India-Pakistan |
Pakistani army kills 60 in offensives after bomb |
2008-09-24 |
![]() Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani said terrorists are "enemies of Islam with no faith" and vowed to get tough on militants sheltering in the border region. "We will not allow them to challenge the writ of the government and create a law of the jungle and a life of the stone age," he told a gathering of Muslim scholars in the capital, Islamabad. The fighting Monday and Tuesday comes at a time of tension between the U.S. and Pakistan over American military attacks on militants based in the lawless tribal areas along the border with Afghanistan. Washington has urged Pakistan to assert its control in the region, which is a haven for al-Qaida and Taliban militants who cross into Afghanistan to attack American and NATO troops as well as for Pakistani extremists who are striking targets in Pakistan. The bloodiest fighting this week has been in the Kohat region, where the military deployed helicopter gunships and artillery in killing at least 50 militants, an army spokesman, Maj. Murad Khan, said. One solider also died, he said. Khan said the military regained control of a mountain road tunnel seized by insurgents several days ago. In the nearby Bajur tribal region, security forces killed at least 10 militants Tuesday in the latest round of a major offensive there, government official Iqbal Khattak said. Al-Qaida or the Taliban are suspected in Saturday's truck bombing at the Marriott hotel in Islamabad. The attack killed 53 people, among them the Czech ambassador and two U.S. Defense Department employees, and wounded about 270. Some officials believe the bombing may have been a response to the Bajur offensive, which the army says has killed more than 700 suspected militants since August. The region is believed to be a possible hiding place for Osama bin Laden. Pakistan's army spokesman, Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas, has described Bajur as a "mega-sanctuary" for militants and said the military was determined to flush them out. However, a series of recent cross-border operations apparently conducted by U.S. forces, including missile strikes and a ground assault, have highlighted Washington's concerns that the Pakistani government is unwilling or incapable of rooting out extremists. The incursions have angered many Pakistanis and drawn officials protests that Washington is violating the country's sovereignty, something President Bush acknowledged before meeting with Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari in New York on Tuesday. "Your words have been very strong about Pakistan's sovereign right and sovereign duty to protect your country, and the United States wants to help," Bush said. "Pakistan is an ally, and I look forward to deepening our relationship." Meanwhile, at least six people -- including a 12-year-old boy -- were killed and a bank set afire Tuesday during rioting in Mangora in the northwestern Swat Valley, police and a hospital official said. It was unclear how the people died, but police said officers fired warning shots trying to control a mob that was protesting the lack of electricity and natural gas in the town. Police officer Mohibullah Khan said militants bombed the power station and gas pipeline to the town last week. In Geneva, the U.N. refugee agency asked for donations of $17 million to aid more than 300,000 Pakistanis who have fled fighting and floods near the Afghan border. The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees has distributed supplies to 84,000 people displaced by floods in northwestern Pakistan and could provide shelter and other relief to more than three times that number if it had more money, agency spokesman William Spindler said. Pakistan's government estimates 90,000 people chased from their homes by fighting are living as refugees along the Afghan border in North West Frontier Province and a similar number are displaced in the northern part of the province around Swat, Spindler said. The deadly bombing of the Marriott continued to affect operations of diplomatic missions, aid groups and other organizations. British Airways said Tuesday it "indefinitely" suspended flights to Pakistan "in light of the current security situation." A British Embassy spokesman, Aidan Liddle, said a company that runs four visa application centers for the embassy closed them pending a security review. In Washington, the Pentagon identified one of two Americans killed in Marriott bombing as Air Force Maj. Rodolfo I. Rodriguez, 34, of El Paso, Texas. |
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India-Pakistan |
Soldier killed in Bajaur attacks |
2008-05-14 |
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Afghanistan | |
41 Taliban put to good use in south Afghanistan | |
2008-03-13 | |
Hey, fertilizer is useful, isn't it?
None of the four American troops traveling in the two armored vehicles of the convoy was badly wounded in the Thursday attack, said Lt. Col. David Johnson, a spokesman for U.S. forces. The troops were traveling in one SUV and one truck, he said. Six Afghan civilians were killed and up to 20 others wounded in the blast, Deputy Interior Minister Munir Mangal said. That's going to make the locals happy. The attacker was driving a white Toyota Corolla, he said, a favorite among suicide car bombers. "Mahmoud, this car's the bomb! It's a total babe magnet and gets great mileage, too!" In a mobile phone text message to an Associated Press reporter in Pakistan, Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid identified the suicide bomber as Abdullah. Great. That's only about 10% of the population. Shouldn't take long to find him. The suicide car bomb turned into a fiery hull that burned on the main airport road long after the attack, which also damaged several other vehicles. U.S. troops and international security contractors surrounded the area after the blast. In southern Helmand province, Afghan and international forces attacked Taliban militants Wednesday morning as they traveled by motorcycle toward the Pakistan border, said Ghulam Dastagir Azad, governor of neighboring Nimroz province. The troops employed airstrikes during the four-hour battle and killed 41 militants, including 17 from Nimroz, he said. A Taliban commander from Nimroz was among the dead. Must have been up-armored motorcycles. The U.S.-led coalition could not confirm the attack. NATO said they were looking into the report, but did not immediately have any information. Sorry, no evidence left to confirm or deny the report. In other By the suspects, of course. In Wardak province, a remote-controlled bomb hit a police vehicle Thursday in Saydabad district, killing one policeman and wounding four others, said district police investigator Mohibullah Khan. In Zabul province, Afghan security forces and NATO troops launched an operation Wednesday against Chechen fighters meeting in Daychopan district, said district chief Fazel Bari. The ensuing two-hour gun battle left three Chechens dead and six wounded, he said. On Wednesday in Farah province, authorities recovered the dead body of the Pusht Rod [sic - maybe they meant pushrod?] district police chief, a day after he was kidnapped along with five other policemen, said Bariyalai Khan, spokesman for the Farah provincial police. There was no information on the fates of the five other men. Check the local Starbucks to see if they're being questioned by the Taliban. | |
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India-Pakistan | ||||
Mullah Fazlullah's brother held: Stray shell kills 11 civilians, 40 militants arrested | ||||
2007-11-30 | ||||
![]() The shell destroyed a house in Allahabad, a village in the Swat valley, as security forces continued an offensive against the followers of Fazlullah late on Wednesday, a police official said. Eleven members of the family died, while nine more were wounded, said the official, Mohibullah Khan. However, military spokesman Major Amjad Iqbal told Reuters that he had no information about civilian casualties in the village but confirmed that a clash had taken place there on Thursday after militants fired rockets at troops. We responded and fired into the area from where the fire came. People should not shelter any militants in their residences, Iqbal said in Mingora.
Top Military Spokesman Maj Gen Waheed Arshad said security forces had arrested Maulana Fazal Ahmed along with other militants at a checkpost located between Chakdara and Mingora, Online reported.
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India-Pakistan |
Some parents trapped inside Lal Masjid |
2007-07-06 |
![]() Mohibullah Khan from Dir told Daily Times that his nephew Azizur Rehman had gone inside the mosque to bring his sister Hajra, 12, but had not returned despite passing of several hours. A group of Pashto-speaking men, all from remote areas of the NWFP, expressed similar complaints, saying they were waiting for their relatives who had gone inside the mosque to pick their children. Many students, both boys and girls, who surrendered to authorities said they had been kept at the madrassa forcibly and militants had pressed them to sacrifice their lives by staying inside Lal Masjid till the end of the standoff. |
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