What's new

FATA Situation

Status
Not open for further replies.

The Associated PressPublished: September 26, 2008

KHAR, Pakistan: Pakistan will bring stability to a restive tribal region bordering Afghanistan within two months, a top general said during an assessment of a major ongoing offensive there against al-Qaida and Taliban militants.

Maj. Gen. Tariq Khan told reporters on an army-organized trip to the northwestern Bajur region that troops had killed more than 1,000 militants and wounded 2,000 others since the offensive began in early August.

Some 63 troops have died and 212 were wounded, he said.

"My timeframe for Bajur is anything from between one-and-a-half to two months to bring about stability, said Khan of the paramilitary Frontier Corps.

Still, he also showed reporters photos of militant tunnel systems and trenches, suggesting the insurgents are well dug in the region that is considered a likely hiding place for Osama bin Laden and other top al-Qaida leaders.

Military officials paraded 10 blindfolded and handcuffed men said to be Taliban fighters arrested during the operation before the reporters who joined the trip.

Pakistan's top military spokesman, Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas, told The Associated Press in a recent interview that the militants had established a virtual mini-state in Bajur as well as a "mega-sanctuary" for insurgents attacking foreign and government troops in Afghanistan.

He said militants control the main road leading into the tribal area, have converted schools into Islamic courts and have imposed taxes on timber and marble, the region's two main industries.

The Pakistani offensive has used ground forces backed by helicopter gunships and other air support. A suspension was announced at the end of August in honor of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, but within days the fighting resumed.

The militants are led by 10 commanders stationed in various parts of the tribal region, Khan said. Faqir Mohammed, a top Pakistani Taliban leader, is among those coordinating attacks and is believed to have been injured, Khan said.

Abbas said Afghan militants, led by a commander named Ziaur Rehman, have joined the fight. He added that the operation has so far produced no trace of bin Laden or al-Qaida No. 2 Ayman al-Zawahri.
 
1,000 militants killed in Bajaur
Saturday, September 27, 2008
By Mushtaq Yusufzai

PESHAWAR: Military officials on Friday said around 1,000 militants, five of them important foreign and local commanders, including al-Qaeda's Afghanistan chief Abu Saeed al-Misri, had been killed in the two-month-long military operation launched by the Pakistan Army against the militants in Bajaur Agency on August 6, in which 27 personnel of the security forces also embraced martyrdom.

Also, military officials said 25 more suspected militants and three security personnel, including two senior officers, were killed in the daylong clashes between the Taliban fighters and the security forces on Friday.

Inspector General of Frontier Corps (FC) Major General Tariq Khan, while briefing media representatives who were taken from Islamabad to militancy-stricken Bajaur Agency on Friday about the ongoing military operation in Khar, said the security forces had so far achieved remarkable successes against the militants.

"The command and control system of the militants has been disrupted and they are now on the run due to effective and targeted operation by the security forces in the last two months."

After days of wait, Director General Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) Major-Gen Athar Abbas finally took around 50 journalists, mostly foreigners, to Bajaur in a military helicopter, where officials of Pakistan Army, Frontier Corps and the political administration briefed them about the ongoing military operation.

Gen Tariq claimed that over 1,000 militants had been killed in the operation so far, in which five were important foreign and local militant commanders. The foreigners killed in the operation belonged to various countries, including Egypt, Afghanistan, Uzbekistan and other Arab states, he added.

He said among the foreign militants killed in the air strikes were Abu Saeed al-Misri, reportedly al-Qaeda's Afghanistan chief, Abu Suleman, and an Uzbek militant Mulla Mansoor.

The spokesman said Abdullah, son of Taliban leader in Bajaur and deputy chief of the Baitullah Mehsud-led banned Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) Maulvi Faqir Mohammad, had also been killed in the operation.

Abdullah, the military official said, had close contacts with al-Qaeda's No 2 Ayman al-Zawahiri.

Apart from killing important militant commanders, the official said an Afghan militant commander Munaras Khan and several others had been arrested during the operation.

Maj Gen Tariq Khan claimed that the security forces had unearthed underground channels, which the militants had dug to ambush the security forces in Tang-Khatta, Rashakai, Khazana, Kausar and Loisam areas.

He said the security forces had destroyed several strongholds of the militants in these areas and recovered arms and ammunition from their hideouts.

He said 27 personnel of the security forces had died and more than 100 were injured in clashes with the militants.

The FC commandant said the local tribesmen had extended unprecedented support to the security forces in the operation against the militants. He hoped that militants would soon be flushed out of the once peaceful tribal region.

However, Gen Tariq said the operation could last for the next six weeks for complete eradication of the militants and restoration of writ of the government.

Later, the media team was given aerial view of Kerala, Tang-Khatta and Khazana where they were briefed about the operation of the security forces.

Also, Shafeerullah Khan, political agent, Bajaur Agency, briefed the media about the role of tribal Lashkars of Salarzai and Utmankhel tribesmen against the militants.

He said due to the support of Salarzai and Utmankhel armed Lashkars, the writ of the government was now established in the two sub-divisions of the tribal agency.

The elders of Salarzai and Utmankhel tribes also informed the media about the activities of their respective armed Lashkars against the militants.


1,000 militants killed in Bajaur

This is excellent news, however once we succeed in establishing the writ of the govenment and with flushing of the militants, we will have to shut down the Pak afghan border for good. No more wheat smuggling, no tresspassing no thing. Everything shut, otherwise all that we achieved will be lost in vain as US/NATO have not done crap about the militants crossing from afghanistan into Pakistan. Its their duty to stop the flow of terrorists from afghanistan into pakistan same as its our to stop from ourside.
 
Ice

It's easier said than done - it really is vitually impossible - and the poor Pakhtun who live on the other side of the border are virtually Pakistani anyway - they depend on finding work in the winter months in Pakistan - And they are poor, desperately poor - yes, they are ignorant and arrogant, but that's both an affectation and defence mechanism.

Once this clean up is through and it has to be a through job, no small pockets left here and there, the whole thing cleaned up, the very first thing to do is to abolish FATA, PATA and these anachromisms - these are full citizens and they ought to have full access to all of Pakistani governance and government services.

The development of these ares ought to be a priority and all efforts should be made to offer education and to bring the outside world to them.

Attitudes and behaviours we see are a result of isolation and ignorance. Pakistan ought to establish effective law and order and esure free flow of commerce within and through this area.

The more the Pakistan government asserts itself and the more sevices it provides the more secure the area can be made.
 
  • Like
Reactions: S-2
Ice

It's easier said than done - it really is vitually impossible - and the poor Pakhtun who live on the other side of the border are virtually Pakistani anyway - they depend on finding work in the winter months in Pakistan - And they are poor, desperately poor - yes, they are ignorant and arrogant, but that's both an affectation and defence mechanism.

Once this clean up is through and it has to be a through job, no small pockets left here and there, the whole thing cleaned up, the very first thing to do is to abolish FATA, PATA and these anachromisms - these are full citizens and they ought to have full access to all of Pakistani governance and government services.

The development of these ares ought to be a priority and all efforts should be made to offer education and to bring the outside world to them.

Attitudes and behaviours we see are a result of isolation and ignorance. Pakistan ought to establish effective law and order and esure free flow of commerce within and through this area.

The more the Pakistan government asserts itself and the more sevices it provides the more secure the area can be made.

Its not easy said then done. At some point we need to take a decision. How long do you expect things to carry on the way they are. Israel has built a wall, the least we can do is to built a fence to stop infiltration into our side of the border. US wont stop it for us. Infact it seems they encourage it otherwise they wouldnt object the fencing of the border or perhaps mining it. Just see the number of arrests made taliban crossing over with ammunation into Pakitan, where the hell were the US/NATO then, and Pakistani military commanders have showed their anger over it.
Also these poor on both sides are the main cause we bear these suecide bombers everynow and then. We should worry about people at this side of the border and not the paktuns in the larger sense which includes the ones of afghanistan.They are a menace in Pakistan, a huge load on the economy plus the extra bonus of talibanization and suecide bombing, we need to throw these afghan pasthus out before they deliver anymore damage then what they already have to Pakistan.:sniper:
 

US secret forces are intensifying their cross-border raids into Pakistani tribal areas because of fears of a high-profile al-Qaeda attack during the American election campaign, The Sunday Telegraph has learned.

By Philip Sherwell in New York and Massoud Ansari in Islamabad
Last Updated: 6:40PM BST 27 Sep 2008

The Pentagon has ordered that raids on suspected terrorist targets within Pakistan be stepped up to pressurise al-Qaeda leaders and distract them from preparing attacks on American targets elsewhere.

"The aim is to disrupt their scope for planning and keep their leaders on the move so that it is more difficult for them to co-ordinate complicated plots," a senior US intelligence official told The Sunday Telegraph.

The operations launched from neighbouring Afghanistan have led to sharply increased tensions with Pakistan's armed forces since President George W.Bush recently authorised assaults involving "boots on the ground" without prior approval by Pakistan's government, a supposed US ally.

Those hostilities almost turned lethal last week when Pakistani troops shot at two clearly marked US helicopters, and the two sides then traded fire. The Pentagon said the aircraft were just inside Afghan air space but Pakistani officials insisted they had crossed the volatile border.

There were no injuries in the clash but US and Pakistani officers have arranged meetings this week to discuss the tensions. While new Pakistani president Asif Zardari praised US support for his country as a "blessing" on Friday in New York, senior officials in Islamabad angrily warned US troops not to intrude on its territory.

The US has been increasingly alarmed about the growth of attacks on Nato forces in Afghanistan launched from safe havens established by Islamic terror groups in the lawless mountainous tribal districts just inside Afghanistan.

Robert Gates, the defence secretary, told lawmakers last week that an estimated 30 to 40 per cent of attacks in Afghanistan were staged by fighters based in, or commanded from, Pakistan - a significant rise on previous years.

The approach of the US election has fuelled fears that al Qaeda or its allies, including the increasingly active Haqqani network, will seek a headline-grabbing strike against a symbolic American target such as an overseas embassy.

Last week's devastating truck bomb attack on Islamabad's Marriott Hotel further highlighted security concerns in Pakistan. The blast claimed the lives of 53 people, including two US military personnel, the Czech ambassador and a Danish intelligence officer.

"The level of sophistication and destruction was a message to the international community and the Pakistanis that we can pretty much hit you any place, any time," said Seth Jones, a senior regional analyst with the Rand Corporation, a leading security think-tank.

Kamran Bokhari, Middle East director at Stratfor, an intelligence analysis company, said that the scale of the attack - involving up to 1,000 kilogrammes of explosives - was a clear indication that al Qaeda or its allies were involved.

"The target and modus operandi have the signature of a sophisticated jihadi operation," he said. "The hotel is in a very sensitive area. If they can hit the Marriott, why can't they hit courts or ministries or the prime minister's house?"

Against this backdrop, a senior US intelligence official said that al Qaeda was seeking to stafe a major attack on an American target close to the election, to test the new president-elect.

"Their goal would not be to influence the election but merely to send a message that they are still a force to be reckoned with," the official said. "They know that a successful attack in the election season will have maximum impact, and they want to give the new president the jitters."

Any attack in the weeks before the Nov 4 election - what is known in American political circles as an "October surprise" - would almost certainly give a decisive boost to John McCain, the Republican candidate who already holds a commanding lead on questions of national security.

The US has for several years attacked suspected militant bases inside Pakistan with missiles fired from Predator drones. Tribesmen regularly shoot at the unmanned aircraft, although both the US and Pakistan rejected claims that a drone that crashed near the border last week was broight down by gunfire.

But in July, Mr Bush approved classified orders authorising special operations forces to conduct ground assaults inside Pakistan without seeking Islamabad's approval after his commanders presented him with evidence about the militants' increasingly secure bases in the tribal areas. Small commando units are flown in and out by helicopter for precisions raids.

"To tackle the insurgency in Afghanistan, you have to deal with what's happening in Pakistan," said Mr Bokhari. "It's not just the border now.

Pakistan increasingly feels like a state under siege."

Mr Jones said: "The US has been increasingly aware that the command and control networks for groups such as Al Qaeda and its allies in the Haqqani network conducting attacks in Afghanistan are based in Pakistan."

The new US approach has infuriated senior Pakistani commanders who feel freer to express their anger since President Pervez Musharraf was forced from office. New army chief General Ashfaq Pervez Kiyani has told his US counterparts that US incursions without prior approval are "unacceptable".

Pakistan is also mounting a major ground offensive against militants in the Bagaur region and claims to have killed 1,000 fighters in an operation that may have prompted the Marriott attack in retaliation.

But Gen Kiyani's combative approach has taken the US aback. "He is trying to assert himself more than they (US) expected and sooner than they expected," a Western diplomat said.

Relations plummeted after US commandos landed by helicopter on a raid in early September in Pakistan and killed seven innocent civilians, according to the Pakistanis. The mood was already raw after a US missile fired from Afghanistan killed several Pakistani soldiers at a border post in June.

Pakistani army officials said that the Americans do not understand that Gen Kiyani is already facing major obstacles in deploying his soldiers against the militants.

"It is just adding to the problem for him to engage these soldiers against the militants when they are being taunted by their fellow Muslims that they are working for the US against the Muslims," said a senior army official.

Scores of soldiers have deserted in the past few years especially when they were stationed in the tribal areas after refusing to fight. Nearly 1200 Pakistani soldiers have died since in the tribal region since 2001.

"There is a limit to what one could cooperate and army chief alone knows how difficult it is for his to keep the morale of his soldiers," the same official said.

Additonal reporting: William Lowther, Washington
 

Sat, 09/27/2008

Islamabad - Warring Sunni and Shiite Muslims in a remote Pakistani tribal region on Saturday announced an interim ceasefire after months of clashes killed more than 500 people and wounded hundreds more.

Meanwhile, troops killed at least seven militants in the raging offensive against insurgents supported by al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters near the Afghan border.

Tribal elders from the rival Bangash and Toori tribes brokered the truce in a meeting arranged by the top administrator of Kurram tribal district, Muhammad Azam Khan, in Islamabad.

The chieftains agreed to a truce until December 31 to defuse the situation in the violence-plagued mountain area near the Afghan border. Both sides will also exchange prisoners.

Khan said the tribesmen would again meet on October 6 to bring lasting peace to Kurram, which was in the grip of fierce fighting since April 2007.

Government forces also made infrequent attempts to quell the violence, using helicopter gunships to pound positions held by militants who joined the Sunni Bangash tribesmen after crossing into Kurram from adjoining regions.

The tribal elders on Saturday accused "the common enemy across the border" of having "sinister designs" and of inciting sectarian violence in Kurram, which they vowed to put an end to.

Shiite-dominated areas in Kurram, particularly its main town of Parachinar, have been cut off from the rest of the country through land routes over the last year, causing severe shortages of food and medicine.

Khan vowed to reopen a key link between the towns of Parachinar and Thal as soon as possible to transport food and medical stores. Earlier, Sunni fighters were accused of killing truckers delivering supplies to Shiites.

Meanwhile officials said at least seven pro-Taliban insurgents were killed on Saturday when security forces pounded their hideouts in the restive Bajaur tribal district, a sanctuary for al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters.

Helicopter gunships and artillery targeted the militant positions in the Loi Sam and Tang Khata areas where the rebels have developed a maze of trenches and tunnels, a security official said.

According to Major General Tariq Khan, chief of the Frontier Corps paramilitary force, more than 1,000 militants, including some foreign commanders and their supporters, were killed in intense fighting that started early August after scores of rebels attacked a strategic security post in Loi Sam.

Khan said it would take another six weeks of military operations to clear Bajaur of militants. (dpa)
 
Decisive action against Taliban planned

* Taliban activities to be curbed in Mohmand, Jamrud and Landi Kotal
* Official says further delay would invite more trouble

By Daud Khattak

PESHAWAR: The government is set to launch a major crackdown on Taliban in the Tribal Areas depending on the ‘availability of men and material’, an official said on Sunday.

“The government understands that it is time to launch a crackdown against the Taliban before it is too late,” a senior official told Daily Times on condition of anonymity. He refused to give the exact date for launching the operation.

“Troops are presently engaged at several fronts like Bajaur, Waziristan, Swat, Darra Adam Khel and most recently in Shabqadar area of Charsadda,” he said, adding that it did not mean that the government was not planning action against Taliban in other areas.

“Decisive action would be taken to curb terrorists activities in Mohmand, Jamrud, Landi Kotal and other areas,” he added.

Delay: He said the government had been told that any delay at this juncture would amount to inviting bigger trouble in the future. “Therefore, we have to go all-out against those disturbing peace in any area,” he said.

“Action must be taken before it’s too late,” he said, adding, “It’s now or never.”

The official said the recent operation in Shabqadar was part of the government’s resolve to the purge all areas of Taliban.


Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
Neo

The "October Suprise Plot" may itself be the "October suprise", it may explain the position Obama is taking on Pakistan - you wil note that Biden's position is very different than the one Obama is officially taking - ought one expect that VP candidate and the presidential candidate would have two opposite points of view on such a pivotal issue?
 
  • Like
Reactions: Neo
Gen. Kayani vows to eliminate militants from Bajaur Lauds tribesmen for support

10 more militants killed in operation

Monday September 29, 2008 (1021 PST

KHAR: Chief of the Army Staff (COAS) General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani on Sunday said that the military operation would continue till the complete elimination of militants from the Bajaur Agency. :tup:

Addressing the Jirga of elders and the tribal people of the Utmankhel, Barang and Salarzai areas here at Khar, the headquarters of restive Bajaur Agency, the COAS said the support being extended by tribesmen against the militants had given an impetus to the operation and boosted the morale and courage of the security forces in the agency.

“The people of the tribal areas have been rendering great sacrifices for the defence of the country. They had always worked shoulder-to-shoulder with the Pakistan Army in the most turbulent and challenging situations,” General Kayani said, adding that the ongoing operation against the militants in Bajaur Agency was in favour of the people of the area.

He said the Army wanted uplift and development of the tribal areas to bring them at par with the rest of the developed areas of the country. The COAS warned that miscreants would be dealt with an iron hand and the Army would not hesitate to take action against the anti-state elements.

“We will soon eliminate the militants and their supporters from the tribal areas and will shortly establish the writ of the government. the tribal areas are part of Pakistan but the militants are using the region for their vested interests,” the Army chief said while rallying the tribesmen to stand up against these elements.

He praised the people of Bajaur Agency for their effective strategy and action against the militants through the traditional way and said that the militants wanted to deceive the tribesmen in the name of Islam and Jihad.

“They (militants) are the worst enemies of the people and Islam but their days are numbered and they would soon be tracked down,” the COAS said. The elders of Bajaur Agency in their speeches hailed the efforts of the security forces for restoration of peace in the troubled areas and pledged their full support.

“We are patriotic and will never allow anyone to spread a reign of terror in the name of Jihad and Islam in our areas. We will flush those out of our areas who are bent upon bringing death and destruction to our peaceful region. We have raised our own Lashkar (armed force) for this purpose,” the elders told the Army chief.

Earlier, the Inspector General Frontier Corps Maj Gen Tariq Khan gave detailed briefing about the ongoing military operation against the militants to the Army chief. General Kayani eulogised the sacrifices of the security forces and praised their successful action against the miscreants and militants.

Meanwhile, the security forces continued pounding the hideouts of militants in various parts of the volatile agency. The forces killed, at least, 10 militants in different areas of the agency during the daylong operation on Sunday. Sources said jet fighters and gunship helicopters continued shelling the hideouts of militants in Loisam area of Khar Tehsil and Rashkai area, killing at least 10 militants.

The forces also extended their shelling to other Tehsils of Bajaur Agency, including Salarzai, Momand and Nawagai. Gunship helicopters were also put into action against the militants. However, a shell fired mistakenly by the security forces hit a passenger vehicle, injuring 28 persons, who were rushed to the Agency Headquarters Hospital.
 
Neo

The "October Suprise Plot" may itself be the "October suprise", it may explain the position Obama is taking on Pakistan - you wil note that Biden's position is very different than the one Obama is officially taking - ought one expect that VP candidate and the presidential candidate would have two opposite points of view on such a pivotal issue?

Right on spot Sir!
VP candidate going against Presidential candidate on a vital issue, thats interesting :usflag:
 

RAWALPINDI (September 29 2008): On return from China's visit, Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani on Sunday visited Bajaur to meet commanders and troops engaged in the ongoing operations. According to an ISPR press release, he also met with local tribesmen of the area.

The Chief of Army Staff was given a detailed briefing by Major General Tariq, Inspector General Frontier Corps on the progress of the operations. General Kayani expressed his satisfaction that local tribesmen have risen against miscreants and are fully supporting the army. He reiterated that success in this operation was directly linked with popular support.

The Chief of Army Staff remained with troops for a considerable period of time and had informal interaction with local commanders. He appreciated the high morale of officers and men alike. Earlier, on arrival in the area, Corps Commander Peshawar Lieutenant General Muhammad Masood Aslam received General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani.
 
Pakistan's security forces kill 2,825 militants in operations


English_Xinhua 2008-09-29 21:13:05

ISLAMABAD, Sept. 29 (Xinhua) -- Pakistan has killed 2,825 militants in the tribal regions and Swat valley in the northwest since July 2007, a senior security official said on Monday.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, the official said a total of 2,825 militants, including 581 foreigners, had been killed. A total of 1,400 miscreants, including 311, have been injured so far and a total of 2,774 militants, including 330 foreigners, have been arrested, said the official.

The News Network International (NNI) news agency quoted the official as saying that 386 army soldiers and 225 personnel of Frontier Corps (FC) were among the dead.

The official also confirmed that 1,622 army men were also injured in the operations during the same period.

A total of 88 suicide attacks, 769 Improvised Explosives Devices explosions, 520 fire raids, 79 ambushes and 128 physical attacks have occurred since July 2007, said the official.

He clarified that in those 88 suicide attacks, a total of 1,188people were killed and as many as 3,209 others injured. The official elaborated that those who were killed in suicide attacks included 174 army men, 45 FC personnel, 145 policemen and 847 civilians.

The NNI quoted the official as saying that a total of 98 security officials were killed and 145 officials wounded in Swat valley since November 2007. In the military operation continued in tribal area since November 2007 till date, a total of 611 security officials were killed and 1,622 wounded. Those killed included 386army men and 225 FC personal, said the official.
 
Ice

It's easier said than done - it really is vitually impossible - and the poor Pakhtun who live on the other side of the border are virtually Pakistani anyway - they depend on finding work in the winter months in Pakistan - And they are poor, desperately poor - yes, they are ignorant and arrogant, but that's both an affectation and defence mechanism.

Once this clean up is through and it has to be a through job, no small pockets left here and there, the whole thing cleaned up, the very first thing to do is to abolish FATA, PATA and these anachromisms - these are full citizens and they ought to have full access to all of Pakistani governance and government services.

The development of these ares ought to be a priority and all efforts should be made to offer education and to bring the outside world to them.

Attitudes and behaviours we see are a result of isolation and ignorance. Pakistan ought to establish effective law and order and esure free flow of commerce within and through this area.

The more the Pakistan government asserts itself and the more sevices it provides the more secure the area can be made.


Muse
I agree with what you are saying, but this is a war for Pakistans survival and in my view anyone living that side of Durand line is not our concern. They cant have their cake and eat it too. Either they talk to their helpers and guests to provide them with food and shelter and means of earning , or fight them, but it need to happen that side of the border. Pakistan needs to be able to say that we have closed the border and this is now not our problem. The problem lies in Afghanistan and the NATO needs to find its solutions in Afghanistan.So whatever good or evil they do needs to stay that side of the border.
If the Grewat wall of China could have been built so can the border be mined and fenced.I also strongly feel that the border fence and its maintenance and monitoring by PA should be charged to the NATO forces just for the impunity with which they blame Pakistan for all its ills.
WaSalam
Araz
 
Neo sir this is indeed a good news..with the help of these tribesmen pak army will succeed in rooting out the miscreants. :sniper:
 
Security Forces complete operation in Darra Adamkhel
Updated at: 0600 PST, Tuesday, September 30, 2008


DARRA ADAMKHEL: Security forces have completed their operation in the tribal area of Darra Adamkhel while hill tops near Kohat Tunnel and Indus Highway have been vacated from militants.

Sources of the security forces told that the operation has almost been completed after the 12-day activities against the militants and all the important places are under the security forces’ control.

The sources told that 88 militants were arrested and 54 were killed during the operation while a heavy quantity of arms and weapons has been taken in custody after many temporary centres were removed.

An armed contingent of Kalakhel tribe patrolled the area for restoring law and order and expressed its determination to cooperate with the government in the efforts of restoring peace in the area.

Security Forces complete operation in Darra Adamkhel
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top Bottom