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Posts Tagged ‘Miranshah’

Pakistani Taliban kill 51 in strikes at Heart of US Presence, and at Secular Party

April 6th, 2010 Arab News No comments

Although in the US the big news out of Pakistan on Monday, understandably, was a Taliban attack on the american consulate in Peshawar that killed 5 persons, including two Pakistani policemen guarding the consulate, in Pakistan itself the subsequent bombing of a political rally that left around 45 persons dead and 100 others wounded was equally a source of anxiety.

Five well-armed and well-trained guerrillas of the Tehrik-i Taliban Pakistan (TTP or Taliban Movement of Pakistan) launched the attack on the consulate with rocket propelled grenades. It appears that three of them were killed prematurely when one accidentally detonated the bomb in his vehicle. Two of the dead were found with sophisticated suicide bomb vests that they had not had the opportunity to set off at the consulate. It is chilling that only the bombers’ own mistakes prevented the attack from being much more devastating.

Azam Tariq, a spokesman for the Movement of Pakistani Taliban in the city of Miranshah, announced to reporters that the attack on the consulate was intended to be revenge for US drone attacks in the tribal regions and for the role the US played in pushing the Pakistani military to mount military campaigns against the TTP in Swat and South Waziristan. Dawn quotes him as saying ““We will continue attacks on the Americans in Pakistan and Afghanistan.”

AP has video:

In Timergara, 171 km from Peshawar, a Taliban suicide bomber killed 45 and wounded 100 at a rally. The secular Pashtun party, the Awami National Party, held a big celebration to commemorate the renaming of the North-West Frontier Province as ‘Khyber-Pukhtunkhwa.’ The new name combines a famous place name (the Khyber Pass) with the ethnic name of most of the people of the province, Pukhtuns or Pashtuns. The other Pakistan provinces were already named for their major ethno-linguistic group. The renaming was a victory for Pashtun subnationalism and therefore poses a threat to the Taliban, who seek their support from the Pashtuns, as well. Most Pashtuns reject the extreme religious and political ideas of the Pakistani Taliban, and the ANP, which controls the state legislature, is promoting a form of Pashtun ethnic pride. This is not the first time the Pakistani Taliban have lashed out at their secular rivals. That there is a powerful anti-Taliban political tendency in Khyber-Pukhtunkhwa is often overlooked by outsiders.

GEO satellite television said in its broadcast of “Today With Kamran Khan” on Tuesday, April 6, 2010:

‘Kamran Khan establishes telephonic contact with Mian Iftikhar Hussain, NWFP senior minister, and asks him whether the local leadership of Awami National Party (ANP) did not take a risk while arranging a public meeting in Lower Dir because two or three major terrorist attacks have taken place there in recent weeks. Sidestepping the question, Hussain says: the ANP is in “forefront” of war against terror and it is supporting and siding with the security agencies at all cost and, so, the terrorists are naturally targeting the ANP. Hussain adds that the ANP has, however, accepted the challenge of terrorists and it will neither be “frightened” nor “surrender” in fight against terror. Hussain says: “there may be many more martyrdoms, but we have made a resolve, a firm resolve, that our jihad would continue until the elimination of terrorists.” When asked why Dir is being particularly targeted by terrorists, Hussain says Dir borders Bajaur and Mohmand Agency which had been strongholds of terrorists and as their strongholds are being gradally dismantled (in military operations), terrorists want to have their presence felt through some isolated attacks. When asked whether attackers of US consulate have been identified, Hussain says: faces of five of the attackers are beyond recognition and only the face of one remaining attacker is slightly recognizable and he appears to be “foreigner,” but this would be confirmed only after the completion of investigation. Hussain pays tributes to the security agencies for foiling the “well prepared” terror attack.’

The outbreak of Taliban guerrilla attacks in the northwest did not forestall the Pakistani government’s major political move. President Asaf Ali Zardari is attempting to speed up the passage of legislation that would strip the president of the right arbitrarily to fire the prime minister and dismiss parliament. Zardari, oddly enough, addressed parliament in English, speaking for the last time as a political figure– before being reduced to a political symbol. This movement by the Pakistani government does return it to a parliamentary model that is more democratic than the high-handed president’s rule fostered by military dictatorships since the early 1980s, though from the point of
view of the Pakistan public, the deterioration in the country’s security is probably the more pressing issue.

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Panetta: Al-Qaeda Effectively Disrupted; Yemeni Killed in Drone Strike; Nearly 6,000 Pakistanis Killed in Terrorist Incidents since 9/11

March 18th, 2010 Arab News No comments

CIA director Leon Panetta said Wednesday that US strikes against targets in northern Pakistan have left al-Qaeda in disarray and without the command and control necessary to plan and carry out major operations.

The US is claiming a big success in a precision strike on the town of Miranshah in North Waziristan, saying that it killed Husain Yemeni. Yemeni is said to be a liaison between al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula and the Arabs holed up in North Waziristan, north Pakistan. He is also said to have been involved in the bombing of a CIA forward base in Afghanistan in late December, which killed several CIA operatives along with some contractors.

The News reports that: since 9/11 (102 months), Pakistan has suffered a major terrorist bombing roughly once every 10 days. Over these years, there were 332 ‘terrorism-related incidents,’ which killed 5,704 persons (substantially more than died in the September 11 attacks). By city, terrorist bombings clustered this way:

Peshawar: 58 terrorist incidents
Rawalpindi/Islamabad: 46
Karachi: 37
Lahore: 21
Swat Valley: 21
Karachi: 21

In the troubled Northwest of the country, the Taliban of Miranshah in North Waziristan on Wednesday affirmed their commitment to an ongoing truce with the government. The truce is observed by Pakistan as it campaigns in South Waziristan, so as to be able to concentrate on one tribal area at a time. The truce is shaky, and was annulled last summer briefly by the Taliban.

Centcom commander Gen. David Petraeus cautioned Pakistan that another terrorist attack on India such as Lashkar-e Tayyiba carried out on Mumbai could spark severe conflict in South Asia. Radicalism in Punjab of the Lashkar sort is an increasing concern among Pakistanis, as this Dawn editorial shows.

Meanwhile, Pakistan’s two big rival parties, the Pakistan People’s Party and the Pakistan Muslim League-N (PMLN), have been roiled over comments earlier this week by Shahbaz Sharif, the Chief Minister of Punjab Province, who said that Taliban should not hit the Punjab, since Punjabis had been more or less on the same page in their opposition to military dictator Pervez Musharraf. On Wednesday, the Taliban showed interest in a truce with Sharif. The Pakistani public is outraged at the remarks, seen as cowardly and/or collaborationist.

Female member of parliament Nighat Orakzai (PML-Q) taunted Sharif that if he is so afraid of the Taliban, he can borrow her neck scarf (dupatta), which many Pakistani women wear on their shoulders instead of covering their faces. She dropped hers on the floor of Parliament.

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