India-Pakistan |
Jirga announces sanctions against Taliban supporters |
2008-09-06 |
![]() The new sanctions include the torching of houses and a fine of Rs 1 million for Salarzai tribesmen providing refuge to the militants, tribal elders told Daily Times. Elders of all the Salarzai tribes participated in the jirga, which also decided that the Taliban would not be allowed to disrupt peace in the Salarzai tehsil. Addressing the jirga, Malak Manasab Khan, Malak Bakhtawar Khan, Malak Abdul Nasir and Malak Muhammad Younas said, "Pakistan is our country and we don't want militancy here. Those involved in creating law and order problems in the tehsil have no right to live here." They said if the Taliban took any action against them, they would react strongly. "Complete peace has been restored in the Salarzai tehsil and there is no militant in the area," the elders told the jirga. The tribal elders also convened a grand jirga of the Salarzai tribes on September 10. Meanwhile, security forces, backed by helicopter gunships and artillery, destroyed suspected militant hideouts in Khar and Torghundi areas. The locals have started fleeing to safer areas. The locals face problems due to an un-announced curfew in the agency. Most of the business centres and government departments remained closed. TTP: Spokesman of the defunct Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan Maulvi Umer said on telephone from an undisclosed location that the government was violating the ceasefire in Bajaur Agency, Swat and other Tribal Areas. He vowed that the Taliban were still standing by their promise. "There is complete ceasefire from the Taliban side," he added. Umer said the Taliban reserved the right to retaliate where the security forces attacked them. He also warned of revenge for the damages done to the Taliban. |
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India-Pakistan |
Salarzai Lashkar kills militant in Bajaur to avenge elders killings |
2008-08-30 |
Fed up with the Taliban, being blamed for mass exodus from Bajaur Agency due to the military operation, the tribesmen of Salarzai tehsil in the agency Tuesday raised an anti-Taliban lashkar (armed force) that killed a militant. The lashkar was raised after three notables including two tribal elders and a cleric belonging to Batmaley village of Salarzai Tehsil, were ambushed and killed by suspected Taliban fighters on Monday near Khar, the agency headquarters. Reports suggested tribal elders Malik Bakhtawar Khan and Malik Shah Zarin and religious scholar Maulvi Sher Wali were ambushed on their way home after a meeting with government officials in Khar where they pledged to raise a lashkar and sought government assistance towards this end. The government officials and local tribesmen held the Taliban responsible for the killings. Sources from Salarzai tehsil reported the lashkar, comprising 200-300 volunteers, announced to fight against militants soon after bodies of the three elders were brought to the village. They blamed local Taliban commander Maulvi Niamatullah for the killings and vowed revenge. Later, the lashkar opened fire on a group of three militants travelling in a car near Batmaley and killed one of them. The other two militants, according to villagers, fled after being slightly injured. The name of the slain militant could not be ascertained but local villagers said he belonged to Mansehra. The tribesmen's revolt against Taliban fighters is the first of its kind in Bajaur Agency. Salarzai residents may give the Taliban a tough time if the government extended them support. After the killing of a militant by the lashkar, sources said, the Taliban fighters started checking every vehicle at their roadside checkpoints in a bid to capture the residents of Batmaley village. Meanwhile, the security forces continued firing mortar and artillery shells at suspected militant hideouts in Mamond and Salarzai subdivisions. However, there were no details about casualties suffered by the Taliban. Tuesday was a relatively calm day in Bajaur, as gunship helicopters or jetfighters did not pound Taliban positions. On the other hand, several displaced families were seen returning to their homes in Bajaur from the relief camps outside agency. Reports of unilateral ceasefire by the militants and their secret talks with the government are a ray of hope for the displaced families. |
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India-Pakistan |
TNSM delegation meets DIG Malakand |
2008-04-09 |
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