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)

Cornered Fazlullah will be nabbed dead or alive soon: NWFP Minister

Peshawar, Sep.15 (ANI): North West Frontier Province (NWFP) Information Minister Iftikhar Hussain has said that Swat Taliban chief Mullah Fazlullah would be nabbed dead or alive soon as the security forces have tightened the noose around him.

Hussain claimed that troops have surrounded the region where Fazlullah is believed to be hiding.

“Fazlullah has not yet surrendered and even if he does so, he will not be given amnesty and will be brought to justice,” Hussain told media persons here.

He said the extremists who are apprehended would be dealt according to the law and authorities would appeal to the court to award them the ‘harshest punishment possible’.

“The arrested Taliban will have to go through the judicial process and face the courts. They will not be given blanket amnesty,” the Daily Times quoted Fazlullah, as saying.

Responding to a question regarding reports of massive killings of innocent people by the security officials during the Swat military offensive, Hussain said: “That’s not true. That’s a lie”.

Hussain said normalcy was returning to the Valley and claimed that almost 95 percent area of Malakand division has been sanitized. (ANI)

TNSM chief Sufi Mohammad’s detention extended till September

Peshawar, Aug.30 (ANI): The Tehreek-e-Nifaz-e-Shariat-e-Muhammadi (TNSM) chief Sufi Mohammad’s detention has been extended by a month by the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) government.

According to sources, the Peshawar district coordination officer has extended Mohammad’s detention till September 27 under Section 3 of the Maintenance of Public Order (MPO).

Sufi was arrested along with his three sons Ziaullah, Rizwanullah and Hayatullah, from their residence in Peshawar on July 22.

They were later sent to prison under the provision of the Maintenance of Public Order law, which allows people to be detained without charges being filed against them, The Daily Times reports.

Sufi’s sons were released earlier this week after they challenged their detention in the Peshawar High Court, but were arrested again later by security officials, saying they were wanted in various other cases also. (ANI)

‘NWFP, FATA most unsafe region for journalists’

Peshawar, Aug.26 (ANI): Monday’s incident in which an Afghan journalist, Janullah Hashimzada, was brutally murdered in Jamrud sub-division of Khyber Agency has once again highlighted that the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) and the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) are the two most unsafe areas for journalists in the region.

About 12 journalists have been killed by extremists and many kidnapped since the Taliban established its writ in the region.

Musa Khan Khel, correspondent of The News and Geo News in Swat, was killed in February this year while returning home after covering a meeting of the banned Tanzim Nifaze Shariat-e-Mohammadi (TNSM).

Another journalist from the Valley, Mohammad Shoaib, was shot dead by the security forces for alleged violation of curfew. He was taking his daughter to hospital when security personnel opened fire at him.

Similarly several media persons, who were constantly bringing the brutalities of the Taliban to the fore, have been killed by militants over the last one year.

While the government and the Army claims that extremists have been forced to retreat and the region is now safe for thousands of displaced people to return, there still exists severe threats to the lives, properties and families of media persons in NWFP and FATA, The News reports. (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)

Several Taliban insurgents killed as PAF pound Mehsud’s stronghold in South Waziristan

Islamabad, July 13 (ANI): The Pakistan Air Force (PAF) continued to pound suspected Taliban hideouts in South Waziristan killing scores of militants.

According to sources, fighter jets bombarded terror training centers and other suspected installations of the Taliban in Maulvi Khan Serai, Old Serwekai and Berwand areas considered to be Baitullah Mehsud’s stronghold.

Residents said at least eight extremists were killed in an attack on a training centre in Maulvi Khan Serai on Sunday.

It is believed that the sudden surge in air strikes is primarily aimed at dismantling the Taliban before the launch of a full scale military offensive in the region.

Meanwhile, security forces have reportedly started moving further inwards in the North West Frontier Province (NWFP).

Troops backed by tanks were seen heading towards some areas in Bannu district and the adjacent Frontier Region where an operation had been carried out recently, The Dawn reports.

In yet another significant move, pro-government militant commander Turkistan Bhittani pulled his army out of the Tank city and has reportedly moved towards Jandola.

“Tank was practically controlled by Bhittani till Saturday. His people conducted raids in the city and outskirts in search of Baitullah’s people.

Soon after the arrival of army in Tank on Saturday, Bhittani’s people disappeared,” residents said, adding: “Baitullah’s men have either left Tank or gone underground.”

A statement issued by the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) claimed that security forces killed one insurgent and arrested 16 others in raids carried out on Saturday and Sunday. (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)

Pak “may be biting off too much” in launching Waziristan offensive without sealing Swat

Lahore, July 3 (ANI): The Pakistan Army may have been planning an all out assault against the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) chief Baitullah Mehsud in his stronghold of South Waziristan, but experts believe that the operation could result in further disappointment for the United States.

South Asia specialist at the Council on Foreign Relations, Daniel Markey, warned that Pakistan “may be biting off too much” by initiating an offensive against the Taliban chieftain in his stronghold without establishing total command in the North West Frontier Province (NWFP).

The Obama Administration wants to establish comprehensive control in Waziristan to counter Islamic extremis, but the objective is unlikely to be achieved.

“If Mehsud can be captured or killed, he would likely be replaced by Taliban leaders even more eager to fight US forces in Afghanistan,” said Markey.

The military offensive in the NWFP’s Swat Valley has forced the Taliban to retreat, but the government has not been able to establish its control in the region completely.

Moreover, questions are being raised over the chances of success of the military operation against Mehsud in Waziristan, as it had failed to suppress the Taliban on two earlier occasions.

The Army had initiated operations against the banned outfit in 2004 and again in 2007, but failed on both the occasions. (ANI)

Don’t fool people by claiming “premature”success in Swat operation : former PAF official

Islamabad, July 1 (ANI): While the Pakistan government has been claiming that the Swat military offensive has been successful and nearing its end, a former Pakistan Air Force (PAF) top official, Air Marshal (retired) Masood Akhter has raised questions over the claims by saying that people shouldn’t be fooled through such statements.

During a discussion on ‘Post-Swat Operation Outlook’ here, Akhter said people should not hope that the war against terrorism and the extremist threat would end within a few weeks.

“We shouldn’t befool people by saying war against militancy will end within a few weeks. The army is rendering sacrifices there and we must support it but it’ll take some time to completely defeat these elements,” The Daily Times quoted Akhter, as saying.

Akhter said the military offensive in the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) would continue until militants are rooted out from region, and added that it was in Pakistan’s interest to quell extremism.

“It’s our war because it threatens our vital national interest and our moderate way of life, and the non-state actors are also threatening all of us,” he added.

Akhter highlighted that the government’s work should not be limited to flushing out of the militants, but it should also cover the post-war scenario.

“The government should socially and ideologically isolate adversaries, sever links between local terrorists and international jihadis, and wean people away from religious extremism,” he said. (ANI)

Taliban demands six million rupees as ‘Jaziya’ from Hindus in NWFP

Islamabad, June 28 (ANI): The Taliban has demanded six million rupees as ‘Jaziya’ from Hindus residing in the Battagram district of the North West Frontier Province (NWFP).

According to sources, an unidentified Taliban insurgent called a Hindu leader of the region, Dr. Parkas, and asked him to collect six million rupees as ‘Jaziya’ from all the Hindus of the region.

However, officials have still not confirmed the reports, and said that they are investigating the matter.

“I doubt the call was made by Taliban as in some cases people use fake identity to settle personal scores,” The News quoted the DPO Battagram, Sohail Khalid, as saying.

Khalid revealed that similar threat calls have also been received by some Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs) and other people in the region. (ANI)

Fears over Pak minister’s company financing terror outfits grow stronger

Islamabad, June 27 (ANI): With the dismissal of the bail pleas of three employees of a forex company owned by the Minister of State for Kashmir Affairs and Northern Areas, Abdul Raziq, it seems that there could be something more sinister than what really meets the eye regarding the multi-billion rupees forex scam involving the minister’s company.

A Lahore court dismissed the bail applications of three employees who worked for the Malik Exchange Company, after they failed to appear before it despite repeated appeals.

The court has also directed the FIA to launch a special operation to nab the absconding employees, The News reports.

Meanwhile, the company, which has been charged of transferring huge amount of money to Pakistan’s restive regions supposedly to help the extremists, has filed a petition in the Peshawar High Court against the ongoing investigations regarding its nefarious links with banned terror outfits.

Intelligence agencies in Pakistan were shocked to find out that billions of rupees were disbursed to the country’s terror hit volatile regions through Raziq’s forex company.

According to the FIA, about 15 billion rupees were transferred from 21 secret bank accounts of Lahore to different regions of the country, and a major share of the money was sent to the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) over the last seven months, where the Pakistan Army has been engaged in a fearsome battle with the Taliban.

It may be noted that Raziq was elected a Senator as an independent candidate. He was apparently rewarded with the minister of state’s post, as he sided with the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) government at the Centre. Raziq himself belongs to the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA).

About 80 percent of the amount transferred by the three employees of the company was sent to Parachanar, Hangu and other troubled areas of the country, and 15 percent was sent to different areas of Kashmir. Only five percent was disbursed in areas within Lahore, sources said.

This trend of a large amount of money being sent to the restive regions had set alarm bells ringing for the concerned authorities.

“This not only a national issue as there are international dimension of this forex scam too. The outward diversion of these billions from the accounts of three employees of Malik Exchange is worrisome for me. It’s a matter of further inquiry at this stage if this money was also being sent to Afghanistan,” the DG FIA , Tariq Khosa, had said,

Raziq, however, has denied his company’s involvement in any illegal transaction.

A close aide of the minister also denied the charges, saying the allegations made against Raziq were totally without foundation.

“Those leveling the allegations have vested interests against the minister,” he said. (ANI)

Imran cannot run with the Taliban and disco in London at the same time : Pak editorial

Islamabad, June 27 (ANI): Cricketer-turned-politician, Imran Khan may have vehemently opposed the military offensive against the Taliban and other extremists in Pakistan’s North West Frontier Province (NWFP) terming the offensive as ‘suicidal’, but Khan apparently is unsure about what he really wants to achieve by showing a soft corner towards the extremists, an editorial in a leading Pakistan daily said.

Khan is of the view that the operation against the militants would not be successful, and said that it would only add to the country’s woes by creating more anarchy in the region, over which the government has already lost its control.

Khan had also criticized those who had raised fears about Pakistan’s Talibanisation, saying the term ‘Talibanisation’ has wrongly been projected.

He believes that the Taliban is not a part of some ideology, but it had only emerged as a reaction against the US invasion of Afghanistan, it said.

The Daily Times editorial highlighted that Khan certainly forgot that the Taliban did not emerge out of any reaction, but infact it was the “non-state actors” used by Pakistan to help the Kabul regime of Mullah Umar survive in the face of internal opposition.

All the Taliban chieftains, who are currently creating havoc in Pakistan are veterans of the Kabul conflict, and later turned against the US in 2001 after the world super-power decided to invade into their territory to seek revenge of the 9/11 incident, it went on to add.

Pakistan is suffering today because its strategies on Afghanistan have failed miserably in the past, the editorial said.

“Talibanisation is an ideological extension which rejects the Constitution of Pakistan and seeks to implement a tougher version, something which the people of Pakistan have rejected,” it added.

Rubbishing his claims of being in the know of things with regards to realities behind politics in Pakistan, it concluded by saying : “Imran Khan cannot run with the Taliban and disco in London at the same time.” (ANI)

Swat Taliban deputy commander’s death ‘unconfirmed’: NWFP minister

Peshawar, June26 (ANI): The North West Frontier Province (NWFP) Information Minister Iftikhar Hussain has said that reports about the death of Taliban Swat chapter deputy leader, Shah Durran, had not been confirmed yet.

“We’ve heard reports of Shah Durran’s death, and his consequent funeral and burial, but we cannot officially confirm it unless we have concrete evidence,” Hussain said.

Hussain also said that there were unconfirmed reports that the Taliban chief Maulana Fazlullah and the banned outfit’s spokesman, Muslim Khan, were killed in the military offensive.

He, however, said that the government was still trying to ascertain the truth behind the reports.

Hussain claimed that over 80 percent of Buner has been re-captured by the security forces, but added that the extremists were still offering stiff resistance to the military in certain areas of Chagarzai, Gagara, and Daggar.

Earlier, Hussain had said that Durran had been killed in the military offensive in Swat, and two senior Taliban commanders had sustained injuries.

Hussain also claimed that the security officials were searching for the body of Durran, who has reportedly been buried by his associates. (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)

Pak readying ‘exit policy’ for security forces stationed in NWFP

Peshawar, June 20 (ANI): The Pakistan government is preparing an’exit policy’ for the army currently stationed in the North West Frontier Province (NWFP), and engaged in a gruesome battle against the Taliban and other extremists.

Talking to media persons at Governor’s House here, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani said the government has allocated 25 billion rupees to enhance the capability of civil armed forces.

“We are preparing an exit policy for the army, and for this reason, the government has allocated 25 billion rupees for the capacity building of police, the Levies Force and the Frontier Corps,” The Daily Times quoted Gilani, as saying.

Gilani said the aid earmarked for the army would be spent over the next two years, and it would primarily be utilized for training and providing equipments needed for a sound civil administration in troubled regions.

When enquired about the government’s decision to initiate a war in Waziristan similar to the one in Swat, Gilani said the government would take action against the extremists wherever in the country they challenge its writ.

“The government has no intention of ordering an operation everywhere, but we will take action where the writ of the state is being challenged,” he said.

Gilani also rejected any conciliation with the Taliban, saying they (Taliban) must surrender to the security forces.

“The only way out for them is to surrender,” said Gilani. (ANI)

Swat Taliban chief Mullah Fazlullah killed, claims NWFP minister

Lahore, May 28 (ANI): Pakistan has claimed that Swat Taliban chief Mullah Fazlullah has been killed in a military operation being carried out in the SwatValley.

Announcing a whopping four million rupees bounty on Fazlullah, the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) Information Minister Iftikhar Hussain said the Army has confirmed the deaths of several top militant commanders.

The NWFP government has also announced cash reward for the arrest of 21 other Taliban commanders, The News reports.

It has also announced an additional bounty of four million rupees over arrest of Haji Muslim Khan, and five million rupees over arrest of the Taliban’s Naib Ameer Shah Doran. (ANI)

Women bearing brunt of Taliban’s expanded writ in Karachi

Karachi, May 27 (ANI): After establishing its control over a major part of the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) in Pakistan, the Taliban is looking to expand its control over other parts of the country , making women its prime target.

In an attempt to spread panic among the people, especially females, the Taliban is now threatening young women in Karachi.

There have been several incidents in the country’s most cosmopolitan city where the Taliban has told young women to cover themselves from head to toe.

The warnings have left upper- and middle-class women in a state of panic as they have enjoyed Karachi’s liberal environment for years, says the Christian Science Monitor reports.

In a recent incident, Noor, a college student, was threatened by two bearded men for wearing jeans.

“They told us to have shame and only leave the house with our heads covered.Before we could say anything, they added that no one would be able to keep us safe if we didn’t obey,” Noor said.

Since then, Noor has stopped wearing jeans.

The incident is certainly not an isolated example of the alarm bells ringing about the ‘Talibanization’ of Karachi.

The extremists have also threatened private, co-educational institutions, asking them to close down or separate their students.

School administrations too have received letters signed by the Taliban.

It is also learnt that the top Taliban commanders based in Quetta have relocated to Karachi to avoid drone attacks in their stronghold in the northwest tribal regions, and the recent arrest of Badshah Deen, the right-hand man of Pakistan Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud, from Karachi’s Sachal area confirms that extremists are slowly establishing their control over the city.

Officials have also admitted that after NWFP, the Taliban is expanding its network in Karachi.(ANI)

Taliban agrees to pull out from some parts of Lower Dir in NWFP

Islamabad, May 22 (ANI): The Taliban has agreed to move out of the Asbanr and Gulabad areas of the Lower Dir region of the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) within the next two days.

Sources said the Taliban has assured a local jirga in Adenzai tehsil of Lower Dir district that they would pull out of the region soon.

Sultanat Yar of Jamaat-i-Islami, Khurshid Ali of Pakistan People’s Party and tribal leaders Umar Bacha and Shamsul Qamar attended the jirga, the Dawn reports.

The Taliban has agreed to leave the region without any condition, after the jirga urged them to pull back, as hundreds of people were rendered homeless and scores of innocent civilians were killed because of their activities in the region.

“They did not set any condition for pulling out,” a member of the jirga said.

The jirga also urged the government to stop the military offensive and ask the troops to pull out of the region as soon as possible. (ANI)