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India-Pakistan
Four Pakistani policemen killed in militant ambush
2008-06-10
Suspected Taliban militants killed four policemen in an ambush in northwestern Pakistan, while an Islamist leader escaped a bomb attack in the same area on Monday, officials said.

The incidents came despite peace talks between the new government and the hardline militants aimed at stopping a wave of extremist violence in Pakistan's troubled mountain regions bordering Afghanistan.

The attack on the police happened on Sunday night in Matani, near Peshawar, the capital of troubled North West Frontier Province, senior police investigator Nasirul Mulk told AFP.

"The militants hid near a gas station and opened fire on the police van. It was a surprise attack -- the police party could not even retaliate because the hail of bullets was so sudden," Mulk said.

Four policemen were killed and a senior police officer was wounded in the attack, he said, adding that a hunt was under way for the killers.

Separately four policemen escorting Sufi Mohammad, the chief of the banned pro-Taliban group Tahreek Nifaz-e-Shariat Mohammadi (TNSM), were wounded in a bomb blast on Monday, officials said.

Mohammad was freed in April after spending seven years in jail for allegedly sending rebels to fight the US-led invasion which eventually toppled Afghanistan's hardline Taliban regime. "A remote controlled bomb was planted alongside the road which went off as the escort van passed by it. The TNSM chief remained unhurt in the attack" in his native town of Dir Maidan, a security official told AFP. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for either attack.
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India-Pakistan
Pakistani Army troops on offensive in troubled Swat valley
2007-11-13
(KUNA) -- A day after President Pervez Musharraf said that his men will take action in the northern Sawat district the army went on the offensive carrying out mop-up operations against the militants.

Two military gunship helicopters pounded militants positions in Matta area of the district for the first time since Musharraf imposed emergency in the country, police sources told KUNA. They said the strike left many people wounded, adding that there were reports that about 10 militants were killed.

Addressing foreign journalists here on Sunday, Musharraf said the Army in the troubled areas of Swat, prior to the imposition of emergency, was not allowed to act in aid of the paramilitary forces. "Now after the emergency, the army will take action to combat terrorism," he said. The army has assumed the lead role in Swat from today onward, said military spokesman Waheed Arshad while talking to media. He said the army will be conducting operations in coordination with local and provincial authorities. He declined to give any timeframe for the operation but said that it will continue till the "militants are brought to book."

Earlier, the Law-enforcement agencies, Police, FC and Frontier Core (FC), had been conducting operation against local radical Muslim cleric, Maulana Fazlullah, and his supporters since last three weeks. Fazlullah, known as "Mullah Radio" is covertly running Al-Qaeda linked banned group Tahreek Nifaz-e-Shariat Mohammadi (TNSM) in Swat that has given rise to militancy and extremism in once-peaceful lush green valley. Few days after the operation was launched, militants kidnapped and executed eight security personnel in public.

The operation has killed over 200 militants and caused immense property damage, compelling the local population to flee to safe areas.
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India-Pakistan
Pakistani forces launch offensive against militants in Swat valley
2007-10-27
(KUNA) — Hundreds of Pakistani troops with aerial support launched an operation against a local holy man militant commander and his supporters in the once peaceful Swat valley in northern frontier province, NWFP, a day after huge explosions killed over 30 security personnel and wounded dozens others in the area. Paramilitary troopers, after Friday noon prayers, raided a seminary of local militants' commander Maulana Fazlullah at Imamdehri village, security sources told KUNA.

They said a fierce gunbattle erupted between the supporters of Maulana and troopers when they tried to enter into the seminary. They added that the two sides were still exchanging heavy fire, adding that troops fired mortar shells as well. According to media reports, at least six gunship helicopters were hovering in the area and sounds of explosions could also be heard. Sources said that forces had taken control of the militants' training camp adjacent to the religious seminary. Another source claimed that at least five militants had been killed and several, including security men, were wounded in the ongoing offensive. The source said the two sides were using heavy weapons against each other.

The operation was launched a day after in a suicide explosion that caused ammunition in military truck to explode, killed over 30 security personnel and wounded several others.
Important safety tip here: If you need a ride in a war zone, probably the ammunition truck isn't the best ride to have. You might think seriously about walking. If there are 40 of you, you might want to wait for a bus.
The attack has been seen in reaction to recent troops reinforcement in the valley in the aftermath of rising militancy and attacks on security forces. Military Spokesman Waheed Arshad said troops had been dispatched at the request of provincial government to improve the situation of law and order.

A few hours ahead of the operation, Caretaker Chief Minister NWFP Shamsul Mulk told Pakistan Television that the government had no intention to launch a specific operation in Swat if the efforts to establish its writ are not resisted.
Militancy and extremism is on the rise in once peaceful touristic Swat valley since Tahreek Nifaz-e-Shariat Mohammadi (TNSM), Fazlullah's Al-Qaeda linked banned group, established its strongholds in the area. Despite the government ban on his group and its illegal radio station, Fazlullah, also known as "Mullah Radio," has been broadcasting fiery anti-government and anti-west speeches on his illegal FM radio station.

A few hours ahead of the operation, Caretaker Chief Minister NWFP Shamsul Mulk told Pakistan Television that the government had no intention to launch a specific operation in Swat if the efforts to establish its writ are not resisted. He said the writ of government was weak in the area and the government was trying to strengthen it by deploying more troops. If these efforts are not resisted the law enforcers will not go in pursuit of anyone to his doorstep, the chief minister said.

Hundreds flee as ‘operation’ launched in Swat
  • Forces battle with Fazlullah supporters
  • One militant killed, bodies of 4 abducted soldiers found
  • Militants fire at copter carrying FC IG
  • Musharraf directs officials to avoid civilian losses
By Saleem Athar and Manzoor Ali Shah
MINGORA/PESHAWAR: Security forces battled with armed supporters of rebel cleric Maulana Fazlullah here on Friday, killing one militant and injuring three others, while bodies of four abducted security personnel were found on a roadside, witnesses and officials said. Two civilians were also killed in the clashes, as hundreds of residents of Imam Dheri started leaving the area fearing a full-scale operation, Online reported.

Maulana Fazlullah’s spokesman Sirajuddin confirmed the attack on the cleric’s headquarters in Imam Dheri and the death of a militant. He said that an 80-member delegation was heading for Islamabad to hold talks with the federal government on the invitation of Political Affairs Minister Amir Muqam when the security forces besieged Fazlullah’s headquarters. “Heavy weapons and helicopters were used when the forces surrounded Fazlullah’s headquarters,” security sources told Daily Times.

The local Taliban set up barricades at Sharialm, Chaprial and Shakar Dara in Matta Tehsil on Friday morning and took ‘suspicious’ people hostage at gunpoint, locals told Daily Times. Three Frontier Corps personnel and a policeman were reportedly among the ‘suspicious’ people the Taliban took hostage from the Chaprial and Pir Killi areas of Matta Tehsil. The militants later dumped the bodies of the four law enforcement personnel in Shakar Dara.
"What'ya bring 'em in for, Mahmoud?"
"Looked suspicious to me, Yer Holiness."
"Okay. Kill 'em."
NWFP Home Secretary Badshah Gul Wazir said they received “unconfirmed reports” of the abducted soldiers’ killing. The militants paraded the soldiers’ bodies in their vehicles while holding the head of a soldier in the air to show their barbarity, he added.
That's unconfirmed barbarity, mind you.
A journalist of a local television channel was also taken hostage in Imam Dheri on suspicion of being an “undercover agent”, but was released after four hours.

Military spokesman Maj Gen Waheed Arshad said army helicopters joined the operation, and troops were sent to the region as reserves to help local authorities maintain law and order, if requested, AP reported.

Helicopter attacked: Separately, militants fired at a helicopter carrying FC Inspector General Maj Gen Alam Khattak who had come to inspect his troops deployed at Fizza Ghat. They missed the target and the helicopter made safe landing, said a local police official.

Musharraf briefed: The top military authorities and the NWFP governor have briefed President Pervez Musharraf on the operation in Swat, Online reported. Musharraf has asked them to avoid loss of life and property of civilians. NWFP Home Minister Shahzada Gustasap
Yes, you read that name right. It's Pasatsug, spelled backwards.
said the government was still trying to pacify the situation through peaceful means, while a meeting of the NWFP cabinet hinted at the promulgation of the Provincial Shariah Act 2003 to the Provincially Administrated Tribal Areas (PATA). The meeting also decided to implement the Nizam-e-Aadal Ordinance in the Malakand and Swat areas after removing the ‘legal hitches’ with the consultation of the Peshawar High Court chief justice.

It also considered allowing an FM Radio channel in the area for “peaceful teachings”. The cabinet also discussed a proposal for setting up Shariah courts and appointment of qazis.
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India-Pakistan
30 dead in Pakistan military blast
2007-10-25
A blast tore through a truck carrying paramilitary soldiers in restive northwest Pakistan on Thursday, killing 30 people and wounding at least a dozen more, a senior security official said.
The vehicle, which was packed with ammunition, was travelling outside Mingora, the main city in the scenic Swat valley in North West Frontier Province, when the explosion occurred, the official said.

"Thirty people were killed in the explosion including 17 paramilitary soldiers. The damage was high because the truck was packed with ammunition," the official, who asked not to be named, told AFP.

A doctor at a local hospital said 10 bodies had been brought in so far.

"Ten dead bodies were brought to Saidu Sharif hospital, and 35 wounded people. Some of the bodies are charred," doctor Nisar Khan told AFP.

Security sources said a suicide bomber detonated his explosives near the truck, but the government said the truck's cargo could have triggered the explosion.

"The nature of the blast is not clear and it is being ascertained. There was ammunition in the truck which caused the damage," interior ministry spokesman Javed Cheema told AFP.

The explosion comes just one day after Pakistan deployed more than 2,000 troops to the scenic Swat valley to bolster efforts to stem rising violence linked to pro-Taliban militants.

The district was once one of Pakistan's premier tourist attractions, but the area in conservative North West Frontier Province, bordering Afghanistan, has become a stronghold of banned group Tahreek Nifaz-e-Shariat Mohammadi (TNSM).

The radical group has close ties to Taliban fighters who have been mounting attacks on government officials and security forces in the area.

No one immediately claimed responsibility for Thursday's attack.

Hundreds of Taliban militants fled over the Afghan border into Pakistan's nearby tribal areas after the fall of the Taliban in a US-led invasion in 2001.

Pakistan's military has suffered a string of deadly attacks since government troops stormed the Al-Qaeda-linked Red Mosque in Islamabad in July.

Most of those attacks have been suicide blasts that have killed about 400 people since July, according to an AFP tally.

The military said Wednesday that the deployment of troops into Swat was aimed at improving law and order in the troubled region.
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