Yemeni tribe, Shi’ite rebels fight as truce broken

SANAA, July 25 (Reuters) – Fighting broke out on Sunday between a pro-government tribe and Shi’ite rebels in Yemen, hours after the two sides agreed to a truce following battles last week which threatened to re-ignite a civil war.

Tribal leader Sheikh Saghir Ibn Aziz blamed the rebels, named Houthis after the clan name of their leaders, for the renewed fighting after clashes killed up to 70 people last week.

“The Houthis did not respect the agreement and attacked us. We responded,” he told Reuters by telephone.

Al Arabiya television said the latest fighting, which it said killed four rebels, broke out after the tribesmen did not withdraw from a position as demanded by the rebels, who said it was part of the truce accords.

There was no immediate comment by the rebels on their website.

Last week’s fighting, in which government forces were also involved, was the bloodiest in the north since a truce in February ended a war between the state and the rebels that has raged intermittently since 2004 and last year drew in neighbouring Saudi Arabia.

Earlier on Sunday, Yemen’s President Ali Abdullah Saleh called for a permanent end to fighting in the north, especially in Saada province, the rebels’ stronghold.

“Six wars are enough. Yes to security, stability and peace in Saada. No to the latest war,” Saleh said in remarks carried by regional television stations.

Yemen’s Western and Saudi allies want Sanaa, also trying to quell southern separatism, to resolve domestic conflicts such as the northern war so it can focus on fighting a resurgent regional arm of al Qaeda, seen as a bigger international threat.

Tension between the rebels and the Ibn Aziz tribe, from the same Zaidi sect of Shi’ite Islam but which sided with the state during the civil war, has been growing for months.

The tension exploded into violence after rebels attacked Sheikh Saghir’s home in early July, killing three of his followers. Clashes broke out again last week, prompting government forces to intervene to assist the tribe. Five government soldiers were among those killed.

Qatar has offered to revive a 2008 peace deal it brokered between Sanaa and the rebels to end the war, which displaced 350,000 people. (Reporting by Mohammed Ghobari; Writing by Cynthia Johnston and Firouz Sedarat)

Machine gun and mortar battle in Yemen kills 19

July 22 (Reuters) – A mortar and machine gun battle between Shi’ite rebels and pro-government tribesmen in north Yemen drew in government forces overnight, killing at least 19 people and complicating efforts to cement a truce, local officials said.

“Yesterday night there were very violent confrontations. Nine soldiers and pro-government tribesmen were killed as well as about 10 Houthis (rebels),” a local official in the flashpoint Harf Sufyan region told Reuters on Thursday.

“It remains very tense after the failure of efforts to stop the fighting between the two sides,” he added. (Reporting by Mohammed Ghobari; Writing by Cynthia Johnston; Editing by Andrew Callus)

Afghan Taliban kill 11 Pakistani travellers – official

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

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

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

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

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

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

Pakistan detains German man near militant stronghold

Pakistan, June 22 (Reuters) – Pakistani security forces have detained a German man clad in a head-to-toe veil in the northwest as he was being driven from the militant bastion of North Waziristan on the Afghan border, police said on Tuesday.

The man, in his mid-20s, was caught at a security checkpost on the border between North Waziristan and Bannu city on Monday, Shafqat Khan, a senior police officer in Bannu, told Reuters.

“He was in a car with two tribesmen, one of them was also wearing a burqa. They were carrying a girl in a bid to pretend they’re a tribal family,” he said.

Khan said the German was being interrogated by a joint investigation team.

Khan did not give further details but he suspected the German man could have links with militants in the the lawless region.

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(For more stories on Afghanistan and Pakistan, click on [ID:nAFPAK])

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North Waziristan is a known stronghold for al Qaeda and Taliban militants, and the United States has been pushing Pakistan to launch a military offensive there. But the Pakistan army says it lacks resources to do it.

Last week, police in northern Chitral detained an American for allegedly trying to sneak into Afghanistan to hunt and kill al Qaeda kingpin Osama bin Laden.

Separately, Pakistani warplanes bombed militant positions in the northwestern region of Orakzai on Tuesday, killing eight militants and destroying several hideouts, security officials said.

(Additional reporting and writing by Kamran Haider; Editing by Chris Allbritton and Sanjeev Miglani)

(For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here)

Sudan nomads attack flashpoint village-administrator

June 13 (Reuters) – Arab tribesmen attacked a village in Sudan’s highly charged Abyei border region, killing one civilian and injuring another, the territory’s chief administrator said on Sunday.

Tensions are mounting in Abyei ahead of a referendum due in January 2011 on whether the territory should join south Sudan — an oil-producing region that is preparing for a separate plebiscite on whether to split off as an independent country.

Abyei, which is close to key oil fields and includes rich pasture land, is used by two main groups, the Dinka Ngok, linked to south Sudan’s Dinka people, and nomadic Misseriya Arabs, associated with the north.

Some Misseriya leaders fear they would lose their grazing grounds if Abyei moved to the south — even though the southern government has promised to let nomads cross borders.

“There was a Misseriya attack on the village of Maker, 12 miles (19 km) north of Abyei town on Saturday morning,” Abyei chief administrator of Deng Arop Kuol said.

“They attacked it killing one civilian and wounding another man from the village … We feel it is politically motivated to cause disruption.”

Kuol said the attack on the Dinka Ngok village had come as a surprise as relations had been good in recent weeks.

A U.N. official confirmed the attack had taken place but said the identity and motivation of the attackers were unclear.

Both south Sudan’s independence referendum and the Abyei vote were promised in the 2005 peace deal that ended more than two decades of north-south civil war.

Northern and southern soldiers clashed in Abyei town in May 2008 and analysts fear the territory could be a flashpoint of trouble after the votes.

Seven months ahead of the referendums, leaders from both sides have still not agreed on the position of their shared border, or named commissions to organise the voting. (Reporting by Andrew Heavens)

FEATURE – Sorely missed: Foreign tourists shy away from Yemen

The ancient alleys of Sanaa are still bustling. Shoppers mingle, traders peddle their wares and children play in the street, all to a cacophonous backdrop of roaring motorbikes and honking cars.

But there is one thing that is almost entirely missing from the oldest and most picturesque part of the Yemeni capital: tourists.

“We have had no clients for a year and a half,” said Madeleine Schaffner from France, who, together with her Yemeni husband, has been running a tour operator for the past 12 years.

This week’s kidnapping of two U.S. tourists by armed tribesmen near the capital was another nail in the coffin for the badly needed tourist industry of this impoverished country, said tour guide Mohammad al-Hubaishi.

“That’s it — 99 percent of tourism has stopped as a result of the kidnappings,” he said.

“The government needs to take harsher measures. If they were in place, then nobody would do it.”

Hubaishi, who has worked in tourism for the last 20 years, was himself kidnapped in Shabwa in 2006, when he was held hostage along with French tourists for 16 days — long by Yemeni standards, where most abductions last just a few days.

Yemen, bordering the world’s top oil exporter Saudi Arabia, surged to the forefront of Western security concerns after the Yemeni arm of al Qaeda claimed responsibility for an attempt to bomb a U.S.-bound plane in December.

Yemen is also witnessing rising violence between government forces and southern separatists; and a truce reached in February with northern Shi’ite rebels who have been fighting the government on and off since 2004 is looking fragile.

Kidnappings of foreigners and Yemenis are common in Yemen, where hostages are often used by disgruntled tribesmen to press demands on authorities.

Most kidnappings are resolved within days with no harm to the hostages, but some have had violent endings. In an unexplained incident, a group of nine foreigners were kidnapped in the northern region of Saada last June, of which three women — two Germans and a South Korean — were later found dead.

YEMEN LOVERS STAY AWAY

Yemen’s struggling economy is badly in need of revenues from tourism, which contribute 3 percent of GDP. The country offers visitors rich historical sites, rugged mountains and pristine beaches. But a number of violent incidents have scared many off.

In 2008, an al Qaeda suicide bomber killed four south Korean tourists and their Yemeni guides while visiting Shibam, a UNESCO World Heritage site dubbed the “Manhattan of the Desert” for its 16th-century tower houses rising up to 16 storeys high.

In January 2008, gunmen killed two Belgian women; and in July 2007, a car bomb killed seven Spaniards in Maarib, a region to the east of the capital.

Some of the European embassies in Sanaa tried to keep travel advice on Yemen positive for as long as possible, a Western diplomat said, but the deteriorating security situation had eventually made this impossible.

There are still plenty of foreigners in Sanaa, but most are residents who work in Yemen. The visitors who come often have professional or family reasons for their trip.

“I am never scared, I don’t know why, but I am never scared,” said Segolene Belier, who was on her fourth visit to Yemen and planning to set up a private aid organisation.

“I live in Paris, I tell myself that I can be blown up there also,” she said, sipping tea in a cafe on the edge of Sanaa’s old city.

Tighter visa restrictions for visitors to Yemen, imposed after it was revealed that the Nigerian behind the December attempt to blow up a plane bound for Detroit had visited Yemen not long before, significantly cut the number of tourists.

Britons were among those who could previously get visas on arrival, but must now apply at Yemeni embassies at home.

“At the beginning it was affecting us. All the agencies and the institutions — they were not ready for this procedure. Now it is getting easier,” said Soraya Abu Monassar, general manager of the Burj Al Salam, a popular hotel housed in one of the old city’s iconic tall buildings.

She said most of the clients of her hotel, which boasts spectacular views of Sanaa and the surrounding mountains, were professionals working for government and non-government organisations.

For Yemen, where more than 40 percent of the 23 million population live on under $2 a day and more than half the young men are out of work, the loss of revenue to an industry estimated to be worth $900 million last year is another huge blow.

“This is a very, very big problem for Yemen. A lot of people work in tourism, it’s one of the only jobs here,” Schaffner said. Asked what she can do to save her business, she shrugged and said: “We wait. We wait.”

Air strike kills Yemen mediator, tribes hit pipeline

An air strike in Yemen targetting al Qaeda missed its mark and killed a mediator, prompting members of his tribe to blow up an oil pipeline in clashes that followed, a provincial official said on Tuesday.

Separately, a Yemeni government official said a U.S. couple taken hostage by tribesmen were released on Tuesday, a day after they were seized near the capital Sanaa.

A Yemeni website aligned with the opposition said the strike was carried out by a drone, a weapon that Yemen is not believed to have. U.S. forces have used drones in the past in Yemen, but a U.S. diplomat declined to say if Washington was involved.

The strike could heighten anti-U.S. sentiment and broaden al Qaeda’s appeal among powerful Yemeni tribes, threatening efforts to stabilise a country neighbouring oil power Saudi Arabia and busy international shipping lanes, analysts said.

The botched bombing of a U.S. airliner on Dec. 25, claimed by al Qaeda’s Yemen-based wing, spurred Washington to step up security help to President Ali Abdullah Saleh’s government, which faces grave challenges apart from militancy.

The mediator, seeking to persuade al Qaeda members to surrender, was killed in the pre-dawn strike on his car in the mountainous Maarib province that also killed three other people.

“Jaber al-Shabwani, the deputy governor of Maarib, was killed with a number of his relatives and travel companions in an air strike targeting the Wadi Obeida area, where al Qaeda elements are present,” the provincial official said.

U.S. COUPLE RELEASED

On Monday, armed tribesmen kidnapped two U.S. tourists near Sanaa and demanded the release of a relative jailed over a land dispute that was before the courts.

“The Americans have arrived at the interior ministry building in Sanaa,” a government official told Reuters.

Authorities had set up road blocks and arrested dozens of members of the kidnappers’ families to pressure the abductors.

Another official told Reuters that authorities had promised to look into the kidnappers’ demand.

The air strike provoked clashes between the army and members of Shabwani’s tribe, and the tribesmen attacked the pipeline that ferries crude oil from Maarib, east of the capital Sanaa, to the Red Sea coast, the official said.

Clashes with the mediator’s tribe spread from the countryside to Maarib town, where dozens of tribal gunmen opened fire on government buildings, a local official said.

Security officials said angry tribes blocked a main road to Sanaa, stopping trucks carrying cooking gas and petrol.

“Many of the tribes have become increasingly hostile to the Saleh government, and AQAP (al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula) have done a better job than some al Qaeda affiliates elsewhere in making inroads into the local population,” said Shadi Hamid, a deputy director at the Brookings Doha Center.

“There is more of an indigenous character to the group, more of a Yemeni character. So it would not be surprising if this incident feeds into more latent support for AQAP,” he added.

The United States and Saudi Arabia want Yemen, which is trying to end a conflict with Shi’ite rebels in the north while separatist sentiment bubbles over in the south, to focus its efforts on fighting al Qaeda, seen as a greater global threat.

Yemen declared war on al Qaeda after the failed December attack, stepping up air strikes on the group, which has vowed attacks against Western targets in the oil-exporting region.

A statement from a top Yemeni security body expressed sorrow for Shabwani’s death and called him a martyr, without saying who carried out the strike or what type of aircraft was used.

A U.S. diplomat would not discuss the attack. Washington backed Sanaa’s fight against al Qaeda by training Yemeni forces, sharing information and providing equipment, and recognised al Qaeda in Yemen was a threat to both countries, he said.

“So we are working together. The Yemeni forces always take the lead in operations carried out in Yemen using some of that support that we have provided for them through training and information sharing,” the diplomat said.

Asked directly if the United States was involved in the strike, he said: “If you want operation-specific details you need to contact the Yemeni government.”

Yemen and U.S. military targeted al Qaeda figures in Yemen, where Osama bin Laden’s father was born, after the September 11, 2001, attacks. A CIA drone fired a missile that killed al Qaeda’s leader in Yemen in 2002.

The latest strike had likely intended to hit Ayed al-Shabwani, an al Qaeda leader whose farm in Maarib province was the target of a strike in January, the provincial official said. Shabwani is a relative of the mediator who was killed.

Shipping companies said there was no impact on exports from the attack on the pipeline, which ferries crude to the Ras Isa offshore export terminal. Authorities could not immediately reach the affected area.

(Additional reporting by William Maclean in London, and Simon Webb and Luke Pachymuthu in Dubai; Writing by Cynthia Johnston and Firouz Sedarat; editing by Ralph Boulton)

Airstrike kills Yemen mediator, tribes hit pipeline

An airstrike in Yemen targeting al Qaeda missed its mark on Tuesday and killed a mediator by mistake, prompting members of his tribe to blow up a crude oil pipeline in clashes that followed, a provincial official said.

The mediator, who had been trying to persuade members of the global militant group to surrender, was killed instantly in a pre-dawn strike on his car in Yemen’s mountainous Maarib province that also killed three other people.

“Jaber al-Shabwani, the deputy governor of Maarib, was killed with a number of his relatives and travel companions in an airstrike targeting the Wadi Obeida area, where al Qaeda elements are present,” said the official, a member of a local council in Maarib, who declined to be named.

“The deputy governor was on a mediation mission to persuade al Qaeda elements to hand themselves over to the authorities, but it seems that the airstrike missed its target and struck his car, killing him instantly in addition to three companions,” he added. Two others were wounded.

The strike provoked clashes between the army and members of Shabwani’s tribe, and the tribesmen attacked the pipeline that ferries crude oil from Maarib, east of the capital Sanaa, to the Red Sea coast, the official said.

He said the pipeline attack was “in response to the killing of the deputy governor of Maarib province”.

Yemen, which borders the world’s top oil exporter Saudi Arabia, moved to the forefront of Western security concerns after al Qaeda’s Yemen-based regional arm claimed responsibility for a failed attempt to bomb a U.S.-bound plane in December.

The United States and Saudi Arabia want Yemen, which is trying to end a conflict with Shi’ite rebels in the north while separatist sentiment bubbles over in the south, to focus its efforts on fighting al Qaeda, which they see as a greater global threat.

NO EXPORT DISRUPTION

Shipping companies said there was no impact on exports from the attack on the pipeline, which ferries crude to the Ras Isa offshore export terminal. Authorities could not immediately reach the affected area.

“There has been no hindrance to exports,” one shipper said. Exports from Ras Isa are about 30,000 barrels per day. The terminal exports Marib Light crude.

Clashes with the tribe, which began in the countryside, spread to Maarib town, where dozens of tribal gunmen opened fire on government buildings, and the army was returning fire. At least seven people were injured, a local official said.

“Units from the army are now fighting the deputy governor’s tribe. It’s turned into a ground battle. There are ground operations,” a Maarib area resident reached by telephone from London said.

Tuesday’s air strike had intended to target Ayed al-Shabwani, an al Qaeda leader whose farm in Maarib province was the target of a similar strike in January, the provincial official said. Shabwani is a relative of the mediator killed in the strike.

(Reporting by Mohammed Ghobari in Sanaa, William Maclean in London, and Simon Webb and Luke Pachymuthu in Dubai; Writing by Cynthia Johnston; editing by Myra MacDonald)

Taliban guns down outspoken Afghan tribal chief

Kandahar, Apr 29 (ANI): Taliban militia have gunned down Afghan tribal chief Abdul Rahman in Kandahar.

Rahman had attended a tribal shura a few days prior to his death. The gathering of 1,500 chieftains and tribesmen had President Karzai in attendance.

Rahman raised several pertinent questions with regard to the security situation and the threats posed by both the government and Taliban.

At the shura in Kandahar, the elders made it clear they thought the Karzai Government was as much a problem as the militants, who have grown in strength in the region in recent years reports the BBC.

Rahman had become widely known in Afghanistan after telling President Karzai that those who spoke out against the Taliban risked being killed.

The Taliban are blamed for a spate of killings in Kandahar province ahead of a planned Nato-led assault this summer. (ANI)

Barbaric Taliban butcher four school kids in Pakistan

Peshawar, Sep. 8 (ANI): At least four children were killed and three others injured in a militant attack in Orakzai Agency on Tuesday morning.

Sources said militants opened indiscriminate fire at school going kids in Kalaya, capital of Orakzai, killing four children on the spot while injuring many others.

Eye witnesses said extremists sprayed bullets with automatic weapons.

According to sources, the students were apparently attacked because they belonged to the Shia community.

‘They opened fire on the students and we have reports of four deaths,’ said an official Khaista Gul.

Two tribesmen belonging to Taliban faction of Aslam Farouqui and one from the rival side were also injured in the crossfire, The Dawn reports.

Farouqi is believed to be a close aide of the Taliban chief Mullah Omar. (ANI)

KNP to hold Black Day on Oct.22

London, Sep.8 (ANI): The Supreme Council of the KNP held an important meeting in Luton on September 6, which was presided by the party Chairman Abbas Butt. The meeting discussed and analysed the current situation of the Kashmiri struggle and made important decisions.

The Supreme Council strongly condemned the government of Pakistan’s latest attempts to grab territory which is legal part of State of Jammu and Kashmir. The SC said Pakistani governments have never been sincere with the cause of Kashmir and always have formulated policies to snatch Kashmir; and have deliberately deprived people of their fundamental human rights.

The SC said people of Gilgit Baltistan deserve to have their basic human rights which have been denied since 1947; but no one should be allowed to implement their imperialist designs in name of giving rights to people of the region. The KNP leaders said, if Pakistani authorities were sincere they could have discussed the issue with the people of the region and given these rights without making the region a ‘province’ of Pakistan.

PPP government claims to advance rights of people and democracy, but their policies are designed to deprive people of basic rights and advance undemocratic and unconstitutional practises. They tried to make Pakistani Administered Kashmir a province after the Shimla Pact and they plan to make Gilgit Baltistan a province and pave way for division of Jammu and Kashmir.

KNP leaders said some people of Jammu and Kashmir hold Black Day on 27th October, as that is the day when Indian army landed in Kashmir. KNP leaders said in our opinion their wisdom is misdirected. We have to look at the root cause. Indian army came after the tribal invasion and subsequent ‘Provisional Accession’.

KNP Supreme Council said, ‘It was the Pakistani tribesmen supported by the Pakistani government of the time which violated the Standstill Agreement and invaded parts of the State territory. It was these tribesmen which contravened the State sovereignty and killed thousands of innocent Kashmiri men and women. It was because of this unprovoked and unjustified attack on our sovereignty which seriously threatened life, honour and property of people that the Maharaja was compelled to seek help from India.

KNP leaders said we have serious issues with India on their Kashmir policy, as we believe Kashmir is not their internal part; but as for the Black Day is concerned we should have Black Day on 22 October because this is the day when our troubles and miseries started.

KNP SC has decided to take a lead on this matter and hold a BLACK DAY on 22 October; and in this regard various responsibilities have been given to Dr Shabir Choudhry and Nawaz Majid who will liaise with other like minded people and parties. The meeting was addressed by ZubairAnsari, Nazam Bhatti, Nawaz Majid, Asim Mirza, Abbas Butt and Dr Shabir Choudhry.

Earlier KNP held an Iftar Party in which more than eighty people were present; among them were leaders and political activists of various Kashmiri parties who spoke against the new package for Gilgit and Baltistan and condemned designs of Pakistani government. In the meeting pro Pakistan and nationalist leaders were present, and they all strongly spoke against this new package and demanded that it must be taken back.

A unanimous resolution was passed which strongly criticised the new package and demanded from government of Pakistan to withdraw it as it will seriously damage our struggle for right of self determination. The resolution fully supported fundamental rights of people of Gilgit Baltistan; but added that the State of Jammu and Kashmir is one political entity and it must not be divided. (ANI)

15 more Taliban extremists killed in Pak army offensive, drone strike

Peshawar, Sep.8 (ANI): At least 15 more Taliban extremists were killed in Pakistan military’s counter insurgency operation and a drone attack in the Khyber and North Waziristan areas.

While 10 militants were killed in the Tirah valley during anti-militancy offensive, a US drone targeted an alleged militant hideout and a madrassa in Machikhel village in North Waziristan killing five persons on the spot besides injuring six others, The Daily Times reports

“The strike targetted a madrassa and an adjoining house in Machikhel village in North Waziristan. At least five people were killed and six others injured,” a senior security official said.

Local tribesmen have cordoned off area and are searching for bodies, sources said.

People have started leaving their homes amid the fresh military operation against the extremists in the region.

According to an estimate 30,000 people have left Khyber Agency for safer places since Sunday.

“Thousands have fled the military operation in Khyber. Around 30,000 people have arrived in Peshawar,” said Sahibzada Mohammad Anis, administrative chief in Peshawar. (ANI)

Four tribals die after eating mango kernel in Orissa

Koratpur (Orissa), Sep 4 (ANI): Four tribesmen died in Koraput district of Orissa after they were forced to eat a soup made of mango kernel recently.

Preliminary medical reports said the soup was bacteria-infected and the tribals, who belong to Narayanpatna block, died of food poisoning.

“My wife and two of my grand daughters died. They consumed mango kernel and wild leaves, as we didn’t have anything else to eat. Most of the times we consume this because we do not have rice at our homes,” said Balsi Suika, relative of the dead.

However, Surya Narayan Patra, the state revenue minister said that the tribals were provided with rice, but they often keep it for a number of days, leading to food poisoning.

“The habit of tribals is to keep cooked rice for four to five days which actually gets spoilt. In recent cases the reports from doctors confirm that they kept the food for a longer period of time. We have directed the extension officer and the collector to propagate them about it in those areas,” said Patra. (ANI)

South Waziristan tribe agrees to abide by 2007 peace accord

Islamabad, July 3 (ANI): The Ahmadzai Wazir tribe has decided that it would abide by the peace accord inked with the government in 2007, and would not attack the troops stationed in South Waziristan.

The decision was taken during a ‘jirga’ in Wana, where about 120 tribal elders met the Political Agent of the region, Syed Shahab Ali Shah.

Earlier, a group of tribal elders had met the Taliban commander Maulvi Nazir, and officials claimed that the talks were ‘successful’.

Members of the ‘jirga’ claimed that Nazir has agreed to support the peace deal in view of the situation in South Waziristan and work for peace in the region.

However, sources privy to Nazir rejected reports of any such meeting, The Dawn reports.

They said the government was trying to ‘isolate’ the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) chief Baitullah Mehsud with the help of Ahmadzai Wazir jirga.

Meanwhile, the administration has released six tribesmen as a ‘goodwill’ gesture on the request of the ‘jirga’. (ANI)

Pak Army rules out offensive in North Waziristan

Peshawar, July 2 (ANI): The Pakistan Army has ruled out any possibility of a military offensive against the Taliban in North Waziristan.

The Army has said it would honour the peace deal inked with local tribes in the region despite a sudden increase in attacks on security forces.

Dispelling fears about a probable attack, the military air-dropped pamphlets in Pashto and Urdu to assure tribesmen that the Army has no intention of initiating military action in the region.

The pamphlets mentioned that ‘some miscreants were trying to destroy peace and damage ties between the government and Utmanzai Wazir tribes.’

The people were relieved to know that the military is not planning any action in the region, The News reports.

“The leaflets and assurance by the government not to launch any operation restored signs of life to the region,” said a resident of Miramshah, Muhammad Kaleem.

Referring to the recent attacks on security forces in the region, the pamphlet said some disgruntled elements could not tolerate development work in the underdeveloped tribal region, and therefore, have started terrorist attacks on government installations and security forces. (ANI)

Pak military taking history lessons to ‘Get Baitullah’

Lahore, June 30 (ANI): In a bid to make its ‘Get Baitullah’ mission successful, the Pakistan Army is paying heed to lessons learnt by the British military some 70 year ago in Waziristan.

When the British went to war against Waziristan tribesmen more than 70 years ago, the ensuing guerrilla conflict lasted more than a decade. The British never captured the renegade leader and finally withdrew from the region.

Now, the Pakistan Army is trying to isolate Baitullah Mehsud before sending its troops into battle.

“We are trying to shape the environment before we move in for the fight. We are also trying to minimise the loss of life. Ours is the only institution that can stand up to the militants, but public support is crucial. When we do move in, it must be only against Baitullah and his group. We cannot afford to provoke a tribal uprising,” the Daily Times quoted Major General Athar Abbas, as saying. owever, the results have not been very satisfactory.

Last Tuesday, a Mehsud loyalist assassinated a key pro-government tribal leader and US drone strikes killed 46 people at the funeral of a slain Mehsud commander.

The delay in launching a full operation is giving Mehsud plenty of time to gather support.

According to sources, the military is concerned about being pushed into the new campaign too soon after the Swat campaign.

They added that there were also concern in the military that the US drone attacks were killing only a few important militant figures but stoking anti-American sentiment throughout the tribal region.

General Abbas said he would not say how soon the ground operation in Waziristan would begin.

However, he said, “We are dealing with a lot of complexities and constraints. We can only go so far without hurting our long-term interests.” (ANI)

No peace with India until Kashmir issue is resolved: Pak PM

Lahore, June 29 (ANI): Pakistan Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani has said that it is not possible to have peace with India until the Kashmir issue is resolved, and added that Islamabad always wanted cordial relations with all neighbouring countries.

“I want to say again that Pakistan has always wanted to have cordial relations with all neighbouring countries, including Afghanistan, India and Iran, but talks between India and Pakistan without resolution of the Kashmir issue would be fruitless,” he told reporters here.

He said a solution to the Kashmir issue was the cornerstone of Pakistan’s foreign policy, the Online reported.

Commenting on the drone attacks in the northern areas, Gilani said they were an attack on the integrity of Pakistan and were forcing tribesmen to join extremist elements.

The Daily Times quoted him, as saying that the US was working towards understanding Pakistan’s view on the drone attacks.

Gilani said all anti-Pakistan elements were terrorists, and had no religion or geographical boundaries.

Replying to question about Maulana Fazlur Rehman’s statement on dialogue with the Taliban, he said that while Fazl was a coalition partner of the government, his views on the Taliban were a personal statement, and added the entire nation wanted peace by eliminating the terrorists forever.

Gilani said the Pakistan Army was taking decisive action against the Taliban in FATA and other tense areas, adding this was not the time for dialogue with extremists.

“Our army is fighting very efficiently against the cowards who strike through ambushes. These anti-social and anti-Pakistan elements are working on foreign agendas,” he added. (ANI)

Pak Army intensifies operation in South Waziristan, kills 22 Taliban insurgents

Peshawar, June 21 (ANI): At least 22 Taliban insurgents and other extremists have reportedly been killed, as the Pakistan Army intensified its operation against the Baitullah Mehsud-led Taliban in South Waziristan.

According to sources, the security forces are engaged in a gruesome battle in the region, and are also being assisted by Pakistan Air Force fighter jets and helicopter gunships.

The troops have cleared a portion of the Wana-Jandola Road, as helicopter gunships and fighter planes targeted the militants, who had occupied the hilltops nearby.

However, military officials claimed that 32 militants were killed in the operation during artillery shelling and bombardment by the helicopter gunship.

The militants are offering a stiff resistance to the security forces in the region, as the military is advancing towards Wana, the capital of South Waziristan, The News reports.

Sources said the residents have already fled their villages for safer places in Tank and Dera Ismail Khan Districts, fearing a big offensive.

Many of the displaced persons in the region complained that the government was doing nothing to relocate them properly.

The former close aide of the Tehreek-e-Taliban (TTP) chief Baitullah Mehsud, Qari Zainuddin Mehsud has asked the government to assist and help the displaced people.

“I urge the government to come forward and help the displaced tribesmen so that they could assist us in the ongoing operation against Baitullah Mehsud,” said Mehsu, who has formed his own group named, Karwan-e-Abdullah Mehsud, after parting ways with the TTP chief. (ANI)

Karzai says, Afghanistan will target Taliban

Islamabad, May 14 (ANI): Afghan President Hamid Karzai has announced plans to launch a military offensive against the Taliban to flush out militants from its side of the border with Pakistan.

Karzai’s declaration comes after conducting bilateral talks with Pakistan Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani, who had made a similar announcement on May 7.

Currently, the Pakistani military is engaged in a fight with the Taliban in Pakistan’s northwestern region, which borders with Afghanistan.

Karzai said Afghanistan supported Pakistan’s efforts to combat terrorism.

During the meeting, both leaders expressed the resolve to eliminate the threat of militants from both sides of their shared border, the Daily Times reports.

Karzai agreed with Gilani that drone attacks hurt the government’s strategy to isolate the Taliban from the tribesmen. (ANI)

Fifty six percent in FATA see Afghan Taliban as ‘heroes’

Peshawar, Apr 28 (ANI): Exactly 56 percent of the respondents polled have described Afghanistan’s Taliban as “Islamic heroes fighting western occupation.”

In a survey conducted by Community Appraisal and Motivation Programme (CAMP) with the help of the British High Commission in Islamabad, a paltry 12.1 percent called them “a terrorist group”, the Daily Times reports.

Over 54 percent respondents said they were “dissatisfied with life” in FATA in general.

The number of satisfied people stood at 18.15 percent, according to the survey, and 17.5 percent said they were neither satisfied nor dissatisfied.

Some 73.25 percent tribesmen referred to provision of justice as “the most important service” that the government should provide in their areas followed by 64.6 percent voting for education, 52.1 percent for health and 47 percent for tackling terrorism.

Just 2.95 percent respondents referred to the US as a “very favourable” country, compared with 66.2 percent who called it “very unfavourable”. (ANI)