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India-Pakistan
After jihad: Abandoned ...
2014-08-04
[DAWN] Bin Yameen will turn 19 this year, but he often wonders what his father, Baligh Jan, looks like now. His father would have been 48 this year; Jan was a labourer, who left home for jihad in Afghanistan on the directions of Tehrik-e-Nifazi-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi (TNSM
...Tehreek-e-Nafaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi (Movement for the Enforcement of Islamic Law) is a Pak militant group whose objective is to enforce their definition of Sharia law in Pakistain whether anybody wants it or not. It was founded by Sufi Muhammad in 1992, and was banned by President Musharraf in January, 2002 after Sufi dispatched several thousand yokels to Afghanistan to fight the infidel and ended up with most of them killed or captured and held for ransom. In 2007 TNSM took over Swat, which shows how well the banning worked. TNSM is the Pony League of Islamic militancy..
) chief Maulana Sufi Mohammad.

"I often try to remember my father's face but it is difficult for me to visualise him, because I was just four years old at that time," says Bin Yameen.

A resident of Barawal Bandi village in the Upper Dir district of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa
... formerly NWFP, still Terrorism Central...
, Bin Yameen laments that his family was unable to stop his father from leaving for Afghanistan along with the other villagers. He was adamant about supporting the Afghan Taliban in their fight against American forces.

"We are five sisters and three brothers. Four of my sisters are elder to me," says Bin Yameen. "It was difficult for my mother to meet the family's monthly expenses after my father left for the war in Afghanistan."

According to locals of various districts in Malakand division, over 10,000 people aged between 30 and 55 left for Afghanistan in 2001 to fight the US forces, on the directions of Maulana Sufi Mohammad. His organization, TNSM, was banned in 2002 by former President General (retired) Pervez Perv Musharraf
... former dictator of Pakistain, who was less dictatorial and corrupt than any Pak civilian government to date ...
. Not many of Sufi's jihadis returned home, not many have any traceable whereabouts either.

Over time, Bin Yameen's devastated family came to terms with their loss. The young mother focused all her energies on raising her children, while Bin Yameen's uncle took on the financial responsibility of providing for the family.

And yet, a great burden was also placed on Bin Yameen's young shoulders.

"In the mornings, I study; I am enrolled in class IX at the Government High School Chukyatan, which is some 4km away from my village. After school, I work in the vegetable market," explains Bin Yameen. When asked how he manages balancing studies and work, he says that it is difficult but he has no option. "My mother successfully arranged the marriages of four of my sisters, but I am still responsible for providing for my mother, two younger brothers and one more sister."

Bin Yameen takes his younger brother, 16-year-old Ameenullah, to work as well — the family supplements its income in any way they can. But unlike Bin Yameen, Ameenullah neither has a fleeting memory of his father nor has he ever seen a picture of him over the last 14 years. "I was two years old when he left," says Ameenullah.

Their family attempted to search for Baligh Jan in Kabul, but all efforts came to naught. "When my uncle visited Kabul to search for my father, all he returned with was an assurance by Red Thingy officials that they will try to locate him in Afghan prisons," says Bin Yameen. "Our mother has become mentally ill because of the continuous tension."

Meanwhile,
...back at the chili cook-off, Chuck and Manuel's rivalry was entering a new and more dangerous phase...
Ameenullah always feels his father's absence on occasions such as Eid or "when the fair comes to our village."

In Qader Kalay village of Upper Dir, 64-year-old Safia Bibi saw her son leave for Afghanistan in 2001 and her husband die soon after. She now works as domestic help in the homes of the rich.

"My 30-year-old son, Badshah Zada, worked as a labourer before leaving for Afghanistan. I advised him to cancel his plans but he refused; he was enamoured by jihad," says Safia Bibi.

Badshah Zada left his wife and two children in the care of his aging parents. After his father's demise, his mother assumed the role of sole breadwinner of the household. "I wish my son had refused to follow the rhetoric and directions of Sufi Mohammad," she says wistfully.

Unlike blue-collar Badshah Zada, 30-year-old Mohammad Mursaleen Khan was teaching at a local seminary in his native Qader Kalay. Like Badshah Zada, he also left for jihad. His 62-year-old father, Mohammedan Khan, is forced to work as a security guard of a school in Upper Dir city to meet the family's monthly expenses.

"Why would I be forced to work in this age if my son had not followed the directions of the TNSM chief?" he asks.

Twenty-eight-year-old Abdullah Jan works in Soddy Arabia
...a kingdom taking up the bulk of the Arabian peninsula. Its primary economic activity involves exporting oil and soaking Islamic rubes on the annual hajj pilgrimage. The country supports a large number of princes in whatcha might call princely splendor. When the oil runs out the rest of the world is going to kick sand in the Soddy national face...
as a labourer; he was forced to abandon higher education after his 50-year-old father, Barkat Jan, left their Kater village home in October 2001 — also for jihad in Afghanistan.

"My father was a farmer," says Abdullah Jan. "Of course, we depended on him to meet our monthly expenses. I failed to complete my higher studies due to the monetary problems of my family after he left us."

In Dogdara village of Upper Dir, 38-year-old Muftahuddin's cousin, 38-year-old Javed Khan, returned home after two-and-a-half-years since leaving in September 2001. His family paid Rs400,000 to Afghan officials for his safe return from jail in Jalalabad, or so they claim. They were one of the lucky ones.

But it is not just jihadis inspired and prepared by TNSM that are languishing in Afghan jails. Former Interior Minister Aftab Khan Sherpao
...Pak dynastic politician, head of his own branch of the Pakistan Peoples Party and former interior minister under Pervez Musharraf. Sharpao began the usual military career, rising to the rank of major, but when his elder brother was bumped off in 1975 he took up the political mantle. Aftab's family (known as the Khans of Sherpao) is a prominent and influential family in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa. The family belongs to the Mohammadzai tribe which has for long been a dominant tribe amongst the Pukhtuns...
says it is difficult for him to give an exact number of Pak prisoners in Afghanistan, but the figure could be in the hundreds.

"I discussed the issue of Pak prisoners with my Afghan counterparts on behalf of the Pak government but I did not get a positive response from Afghan authorities," he says. But even Sherpao is aware of the reports that the families of many Pak prisoners paid money to Afghan landlords and jail officials to secure the release of their loved ones after 2001.

Sahibzada Tariqullah, Member of the National Assembly from Upper Dir, agrees. He explains that thousands of Paks were either killed, imprisoned or went missing in Afghanistan during the war in 2001. Hundreds returned home with the support of the Red Thingy but there are reports of many more still languishing in Afghan prisons.

According to an official of the ministry of Foreign Affairs, it is difficult for the Pak missions to have an update on detained Pak nationals languishing in Afghan prisons due to the law and order situation there, as well as the existence of 'private' prisons run by the National Directorate of Security (NDS) in Afghanistan.

The officials claimed that over 185 Pak prisoners are currently being incarcerated in Afghan jails — 106 in Pul-e-Charkhi Jail in Kabul; 46 in Sarpoza Jail in Kandahar; 26 in Jalalabad; and the remaining in Helmand
...an Afghan province populated mostly by Pashtuns, adjacent to Injun country in Pak Balochistan...
, Herat
...a venerable old Persian-speaking city in western Afghanistan, populated mostly by Tadjiks, which is why it's not as blood-soaked as areas controlled by Pashtuns...
and Mazar Sharif.

"Back in 2001, the government did not prepare any lists of such Paks because it was trying to stop them from crossing the border in the first place," says Brigadier (retired.) Mahmood Shah, who served as the secretary of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (Fata) between 2003 and 2005. He pins the blame on Sufi Mohammad for the killings and missing of thousands of Paks while their families are compelled to survive in difficult circumstances.

"Although Sufi Mohammad is responsible for the crises, but under the Geneva Convention it was the responsibility of the Afghan government to provide complete details about the POWs," argues I.A. Rehman, director of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistain (HRCP).

"If Pak prisoners are still being held in Afghanistan, it is contrary to all norms of humanity as well as in direct contravention of the Geneva Convention," adds Rehman.

Foreign Office Spokeswoman Tasneem Aslam meanwhile told Dawn that the Pakistain Embassy in Afghanistan is in process of securing the release of Pak prisoners. She claims that Pakistain and Afghanistan had already agreed to form a joint commission on prisoners in 2011, with Pakistain pushing for early activation of this mechanism.

As long drawn and extended as governmental procedures are, equally short and swift was Sufi Mohammad's message and the speed at which it was consumed. Latifullah, a 55-year-old local school teacher of Government High School Jan Bati, Lower Dir, recalls that people from different towns and villages of Malakand division left their homes to support the Taliban regime back in 2001.

Latifullah describes that most jihad volunteers belonged to the Matta area of district Swat, the Maidan area of Lower Dir, the Dir Kohistan
...a backwoods district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa distinguished by being even more rustic than is the norm among the local Pashtuns....
area of district Upper Dir, Butkhela area of Malakand district, Aman Dara area of district Shangla and Alpori area of district Buner. Then there were others from Punjab, Mohmand Agency
... Named for the Mohmand clan of the Sarban Pahstuns, a truculent, quarrelsome lot. In Pakistain, the Mohmands infest their eponymous Agency, metastasizing as far as the plains of Peshawar, Charsadda, and Mardan. Mohmands are also scattered throughout Pakistan in urban areas including Karachi, Lahore, and Quetta. In Afghanistan they are mainly found in Nangarhar and Kunar...
and Bajaur Agency, aka Turban Central
...Smallest of the agencies in FATA. The Agency administration is located in Khar. Bajaur is inhabited almost exclusively by Tarkani Pashtuns, which are divided into multiple bickering subtribes. Its 52 km border border with Afghanistan's Kunar Province makes it of strategic importance to Pakistain's strategic depth...
.

A former member of TNSM, speaking to Dawn on condition of anonymity, narrates that Maulana Sufi Mohammad gathered all volunteers in the areas of Timergara and Bajaur for registration. "We just prepared the lists of the people by including their names and their areas; most people were farmers, labourers and unemployed. They left for the Afghan province of Kunar through the Ghakhi Pass, near the Laghari area in Bajaur Agency," he claims.

Caught between the two is Bin Yameen, who has an agonising 'last wish': "I wish I can see my father in my lifetime; I am hopeful he will return one day."

Will these families ever get closure?
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India-Pakistan
Sherpao escapes suicide attack in Charsadda
2012-03-04
[Dawn] A copper was killed and a local politician was among eight maimed on Saturday in a suicide kaboom in Charsadda, officials said.

The jacket wallah struck as the former chief minister of the province, Aftab Khan Sherpao
...Pak dynastic politician, head of his own branch of the Pakistan Peoples Party. Sharpao began the usual military career, rising to the rank of major, but when his elder brother was bumped off in 1975 he took up the political mantle. Aftab's family (known as the Khans of Sherpao) is a prominent and influential family in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa. The family belongs to the Mohammadzai tribe which has for long been a dominant tribe amongst the Pukhtuns...
, returned with his son and another politician from a rally on the outskirts of Shabqadar town 35 kilometres northeast of Beautiful Downtown Peshawar.

"A policeman was killed and eight others were maimed including the provincial assembly member Muhammad Ali Khan in the suicide attack," Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa
... formerly NWFP, still Terrorism Central...
Information Minister Mian Iftikhar Hussain said.

"The politician is out of danger and being shifted to the provincial headquarters in Peshawar," Hussain said.

Police said the bomber struck when the security convoy escorting the politicians left the rally venue.

"The suicide bomber walked in the security convoy and hit the vehicles,"local police chief Nisar Khan Marwat said.

A local leader of the Pak Taliban militia, Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistain (TTP), grabbed credit for the attack.

"We made this attack because Aftab Sherpao has cooperated with the government for an operation against us in the tribal areas," Omer Khalid, a local Taliban leader, told AFP by telephone from Qazi's guesthouse an undisclosed location..

Sherpao heads his own faction of a small political party.

The Taliban has carried out a number of attacks against him over the years.

In April 2007, a suicide bomber attacked a rally of Sherpao's political party, killing 28 people.

In December 2007, a suicide bomber again targeted Sherpao amid hundreds of worshippers at a mosque inside his home in the same region, killing at least 50 people.
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India-Pakistan
Parliamentary panel wants anti-terror policy changed
2010-07-04
[Dawn] The 17-member Parliamentary Committee on National Security urged the government on Friday to change its strategy for combating terrorism. The committee chairman Mian Raza Rabbani told reporters after a meeting of the committee at the Parliament's House: "When the United States and Afghanistan were reviewing and revising their strategy to combat terror, it is incumbent upon Pakistan also to change its policy for regional peace."

He, however, added: "We can only submit our proposals and it is up to the government to implement or reject these."

He said the government should change its political and military strategy as a frontline state in the war against terror. The committee was preparing its recommendations and would submit a report to the government, he added.

The director general of military operations briefed the committee on operations against militants in Fata and Malakand.

Mr Rabbani said the committee was being briefed by various departments, including the defence establishment, on the situation vis-à-vis the war on terror and law and order in the country.

The committee will meet again on July 7 and 8.

Sources said that Interior Minister Rehman Malik had on Thursday briefed the committee on the nexus between the remnants of Al Qaeda, Taliban and some banned organisations. Aftab Khan Sherpao, Wasim Sajjad, Ishaq Dar, defence secretary and interior ministry officials attended the meeting.
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India-Pakistan
Govt writ to be enforced in Swat, Tribal Areas. Really.
2008-06-06
Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi on Thursday vowed to re-establish the writ of the government in Swat and the Tribal Areas and invited the opposition to come forward and devise a joint strategy to combat terrorism. “This is our country and we have to protect its sovereignty. I welcome the opposition to come to the Foreign Office and sit together to devise a national foreign policy,” Qureshi said in his speech on the recent attack in Bajaur by the United States allied forces from Afghanistan. Several people were killed in the attack. The minister said Pakistan would not allow sanctuaries and safe heavens for terrorists on its soil. Qureshi said Pakistan was keen to monitor cross-border movement and it had established 1,000 checkposts for the purpose. “As far as the issue of the Bajaur attack is concerned, Pakistan has lodged its protest at every forum. Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani has taken up the issue with US President George W Bush during their recent meeting in Egypt,” he said. Earlier, former Interior minister Aftab Khan Sherpao condemned the Bajaur attack by allied forces and urged the government to form a policy in this regard.
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India-Pakistan
Pakistan hunts for bombing clues
2007-12-23
Pakistani authorities have arrested a man over a suicide attack at a mosque on Friday that killed at least 50 people. Police on Saturday picked up the suspect in Charsadda, the same district where a suicide bomber detonated around 10kg of explosives amid a packed 1,000-strong congregation celebrating the festival of Eid. "We're looking for another man who could be a second accomplice," a security official said.

Reports said four people, including three Afghan nationals, were arrested late on Friday in a town four kilometres from the site of the attack. But it was unclear if the detentions at a religious school in the North West Front province were related to the blast.

Friday's bombing, apparently targeting Aftab Khan Sherpao, the former interior minister, was the second such attack on him in eight months. Sharif Virk, the provincial police chief, said that so far forensic evidence at the site of the blast was insufficient to give up any strong leads. "No head has been found from the scene," he said, referring to the fact that the heads of suicide bombers are often blown off by the force of the explosions and later found intact. "We have found four legs which we have sent for DNA test, but it could be little help unless we know the family."

Virk said the attack could be linked to armed groups in the adjacent Mohmand tribal region. The attack sparked anger and fears of further attacks should Pakistani forces crackdown on tribal fighters.

Fawad Khan, relative of a blast victim, said: "Why did these people, the government, spoil the situation in Swat, Bajaur and the Red Mosque? Now that they have done so, naturally even those people the militants are going to retaliate."

Kamal Hyder, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Pakistan, said: "It was widely expected that there would be attacks against Aftab Khan Sherpao ... he had been warned there would be revenge attacks." Besides being blamed for a security crackdown on armed tribal groups, many hold Sherpao personally responsible for the assault on a hardline mosque in Islamabad in July.
Link


India-Pakistan
Paks raid madrassah after mosque boom
2007-12-22
Pakistani police raided an Islamic school and arrested seven students yesterday, hours after a suicide bomber killed at least 50 people inside a mosque packed with holiday worshippers at the home of the former interior minister, police said. The bombing, which left bloody clothes, shoes and pieces of flesh scattered across the house of worship, was the second suicide attack in eight months apparently targeting Aftab Khan Sherpao, who escaped injury. After the bombing, dozens of police and intelligence agents raided an Islamic school in the nearby village of Turangzai and arrested seven students, some of them Afghans, police officials said.
Link


India-Pakistan
Dupe entry: Evidence suggests U.S. missile used in (AQ #3) strike
2007-11-02
False alarm. Story's from 2005.
Shrapnel that appeared to be from an American-made missile was found Sunday at the house where Pakistan said a top al-Qaida operative was killed in an explosion, although President Bush’s national security adviser declined to confirm the death.

U.S. and Pakistani officials declined to confirm an NBC report, citing anonymous officials, that the attack on the house where Hamza Rabia reportedly died was launched by a U.S. drone.
Here lies the sacrificial AQ #3 to commemorate Admiral Fallon's visit.

But local residents found at least two pieces of shrapnel at the blast scene inscribed with the designation of the Hellfire missile, which is carried by the U.S. Air Force’s unmanned, remote-controlled Predator aircraft. The metal pieces bore the designator “AGM-114,” the words “guided missile” and the initials “US.”

John Pike, director of the defense Web site GlobalSecurity.org, said the Hellfire is used almost exclusively by the U.S. military. Al-Qaida operatives would be unlikely to have Hellfire missiles, Pike said, although he said the possibility could not be completely discounted.

‘A good thing for the war on terror’
U.S. national security adviser Stephen Hadley declined to confirm that Rabia, said to be among al-Qaida’s top five leaders and responsible for planning overseas attacks, was dead or that the attack was carried out by a pilotless U.S. plane. “At this point we are not in a position publicly to confirm that he is dead. But if he is, that is a good thing for the war on terror,” Hadley told “Fox News Sunday.”

Rabia was involved in planning two assassination plots against Pakistani President Gen. Pervez Musharraf, and “we believe he was involved in planning for attacks against the United States,” Hadley said.
So a thorn in Musharaff's side too. In Pakistan, that's the one strike and you're out rule.

Musharraf said Saturday it was “200 percent confirmed” that Rabia was killed.
He was killed twice. Once for good luck.


The senior Pakistani intelligence official said the missile attack blew up a stockpile of bomb-making materials, grenades and other munitions. Pakistan Interior Minister Aftab Khan Sherpao said Rabia’s two Syrian bodyguards also died in the explosion.
Flowers on way to Pencilneck.

'A big blow for them'
Sources told NBC that Rabia was one of five men killed at a safehouse located in the village of Asorai, in western Pakistan, near the town of Mirali.

Information Minister Sheikh Rashid Ahmed declined to comment on the report about Rabia’s remains but said there was “other information” besides the DNA tests that confirmed his identity. “He was a high-profile commander in the network. We were tracing him for the last two years,” Sherpao told The Associated Press on Sunday. “Naturally any person killed in their hierarchy is a big blow for them.”

An intelligence official said U.S. help was involved in tracking Rabia down and “eliminating the threat” that he embodied. That official spoke on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to speak to the media.

Local residents said that the men were killed by an unknown number of missiles fired by an unmanned Predator aircraft. The witnesses said they had heard six explosions, but it is uncertain how many of these were the result of missile attacks and how many may have been the result of the missiles detonating explosives inside the safehouse.

On Saturday, Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper, citing sources it did not identify, reported that the attack on a mud-walled home near Miran Shah may have been launched from two pilotless planes.

Associates from outside Pakistan retrieved the bodies of Rabia and two other foreigners and buried them in an unknown location, the report said.

Rabia had moved up al-Qaida ranks
Two U.S. counterterrorism officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the information’s sensitivity, said Saturday that Rabia was believed to be an Egyptian and head of al-Qaida’s foreign operations, possibly as senior as the No. 3 in the terrorist group, just below al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden and his lieutenant, Ayman al-Zawahri. They are believed to be hiding in a rugged area along Afghanistan’s border with Pakistan.

Rabia’s death would not enhance the prospect of catching either bin Laden or al-Zawahri, according to another Pakistani intelligence official, who requested anonymity because of the sensitive nature of his job. The official said intelligence agents had no clue about the whereabouts of bin Laden or al-Zawahri.

Rabia filled the vacuum created this year by the capture of the previous operations chief, Abu Faraj al-Libbi, the two U.S. officials said.

Rabia would have been responsible for training, recruiting, networking and, most importantly, planning international terrorist activities outside the Afghan-Pakistan region. He had a wide array of jihadist contacts, one official said, and was believed to be trying to reinvigorate al-Qaida’s operations.

One Pakistani intelligence official said Rabia had been the target of a Nov. 5 attack in the same area that killed eight people, but he managed to escape. That attack initially was blamed on militants setting off bombs they were making.

Miran Shah is a strategic tribal region where al-Qaida militants are believed to be hiding and where Pakistani forces have launched several operations against them.
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India-Pakistan
Govt rules out foreign help to probe Karachi blasts
2007-10-23
The prime minister and interior minister have rejected the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP)’s demand for foreign experts to assist in the inquiry into last Thursday’s suicide bombings in Karachi, while PPP chief Benazir Bhutto has insisted the government isn’t equipped to handle such an investigation.

Interior Minister Aftab Khan Sherpao said foreign experts would not be brought into the investigation. “I would categorically reject this,” he told reporters in Islamabad. “We are conducting the investigation in a very objective manner. Our investigation teams and security agencies are competent enough to investigate such incidents. The political parties should have trust and confidence in them.”
Prediction: Nothing's going to come of them.
Mr Sherpao said the federal government had directed the Sindh government to intensify the investigation. He said the government had not sought foreign assistance to investigate the suicide attacks on President Gen Pervez Musharraf and Mr Aziz.

Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz told a group of federal ministers that he was confident that the investigation being carried out by Pakistani law-enforcement agencies would lead to the perpetrators of the crime. He said the agencies had successfully investigated terrorist attacks in the past and arrested those responsible.
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India-Pakistan
Fight against terrorism to continue despite attack, says Sherpao
2007-04-30
Either Aftab Khan Sherpao or Leslie Nielsen, we're not sure which.
Federal Interior Minister Aftab Ahmed Khan Sherpao said on Sunday that the terrorist attack would not weaken his determination and he would continue his mission of serving people with renewed dedication and commitment. Talking to various delegations that called on him at the People’s House to inquire about his health, Sherpao said, “I was the prime target of the suicide bomber but with the grace of God and the prayers of people I am safe.” He said the incident was not new for him as his brother Hayat Muhammad Khan Sherpao was also killed in a bomb blast.

The interior minister said Islam was a religion of peace and did not teach violence.
The interior minister said Islam was a religion of peace and did not teach violence. He appreciated the warm feelings of party workers and people who were coming in large numbers to inquire about his health. “I get further courage and strength from the love expressed by the party workers and people following the tragic blast at Station Korona,” he added. While terming the suicide blast a coward’s act, Sherpao said he was deeply grieved over the loss of innocent lives and expressed sympathy with the members of the bereaved families.

Sherpao said the Charsadda attack had strengthened his determination to work for the establishment of democracy, economic equality, interfaith harmony, elimination of sectarianism, prosperity, employment creation and provision of all basic necessities to people. He added that he would continue his struggles for the accomplishment of these objectives. Earlier, Sherpao attended the funeral prayers of the victims of Charsadda bombing at Shabqadar tehsil, Umarzai, Tarangzai and Station Korona.
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India-Pakistan
Teams formed to probe Sherpao attack
2007-04-30
Russian-made explosives were used in Saturday’s suicide attack targeting Interior Minister Aftab Sherpao Khan, a police official said, as investigators launched a formal probe into the bombing. “All the federal government agencies will assist the team,” said Information Minister Muhammad Ali Durrani at a news conference in Peshawar after returning from the funerals of nine victims of the blast in Charsadda. He said that the bomber used eight to 10 kilograms of explosives and the death toll from the attack has risen to 28.

NWFP Additional Inspector General (Investigation) Fayaz Toru, who heads the joint investigation team, told Daily Times that the explosives used in the attack were known as ‘MUV2’ and were of Russian origin. Sherpao sustained minor injuries on both his legs from shrapnel in the attack. Toru told Reuters that the bomber appeared to be in his 30s. “He is either an Afghan or belongs to our tribal areas,” he said. “The pattern of attack was similar to previous ones, all of which had links in our tribal areas.”

Either Aftab Khan Sherpao or Leslie Nielson, we're not sure which.
Forensics experts sealed the crime scene and were collecting evidence. “Evidence from the scene of the crime is essential and helpful in any investigation ... we have sealed off the area to keep all evidence intact,” a forensics expert said. Police sources said body parts of the suspected bomber had been sent to Islamabad for forensic tests. Daily Times has learnt that the interior minister was not protected by electronic jamming equipment of the kinds provided to other VIPs in the Frontier province. AIG Toru said the equipment could have stopped the bomb.

A police explosives expert said the death toll would not have been so high had people not been standing when the explosion took place, as ball bearings and other shrapnel used in such explosives usually flies upwards.

Agencies add: Authorities were preparing a sketch of the suspect to help identify him, Reuters reported. Charsada police chief Firoz Shah told AFP that the investigators have found two Russian-made detonators and parts of the jacket the suicide attacker was wearing, he said.
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India-Pakistan
Pakistan Fights Near Afghanistan Kill 52
2007-03-30
Fighting between local and foreign militants Friday killed 52 people, bringing to more than 200 the number of dead in recent days in a conflict between Pakistanis and suspected al-Qaida-linked extremists, a senior official said. Interior Minister Aftab Khan Sherpao said 45 Uzbek militants and seven tribesmen died in battles in South Waziristan, a lawless region used as a rear base by Taliban militants fighting in Afghanistan and where the United States fears that al-Qaida is regrouping. Since fighting began last week, 213 people have been killed, including 177 Uzbeks and their local alllies, Sherpao told The Associated Press.

The minister said the conflict intensified Friday after foreigners failed to comply with an ultimatum from tribal elders to leave their territory. Security officials said tribal militias had fired rockets at the hideouts of the foreigners in several locations. An aide to Maulvi Nazir, the leader of the purportedly pro-government side in the conflict, said earlier Friday that they had killed 35 Uzbeks and lost 10 of their own men. He said both sides were using heavy weapons. The aide, who spoke to AP by telephone, asked for anonymity to prevent enemies from identifying him.

South Waziristan is generally off-limits to journalists, making it hard to verify reports of the fighting.
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India-Pakistan
Suicide attack at Kharian army base, soldier killed
2007-03-30
A suicide attacker blew himself up at a military training ground in eastern Pakistan on Thursday, killing one soldier and wounding at least six more, officials said.

The bomber detonated explosives at a training ground near Kharian, 130 kilometres southeast of Islamabad. Interior Minister Aftab Khan Sherpao said one soldier was killed and six others wounded. However, military and police officials said seven were wounded. Officials said soldiers at the Guliana training ground, about four kilometres from Kharian, were learning driving skills when the bomber approached on foot and blew himself up near an army truck.

Ahsan Mehboob, the police chief of the surrounding Gujrat district, said the wounded soldiers were taken to a hospital, two of them in critical condition. Mehboob said the bomber’s upper body was mutilated beyond recognition. Intelligence agents arrived at the scene to collect and preserve evidence, he said.

Officials declined to speculate about who was behind the attack. However, the blast was the latest in a string of suicide bombings raising concern that militants aligned with the Taliban and Al Qaeda are gaining strength and taking aim at President Gen Pervez Musharraf’s US-aligned government.

The attack comes two days after gunmen on motorbikes hurled grenades and opened fire on an army vehicle in Bajaur Agency, killing five officials of the Inter-Services Intelligence agency.
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