India-Pakistan |
British Red Cross doctor kidnapped in Quetta found beheaded |
2012-04-30 |
[Dawn] The beheaded body of a kidnapped British doctor working for the International Committee of the Red Thingy was found by the roadside on Sunday in Quetta, police and Red Thingy officials said. Khalil Rasjed Dale, 60, was kidnapped by suspected hard boyz on Jan 5 while on his way home from work. "The ICRC condemns in the strongest possible terms this barbaric act," ICRC Director-General Yves Daccord said in a statement. "All of us at the ICRC and at the British Red Thingy share the grief and outrage of Khalil's family and friends." British Foreign Secretary William Hague also condemned the killing. "This was a senseless and cruel act, targeting someone whose role was to help the people of Pakistain, and causing immeasurable pain to those who knew Mr Dale," Hague said in the statement. The foreign office has promised to hold the killers accountable. "The Government of Pakistain condemns this barbaric act in the strongest terms and is determined to bring the perpetrators of this heinous crime to justice," a statement from the Foreign Office said. "Pakistain is committed to combat terrorism and the death of Mr Dale has only strengthened our resolve to eliminate this scourge," it added. Really? When did that happen? Was it in the papers? A senior police officer said the Pak Taliban had grabbed credit for the killing, saying a ransom had not been paid. Police discovered Dale wrapped in plastic near a western bypass road. His name was written on the white plastic bag with black marker. "A sharp knife was used to sever his head from the body," said Safdar Hussain, the first doctor to examine the body. "He was killed about 12 hours ago." Dale is only the third Westerner killed in such a fashion in Pakistain. The others include Wall Street Journal news hound Daniel Pearl in 2002 and Piotr Stanczak, a Polish geologist, in 2009. |
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India-Pakistan | ||||
The Fluttering Flag of Jehad | ||||
2009-04-19 | ||||
By Amir Mir - Mashal Books Lahore 2008 Pp306; Price Rs 700 Amir Mir has developed into an informed commentator on the state of jihad with an uncomfortable inside track with those who are supposed to counter it in Pakistan. Of course jihad has unfortunately become another name for terrorism and those who have taken it out of the roster of the functions of the state and privatised it are to blame for this development. Amir Mir was able to interview Benazir Bhutto just before she fell to the terrorism of Al Qaeda or whoever it was who assassinated her in December 2007. She thought Pervez Musharraf was secretly in league with the terrorists and had tried to kill her in Karachi in October 2007, and was sure he would get terrorists like Abdur Rehman Otho of Lashkar-e Jhangvi and Qari Saifullah Akhtar of Harkat Jihad Islami, protégés of the ISI, to do the job. She named Brigadier Ijaz Shah and Brigadier Riaz Chibb etc. in her final writings. She predicted her death and blamed it on the army; months later, Major General Faisal Alvi too predicted his own death at the hands of the army and was shot down in Islamabad. Musharraf claimed that Benazir was killed by Baitullah Mehsud through his suicide-bombers whose minder was taped talking to him on the phone about the achievement. Evidence in place was destroyed by the establishment, and questions arising from her murder could not be answered although Al Qaeda was at first quoted in the press as having taken care of the most precious American asset in the words of Mustafa Abu Yazid, the Al Qaeda commander in Afghanistan. Benazir had her moles inside the ISI (p.28); but Amir doesnt accept that Baitullah Mehsud killed her and gives a convincing critique of the findings of Scotland Yard. Now a lot of writers use inside information from the US government to claim that Musharraf was sympathetic to the Taliban as they fled from the US attack in 2001. Amir Mir tells us that Corps Commander Peshawar General Safdar Hussain, who signed the peace accord with Baitullah Mehsud at Sararogha near Wana in February 2005, had called him a soldier of peace even as Mehsuds warriors shouted Death to America. Major General Faisal Alvi was to accuse some elements in the army high command of being on the side of the Taliban before his assassination in 2008. Baitullah rewarded General Hussain with 200 captured Pakistani troops in August 2007. Benazir believed Qari Saifullah Akhtar was involved in the attempt on her life in Karachi in October 2007 (p.43). Qari was in prison for trying to kill Musharraf in 2004 and was sprung from there to do the job on Benazir. Musharraf was outraged when he got to know that an ISI protégé had tried to kill him from his safe haven in Dubai after fleeing from Afghanistan in 2001. Qari was special because he was rescued by the spooks after he was found involved in trying to stage a military coup in league with Islamist fanatic Major General Zaheerul Islam Abbasi in 1995. He along with his Harkat Jihad Islami was to become the favourite of the Taliban government. The place to be mined for leadership talent was Karachis Banuri Mosque where the Qari and that other protégé Fazlur Rehman Khalil had received their Deobandi orientation. The third Banuri Mosque protégé of the state was Maulana Masud Azhar, who formed Jaish-e Muhammad and was rescued from an Indian jail together with Omar Sheikh, the man who later helped kill Daniel Pearl in Karachi. Qari was recalled from Dubai and kept in custody, and the Lahore High Court did not release him on a habeas corpus petition. But he was released quietly before Benazir arrived in Pakistan in October 2007 (p.45). After Benazir named him in her posthumous book, Qari was arrested again in March 2008. The reaction came in the shape of a suicide attacks on the Naval War College and the FIA office in Lahore where Qaris terrorists were being kept for interrogation into the War College attack (p.47). A Karachi terrorist court heard the case against Qari and freed him on bail because the proof with which the prosecution could have proved him guilty had disappeared. Later he was rearrested but then quietly released by the Home Department because the spooks wanted him freed (p.48).
Fazlur Rehman Khalil is another protected person who lives in Islamabad but governments hardly know what he has been saying to the American authors who visit him. When Islamabad got into trouble with its own clerics in Lal Masjid, it was Khalil who was taken out and made to negotiate with them (p.109). He is the sort of person who can some day get Pakistan into trouble after which Islamabad will have to say he has mysteriously left the country and cannot be produced. He is Osama bin Ladens man and his Harkatul Mujahideen was prominent among the jihadi organisations in Kashmir and ran training camps for warriors in Dhamial just outside Rawalpindi, at least that is what an American suspect Hamid Hayat told the FBI after visiting it (p.108). It is not only Dr AQ Khan whom Pakistan has to save from being kidnapped by the anti-proliferationist West, there is also Sultan Bashiruddin Mahmood, the top scientist who enriched uranium at Khushab and then conferred with Osama bin Laden about building a nuclear bomb when he was in Kabul looking after his charity organisation called Umma Tameer Nau (p.111). He is the crazy bearded man who once presented a paper to General Zia saying Pakistan could make electricity from jinns. He also thought he could use a nuclear bomb to clear up a silted Tarbela Dam. Daniel Pearl was on to him, but he got killed when he got close to another protected person.
The other person was Mubarak Shah Gilani, a scion of the great Sufi of Lahore, Mianmir, who actually controlled jinns and ran a jihadi organisation named Al Fuqra still alive and doing well in the UKs Londonistan. He had recruited Richard Reid, the Shoe Bomber terrorist who was caught before he could blow up an aircraft. Daniel Pearl had traced Mubarak Shah Gilani to Karachi and was going to interview him when he was tricked by Omar Sheikh into going with Lashkar-e Jhangvi gunmen who then handed him over to Khaled Sheikh Muhammad, who confessed at Guantanamo to personally beheading him (p.116). Omar Sheikh, who got involved in planning the 9/11 strike, was finally made to surrender after sheltering in home secretary and ex-ISI officer Ijaz Shahs residence in Lahore for a week. The book says on page 122 that the ISI chief General Mehmood was later investigated by FBI for sending $100,000 to plane hijacker Atta, who led the 9/11 strike on the World Trade Centre. The conduit for Mehmood was Omar Sheikh. The Wall Street Journal, Daniel Pearls paper, reported that an examination of Omar Sheikhs telephone record showed him talking to General Mehmood, proving also that the money sent by General Mehmood through Omar Sheikh was funding for the New York strike (p.122). General Musharraf in his book reported, as if in rebuttal, that Omar Sheikh was first recruited by the British spy agency MI6.
The book also reports that the hijacking done by Masood Azhars brother Abdul Rauf and brother-in-law Yusuf Azhar of an Indian airliner that led to the release of Omar Sheikh and Masood Azhar from an Indian jail was linked to the ISI because its Quetta-based officers talked to the hijackers on the wireless set at Kandahar (p.128). Masood Azhar then went on to attack the Parliament in New Delhi in 2001, a month after 9/11. ISI chief Javed Ashraf Qazi on March 6, 2004 admitted that Jaish was involved in the New Delhi parliament assault (p.134). Later Jaish militants were to be housed in Lal Masjid during its siege by state troops in 2007 (p.141). An interesting chapter is included on the infiltration of the Pakistani cricket team by the Tablighi Jamaat. As a result, the team under captain Inzamam-ul Haq lost its playing ability to its obsession with tabligh and conversion. Media manager PJ Mir accused the team of neglecting the game during the 2007 World Cup and spending all the time trying to convert the innocent people of the West Indies (p.204). | ||||
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India-Pakistan |
The Curious Case Of Rashid Rauf |
2006-12-07 |
Just as in the case of Omar Sheikh and Dr.A.Q.Khan, the Pakistani authorities are once again avoiding handing him over a criminal to the British or American investigators. Rashid Rauf is from a Mirpuri family of Birmingham. The Mirpuris are the Punjabi-speaking residents of Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir (POK).He disappeared from the UK in 2002 after the British Police suspected him in connection with the murder of one of his relatives in Birmingham. Their search for him did not produce any clueseither in the UK or in Pakistan. Then, suddenly, on August 9, 2006, Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) claimed to have picked him up from a house in Bhawalpur, southern Punjab, which he had bought after coming to Pakistan in 2002. He had married a woman related by marriage to Maulana Masood Azhar, the Amir of the Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM) which was involved in the aborted attack on the Indian Parliament in December, 2001. The Pakistani authorities claimed that he was in close touch with Al Qaeda and that it was his arrest that gave them an inkling regarding the imminence of the plot of a group of jihadi extremists based in the UK to blow up a number of US-bound planes. The discovery of the conspiracy and the arrest of many UK-based suspects were then announced by the British Police. The final results of their investigation are not yet known. Since Rashid Rauf was projected by the Pakistani authorities as the most important player in the plot and as the man whose arrest led to the unearthing of the planned terrorist conspiracy in the UK, one would have thought that his being handed-over to the British for interrogation would have been of the highest priority to the British investigating authorities. But, no action has been taken so far. The Pakistani media had reported that a team of British Police officers had visited Pakistan to question him, but it is not clear whether Rashid was questioned by them and, if they and if his questioning did indicate his involvement in the plot, why have they have so far moved for his extradition. It is clear from the facts available so far that as with Omar Sheikh, the principal accused in the case relating to the kidnapping and murder of Daniel Pearl, the US journalist, in the beginning of 2002, and Dr.A.Q.Khan, the Pakistani nuclear scientist with links with Iran, North Korea, Libya and Al Qaeda, in the case of Rashid Rauf too, the Pakistani authorities are avoiding handing him over to the British or American investigators. Reliable police sources in Pakistan say that the reluctance of Gen.Pervez Musharraf to hand over Rashid Rauf to the UK or US is due to the fear that his independent interrogation by them might bring out that Rashid Rauf was aware of the training of some of the perpetrators of the Mumbai blasts of July, 2006, in which over 180 suburban train commuters were killed, in a camp of the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LET) in Bhawalpur and that the ISI was aware of his presence in Bhawalpur ever since 2002, when he fled to Pakistan from the UK. These police sources say that the ISI's contention that it came to know of his presence only in the beginning of August,2006, is not correct. The government of Pakistan told a court on October 30, 2006, that Rashid Rauf had been detained under the Security of Pakistan Act. A Rawalpindi Anti-Terrorism Judge, Justice Safdar Hussain Malik, passed orders on November 21, 2006, approving his judicial custody in the Adiala jail. This could rule out his early transfer to the British Police for interrogation. Under the joint anti-terrorism mechanism recently set up by the Foreign Secretaries of India and Pakistan, India should also request the Pakistani authorities for permission to interrogate him on the LET training camp in Bahawalpur. If Pakistan refuses to co-operate, the international community should be informed about it. |
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India-Pakistan |
The Taliban's Waziristan Accord: Musharraf Blinked! |
2006-10-15 |
![]() While Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf and a host of government functionaries continue to claim the Waziristan Accord was an agreement with the tribes that will further peace in the tribal regions, the Pakistani press continually refutes the government line. Dawn, the Pakistani newspaper that provided the details of the Waziristan Accord, digs deeper and discovers the agreement was indeed between the Taliban and the government. The tribes were essentially sidelined. The deal was signed with militants and not with tribal elders, as is being officially claimed. The signatories are the two principal parties to the conflict: (a) the administrator of North Waziristan as the government representative, and (b) militants and clerics who until September 5 were on the wanted list. Among them are Hafiz Gul Bahadar, Maulana Sadiq Noor, Azad Khan, Maulvi Saifullah, Maulvi Ahmad Shah Jehan, Azmat Ali, Hafiz Amir Hamza and Mir Sharaf.. How can you violate sovereinty that does not exist? By Bill Roggio |
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India-Pakistan |
ATC acquits man accused of attack on Musharraf |
2006-09-19 |
RAWALPINDI: An anti-terrorism court in Rawalpindi on Monday acquitted Nazir Ahmad Khan, who was allegedly involved in an attack on President Gen Pervez Musharraf in Rawalpindi. Khan, a resident of Peshawar, was acquitted when Special Court Magistrate Safdar Hussain Malik found no substantial evidence against him. |
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India-Pakistan |
SC confirms death sentence for LJ activists |
2006-05-18 |
![]() Mohammad Shahid Hanif was awarded a life term while Talah Hussain and Khalil Ahmed were handed down the death sentence by Judge Arshad Noor Khan of the Anti-Terrorism Court-III on April 15, 2002. The appellants, who according to the prosecution were riding a bike, had shot dead Syed Zafar Hussain, the director laboratories of the ministry of defence, while he was in his car on the way to office from his house in the limits of Gulberg police station on July 30, 2001. Safdar Hussain Shah, the car's driver, identified the accused during the identification parade as well as during the trial. The trial court, on the evidence of Safdar Hussain Shah, who was also an eyewitness to the crime, convicted all the accused, but awarded a lesser punishment to Mohammad Shahid. |
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India-Pakistan |
Wazoo holy men demand army leave |
2006-04-08 |
![]() The clerics denounced a ban on the display of weapons in North Waziristan. JUI-Fazl North Waziristan General Secretary Maulana Abdur Rehman told the Mir Ali jirga that carrying weapon was a key element of tribal traditions and tribal people could not accept the ban. The North Waziristan administration banned public display of weapons to improve law and order situation. The ban was also aimed at keeping Al Qaeda and Taliban-linked militants away from attacking security forces in main towns. We have feuds. Living in the tribal areas without weapons is impossible, said the JUI-F senior leader, who recently surrendered after the government declared him wanted. Eyewitnesses said that only the clerics addressed the jirga attended by around 10,000 tribesmen. The tribal elders did not speak on the occasion. The jirga will meet again on Monday to take important decisions. The participants demanded the removal of army from check-posts on roadside throughout North Waziristan. Tribal militant commander Baitullah Mehsud also demanded armys withdrawal from Waziristan. It is part of our deal with the government that forces will be withdrawn, he said while making telephone calls to newspaper offices in Peshawar from an undisclosed location. He said the armys withdrawal was a key point of the peace deal he reached with the government and signed on February 7 last year in the Sararogha area of South Waziristan. Baitullah said all those killed on Wednesday in North Waziristan were mujahideen returning from operations in Afghanistan. He said the tribal militants did not want to clash with security forces but whenever it happened there was no other way out. He added that tribal militants would continue jihad in Afghanistan. Jihad will continue as long as it is possible, he vowed. Baitullah alleged that certain intelligence agencies were threatening him and were trying to collapse the peace deal. Gen Safdar Hussain was sincere to peace in Waziristan but not the intelligence agencies, which are threatening to kill me, he claimed. The jirga of political leaders and elders in Mardan agreed to first meet NWFP Chief Minister Akram Khan Durrani to inform him of the situation in the seven districts. They pledged to fight criminals in Malakand Agency themselves if the government did not take action against them. The jirga was attended by parliamentarians Ikramullah Shahid, Amanat Shah and Sikandar Khan Sherpao, former provincial minister Abdus Subhan, former senator from Malakand Agency Sahibzada Khalid Khan, nazims and other elders of the seven districts at Mardan Circuit House on Friday. The participants were from the Mardan, Swabi, Nowshera, Charsadda, Dir Upper, Dir Lower and Malakand Agency. The jirag was concerned over the increasing incidents of kidnapping for ransom and pledged to flush the Provincial Administered Tribal Area (PATA) of all criminals. The jirga also expressed concern over vehicle thefts and demanded a crackdown on criminals. The speakers said that a handful of gangsters in Malakand Agency had made the life of others miserable. They demanded the federal and provincial governments declare the Agency a settled area and initiate military action against the criminals. The jirga demanded the government recover Haji Lal Zada who has been in the captivity of the kidnappers for the last two months. They threatened a direct action if the government failed to start military operation against the criminals in Malakand Agency. |
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India-Pakistan | |||
Sindh High Court maintains death sentence of LJ activists | |||
2006-02-23 | |||
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India-Pakistan |
Waziristan unrest scaring Pakistani government |
2005-12-29 |
NWFP Governor Khalilur Rehman is facing a real test of his political skills to bring South Waziristan under control after the turbulent tribal region was declared âsecuredâ following successful operations last year, analysts and tribal parliamentarians said on Wednesday. âWe discussed the Wana situation with the governor for two days and we are likely to hold a similar meeting with Peshawar Corps Commander Lt-Gen Hamid Khan today (Wednesday) or Thursday,â Wana MNA Maulana Abdul Malick told Daily Times. He declined to give details of his meeting with the governor. âLet the discussion finish first, then we will talk with the press,â he said. âSouth Waziristan is virtually under the control of people who were once on the governmentâs wanted list and foreign militants are roaming around freely in the area,â he said. South Waziristan MNA Maulana Mirajuddin was also present in meetings with the governor. He said âthe government is complaining about the situation in South Waziristanâ. He said there was a lack of consensus between the federal government and tribal people on the âwar on terrorâ in South Waziristan. âThe real problem was created after the military operations. Whatever anger persists among the people is because the government has imposed its decisions through force,â Mirajuddin said when he came out after meeting the governor on Wednesday. The MMA MNA from South Waziristan renewed his earlier statement that military action against Al Qaeda and Taliban-linked militants was âa mistakeâ and believed negotiations could have achieved the desired results. âPresident Pervez Musharraf failed to convince the people in Waziristan about his pro-America policy after the 9/11 terrorist attacks in the United States,â he said. âThe Waziristan people are not so bad that the government is worried and launching military operations,â Mirajuddin said. Mirajuddin warned that any military option in future would not help the government. âI donât think the military action will generate pro-government feelings among the tribesmen,â he said. Analysts said the successor to Lt-Gen Safdar Hussain might prefer negotiations to bring South Waziristan under control. But these analysts also warned Gen Hamid against âremaining a silent spectator to the situation in Wanaâ where, according to them, militants had obtained greater freedom than before their peace agreements. âWe think that we have failed to build on successes the military achieved in 2004. It will not be exaggeration to say that Pakistan has lost South Waziristan in 2005,â they said. Due to a large number of people migrating from South Waziristan to nearby Dera Ismail Khan district for security reasons there is a surge in demand for rented houses in the district. âWana and surrounding areas have become a wild west. The administration is paralysed and tribal elders are under the constant target of militants. The Wana bazaar has turned into a recruiting centre,â a tribal elder said. Four paramilitary soldiers were kidnapped few hundreds metres from their base in Wana early this month and two of them were later found decapitated. A senior administration official escaped narrowly when his vehicle was blown up in a remote-controlled bomb explosion in DI Khan on Monday. |
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Terror Networks |
Rummy unaware of Binny's location |
2005-12-22 |
Speaking aboard a U.S. Air Force flight from Washington to Pakistan on 21 December, U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld stated that the U.S. government does not know the whereabouts of Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, but has a âreasonable assumptionâ that he is in the remote area along the Afghan-Pakistan border. "I suspect that, in any event, if he's alive and functioning, that he's probably spending a major fraction of his time trying to avoid being caught," Rumsfeld told journalists. "I have trouble believing that he's able to operate sufficiently to be in a position of major command over a worldwide Al-Qaeda operation, but I could be wrong. We just don't know." On 13 December, U.S. Ambassador to Pakistan Ryan Crocker told reporters in Islamabad that he did not believe bin Laden was in control of Al-Qaeda and that the organization was in âserious trouble.â âI think that Osama bin Laden is no longer the operational head of Al-Qaeda, because he is hiding deep inside the mountains and he doesnât have contact with the Al-Qaeda people,â Crocker said. Crocker might have been responding to a video address made on 7 December by Al-Qaeda deputy chief Ayman Al-Zawahiri, who claimed that bin Laden was alive and well and leading the jihad. âAll the lies that U.S. President Bush tries to delude the Americans with, saying that he destroyed half, or three quarters of Al-Qaeda are but nonsense merely in his own head,â Zawahiri said on the tape. The fact that Al-Zawahiri is able to post videos of himself on websites indicates that the Al-Qaeda leadership is not totally isolated in distant mountainous regions. In September, Al-Zawahiri appeared on a video in which he claimed that Al-Qaeda was responsible for the blasts in the London transport system in July, in which 56 people were killed. Three of the suicide bombers had previously visited Pakistan, fuelling speculation that they might have been in contact with Al-Qaeda. During his meeting with the press, Rumsfeld was asked if he believes that bin Laden is alive. "If he's not around.... We know he has a fondness for talking on tapes and videotapes, and he seems not to be terribly fond of it for the last period of months," Rumsfeld said. "But I just don't know [if he's dead]." The Pakistani commander in charge of counterterrorism operations along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border, Lt. General Safdar Hussain, was asked by CBS News on 25 September about the possibility that bin Laden might be dead or incapacitated. âIs it all that important to find him?" Hussain said. Even if heâs taken out tomorrow, his ideology is not going to come to an end. So, I donât think that heâs that important that we should be overly concerned about his being dead or alive.â |
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India-Pakistan | |
34 surrender in North Waziristan | |
2005-11-29 | |
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The peace deal comes after months of fighting between security forces and tribal militants and their foreign guests in the border area, and operations in Khattey Kaley in September in which both sides reportedly suffered heavy casualties. Key JUI-F leader and former MNA Maulana Deen Dar brokered the deal with the militants, mostly from his own party. MNA Maulana Nek Zaman and Senator Mateen Shah also helped the government reach the deal. Maulana Abdur Rehman, JUI-F general-secretary in North Waziristan, was prominent among those who surrendered. âWe donât know if there are any foreigners in North Waziristan. If there is anybody, he should register himself with the government,â Rehman said on the occasion. He said the âinfidel worldâ wanted to destroy Pakistanâs nuclear bomb, clerics and mosques. âBut we will not let it happen,â said Rehman, who security agencies suspected to be facilitating Al Qaeda in the area. The Monday peace deal was the first major âpolitical breakthroughâ since new Peshawar Corps Commander Lt-Gen Muhammad Hamid Khan took over in October. Chief broker Dar urged the government to differentiate between âthe good and bad peopleâ in North Waziristan. He did not elaborate. Tribal elder Khan Asghar Khan, speaking at the peace deal ceremony, underscored the tribal peopleâs sacrifices for the defence of the country. âThe local population will never take a step that endangers the countryâs security,â he said. He asked the tribesmen to stay vigilant as the âenemyâ, an apparent reference to India, was trying on the western border to cause a divide between the tribes and the Pakistan Army. The North Waziristan administration did not release the details of the peace deal, or whether the surrendered militants were being kept in custody for interrogation or allowed to go home. | |
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Afghanistan/South Asia |
Military campaign in N Waziristan: Search starts after âmysterious endâ to resistance |
2005-10-02 |
![]() The end to resistance was followed by a âstern warningâ early on Saturday morning by the army that preparations to launch a âdecisive military operationâ against militants were complete. It called on civilians to leave their homes for their own safety. However, sources said that the Khatai Kallay had already been vacated by civilians, and the militants had also âdisappearedâ between Friday and Saturday after heavy artillery shelling. âThe village is empty and troops have moved in for the search operation,â sources said. Peshawar Corps Commander Lt Gen Safdar Hussain met top commanders in Miranshah to discuss the plans of the operations. A tribal journalist in Miranshah said that the militants had agreed to an unconditional search operation by the security forces. |
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