you lose them, then you lose Pakistan, followed by Afghanistan, The Daily Times quoted Ahmad, as saying.

Ahmed, however said that the ‘existential threat’ to Pakistan is overrated.

“A functioning political, civil and military structure exists in Pakistan which will prevent collapse of the state,” he said.

Ahmed said that Taliban’s invasion into Buner, just 60 miles away from the federal capital Islamabad, was not surprising, and that the bigger danger would be that of Mardan falling into the Taliban’s hand.

“The bigger danger is what happens in Mardan, the most fertile and heavily populated part of the NWFP. If Pakistan loses control of Peshawar, it would be checkmate for the Western troops there,” he added.

Ahmed also criticized the United States for continuously hammering Pakistan about its will and capability to tackle the issue. (ANI)

Taliban”s relentless march due to government”s impotence: NWFP official

Islamabad, Apr.23 (ANI): The Pakistan Government appears to have thrown in the towel insofar as attempting to control the surge of the Taliban.

Militants affiliated to the outfit have established effective control over Buner District, which is 70 miles from Islamabad, and a law enforcement official said it is just a matter of time as to when the Taliban will take charge of Pakistan.

“They take over Buner, then they roll into Mardan and that’s the end of the game,” the New York Times quoted a North-West Frontier Province law enforcement official as saying on condition of anonymity.

Buner, home to about one million people, is a gateway to Mardan, the second largest in North-West Frontier Province, after Peshawar.
Local non-governmental organizations have been ordered to leave, and their offices have been looted, they said. Pakistani television news channels showed Taliban fighters triumphantly carrying office equipment out of the offices of the organizations.

“They are everywhere. There is no resistance,” the paper quoted a resident of Daggar, Buner’s main city, as saying by telephone.

A local politician, Jamsher Khan, said that people were initially determined to resist the Taliban in Buner, but that they were discouraged by the deal the government struck with the Taliban in Swat.

“We felt stronger as long we thought the government was with us, but when the government showed weakness, we too stopped offering resistance to the Taliban,” he said by telephone. (ANI)

Pak Govt. will revisit Swat accord if law and order is affected: Gilani

Islamabad, Apr.22 (ANI): Pakistan Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani on Wednesday warned that his government could revisit the Swat accord reached between the NWFP Government and the Tehreek-i-Nifaz-i-Shariat Muhammadi (TNSM) chief Sufi Mohammad if the maintenance of law and order was becoming a problem in the area and in other parts of the province.

Stating that the decision to sign the Swat peace accord was backed by the collective wisdom of the nation, Gilani told reporters outside the Housing Ministry here that the Swat accord is contingent on the maintenance of law and order and can be revisited if peace is not restored.

He said that for the moment the mandate of the NWFP government, which sponsored the peace deal, has to be respected.

Referring to Sufi Mohammad’s statements against democracy, Gilani questioned the people’s indifference towards the dictators and martial laws of the past.

He further said the menace of terrorism can be contained only if all political parties play their due role both within and outside the parliament.

His remarks came as Buner fell into the hands of the Taliban. Militants belonging to the organization are patrolling markets, villages and towns in the district.

Led by Fateh Mohammad, the militants were asking local people, particularly youngsters, to join them in their campaign to enforce the Sharia.

Taliban militants, who had sneaked into the Gokand valley of Buner on April 4, were reported to be on a looting spree for the past five days. They have robbed government and NGO offices of vehicles, computers, printers, generators, edible oil containers, and food and nutrition packets.

Sources said that leading political figures, businessmen, NGO officials and Khawaneen, who had played a role in setting up a Lashkar to stop the Taliban from entering Buner, had been forced to move to other areas.

The Taliban have extended their control to almost all tehsils of the district and law-enforcement personnel remained confined to police stations and camps, the Dawn reported.

The Taliban, equipped with advanced weapons, were reported to be advancing towards border areas of Swabi, Malakand and Mardan, the hometown of NWFP Chief Minister Amir Haider Khan Hoti.

The sources said officials of the Frontier Constabulary camp in Jorh had asked people to vacate their homes in view of threats of an attack.

The militants have started digging trenches and setting up bunkers on heights in strategic towns of Gadezi, Salarzai, Osherai and other tehsils.

After occupying the Buner district and setting up their headquarters in the bungalow of businessman Syed Ahmed Khan (alias Fateh Khan) in Sultanwas, the militants started patrolling the streets and roads with no signs of law-enforcement personnel.

They have established checkposts on roads and are searching all passing vehicles. They have virtually established their writ in Buner region, once a stronghold of the Awami National Party. (ANI)