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India-Pakistan
Anti-Baitullah militant leader Turkistan Bhittani surrenders
2009-09-20
[Dawn] Anti-Baitullah militant leader Turkistan Bhittani has surrendered to the authorities in Tank along with several hundred fighters. Bhittani said that he had been requested by the government to stop fighting.

Speaking to DawnNews Turkistan Bhittani said that he had more than 5,000 armed activists fighting militancy in the area along with the security forces.

He said that the authorities had asked his group to give up their armed struggle against the Taliban and therefore the group had decided to surrender their weapons to the authorities.

Turkistan Bhittani said that more than 500 fighters had laid down their arms while other members of the group would disarm gradually.

Bhittani said that his militia had been fighting the militants and terrorists in the interest of the country. Turkistan Bhittani and the slain Qari Zainuddin had formed an alliance to fight the Baitullah Mehsud led Taliban.

Unconfirmed reports say that recently the Bhittani-led group had offered peace talks to the Baitullah-led group which was perhaps the main reason behind disarming the group.--
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India-Pakistan
Military convoy attacked in N Waziristan; soldier dies
2009-08-17
One soldier was killed and two others were injured when militants attacked a military convoy in Derga Mandi area in the restive North Waziristan tribal region on Saturday. According to sources, the convoy was on its way to Miramshah from the border town of Ghulam Khan. They said the assailants used machine guns and rockets in the attack.

Soon afterwards the security forces launched a counter-attack and targeted nearby houses. Residents said four people, including two children, received bullet injuries.

Muhammad Irfan Mughal adds from Tank
Supporters of Baitullah Mehsud and those of Turkistan Bhittani clashed in the Gomal Bazaar area on Saturday, leaving four people dead. According to local people, Baitullah's supporters attacked the office of pro-government militant commander Turkistan Bhittani, killing one man and wounding two others. The Bhittani group killed three attackers. The group also claimed seizing four wounded assailants. However, the claim could not be confirmed. Baitullah's supporters had attacked their rival's offices in the area a few days ago and kidnapped several people.

Meanwhile, four unidentified bodies were found in the Kariwam area of Frontier Region of Jandola on Saturday, local officials said.
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India-Pakistan
'Maulvi Nazir' among 17 killed in Taliban infighting
2009-08-17
At least 17 members of the Maulvi Nazir faction of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), including Maulvi Nazir himself, have been killed in fighting with the Baitullah Mehsud group, rival leader Turkistan Bhittani told a private TV channel on Sunday.

"They were hiding behind rocks and, as soon as our people reached there, they opened fire. It was so sudden and quick that none of our men could fire back," Shaheen Wazir, Maulvi Nazir's spokesman, told the Reuters news agency via telephone. However, another spokesman, Abdul Haq, told AFP the group was not blaming anyone. "We cannot say whether it was Mehsud's men or the government that was behind this attack," he added.

Meanwhile, an intelligence official of the region said Taliban belonging to the Baitullah Mehsud group had also fired rocket-propelled grenades at pick-up trucks carrying Wazir fighters towards Wana. A resident saw the Taliban carrying some of the dead bodies into Wana after the attack, Reuters reported.
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India-Pakistan
Tribal chieftain among 14 killed in SWA clashes
2009-08-14
[The News (Pak) Top Stories] It seems target killing has once again started in the violence-hit South Waziristan as four persons, including a prominent pro-government tribal chieftain, were killed and three others injured in a bomb blast in Wana on Thursday.

Also, fighting between the pro-government militant commander, Turkistan Bhittani and Baitullah Mehsud-led Taliban continued for the second consecutive day on Thursday at Sur Ghar area near Srarogha in South Waziristan in which, officials said, 10 more people were killed.

Tribal sources told The News from Wana, headquarters of South Waziristan, that unidentified persons had planted an explosive-device with a motorcycle and parked it with the car of the tribal elder, Malik Khadeen. The explosive device went off as soon as Khadeen and his son approached their car, killing him and his three security guards on the spot.

The sources said Malik Khadeen was presumed to be the target of unknown terrorists as he had already survived two similar attempts on his life. Three other persons, including his son, sustained serious injuries in the blast and were shifted to the nearby hospital in Wana.

According to sources, Malik Khadeen being a pro-government tribal elder, was instrumental in eviction of Uzbekistani militants from Wana and Shakai areas of South Waziristan in 2007. Meanwhile, fierce fighting between Turkistan Bhittani and his rival group affiliated with Baitullah Mehsud continued for the second day in parts of South Waziristan.

A government official based in Tank said 10 persons from both sides were killed on Thursday. Pleading anonymity, he said 30 houses owned by the Bhittani tribesmen had been burnt by the invading Taliban militants in Sur Ghar village - located on the boundary between FR Jandola and South Waziristan. There were also reports of shelling by the military helicopter gunships on suspected positions of the Baitullah Mehsud-led Taliban in which the sources said 15 militants were killed.
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India-Pakistan
Tribal commanders turn on Mehsud as Mighty Pak Army™ threatens lair
2009-06-18
A war of words erupted in Pakistan's tribal belt today as pro-government tribal commanders fired verbal salvoes against the embattled Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud while the army pressed ahead with its plans to invade his South Waziristan lair.

Qari Zainuddin, a fellow Mehsud tribesmen who has risen from obscurity in recent months, accused the warlord of being an Indian and Israeli agent. "He is working against Islam," he told Geo television. Another commander, Turkistan Bhittani, launched a more fanciful slur – that Baitullah, who has a $5m US government bounty on his head, is in the secret employ of Washington.

The comments underscored the tangled web of jihadi politics and personalities facing Pakistan's army as it prepares for a battle that could determine the future of Pakistan. They came as missiles fired from what is thought to have been a US drone were reported to have killed nine militants in South Waziristan.

Mehsud, the leader of Pakistan's largest Taliban grouping, has become the country's top hate figure for launching suicide attacks and allegedly orchestrating the assassination of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto in 2007. His mountainous stronghold is also home to hundreds of al-Qaida fighters, possibly including Osama bin Laden, although most experts believe he is hiding further north in the tribal belt.

Fresh from its success in Swat, where the Taliban have been driven from the main towns, the Pakistani army hopes to isolate Mehsud in South Waziristan through a combination of military strikes and alliances with friendly tribal commanders.

The newly aggressive approach has won generous praise from a previously sceptical US government. But while tribal allies such as Zainuddin oppose Mehsud, they also support al-Qaida and fight western troops in Afghanistan. "We have reservations that this is going to work," said a senior western diplomat in Islamabad. The operation has unofficially started, with troops imposing an economic blockade on Mehsud territory, sealing off approach roads and rounding up supporters. Helicopters and warplanes have pounded targets in Janni Khel district on the fringe of Waziristan.

Anwar Kamal Marwat, a tribal leader from the nearby district of Lakki Marwat, witnessed the violence. "There was no hand to hand fighting. It was all artillery and air attacks," he said. Women and children fleeing the fighting had been permitted to shelter in his area, a traditional courtesy in tribal warfare.

The Mehsud campaign is likely to be far tougher, and bloodier, than the six-week Swat operation. "It will be long, and too many people will die on both sides," said Sailab Mehsud, a veteran local journalist.Handled wrong, it could stir a wider revolt among fiercely independent tribesmen. Mass arrests of Mehsud tribesmen had stirred great anger, said Mehsud. "People say that they will shift to Afghanistan or join Baitullah," he said.

Mehsud may strike back with violence in the major cities. Two days ago authorities in Peshawar closed the city airport, apparently indefinitely, after threats of attack.
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