Turkish leaders mourn soldiers killed in PKK clash

VAN, Turkey, June 20 (Reuters) – Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said on Sunday Kurdish militants would “drown in their own blood” as he lead political and army chiefs in paying respects to troops killed in a clash with the rebels.

The fighting on Saturday, which marked a fresh escalation in the 26-year-old insurgency, killed 11 soldiers and 12 Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) guerrillas in the southeastern province of Hakkari, near the border with Iraq.

The soldiers’ coffins, draped in red-and-white Turkish flags, were laid out on tables for a ceremony at a military base in the city of Van where Erdogan and armed forces chief General Ilker Basbug listened to a Muslim prayer with other leaders.

“Today we will not make the traitors happy,” Erdogan said. “We will defend this ground heroically. Resolute against enemies, resolute against terrorism.”

“I say here very clearly, they will not win. They will gain nothing. They will melt away in their own darkness…they will drown in their own blood,” he said.

The death toll in Saturday’s clash was one of the highest in recent years in a conflict which has killed more than 40,000 people since the PKK took up arms against the state in 1984 with the aim of creating an ethnic homeland in the southeast.

A similarly deadly PKK attack on a military unit in Hakkari in 2007 was followed in early 2008 by a cross-border land offensive against rebel targets in northern Iraq.

After Saturday’s battle, the Turkish air force struck PKK targets in the mountains of northern Iraq, where several thousand of the rebels are based.

Separatist violence generally increases in southeast Turkey in the spring as the guerrillas cross the border from Iraq and there has been a notable escalation in the last two months.

Military sources said on Sunday one Turkish soldier was killed and one injured overnight in a Kurdish rebel attack on a military outpost in the southeastern province of Elazig.

They said the militants threw a hand grenade at the base before opening fire with rifles in the Palu district of Elazig.

The PKK, branded terrorists by Turkey, the United States and the European Union, said this month they had scrapped a year-old unilateral ceasefire and resumed attacks against Turkish forces because of military operations against them.

The ceasefire had come as Erdogan’s government worked on plans to boost Kurdish rights to help end the conflict. However, the process has faltered and it suffered a setback in December when the Constitutional Court banned the pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party (DTP) over links to the PKK. (Writing by Daren Butler)

One Turkish soldier killed in PKK attack

June 20 (Reuters) – One Turkish soldier was killed and one injured in a Kurdish rebel attack on a military outpost in the southeastern province of Elazig overnight, military sources said on Sunday.

The attack followed clashes on Saturday which killed 11 soldiers and 12 Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) guerrillas in the region, near the border with Iraq. The attacks marked an escalation in separatist violence in the region.

The sources said the militants threw a hand grenade at the base before opening fire with rifles in the Palu district of Elazig.

Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan was due to attend a ceremony in the southeastern city of Van on Sunday for the soldiers killed in Saturday’s clashes.

The PKK, branded terrorists by Turkey, the United States and the European Union, said this month they had scrapped a year-old unilateral ceasefire and resumed attacks against Turkish forces because of military operations against them.

More than 40,000 people have been killed in the conflict since the PKK launched its insurgency in 1984 with the aim of creating an ethnic homeland in the country’s southeast. (Writing by Daren Butler)

US turns down Pak’s request for drone technology

Islamabad, May 13 (ANI): The United States has reportedly rejected Pakistan’s fresh demands of handing over unmanned drone technology to it, highly placed sources in the Pakistan military have revealed, adding that Washington’s refusal could see Islamabad further delay its decision to launch a new war front against militants in North Waziristan.

“Apart from other issues, the issue pertaining to transfer of requisite drone technology could cause delay in Pakistan’s launching of military operation in North Waziristan”, The Nation quoted the sources, as saying.

Pakistan has already developed drones capable of reconnaissance missions, but it still lacks the technology to attach weapons to the indigenous drones so that it can carry out attacks against extremists in the country’s semi-autonomous tribal regions by it self.

The well-placed military sources said that it was imperative for the Obama Administration to provide the drone technology to enable it take action against extremists flourishing on the terror hot beds situated along the Afghan border.

“Drones with weapon systems are imperative to meet Pakistan’s pressing needs in tackling low intensity conflict such as terrorism especially with back up intelligence support from US satellite network on Pak- Afghan border” they said.

Islamabad has long been opposing the Central Investigation Agency (CIA) operated drone strikes in the restive tribal areas, saying they violate its sovereignty and fuel anti-American sentiments amongst the population, however, it is believed that Pakistan is privately sharing intelligence with the US about the insurgents and their hide-outs. (ANI)

Pak Army denies taking orders from US

Islamabad, May 12 (ANI): Reacting to statements made by senior military and civilian US officials, the Pakistan Army has said the military leadership does not take dictates from outside the country.

Commenting on a statement of US General Stanley McCrystal that he did not ask Chief of Pakistan’s Army Chief General Pervez Kayani for details regarding operation in North Waziristan, military sources said it clearly indicated that the military leadership does not take dictates from outside Pakistan.

Pakistan is a sovereign state and its military to military relations with other countries are based on equality and mutual interest, The Nation quoted the source, as saying.

“Therefore, there is no question that someone from US will dictate terms to us,” the sources added. (ANI)

Pak-US strategic talks going to be meaningless: Sources

Islamabad, Mar. 22 (ANI): The much-anticipated Pak-US strategic dialogue, scheduled to be held in Washington on March 24, would end without any major breakthrough from Pakistan’s perspective, as the US is unlikely to address Islamabad’s “national security concerns” regarding India, diplomatic sources have warned.

“The strategic dialogue process would be of no meaning, as the US authorities failed to address Pakistan’s national security concerns relating to India,” The Nation quoted military sources, as saying.

They added that the future of bilateral co-operation between Pakistan and the US would largely depend on Washington’s willingness to address Pakistan’s security concerns.

“The US has ostensibly taken position that it would not address Pakistan’s concerns relating to India, which shows the level sincerity being exhibited by the US officials in addressing Pakistan’s national security concerns”, a source said.

The source added that American lollypops like the Kerry Lugar Bill would not be enough to satisfy Pakistan and the US would have to recognise the country as a legitimate nuclear-armed state.

“If US can recognise India as a legitimate nuclear armed state, what stops the US authorities in according Pakistan the same concessions,” the source said.

The other issues Islamabad is likely to raise during the crucial dialogues are: the Indo-Afghan propaganda against Pakistan army and its intelligence agencies, India’s involvement in Balochsitan and its constant efforts to destabilise Pakistan through the Afghan border and Pak-Afghan border management. (ANI)

Pak-Afghan border disputes harming terror war: Sources

Islamabad, Mar 8(ANI): The lingering small-scale border disputes between Pakistan and Afghanistan are reportedly making it difficult for the security forces in the country to fight terrorism and eliminate cross-border movements.

Well-placed military sources have claimed that the US supported Pakistan-Afghan border management project was unlikely to achieve its objectives because of the border disputes between the two countries.

“It is very difficult to curb border crossings unless there are adequate security measures adopted on Afghan side of the border,” The Nation quoted the source, as saying.

They said that despite limited resources, Pakistan had set up a large number of security checkpoints at the Pak-Afghan border to tackle massive border crossings, but the menace of cross-border movements continued unabated.

“We have killed many militants when they were trying to enter Pakistani side of the border. But that is not a sustainable solution,” sources disclosed.

They maintained that US-led multination forces and troops from the National Afghan Army were often very helpful and cooperative, but they were too small in number to effectively man the border.

“Moreover the issues relating to territorial jurisdictions in terms of operational strategies are negatively impacting the war against terror,” the sources added.

The sources further informed these hindrances, if not resolved as early as possible, might also lead to strain the relations between Pakistan and Afghanistan in future, especially after the US-led multinational forces left the war-torn country. (ANI)

Prabhakaran was tortured before being killed, says report

New Delhi: Tamil Tigers leader Velupillai Prabhakaran was tortured by the Sri Lankan military before being killed, a leading human rights body said in a report released on Wednesday.

The University Teachers for Human Rights (UTHR) quoted high-level military sources as saying that Prabhakaran was tortured in the presence of “a Tamil government politician and a general”.

The torture, it said, took place probably at the headquarters of the army’s 53 Division, which battled the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) before crushing it last month.

“Several army sources have said that Prabhakaran’s (younger) 12-year-old son Balachandran was killed after capture. Our (sources) said that he was killed in front of his father,” said UTHR, which has always been critical of excesses both by the military and the LTTE.

“These sources added that this information is correct unless officers at the highest level are fibbing to one another.

“Our sources in addition to several others have said that all the LTTE persons remaining in the NFZ (No Fire Zone) were massacred,” it added in a 48-page report, an advance copy of which was made available to IANS.

Sri Lanka announced on May 18 that Prabhakaran, founder leader of the LTTE, was killed in a lonely coastal stretch in the northeastern district of Mullaitivu where the Tigers had massed their forces before going down.

His body was put on display, placed on a stretcher, the back of the head blown off.

Sri Lankan minister Vinayagamurthy Muralitharan alias Karuna, a former confidant of Prabhakaran, had said that the LTTE chief was shot dead with 18 of his guards.

Prabhakaran’s death marked the end of the LTTE’s dragging conflict that claimed 90,000 lives since 1983.

UTHR said: “Information seeping into the public domain from within the army points to capture or surrender, but the official responses dismissing this are a rehash of stories that public no longer finds credible. It is left to an impartial enquiry to answer this and related questions.”

UTHR pointed out that the government was evasive about the fate of Prabhakaran’s wife Mathivathani.

It quotes a brigadier as saying: “We had to look for Prabhakaran’s body because the world was interested in seeing it. But the body of his wife is not of any importance to us.”

The UTHR report said: “That would be the fate of the unknown hundreds of civilians and militants killed in those last days (of fighting).”

According to the report, among the LTTE leaders who surrendered to the army included Baby Subramaniam, a member of the group since 1976 and one of Prabhakaran’s oldest associates.

Others reportedly now in government custody included former eastern province political leader Karikalan, former spokesman Yogaratnam Yogi, former head of the LTTE international secretariat Lawrence Thilakar, political advisor V. Balakumar, Jaffna leader Ilamparithi and Trincomalee political leader Elilan.

Source: IANS

Taliban begin leaving Buner, Pakistani Army prepares for action

Islamabad, April 23 (IANS) Ending their standoff with the Pakistani government, the Taliban, which had occupied Buner in the country’s northwest just 100 km from this federal capital, have begun withdrawing from the area amid reports that the army is preparing to go into action against the militants.

The withdrawal followed talks between the government’s representative, Syed Mohammed Javed, and Sufi Mohammad, the Taliban-backed radical cleric who had brokered a controversial Feb 16 peace deal to impose Sharia laws in Swat, Buner and five other districts of the North West Frontier Province (NWFP), that is collectively known as the Malakand division, in return for the fundamentalist militants laying down their arms.

‘There has been a major breakthrough in the talks and Maulana Sufi Mohammad has agreed to travel to Buner and convince the Taliban to leave the area,’ DPA news agency quoted Javed, the divisional commissioner of Malakand, as telling reporters earlier Friday.

The cleric then visited Buner, following which the Taliban began pulling out and headed for their Swat headquarters.

The withdrawal notwithstanding, the Pakistani Army was mobilising and would be ready to go into action against the Taliban by Sunday, Dawn News channel said, quoting military sources.

Analysts here pointed out that should the army go into action, it would effectively nullify the peace accord. The army had been fighting the Taliban till early February, when the militants declared a truce to enable the peace accord be worked out.

On his part, Pakistani Army chief Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani said Friday the military fully backed the government in its fight against terrorism. Speaking at a meeting of the top brass at the General Headquarters in the adjacent garrison town of Rawalpindi, he said victory against militancy will be achieved by all means.

Emboldened by the peace deal, the Taliban had moved out of their Swat headquarters to occupy Buner, triggering international alarm and prompting US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to Wednesday accuse Pakistan of ‘abdicating’ to the militants.

On his part, Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani warned of action against Taliban if they didn’t abide by the Feb 16 peace deal. He added to that Friday, saying: ‘Whatever be their demands, we will do what is in the best interests of the nation.’

The reference was to the Taliban demand for setting up Darul Qazas or Islamic courts of appeal to hear challenges to verdicts handed down by the Qazi courts to be set up in Malakand under Sharia laws.

Sufi Mohammad has previously termed as un-Islamic the Peshawar High Court and the Supreme Court which would hear the appeals.

That the Pakistani Taliban was softening was evident Thursday when it indefinitely extended the April 23 deadline it had set for establishing the Darul Qazas. The Taliban also clarified that it wasn’t seeking to create a state within a state with its Darul Qaza demand.

Pak Government moves to tighten noose around Taliban

Peshawar, April 24 (ANI: In the wake of reports emanating from Pakistan that the North West Frontier Province government has made up its mind to launch a military operation in case the “intransigent” Taliban does not agree to vacate Buner district, cease patrolling in Swat and stop moving to other districts, the Taliban has started its withdrawal from Buner, which is located 62 miles from Islamabad.

The decision was discussed and later recommended as ‘second option’ after a high-level meeting at the Chief Minister’s House on Thursday with Chief Minister Ameer Haider Hoti in the chair.

The meeting was briefed about the Taliban build-up and their running over of some villages in Buner district, the armed patrolling of militants in Swat and the threats to the government and contradictory statements from banned Tehrik Nifaz Shariat-e-Muhammadi (TNSM) head Maulana Sufi Muhammad.

A Taliban spokesman on Friday confirmed that militants who had occupied Buner district had started withdrawing.

The withdrawal reportedly began soon after the PPP-led federal government threatened to take action against the militants.

The threat emerged after the outlawed Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), Tehrik-i-Nifaz-i-Shariat-Muhammadi (TNSM) and Malakand Commissioner signed an agreement.

Military sources said an operation against the militants in Swat was to start within 48 hours. A troop build-up in the region is ongoing, the Dawn and The News reported.

Earlier on Friday, Mullah Fazlullah ordered the withdrawal of his fighters from Buner.

Taliban spokesman Muslim Khan confirmed the news of the withdrawal to news agencies.

Over 100 paramilitaries are currently manning police stations in the district. Two platoons comprising 113 men were sent to the rugged region.

Rasheed Khan, a local police officer, was quoted as saying that he was expecting a total of eight platoons in Buner to neutralise the Taliban threat.

The Obama administration has already expressed that it is ‘extremely concerned’ over the events in Pakistan in wake of the controversial move to allow Sharia law in the Swat Valley.

The NWFP Government has agreed to convene a grand jirga of political parties to discuss the situation and evolve a consensus on the next steps to be taken. (ANI)

Pak Army committed to thwart militancy from the country: Kayani

Rawalpindi, Apr.24 (ANI): Worried by the increasing threat perception from the Taliban and questions being raised over the Army’s capability and willingness to thwart the challenge, Pakistan’s Chief of Army Staff (COAS), General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani has said that the military is fully prepared and committed to take on the challenge.

Addressing an operational meeting at the General Headquarters here, General Kayani said he is aware of the doubts being raised over the intent of the security forces of the country, and clarified that his forces would not hesitate to retaliate.

“Pakistan Army never has and never will hesitate to sacrifice, whatever it may take, to ensure safety and wellbeing of people of Pakistan and country’s territorial integrity,” The News quoted Kayani, as saying.

He said that the operational pause, meant to give the reconciliatory forces a chance, must not be taken for a concession to the militants.

General Kayani asserted that Pakistan is capable of dealing with every difficult situation, as it is run by a democratic set-up with full support of the people and the Army.

“A country of 170 million resilient people under a democratic dispensation, strongly supported by the Army, is capable of handling any crisis that it may confront,” he said.

Meanwhile, military sources have said that the Swat Valley could witness a military offensive against the militants in the next 48 hours.

NWFP Information Minister Iftikhar Hussain said that the government’s writ will be established at all costs in the region. (ANI)

French capture Afghan valley where 10 troops killed

UZBIN VALLEY, Afghanistan (Reuters) – French, Afghan and U.S. troops have captured a valley where 10 French soldiers were killed last year in the single biggest combat loss for foreign troops in Afghanistan since 2001.

The 800-strong force marched into the valley, a stronghold of pro-Taliban insurgent leader Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, to set up a base for the Afghan National Army.

U.S. planes thundered overhead, providing air support for a mission that hopes to curb the flow of insurgents toward the capital, Kabul, by cutting off a key mountain pass.

The Uzbin valley is an important transit point for insurgents traveling from Pakistan to the Kapisa valley, east of the main U.S. base at Bagram, according to military sources who declined to be named.

Violence in Afghanistan has reached its highest level since the U.S.-led and Afghan forces overthrew the Taliban government in 2001, despite a growing number of foreign troops, and has spread from the south and east to the outskirts of the capital.

Hekmatyar claimed responsibility for the attack on French forces from the 8th Parachute regiment in the pass last August.

“The threat is higher than usual in this mission,” a French lieutenant told his troops at the start of the mission.

“The presence of a warlord with about 15 fighters has been confirmed 3 km (1.5. miles) north of police station,” the lieutenant said, adding that reinforcements were expected that could bring the number of insurgents as high as 150.

However the column did not meet any resistance and arrived just before dark on a plateau at the heart of the valley, overlooking several small villages.

Soldiers began digging foxholes on the site of the base, which will be permanently occupied by 280 Soldiers of the Afghan National Army and have space for a company of French troops if needed.

(Writing by Emma Graham-Harrison; Editing by Richard Balmforth)

NATO trooper, 47 Taliban killed in Afghanistan

Kabul, April 5 (DPA) At least 47 suspected Taliban militants were killed in clases with the Afghan and international forces across Afghanistan, the military said Saturday.

In southern Helmand province, Afghan and US-led coalition forces killed 15 militants in an operation in Kajaki district Saturday, the US military said in statement.

The compounds where the militants were targeted were used for weapons and bomb-making, materials trafficking, and as a safe-haven for insurgent fighters moving between Helmand and Oruzgan provinces, it said.

Also in Kajaki district, the combined forces killed 20 other suspected insurgents in another operation Friday, a separate US military statement said.

The militants were killed by small arms fire and airstrike after they attacked the combined forces who were conducting a combat reconnaissance patrol in the areas, the statement said, adding that six Taliban fighting positions were also destroyed.

Kajaki district, where the largest hydro-power plant in the region is located, has witnessed a series of clashes between Taliban insurgents and Afghan forces backed by international troops.

In the past five days more than 100 insurgents were killed in separate clash in Kajaki and in the neighbouring province of Uruzgan, according to military sources.

‘Militants in the Kajaki district are known to be heavily involved in bomb-making, weapons smuggling, drug activity, direct attacks on Afghan and Coalition forces and intimidation of the local people,’ the military statement said.

Separately, Afghan and NATO-led ISAF forces killed 12 suspected insurgents during a gun-battle in Baraki Rajan area of Baraki Barak district of central Logar province, ISAF said in separate statement. A woman was also killed in the cross fire, it said.

The firefight began after the combined forces pinpointed a group of insurgents trying to plant a roadside bomb, it said, adding that the militants retreated to a compound and then the shootout started when they refused to surrender peacefully.

Five suspected militants were detained by joint forces, it said, but did not say if there were any casualties on the side of the combined forces.

Meanwhile, a trooper of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), who was injured in a roadside bomb blast in the southern region, died of his injuries, the ISAF said in a statement.

The statement did not reveal the nationality of the soldier, nor did it say where exactly in southern region the incident took place. Most of the soldiers serving under the banner of ISAF are from Canada, Britain, Netherlands and the US.

Around 170,000 Afghan security forces are also battling the resurgent Taliban alongside their international partners. The US, meanwhile, is planning to send 17,000 additional combat forces and 4,000 military advisors and trainers to Afghanistan this year to contain the insurgency.

With new US forces, there will be more than 90,000 international forces in Afghanistan deployed from 42 nations.

Foreign civilian killed in attack on British base in Iraq

Foreign civilian killed in attack on British base in Iraq Kirkuk – A foreign civilian was killed in a rocket attack on a British military base near the southern Iraqi city of Basra, local media reported Tuesday citing British military sources.

The nationality of the victim was not identified, the al-Arabiya news broadcaster reported.

Near the northern city of Kirkuk, two policemen were reported killed by an explosive device that went off near the convoy of Police Director Khalid Mohammed.

According to police, Mohammed was injured in the blast. (dpa)

Israeli Air Force kills Hamas minister

Jerusalem, Jan.16 (ANI): The Israeli Air Force has killed Hamas Interior Minister Said Siam, even as media reports said that a cease-fire between the two sides would begin soon.
According to the Jerusalem Post, Siam is the most senior Hamas political leader killed since Operation Cast Lead began on December 27. He died along with his brother Iad, his son, and Gen. Salah Abu Shrakh, head of the Hamas General Security Service.

The four were killed by an IAF strike on Iad Siam’s home in Jabalya.

Siam was the Hamas political echelon’s liaison with the group’s military wing, Izzadin Kassam, and was responsible for the various security apparatuses in the Strip, including the Hamas police and naval forces.

Officials said he was one of the Islamist movement’s more radical leaders and was a close associate of its Damascus-based chief Khaled Mashaal.

Meanwhile, IDF troops continue to fight with Hamas gunmen as they push deeper into Gaza City, taking up positions a few kilometers from downtown – the deepest push since the ground operation began on January 3.

According to military sources, IDF troops shot and killed close to 60 Hamas gunmen. The goal is to put pressure on Hamas,” a senior military source said.

Meanwhile, some 25 rockets hit the South, including two in Beersheba that wounded six people.

A defense official said Israel was trying to advance before the expected implementation of an Egyptian-mediated cease-fire in the coming days. (ANI)

Mastermind of Hamas’s rocket attacks killed

London, Jan 11 (ANI): The mastermind of Hamas’s long-range rocket attacks on Israel was killed yesterday in an airstrike, Israeli military sources have said.

Amir Mansi, an engineer who commanded cells responsible for firing Grad rockets supplied by Iran, died after coming under attack from a helicopter, The Times reported.

The Israeli army said he had been trying to fire mortar shells at their troops when he was targeted.

Mansi headed the Hamas military wing’s Gaza Strip rocket division and “played a big role in Grad rocket attacks on Israeli communities”, a military spokesman said.

He was killed after a Grad struck the Israeli town of Gedera, near the Tel Nof airbase, where nuclear weapons are believed to be stored, the paper said.

His death was disclosed as Israeli forces said they had surrounded Gaza City, putting nearly one million Palestinians under siege. Leaflets dropped by air warned that the 15-day-old offensive would be escalated.

More than 800 Palestinians and 13 Israelis have died in the conflict. Nine people, including two children, were killed in a Gaza garden on Saturday.

A 20,000-strong protest in central London ended in clashes with police last night.

Three officers were injured after coming under “sustained attack” near the Israeli embassy from protesters armed with baseball bats and placards, The Times reported. (ANI)