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About 5 security personnel were killed when militants attack a check post in Waziristan while in retaliatroy firing 37 militants were also killed today.
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Government links Sufi’s release to new Shariah law in Swat
* Talks with TNSM continue
* Nizam-e-Adl to repeal jurisdiction of courts in Malakand
By Akhtar Amin
PESHAWAR: The government has said it would release Tehrik-e-Nifaz-e-Shariat-e-Muhammadi (TNSM) Chief Sufi Muhammad after the implementation of its proposed Shar’i Nizam-e-Adl Regulation of 2008 in Malakand division. The proposed regulation is aimed at ending the unrest created by rebel cleric Fazlullah.
Talks between government and the leaders of the banned outfit have accelerated in the last two weeks, officials and TNSM leaders said. TNSM acting chief Muhammad Alam said TNSM leaders wanted their ailing leader released, while the government wanted to implement its proposed Shar’i Nizam-e-Adl Regulation.
The proposed new law will repeal the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court and high courts in Malakand (including Swat district) to “speed up the justice delivery system in the aftermath of the unrest created by cleric Maulana Fazlullah”.
“TNSM will definitely accept the reforms under which Islamic laws are being imposed,” Alam said. A government official, seeking anonymity, told Daily Times that the government would soon announce the promulgation of the proposed regulation to “deal with the Swat crises politically”. The government would announce several important decisions regarding Swat, he said, including the release of the TNSM chief. He said that a committee formed by the government had recommended that “the Supreme Court and high courts Extension of Jurisdiction to Tribal Areas Act, 1973 (Act XVII of 1973) be repealed and the Federal Shariah Court have an exclusive jurisdiction there.”
The situation isvery serious because now TALIBAN ARE UNITED.Operation in south waziristan has caused disturbances as far as BAJAUR MOHAMMAND and AURAKZAI AGENCY DARRA ADAM KHEL(which was the only agenc where troops werent deployed).Kurram and Khybe are already in grip of sectarian clashes.
What government should do
1) enforce shariah in the region because in shariah it is not possible for any one to rebel against the ruler who enforces it .In Islam it is forbidden.So if gov enforces shariah then the militants woulld have to go for peace if not then they would be exposed.There would even be a disagreement aomng the militants because in Islam the obediance of the ruler who enforces shariah is MUST.So ordinary people would like to settle with gov.
2) stop the operation carried out on the behest of US.Make peace.
3) the americans and the NATO are the REAL ENEMY.
4) Make peace with the real taliban and CRUSH THE ROGUE JIHADIS LIKE FAZLULLAH WHO DARED TO TAKE OUT PAKISTANI FLAG.
If these things are not done after the elections then the morale of army would further get down because HONESTLY the soldiers dont want to fight against their own brothers.My own relative had refused to fight in Waziristan.
Taliban seize Nato supplies in Pakistan
By Isambard Wilkinson in Tank, Pakistan
Last Updated: 3:38am GMT 25/01/2008
The suspected mastermind behind Benazir Bhutto's assassination has stolen sophisticated Nato equipment by raiding the alliance's supply lines running through Pakistani territory.
Baitullah Mehsud, the Taliban commander who American officials hold responsible for Miss Bhutto's death, has emerged as a threat to the flow of supplies for British and American forces fighting in neighbouring Afghanistan.
Mehsud's increasing prominence shows how Pakistan under President Pervez Musharraf is steadily falling under the sway of Islamist militants.
Mr Musharraf, who is touring Europe, will speak in London today on "a vision for Pakistan and regional harmony". His critics believe, however, that turmoil in Pakistan is fuelling the Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan and helping to destabilise South Asia as a whole.
A senior government official, based near the frontier town of Tank, told The Daily Telegraph that Mehsud's men regularly ambushed container lorries carrying hardware bound for Nato forces in Afghanistan.
Their latest target was a supply convoy outside the town of Dera Ismail Khan on the Indus Highway, one of Pakistan's main arteries.
"They managed to single out the most important lorries, removed the drivers and then vanished the consignment lock stock and barrel," said the official.
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"Among the booty they discovered trucks carrying cargos of pristine 4x4 military vehicles, fitted with the most modern communications and listening technology," he added.
The official added that Mehsud's gunmen lacked the expertise to operate the equipment. So they enlisted the help of Uzbek and other foreign militants who are based in Pakistan's lawless tribal areas lining the north-west frontier.
Gen Athar Abbas, Pakistan's military spokesman, declined to comment on this incident. A Nato spokesman in Kabul did not rule out that material had been stolen in transit through Pakistan, but denied that any weapons or military equipment had been lost.
"This may hinge on what people's definition of 'equipment' is," he said. "I have been assured that no military equipment has been lost."
About 40 per cent of the supplies needed for Nato's 42,000 soldiers in Afghanistan pass through Pakistan. The vital supply routes follow the Indus valley from the port city of Karachi to the border town of Peshawar.
They enter Afghanistan through the Khyber Pass. Other border crossings from Pakistan's province of Baluchistan are also used.
Now we have conflicting versions of the event regarding the ownership of those supplies. The initial reports suggested that the trucks hijacked were PA, this report is claiming NATO. Regardless, I hope that if Arms were present on the truck they are recovered promptly.
This may hinge on what people's definition of 'equipment' is," he said. "I have been assured that no military equipment has been lost."
Pakistani troops kill 30 militants in hunt for stolen trucks: army PESHAWAR, Pakistan, Jan 25 (AFP) - Pakistani troops battled militants during a search for several hijacked trucks full of ammunition on Friday, with up to 30 rebels and two soldiers killed, the army said. Helicopter gunships were also involved in the clashes in Dara Adam Khel tribal area, near the city of Peshawar, where the lorries were seized by militants a day earlier, officials and residents said. “Reportedly, 25-30 miscreants have been killed... Two Frontier Corps personnel embraced martyrdom and 10 others were injured,” an army statement added. Chief military spokesman Major General Athar Abbas said skirmishes were continuing in the region including near a Japanese-built tunnel leading from Peshawar to the northwestern city of Kohat. Residents said gunship helicopters were pounding militant bunkers in the hills around the arms bazaar and the tunnel. The main road was also closed, they said. Separately, troops on Friday continued to comb mountains in the tribal region of South Waziristan around the hideout of warlord Baitullah Mehsud, officials said. “A house-to-house search operation is underway in the areas where the security forces have consolidated their positions,” military spokesman Abbas told AFP. More than 200 militants and 30 soldiers are said to have died during three weeks of fighting in South Waziristan.(Posted @ 17:16 PST, Updated @ 18:51 PST)
Jana,
The response from the Military has been quite rapid and forceful. Is this simply the new doctrine - that militant transgressions are not goign to be tolerated to any degree, or is it because the supplies were destined to NATO, or were there Arms on them?
Militants capture Kohat Tunnel
* Security forces continue advance, plan operation to recapture tunnel
* 20 militants killed
* Convoy escapes blast
By Manzoor Ali Shah
SPINA THANA: Military spokesman Major General Athar Abbas said on Saturday that the Kohat Tunnel was in the control of militants.
Reports, however, said the tunnel also known as the Pak-Japan Friendship Tunnel was only attacked and damaged by militants. The extent of damage to the tunnel was, however, not clear. Security experts feared the Taliban could blow up the tunnel, and with the tunnel under their control, Peshawar is disconnected from southern districts and traffic is being diverted via Rawalpindi.
Operation planned: Abbas said security forces were progressing and operation for the control of the tunnel would be launched any time soon.
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/images/2008/01/27/20080127_01.jpg
1.9 km..
Joins Dara Adam Khel with Kohat ....
Just an alternate route to the Kohat Pass, situated between the cities of Peshawar and Kohat. Reduces the travel time, Not so much Important thou, but since its the smaller route mostly it is used.