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Jets pound
militant stronghold in NWA
MIRANSHAH—Warplanes on Tuesday pounded militant positions in North
Waziristan, as fighting raged for a fourth day in a tribal region known
as an al Qaeda and Taliban stronghold, an army spokesman said. There has
been intense fighting since Saturday night around the town of Mir Ali,
and nearly 200 people had been killed before Tuesday’s air strike.
“Aircraft were used to attack militants positions near Mir Ali this
afternoon,” military spokesman Major General Waheed Arshad said.
Thousands of families were fleeing the town of 50,000 and outlying
villages, making their way on foot, in tractor trailers and cars. Arshad
had no details of casualties from Tuesday’s air strike, though residents
and a security official in North Waziristan put the number of people
killed at close to 50.
Air strikes earlier destroyed most houses around Essori, a village near
Mir Ali where most of the fighting was concentrated. “We don’t have any
place to live,” said villager Mohammad Anwar. “We have sent our children
to other areas because children are scared that the bombing could start
again.” The military had put the death toll from the three days of
fighting at 150 militants, and 45 soldiers. Whereas the army has often
used missile-firing helicopter gunships to attack militant targets in
the past, the use of warplanes in the last few days was a new
development. The latest clashes began after militants ambushed a
military convoy near Mir Ali, and casualties mounted as the army struck
back using ground troops, artillery, helicopter gunships and fighter
jets.
Sher Khan, a resident of Mir Ali, reckoned nearly 90 percent of families
in the town had fled, leaving behind a few menfolk to guard their
belongings. “The main bazaar of Mir Ali is sealed by the army,” Khan
said. “All shops are closed. We have nothing to eat. That’s why I have
sent my family to Bannu.” Lying at the gateway to Waziristan, the North
West Frontier town of Bannu has suffered plenty of militancy itself.
In neighboring South Waziristan militants have been holding about 225
soldiers since the end of August. Violence has surged in the lawless
Waziristan region since militants scrapped a peace deal with authorities
in July. Attacks by suicide bombers have become commonplace, especially
after the army stormed a mosque in Islamabad in July to crush an armed
student movement.
A bomb wounded 17 people in a bazaar in Peshawar, the capital of the
volatile North West Frontier Province, on Tuesday. Unable to defeat the
militants in Waziristan, having lost more than 1,000 men in three years,
the Pakistan army had tried contain the problem by seeking a ceasefire
last year. Critics, including U.S. generals, said the strategy
effectively created a safe haven for the Taliban and al Qaeda. There
have been growing fears in the West that al Qaeda had regrouped in
Waziristan and was organizing conspiracies in Western countries from
there. The militants had originally fled to the region after U.S.-led
forces drove them out of Afghanistan in late 2001.
U.S. ally President Pervez Musharraf swept a vote by parliamentarians on
Saturday, but he will have to wait until October 17 at least to hear
whether the Supreme Court rules whether he was eligible to stand for
re-election while still army chief. Opposition among many Pakistanis,
mainly in the conservative northwest, to General Musharraf’s support for
U.S. policy in the region has increased, analysts say.—Agencies |